Monday, May 14, 2007

#20 Ooh the suspense...


14 de Mayo, 2007

¡Buenos Tardes!

I am currently in Cuidad Serdan, Puebla, right underneath the highest mountain in Mexico, Pico de Orizaba. I have been here for several days now and have had many adventures. The adventures never end in Mexico.



I left Veracruz on a very poorly rigged and wobbley Fiona. She inched her way over the course of 5 days to Orizaba. The road there took me along a nicely paved road through small rolling hills toward the mountains. I managed to become part of a wedding in Mata de Agua. The Mexicanos sure know how to party. It sucks though, when you wake up in the morning after a wedding looking into the eyes of a cow. No it`s not what you think. I camped that night beside a river and when i woke up there was a herd of cows gathered around my tent watching me sleep. I discovered some wonderful beans that morning as well. thier pods are covered in some great fuzz that causes pain like you wouldnt believe. And nothing but time stops the pain. It drives you insane because you can`t scratch it, you can`t wash it and it`s persistent. Water helps a little, but it still takes 10 minutes or so to stop stinging.



"Donde puedo obtener los plátanos" I asked. This means "Where can i get some bananas?" Several minutes later I was invited into the house, fed, given a shower in a bucket and a bed to sleep in. Easy as that. The Mexican people have been amazingly friendly.



I made the mountains the next day, and climbed over 3 big passes into Orizaba to look for Ulises. I checked my notes again for his address and realized i was in the wrong town so I carried on down the road to Nogales and found the Lake there. La Laguna de Nogales in a little lake under a mountain with the clearest spring water. It is so cold and refreshing in the hot Mexican spring. I didn`t take one shower in my time in Nogales (about 2 weeks), but prefered the clear, cool waters of the lake instead.

I stayed around the lake for several hours, hoping my friend would show up, but as night approached and I was getting ready to find a place to sleep, some people saw me and my bike and asked if I was the friend of Ulises. They took me to his house (technically my house, I paid the rent last month) and I set up my hammock and settled in.

Within the next few days I biked back into Orizaba to find a new bike. I found an excellent bike shop there who built me a great bike. It has a steel frame, 26" wheels, very simple setup for fast fixes on the road. I have dubbed her La Burra "Mary". Burra is a female donkey. Mary the Mule. She is an amazing bike. She`s a little slow going up the hills, but she flies down them at obscene speeds.


April 20th was a good day. If you don`t fully understand the signifigance of 4:20, you don`t need to. For those you who do, I had a great time. We cooked a funny light green drink called "Cafe con Leche". It is translated as Coffee with Milk, but has nothing to do with Coffee. We had a good buzz on from it to say the least.

April 25th was my 19th birthday. On the 24th Ulises and I packed our backpacks and headed out into the mountains in search of a waterfall we were told about. 3 hours or so up a dried up creek bed we came to the waterfall. It was small, but supplied a great place to camp, with a little lake of fresh drinkable water. In the morning we headed down a little ways before finding a steep valley to climb to the top of the mountain. I would have liked to have made it to the top, but several vertical walls near to top pf the valley made continuing impossible. I managed to get injured on the way down as well. As I was climbing down, with Ulises above me, I heard crashing sounds as a rock barrelled towards me at high speed. It didn`t get me but a smaller one hit my ankle. Not 10 minutes later another rock hit the same ankle. After that I made Ulises walk below me.

The next night we took the bus to Atzacan to work. Ulises is an Artisano and makes bracelets and necklaces out of seeds. He is teaching me his trade. Very beautiful jewelery. There was a fair there and I spent the whole night dancing and got invited onto the stage to dance. The only problem was I had no girls to dance with, but the band quickly rectified that and called 3 girls up on stage with me. Like I said before, these people know how to through a party. Later that night after a mad dash in my birthday suit from a house chased by a broomstick I flagged down a ride to try to get home. The guy turned out to be quite drunk and had some problems driving. He had to slow down for a speed bump, so I jumped out as he wouldnt let me out. He grabbed my shirt in the process, and almost ripped it in half. It took a 90 peso taxi ride to get my somewhat inebriated body home at around 5AM.



May 1st, 2007 signified 1 whole entire year of travelling. My journal entry says quite simply "Slept all day..." Me and Ulises made a special cake the day before, which is why I slept all day. I had planned to get back on my bike that day and head out for Pico de Orizaba, but plans changed when I woke up at 5 PM. oops.

I left the next day though on Mary, bound for Tlachichuca under the mountain where I could climb it. I spent a whole day climbing uphill out of the Orizaba Valley. I camped half way up the hill and finished it around noon the next day. It was a very big hill. Out of the valley the terrain levelled out and became a flat plain full of fertile fields, and right in the middle, the behemoths of Sierra Negra and Pico de Orizaba. As I biked along I noticed a sign that said "Gran Milimetro Telescopio". It is a telescope that sits atop Sierra Negra at 4600 Meters. This is also the home of the highest road in North America. Being the highest road in North America, I decided I needed to bike up it.

I took me 2 days to get to the top. The road was paved for a while, but after the little town of Texmacilla it turned into cobbles, and finally into gravel. The going was very difficult. The higher I got the less air there was and coming from the low, humid valley I was not acclimitized for any kind of elevation, least not on a cold mountain with snow. I made it though with much toil and many breaks. I camped at the top and had funny dreams about giant killer pineapples...



