Our Adirondack motorcycle tour entered its final day when we awoke at the borrowed camp at Loon Lake. Our plan for the day was really no plan at all, just a vague sense that we’d wander around the northeast and eventually end up back at Essex NY to take the ferry back to Vermont. Naturally Steve and I were eager to find some more backcountry dirt roads where nobody else would be found, and Colin’s low-slung Harley and vulnerable crankcase would have to tough it out. Our first shot was an old railroad grade that was great fun but after a couple of miles of slewing around on loose gravel, we took pity on the old hog and turned back.
Not, however, before I captured
 this shot with my helmet-mounted video camera.  Colin commented that it was the toughest road so far for his bike, perfectly graded but the loose gravel atop hardpack made it “like driving on marbles.”
It wasn’t long before we found another dirt road, the Thatcherville Road that becomes Buck Pond Campsite Road. This one was more comfortable for the Harley and a few miles down we stopped at an idyllic overview of the horribly misnamed “Mud Pond.” It looked crystal clear and absolutely unspoiled from where we were standing.
One great aspect of the Adirondacks is the numerous lakes and navigable rivers. You can’t go 10 miles without bumping into another beautiful and uncrowded northern lake. Along this road we discovered into the little-known Lake Kushaqua and several ponds, each one a paradise for canoes and kayaks. Eventually we came out at Rt 3, stopped in Bloomingdale NY for breakfast at a diner, and then decided to take the scenic drive up to the summit of Whiteface Mountain.
The road to the summit of Whiteface Mtn serves no purpose other than as a monument. It was built during the Depression as a public works project to honor military dead. The road to the top costs $10 and is a fantastic drive, with spectacular views at the top if the day is clear, as it was for us. I shot video all the way up and all the way down, which is included in the YouTube video here. It was well worth the ten bucks, especially for the opportunity to do it on a motorcycle.

Of course, going up meant Colin’s cell phone would start ringing again, but it was a small price to pay for the 360-degree views with eighty mile visibility. We were hovering over Lake Placid just west of us, and off to the east Lake Champlain was easily spotted.
At this point in the ride we had long since gotten over the need to ride as a pack, so I went down the mountain first, and we re-grouped at a gas station down below in Wilmington. We still had no real plan, but Steve led the way from there, through the town of Jay and down Rt 9N. There we found one last glorious winding paved road that had us all grinning: Hurricane Road. I hadn’t expected it, but it was definitely the best set of twisties we hit on the entire three days. From there, it was anticlimactic wandering through fields all the way back to Essex.

We parted company with Colin there and hopped the ferry back to Vermont, reflecting on the success of the trip. We had no breakdowns (although plenty of Ural-tweaks). We had no arguments, or even tense moments. No crashes (Steve later said he had expected I’d wipe out at some point.)
We didn’t get lost, although we tried. The weather was uniformly spectacular, and it seemed like every road had something to offer. Even the worst road food we ate wasn’t really that bad. We had covered 450 miles in three days with two German bikes, one American hog, and a Russian artifact and had a great time doing it. It seemed a shame to be going home so soon. Now I was feeling some regret that I had rejected our longer trip plan: a ride around Quebec’s Gaspe Peninsula.
Still, I won’t be buying my own motorcycle anytime soon. It’s not the same down in southern Arizona. This tour was special because it was in the northeast, where the rural roads seem endless. I have a feeling we’ll be doing it again sometime, the next time I’m in town. This may be something that, for me, can only happen up in the northeast. So my jacket and helmet will stay up there, waiting for the next chance to hit the road.
This wrapped up my visit to Vermont. Work and other obligations were calling, so on Sunday Eleanor hauled me to the airport and I flew back to Tucson. (You’ll notice that I’m flying the Temporary Bachelor Man flag again.) I will be here, in the heat, getting some intense work done, for the next two weeks. Then I’ll return to Vermont to gather up the family and the Airstream and begin the long journey back west. If you’re only interested in Airstream adventures then tune in after July 4 (and incidentally, why did you read this far?) If you are curious what TBM is up to in Tucson, I suspect there will be further updates coming soon…
Since we weren’t cooking on this trip (traveling light), we had to ride to breakfast.  I had a stock of breakfast bars in my bag to tide me over.  I ate a couple of those and then we saddled up and rode 14 chilly morning miles or so to the nearest town with a breakfast place, which was Long Lake, same town where we had dinner.  Even with the cool morning temperatures it was a nice ride, with continued sunshine and wide green views all around us.  The restaurant in Long Lake had a sign left out from last week’s Americade, saying something like “Welcome bikers!” and we weren’t the only ones there.
Our plans were a little in flux at this point.  Steve had a route in mind but we didn’t want to overwhelm Colin’s bike with too many rough dirt roads.  I spotted a nice long backcountry road on the map that probably would have rivaled the previous day’s 30-miler, but we skipped that in favor of a more sedate tour up Route 30.  We took a lengthy detour to Little Tupper Lake, where the state has acquired 15,000 acres of land and a lake (great fishing, they say), then back to Route 30 up to Tupper.