The next morning I headed down. About half way down my brakes failed and I started hitting some extreme speeds on gravel roads. It was after the switchbacks though, so it wasn`t as dangerous. As I got down farther my head stopped hurting so much and things got better. The road turned to pavement again and not having brakes didn`t matter so much as I tore down hill into the valley on the open road. I made it into Tlachichuca that night and found The Hotel Los Tres Garcias. If you are ever in Tlachichuca, look them up. They have a very nice hotel there. I spent 2 nights with them and met Saul there. He offered me a place to stay at his house in Cuidad Serdan, which is where I am now, and have been for a week.






Now, as for Pico de Orizaba, or Citlaltepetl. The plan was to climb it last Wednsday, but my friend who I was planning to climb it with wanted to do it on the weekend, so I agreed on Saturday. I borrowed crampons and an Ice axe, packed my Camelbak (by the way, my hat is off to Camelbak for making a wicked good backpack) and headed out for the Volcano, with my friend Pimpoes in his sisters car. I had planned to climb from the northern side, a much easier accent, but decided to take the southern route instead. It is a much more difficult climb. We got to the first road block and started walking. The road entered the forest and climbed up and up passed the odd house or herd of sheep, through little feilds of corn and towards the mountain. We passed Xipes, the ecotourist hotel in the mountains, but Pimpoes told me that was for "Mujers con caros" not "Hombres de la Montañas". It started raining shortly after that so the 2 men of the mountains pitched the tent and hid from the water for about an hour.

We carried on after it stopped and as we passed to tree line the snow began to fall. we walked into the night between Sierra Negra to the South and Citlaltepetl to the North. we pitched the tent behind some rocks out of the wind around 9PM, made some hot tea, ate some chocolate and went to sleep.

Most people wake up around 1 AM to start thier accent. We woke up around 5 AM, well rested and ready. We packed everything and headed closer to the mountain. After an hour of walking up we left most of the equipment, including the tent, sleeping bags, my stove, most of the food, a backpack and every other unneeded thing hidden behind a large white water tank. There is a small building right under the mountain near the snow that Pimpoes called the Albergue and we arrived there around 7 Am. I put another pair of socks on under my sandals and we headed upwards. The sun peeked over the mountain at around 830. The weather in Mexico is on a perfect schedule. We had till almost exactly noon before it would start to storm on the top of the mountain, so we had to hurry. Scrambling through the rocks was relatively easy, considering I was much better acclimitized at this point, but I still needed to stop often to catch my breath. Pico de Orizaba is 5756m above sea level making it the highest point in Mexico, and the third highest in North America.

Around halfway up, near the glacier Pimpoes called up to me from quite far below me. He motioned that his heart was beating too fast and he didnt want to continue. I told him give me 3 hours, and if I`m not back at the Albergue, to come find my body. Shortly after this I made it onto the glacier and put my crampons on my sandals. Yes, I was still wearing sandals at this point. I left my boots at the Albergue, on purpose. I was wearing 5 pairs of socks and a plastic bag under them, so I was quite warm and dry. Slowly but surely I made my way up the very steep ice. On footstep at a time was enough to keep my mind occupied. My body felt good though, not very affected by the elevation. my heart rate was fine, my breathing was good and I felt a constant adrenalin rush from such an amazing adventure.

As I neared the top the winds began to pick up. I knew it was close to noon by the sun directly over head. the snow began to fly soon after and the winds increased in strength until i was forced into the cover of some rocks. At this point the Mountain let me know in its own subtle ways that I wasn`t going to climb any higher. everything became dark as the clouds swirled around me and blotted out the sun. The wind screamed trough the rocks around me and battered my face with sharp snow. I pulled my toque over my eyes to protect my face and sat in the cold wind eating chocolate for half an hour. The wind slowed down a little at this point and I took the chance the got out of the rocks. As I did the mountain taunted me with a perfectly clear veiw of the summit but a stones through away, and as the thought to climb the last hundred meters crossed my mind the winds picked up again and I started down.

The decent went down without a hitch. Not being attached to any kind of ropes and only a pick to save me I took it slow but steady. At one point I slipped on the open ice and slid about 20 meters before my crampons caught the ice. You can`t imagine what 20 meters of out of control sliding 5000 meters in the air is like. I took it very slow after that and as I got lower the winds died a little. At this point I had planned on trying again in a few days from the other side, but some events to come have hindered that. I saw Pimpoes far below me near the bottom of the glacier, apparently I had been gone more than 3 hours. He had seen the storm on the peak and came out to find me. The reason most people climb this mountain very early is because the weather, especially in the spring is very volitile.

I made it down to Pimpoes and we walked back to the Albergue. On the way down we met some more climbers there for the day. They had jeeps as the road runs almost all the way up to the Albergue and agreed to take up down. They went and had an adventure on the mountain while Pimpoes and I walked back to the water tank to get our gear. Now comes the reason why im not attempting the mountain again. we got the water tank and there were no bags. No backpacks, no tent, no sleeping bags, no equipment of any kind, nothing. Someone stole it all. Well, not all...they left 1 bag of peanuts, an orange, half a bottle of water and a salt shaker...

We made our way back to the jeeps and waited for several hours for the others to return. When they did we eagerly hopped in the trucks and tore down the gravel roads for Atzizatlan. They dropped us off at the parada for the bus and we took the half hour ride back to Cd. Serdan. Once there a large bowl of rice and tortillas, several glasses of water and a shower were very welcomed. I went to sleep early last night feeling very good to back at a lower elevation. Oxygen does amazing things for the brain.

So today is a day off. I will be heading into the market soon to buy some new blankets, as I now have nothing to sleep with. Ill need to get some more gear before I take off, but Im not planning on replacing everything lost on the mountain. Mary will be much lighter because of it. I try to look at everything on the bright side.


The plan for now is no plan, as usual. I think in a few days I will leave Serdan bound for Zacopoactla, then on to Jalapa before returning to Nogales. Ulises is very serious about bicycling with me to brazil, and it will be nice to bike with someone who knows the area. Other than that who knows, you`ll just have to wait for my next update, just like me.

Peace my friends.

Steve in Cuidad Serdan, Puebla, Mexico
















Archive "Steve`s World Bike Trip - Mexico"

Mexico Updates

#17 Texas and Mexico

March 11, 2007

Hola Amigos

So, I survived America and made it out before my VISA expired, but I cut it pretty close. Here´s the story: After the wonderful meal of Crawfish, a southern delicacy I suggest you try if your ever in Louisiana, Art drove me into Laffeyette where we found a bike shop, then he drove me to the texas border. I realize I cheated here, but worse is yet to come. I rode a few miles into Texas then stopped for the night in a yard full of mosquitos. They weren´t the smartest bugs though, none of them bit me.


The bike problems continued the next day as I pedalled down HWY 87. I got to the end of the road and it disappeared, turning into sand. I turned around preparing for a 20 km back track on a dwindling time frame. All of a sudden I heard that all too familiar hiss sound of a flat tire. I groaned but had no choice but to fix it. As I was pumping it up matters got worse. The tire exploded, leaving me stranded. I gave up at this point and stuck out my thumb again. A truck already loaded with people, inside and out picked me up and through my gear in the back, dropping me off at a gas station where a mexican man drove me a little farther down the road. He dropped me off at another gas station where I stayed the night, pitched behind the building. I made some money that night as well, playing my drum. I managed to pull 100$ out of my hat. I was pretty happy with that.

At this point I had 5 days left on my visa, and at least a 10 day ride ahead of me, so I was in a hurry. I am not a religious person, but what happened next made me think twice. I was pedalling hard, in the beating sun, fighting the wind praying; praying for someone to stop and help me out. And someone did. An RV pulled up in front of me and a man got out. He had white hair, a white beard and was dressed in very plain clothes. i was sure he was Jesus, and asked if he was. He said no, but asked me if I wanted a ride. It was a miracle. I through everything inside the RV and he drove me to Galvaston where I found some wonderful tubes in the bike shop. they are very thick and supposedly prevent flats very well. So far so good. I biked till almost midnight after being dropped off and pitched my tent in a church yard, far too tired to eat more than a few hand fulls of peanuts.

I started thumbing rides at 8 AM. The first ride got me 9 miles, the second about 200 miles into Corpus Christi. The man said I had a kind face, which is why he picked me up. I got back on the bike after he took me out for lunch in Corpus and headed down the road. And I didn ´t stop. At all. I biked all night through the desert under the almost full moon. trucks roared down the road all night, but most of the traffic ceased after 11 ish.

I made it to Progresso, Texas, right on the border by the next night and went to the 3 diamonds hotel. A little smooth talking and I managed to get the room for free, which I was thouroughly grateful for. I ate a pile of food and crashed. 24 hours on a hard bike seat will do that to you.

I left the hotel late in the morning of march 1st, bound for Brownsville, texas, where I stayed in another cheap hotel. That day I tried to cross the border at Progresso and Los Indios, but was turned around both times because I didn´t have my visa forms, which I needed to get in Brownsville at the Mexican Consulate. I also met 2 cyclists that day, snowbirds from up north on a day tour from thier RV camp. It was neat to bike with someone again.

March 2nd, the day of reckoning, I got to the consulate early, only to find out that It didn´t open till 9...So i waited 2 hours. I got my 6 month visa without a hitch and headed to the border and crossed the Rio Grande for the last time into Matamoros, Mexico just in the nick of time. I got myself a hotel room. 80 pesos (8$ USD) a night got me a faded pink 8X12 room, 1 bed (1 sheet and 1 pillow included), a table, a sink with brown water, a fan but no plug in, a burnt out light bulb and just enough room for me and my bike. I was in heaven. I sat there, on the bed near the open window in the breeze during the hottest part of the day, reading a book, surveyor of all that is mine. I crashed early that night instead of going out for beer.



The next day was a day off. I slept in, hung out, had a shower, walked around town, played my drum for the tourists ate lots of cheap street food and went to bed early again. Life was good.




After 2 days of chilling in Matamoros I decided I wanted to head into Mexico. I left town and was greeted 20 km in by a checkpoint, at which I flashed my passport, showed off my visa and was waved through without even saying a word. That night I camped off to the side of the road, hidden in the cactuses. It got cold enough that night to freeze my water bottles.

In San Fernando the next day I was flagged down by some students. They gave me the message that I shouldn´t go south. they made many hand signals to me depicting guns and shooting and they ran thier hands across thier necks several times, but I kept going.