This also gave us time to prepare. Eric’s Ural needed a little more tweaking of the drum brakes, which are weak at the best of times, and Emma was still at work painting up some black Airstream Life t-shirts for our gang.  We named ourselves “The Black Flies”:  Steve, Rich, Eric, and Colin.  Each of us adopted a gang name.  Mine was “Wally”, Steve was “Pusher,” Eric with his Russian-made Ural & sidecar was “Putin,” and Colin was “Axel” (deliberately misspelled).  We pledged to wear the shirts all three days no matter how stinky they got, and almost managed it.
On Wednesday the weather was clear again.  Steve, Eric, and I rolled out of the driveway and a few miles to the Charlotte-Essex ferry that crosses Lake Champlain.  In the hamlet of Essex NY, we met up with Colin and his thunderous 1980s-era Harley FLHT “shovelhead.”  It looked like a black limousine with four inches of ground clearance, a typical Harley of the era, with plenty of added chrome, huge saddlebags, and a “King Of The Highway” emblem.
As Colin noted, the Harley was basically the equivalent of two BMWs, since it had twice the number of cylinder (two to our one), twice the engine displacement (1350 cc versus our 650 cc engines) and weighed nearly twice as much.  These characteristics proved to be highly relevant later, especially the fuel economy.  The BMWs got a steady 69 MPG, while the Harley and the Ural were running more like 29 MPG, with the same size fuel tank.  As a result, we stopped for fuel a lot but Steve and I only filled up every other stop.
A few hours later, we hit the first long dirt road of the trip, and had to pause for a conference before proceeding.  Could Colin’s bike make it?  The road was 30 miles long of single-lane former logging road that was only marginally improved.  Every inch of it was either a pothole or a FBR (Big Rock) embedded in the road, and with the road dappled by sun filtering through the trees overhead it was difficult to see what was coming.  If you took your eyes off the road for a split-second, it was virtually guaranteed that another FBR would arise directly in front of you.
(The photo is of me and friend Kathy posing on the Ural.  We weren’t going anywhere.  My normal riding gear includes an armored high-visibility jacket, helmet, gloves, and steel-toed boots.)
We had an interesting episode on the ferry across Lake Champlain, from New York to Vermont, on Saturday.  I was directed to pull the Airstream straight on to the ferry, which would put the streetside next to the center wall.  As always, I pulled up carefully, eyeing the trailer in the mirror.  The crew member who was directing us forward looked confused, then said loudly,”You can’t see that trailer, can you?”  Well, of course I can see my own trailer.  It’s the big shiny thing in the mirror.
I smiled and gave him a thumbs-up through the windshield to reassure him, but for some reason he really was convinced that the Airstream was invisible to me.  Maybe it was because I was inching the Airstream closer to the wall (I figured they’d want me to be tight to it, as ferries are usually short on space for large vehicles).  He might have thought I wasn’t aware that the trailer was within 6 inches of the wall by the time I finishing pulling in, and that I was going to hit the wall.  Then he yelled, “You need towing mirrors!”  Hm. I don’t have anything against towing mirrors, but in the space I had, they would have needed to be folded in anyway, so they’d be useless in this situation.
This time we’ve opted to spend the night next to a little lake named Piseco, just a few miles south of the village of Speculator.  There are lots of public campgrounds here, perhaps not well recognized by the traveling public but very much appreciated by the locals and those in the know.  We’ve chosen Point Comfort campground, found about a mile down a narrow paved road off Rt 8, right on the shore of the lake.