When you can´t speak the language it makes it difficult for things to happen on the road. most of my experiences so far have had to do with meeting people and talking and doing things with them, but so far, I haven´t met anyone on the road worth noting. It´s been a very lonely time biking. Most of my conversations happen at gas stations when i buy water or at road side food stands buying fruit. Im not complaining by any stretch of the imagination though, this is great. I am slowly learning a few more spanish words every day and increasing my vocabulary. I keep my Spanish-English Dictionary in my pocket all the time and pull it out at every chance. the locals think its the funniest thing when I do, but that´s OK, im glad I can make them laugh.



I have gotten into a new schedule here in Mexico. I get up around 630 AM when the sun comes out, make food, pack up and hit the road around 8 or so. My watch beeps for 10 AM and the wind slaps me in the face, every day, never failing. Around 2 or so it is too hot for a northern Gringo like me bike, so I find a tree and pull off to the side of the road, have lunch, read, nap, work on things, or do whatever I feel like until the clouds come out around 3 PM. Then I bike till 6 and camp. It´s very simple. Life is good.

So anyways, March 7th, around 6 Pm I wandered down a back road trying to find a spot to camp. i went through a gate, down a path, down another path, through a forest and came upon a house. It was a huge house randomly placed in the back woods. It had banana trees growing in its yard as well as oranges, which I indulged in. The house itself was amazing. set in almost solid marble, it was very beautiful, and completely abandoned. I asked a man the next day as he rode his horse passed if it was for sale and he told me to inquire in Tampico, which is where I am now. I would stop biking if I could buy that house for a cheap proice and fix it. Im truely in love with that building. But, alas, I probably wont get it.



So yesterday I made it into Tampico. I milled around town most of the day trying to find a hotel and ended up at one for 150 pesos a night. I´ll be moving to a cheaper one tomorow downtown in the market. I am looking forward to the rest of Mexico, and with a 6 month visa in hand, i´ll be taking my time, so expect many adventures in the coming months.


In my next update Ill add some final words about the USA, but for now, i have 1 minute on my time at this computer, so I must go.

A message for Will in Virginia Beach: You bet your sweet ass I am.

Paz y Amor Amigos

Steve Fox



#18 Tampico and some thoughts on America

¡Hola Amigos!

I have not left Tamipco yet. I had to cut the last update short as my our on the computer ran out, but I have time now.
America Stats:
Total Kilometers in USA: 6378.55
Total Kilometers: 17579.10
Spent: 787.42$ USD
Days spent in America: 90
KM hitch-hiked: About 700, give or take
Top 5 Cities: Boston Mass, Spartanburg SC, Mobile AB, Galvaston TX, Talahassee FL
Top 5 Scenic spots: Delaware Water Gap, Catskill Mountains, Outer Banks, The Live Oak trees from Virginia south, The beach in Destin, FL
# of Flats: way to many, somewhere in the area or 30.
Fav state: toss up for Conneticut, South Carolina and Florida.


As I have said before, america met none of my expectations. Any image I had in my head about what it would be like was chopped up, mashed and rearranged into something completley different an unexpected. I met some amazing people there. I would like to tip me hat to the Fort Family especially, you guys were amazing to me and you wont be soon forgotten. The same goes to everyone who helped me ( and Paul) out along the way. there are so many out there I wouldnt know where to start naming you off. you know who you are.

Overall I enjoyed America. Some of the people there were a little more disagreeable than others, but i got along with most people. I did meet a few nasty people and had some bad run ins, but that is to be expected in my line of work. People are nice, they just some times dont know how to show it. It´s forgivable. I do look forward to cycling up the west coast through California in the future.

The plan...:
Since the last time I wrote I managed to find a family to stay with that wants me to stay with them in thier house forever and marry thier daughter. Life is good, the food is amazing and I am learning a huge amount of Spanish. I plan on staying here a few more days, possibly weeks, but seeing as i have 6 months to bike mexico and a strong urge to use all 6 of those months exploring and having adventures, i will be taking my time. If you dont hear from me for several weeks, dont be alarmed. Nothing will happen in Mexico. the people here rival the freindliness of Newfoundlanders, and that is huge. They are so very patient with a Gringo like me talking like a baby, I am so grateful for that. The adventures have begun already though...:

3 nights ago, round 1130 pm, I was laying in bed, writing in my journal after walking around town, exploring the downtown area when I heard someone bang loudly on my door yelling ´FUEGO, FUEGO´ and going on in spanish I understood fuego as fire. i opened my door, 3/4 naked and sure nough, thick smoke billowed into my room. It stung my eyes so i got low, light in hand and ran down the steep stairs. they guy yelling followed me down and as we passed the reception desk the smoke thickened into a black haze. Someone grabbed a fire extinguisher and ran at the door, but upon grabbing the door handle of the enflamed room, he burnt his hand and jumped back. Someone managed to open the door and exposed the flames, a mere electrical fire in the power box, a small flame, but spewing black smoke into the air. they came out of the building a few minutes later as the fire truck was pulling in covered in the yellow fire extinguisher chemicals. someone forgot to aim. No one was serisouly hurt and there was very little damage done.

Anyways, it is time to go learn more spanish with my lovely Familia de Mexico.

Peace and love

Steve Fox


#19 The Road to Veracruz

April 12th, 2007

Buenos Dias. I am coming to you from Veracruz, Ver., Mexico. I have been here for 2 weeks now and have not had a chance to send anything out as I have been having too good or a time here. This city is amazing. There is music all the time on every corner, at times almost too much music. The people are friendly, the night life is pretty good on a weekend and it’s always hot. The beaches here leave something to be desired, but it is worth the bus ride to some of the more distant beaches for a swim, and the Zocalo and other parks in town, surrounded with architecture from days gone by make up for them. It is a big tourist hub for the locals, but you can often see some random gringo, backpack towering high above their heads and laden with camping supplies, glancing about in awe of the visual overload in the colorful squares.


I stayed in Tampico for about 5 days more after the last update with the DeLeon Family. I enjoyed my time there, although it was very different to what I was used to. On the road I have no worries, no cares, to routine (not a rigid one at least), and no one telling me what I can and cannot do. It was definatly strange for me to be around people who cared about me enough to enforce rules. Not that I really cared, but for a free bird like myself, that can get suffocating after a while. Leaving Tampico was filled with tears and when I got half way up the large bridge that over looked the whole city, I saw most of the family gathered below it, flagging me down. I stopped and waited for Miguel to walk up the bridge to give me a watch. The first day I stayed with them we went to the beach and when I went in the water without taking off my watch, it stopped working. I bid one last goodbye towering above the city and headed back out onto the road.


I got searched for the first time at the police check stop just outside of the city. It went down without a hitch, but they broke a bolt on my bike when they set it down. I fixed it there and shared stories and maps with them before leaving. I started out on a paved road, but my map told me of a smaller road to the East. I thought there would be less traffic there, so I took a scenic and winding perfectly paved road to the coast. I found the road, but it turned out to be gravel. There was no traffic aside from the odd VW and a few nearly empty buses and some farm trucks. The road soon turned to finer gravel and then sand and went this way, with patches of pavement in some of the villages, and large pieces of pounded rock. It was not a good road, and my bike told me so with a bent rim at the end of that ordeal.

I made it back onto pavement in 2 days and made my way back to the coast in Tamaihua, a little river port town where I found a cheap hotel for 80 pesos. Getting there was entertaining though, as the road was patchy and there was a bridge over a river missing. I stopped there for a bath and lunch before wading across. The water only came up to the bottom of my bags though.

The next day I made it to Tux pan. It was a cute little city, but seemed to be lacking bike shops. I left in the afternoon and shortly after broke a spoke which sent my wheel grossly out of true. It was almost dark at this point to I hobbled up a hill and pitched my tent at the top in an orange grove. I have been eating very well so far in Mexico. The food is very cheap and always fresh. It is much easier than I thought to not eat meat here, especially when I am alone as there is a huge abundance of different fruits and vegetables. Right now is the beginning of spring here. The banana trees are hanging low, laden down with bunches of green fruits, the oranges are falling off the trees, the mangoes are turning red, and the coconuts are filled with delicious water. It is easy enough to find any of these things and much more wild. Often times cycling along the coast I can find a grove of cocos. I usually have to climb the tree, which is easy enough and chop them down. It’s much more difficult to get them in real life than you see in the movies, believe me. They are tough and fibrous and it takes a lot of hacking to get a bunch on the ground. When you do though, you are rewarded with several liters of liquid. It is well worth the effort on a hot day. I have also discovered tortillas. They go well with anything to make a meal a little more substantial, and coupled with beans and rice, and some chopped up vegetables, they make the perfect meal.


I dodged back inland from the coast and headed into Poza Rica to see some ruins, but got horribly lost and ended up on the wrong road, which wound its way up and up into the mountains. For several hours I climbed and pushed and just when I thought I had come to the top there would be more hills. Eventually near dark I pulled up on the top of a ridge as the sun was sinking below the mountains in the West. I got off the road at that point in an old farm yard and enjoyed the beer which I had just bought and listened to the night. The beer here is amazing. It goes down just like water, especially when it is hot out. It is also nice to be able to drink it again. I have been caught in a strange limbo of adulthood in the last year. I turned 18 only 5 days before I left last May, and when I got to British Columbia, the drinking age turned into 19. Most of Canada was 19, and all of America was 21. Not that I drink that much when I am on my bike, but the odd weekend would have been nice. Not here in Mexico though, where the beer is cheap and the night clubs are hoppin.

By the time I made it back to the coast to bad roads had taken their toll on my bike. As I was riding along I felt that the weight was a little off. When you are on the bike this much, you notice every single change, no matter how minute. I leaned my bike over to check out the back, thinking another bolt had broken. Then I noticed a gaping crack in the frame where the rack attaches just below the seat post. It turns out that both spots that hold the weight there were almost off. I fixed it temporarily with some random bits of wire I found on the road, a stick of cane, and some zip ties.


It was hot when I woke up in the morning, and got hotter as they day progressed. I didn’t make it very far before spotting a summer home with no one around, plus there were several low coco trees and a beach. I ended up staying there most of the day, but put on a few more kilometers as the sun was going down.

I ended up in Cardel the next day. I had hoped to bike up to some ruins in a town just north of there, but the road was very steep and very bumpy and completely absent of wind, so I began to overheat in a hurry. With the sweat pouring off my body, I turned around and headed back to the highway where I quickly drank a 2 liter bottle of water to replenish what I had just lost. Near Cardel that night I camped in a football pitch. I talked to several people there, and one of them returned later with a bag of beans.

The next day I made it into Veracruz. Not to make the same mistake as in Tampico, I made sure I found the perfect place to stay, which meant about 3 hours of touring around the streets looking for a hotel. I managed to find the Hotel Buenas Aires for 80 pesos a night. I think it is the cheapest hotel in town, and I looked at a lot of hotels. It is the cheapest for good reason, too. That day I met a man from Colorado who said he was jokingly going to send a picture of the outside of the Hotel to all his friends saying that he stayed there. I didn’t think it looked that bad from the outside. I found out that night that there were bed bugs as well. Those are not fun.

I met a very cool guy within the next few days. By the way, I have lost all track of time here in Veracruz. I never where the watch I was given in Tampico, and because I have not written in my journal all that much, I don’t know the date. His name is Ulises and he hand makes jewelry out of seeds which he collects himself from the local trees. He was some beautiful pieces. I followed him around for the next few days, learning the ways of the local artisans. I also moved into his house with his family to sleep on their roof. It is the most amazing place to sleep. It is cool at night in the wind, although sometimes it rains which is not bad. You just wake up a little wet.

After a few days of walking, playing my drum and hanging out all over town with Ulises I met Alex and Amber, 2 GAP girls from Britain. I was sitting with some other travelers, who coincidentally played music and sold bracelets, when two white girls sat down beside me and listened to our music. They talked to me in Spanish and I tried talking to them as well, but quickly let them know I was from Canada and didn’t speak much. ``Oh, well you must speak English then`` they said. Ulises left a day or so after that and I concentrated on hanging out with my new found British friends. We went to several clubs and drank a lot of beer. I had a great time with them. They are both English teachers in the mountains here on for Semana Santa, so they were out to have a good time after several weeks in a tiny village. I chilled with them for about 8 days, give or take. They left yesterday for another town, and will return to the mountains in a few days. I have had an amazing time in Veracruz so far. I have walked a long ways here as Ulises` house is a 40 minute walk from the Centro, and I do that at least once a day. There are so many people here to meet and interact with that I have never been bored. There really have been no breaks in the adventures, aside from a little yesterday when I slept all day, a detox thanks to Alex and Amber. I have gone to the beach, gone to the clubs, or just walked around playing my drum and meeting people in the Zocalo. There is always something to do in this beautiful town. I also had an entertaining time getting my bike fixed yesterday. In Mexico, if you want something, all you have to do is put out the ``I want something vibe`` and someone will approach you. In this way I found a bike shop where I was led to a welder. Instead of fixing the problem however, they just covered it up with slag. The guy didn’t weld my frame, but welded the rack, which was not broken, so I could attach it to the frame without bolts. I think it will get me to Orizaba, but I will get something permanent done about it there before I head into the mountains on some nasty roads again.


So, I will be leaving Veracruz today, after it cools off in the afternoon. Right now it is 1pm and I am sitting in an internet cafe between 2 outrageously perfumed men. There is only one fan and every time it passes them, I can catch a thick smell. I will make my way west to Orizaba, which is where Pico de Orizaba is, the tallest mountain in Mexico. I happen to be renting a house there at the moment with my friend Ulises, so I will go there and ditch some equipment, get my bike really fixed, then head into the mountains to visit Alex and Amber in their town. From there I have heard of a large festival of some kind on Mexico City in 3 weeks, so I will make my way there for that. After that all I know is I will be going south on the coast. Who knows what will happen.


Paz y Amor mi familia y amigos.

Steve Fox in Veracruz, México

Archive "Steve`s World Bike Trip - United States"

#12 Of Strange Places To Sleep

Canada is officially over, and I have now begun my journey through the United States of America, along with my "interpreter" and fellow cyclist, Paul Dorr, who contacted me in the interest of biking to texas with me.

So the last few weeks have been very entertaining, all the while I have been crossing my fingers in hopes that I wouldn't get snowed on while I was still up north here. I almost lucked out if not for the blizzard Paul and I pedalled trough on Dec 4. I left Halifax on my way to the border and headed up Highway 1 towards the Bay of Fundy. My first night was spent in a bed in Newport, NS after a difficult time finding a spot to lay my head. The difficulty may have started when I started asking people if I could sleep in thier sheds, as opposed to pitching my tent in thier yards, as I have done al summer. The reason for this is when I wake up in the morning, my tent is almost always frozen, heavy and hard to stuff back in the bag.

The next night was worse for finding a spot to sleep. I knocked on several doors until I found some people who told me about a youth group in town at one of the churches that would have a spot for me. I biked in there, well after dark (which was only about 5pm...) to be told that it wasn't church policy to allow travellers to sleep in thier walls. In the Bible it clearly states, several times, that it is in fact, church policy to give safe haven to travellers. I was turned away to the night and approched several houses before finding a shed to sleep in. At least it was a roof over my head. That night, Ashleigh, who owned the house, asked me if I wanted to sleep inside on a couch, but I was in no mood for telling stories, much less to people. I agreed to join them for breakfast though, and ended up staying for 5 days. Ashleigh had some very interesting ideas about living simpler and back to the land. I also got a chance to go back to high school for a day. It was like a flash back. I realized that all high schools in Canada are the same. I talked briefly to some of the classes there, in small groups, about my trip. I also got corraled into helping out with a church group full of little kids, and I got to attend a university class at the Divinity College. It was a busy couple of days to say the least, but definitely spent with good people. They had tried to convince me to stay for Christmas, but i knew by then there would be snow on the ground, and they were not planning on letting me leave in the snow.

The night after leaving Ashleigh's house in Walton I found myself soundly sleeping in a dairy barn, snuggled up with some cats and chickens. If anything, the barn strengthened my resolve to stop eating meat, which I have been experimenting with for the last 7 months. It can't be all that fun for a cow to live in its own excrement.

Another day down the road I managed to find a spot in a wood shed behind a tire shop, on top of some stacked up tires to sleep. It was cozy, with not much room to roll around and thrash about in my sleep. The logs in the shed were also stacked perilously as though they could fall at any moment. I tried hard not to sneeze near them all night.

One thing that I have noticed, living with the hospitality of people is even though some people might not feel comfortable letting a traveller sleep in thier garage, they always want to talk to me, and sometimes won't let me leave. This was the case on a particularly dark cloudy night, my last in Nova Scotia. The lady there insisted on me waiting at her door until her son and husband came home, then wouldn't let me get back on my bike. She proceeded to borrow a freinds truck, help me take the bags off my bike and drive me to gas station against my reassurances that I would be fine and would find some place to sleep or pitch my tent. I ended up sleeping in the truckers lounge of that gas station on the floor where I couldn't turn the lights off.


I slept on 2 more couches on my way into Fredricton, New Brunswick, and once more in my tent high up on a hill so the sun would wake me up early in the morning. When I passed through Moncton, which is a very nice city, especially on a Sunday morning when there is no traffic on its cobble stone streets between glass buildings and under glass pedways, I stopped in at Magnetic Hill. This hill is fabled to pull cars backwards up the hill. As I arrived, a car was in the process of rolling up the hill, and before I left another car did the same thing. I myself felt no need to pedal from the bottom to the top as I magically rolled, albeit slowly, to the top. Some say it is caused by Ghosts, others by aliens, and some think it is massive iron deposits. For the most part I think it is an optical illusion, but maybe it is magic. Who knows?


In Fredricton i stayed 2 nights in the Hostel there, meeting travellers and students as the Hostel doubles as a residence, and cooking marvelous foods. Fredricton is a very nice city as well, although it is very conservative on the outside. You really have to look hard for eccentric people. Very neat rows of elm trees line the streets, and gardens adorn the middle of the roads.


My first night out of Fredricton, on the final push to the border landed me on a couch of yet another dairy farm. The next night I was driven into a Wreath factory ebcause of the rain and ice falling from the sky. I spent the night there making Christmas wreaths, then I slept on a a table covered in tree boughs.


On December 2nd I crossed my first border of this trip into the USA. The border guard gave me a rough time after I told him my age and what I was doing. He was especially confused about the fact that I was a teen from British Columbia, and I didn't have any drugs on me. He didn't search my bags, but he felt the need to scare my mom by phoning home and telling her they had me in thier custody. Finally, I proved to them that I had enough money to sustain myself, and he let me pass on a 3 month visitor visa. I met Paul in Calais, just 10 minutes after crossing the border into Maine. We pedalled all afternoon and slept my first night in the states in a Baseball Dugout.


That night we camped in the trees under a quickly built lean-to, made of some logs and my tent fly. In the morning we woke up with several liters of rain water pooled precariously above us on top of the lean-to. We made oatmeal out of it, and the warm porridge motivated us to get back to biking in the cold. That's about the time it started to snow. We stopped in at a Blueberry farm for water, and only an hour later found ourselves in a slushy white mess. The roads became like skating rinks and cars repeatedly pulled over to warn us that it only got worse up the road. Then Pauls rear tire exploded. He quickly fixed it and we hurried to the next town to find shelter from the storm. We were flagged down by Jeff, who brought us to his house 4 miles away and housed us for the night. In the morning it was very bright, but also very white, with 5 inches of freshly falled snow on the roads. It was a very cold day for biking, and most of our gears were frozen in place, making riding up and down hills interesting.


Our next night found us in Lyman and Jean's garage, curled up by the wood stove. They treated us to a delicous breakfast of porridge, bagels and orange juice before we left on the final push into Rockland, Maine, where Paul lives. We pushed all day in the cold wind and arrived after dark, in rush hour, in the rain, tired cold and hungry, and blinded by the lights of hundreds of cars on thier way home. Paul almost got run over, it was very close.


So here I am in Rockland now. We have taken a day off to get Pauls bike worked on and stock up on food, so tomorow we can start out south towards warmer climates where we can start riding again in shorts and tee shirts, as opposed to several layers of thermal clothing and coats. Today I went and talked to the local radio station and did a 15 minute show on my trip, and in about a half hour I am going to talk to the local newspaper. It's time to start getting the word out to the people. Well, here's to warm weather and no snow till we hit Florida.


Peace


Steve Fox







#13 A Short and Sweet Merry christmas


Hey everyone. Just wanted to wish you all a very happy holiday, filled with food and love and friends and family. Everything on the road is great. Any impressions and prejudices I may have had about the USA have been turned right around. The people down here, and the hospitality have been amazing, in some cases better than Canada. I am so impressed with the kindness of strangers. Everyone has been amazing. But, there will be a more in depth update later, when I have more time to write, because a lot has been happening in the last few weeks. I hope everyone has a great holiday, and remember to keep those new years resolutions to get on your bike and visit some place new. Keep the rubber side down on the slippery roads, and pass crazy bikers like myself as wide as you can.


Peace Out.


Steve Fox







#14 The Kindness of Strangers


December 30, 2006


As a warning, you may want to take some time off work to read this update, it’s kinda long. Sorry.






"Be careful in the States Steve, they practice paranoia down there", my Mom said over the phone. This was not the first time I had heard similar words about Americans. Most people I talked to in Canada had really nothing nice to say about it. I was going to be turned away every time I approached anyone, I was going to be robbed, flogged, tarred and feathered, before being told to leave. So naturally, with all these people telling me to be so careful, I was a little apprehensive about crossing the border into this new and foreign country. But, what about all the Americans I met in Canada? What about Richard and Carole, the couple who rescued me from the bear in Dryden? What about the slightly unorthodox, but very friendly people I met in Niagra Falls? I met several Americans traveling in Canada, and not once did I have a bad experience. Nevertheless, I was a little worried.


So, the last time I left you I was in Rockland, Maine, at Paul Dorr’s house. We woke up the next morning faced with about a foot of white stuff on the ground. With the slippery roads and bad weather, we decided to wait another day till the snow plows made the rounds. The day after that was spent with my bike in Bikesenjava, the local bike shop/café with a horribly bent chain, and several other broken, misshapen pieces after sliding around in the snow a little too much. My hat is off to Chris at Bikesenjava for the great job he did, and for setting up the newspaper interview.


We finally left Rockland via route 1 along the coast. We arrived in Woolwich that night, and after asking Darrell and Denny if we could sleep in their shop, we were given our own rooms in their house, each with massive beds. I really didn’t know what to do with all the foot room. In the morning we left around 6 AM, long before the sun was thinking about coming up. We stopped that afternoon to visit Eartha, the world’s largest operating globe, which is slowly spinning all the time, making a full days revolution in about 10 minutes. We wild camped that night in a water shed area.


Early the next morning, December 12th, we crossed over the border into New Hampshire. Only 18 miles (30 km’s or so) we crossed into Massachusetts. That night, and the next was spent at Paul’s sister’s house in Haverhill, Mass.


A very quick ride into Boston turned into a long day when we got quite lost in one of its suburbs. We eventually found our way to Needham, at the very south of the Boston area, where Paul knew more people, who he worked with last summer on one of the ships. We arrived quite unannounced to find them not home. So we sat on their door step till they got there, which didn’t happen until long after the sun went down. At that point everything I had heard about Americans was beginning to cross my mind. I was pretty sure they would find us there and tell us to leave, but much to my disbelief, when they arrived, we were welcomed with very open arms, fed some delicious food, and given a room inside to sleep for the night.


I left the Sandlers house the next morning on foot, bound for the commuter train. $3.50 got me into Boston for a chance to check out the sights and do the tourist thing at the Harvard University. If you’re ever in Boston, the Museum of Natural History is an amazing thing to see. One exhibit includes over 4000 hand crafted glass plants made in the 1800’s with very rudimentary tools. The plants look perfectly real. They also have a large gallery of stuffed animals, of every imaginable species. I was mentally exhausted by the end and slept through most of the train ride home. I arrived back at the Sandler’s house just in time to start eating a Sadar dinner, which is for Hanukah. It was an excellent dinner followed by relaxing and playing card games.


After a late start the next day, and many stops to talk to interested people we made it to Cumberland, Rhode Island, following an address given to us by the Sandlers. As we got closer to their house, a car pulled up to me and a man inside asked if we were biking across the country, because we were staying at his house. He directed us to his house which was at the bottom of a massive hill, then drove off. We got there to a note telling us they had gone to a Christmas party, and wouldn’t be back till late that night, to make our selves at home and to sleep in the porch. This was a huge leap of faith that really bamboozled me. Not once had people in Canada done such a thing, to leave two perfect strangers in a house alone. We had a very nice dinner of curry space food that Paul was itching to stop carrying around, watched the news and some silly sitcoms that really have a way of hypnotizing you, and then went to bed. I woke up that morning when the family came back to talk to them before they went to bed as well.


The next day we met another amazing person. As we biked across a causeway over a reservoir, a cyclist stopped to talk to us. He asked us if we needed anything, but since we were quite content with how much out bikes weighed, we declined any offers. We did need water though, which we mentioned, and he immediately turned around and escorted us to a friend’s house down the road. Once there they insisted on plying off their day old pizza with us, which amounted to about a large pizza before sending us off. We camped for free that night at the River Bend campground.


The next two nights found us in East Haddam, staying with more friends of Paul’s. Paul used to be their chef, and eagerly fell back into that role, cooking up a storm for 2 days. While there I took a leisurely walk through the surrounding forests, which included wading twice through waist deep swamps with my pants held above my head, a tree climb from one side of a creek to the other where it was too deep to walk, and several run ins with deer. It was quite entertaining.


One thing I have noticed as well is that every time Pauls bike breaks, someone always stops to ask if we are ok, drawn to his bike flipped upside down, usually as he fixes a flat tire. I only mention Paul’s bike, because mine doesn’t seem to ever break. In Pauls defense though, his bike is older than I am…


Then we met Mr. Mic. Our destination was a closed state park down the road in Clinton, Connecticut, until we saw a man waving his arms at us from the side of the road. He flagged us down and asked where we were staying that night. Before we could say anything he explained that he was a teacher in town for 22 years, that he knew a lot of people, and that we weren’t camping that night. He told us to follow him and before we could even think to object, we were following his car into town. We pulled up in front of a massive house. He knocked on the door and a young girl, whom he taught in school, opened the door. He introduced us all, and we were invited in. Her parents were not home, but he insisted on us waiting there until someone arrived. He commanded the situation very well. Mrs. Gordon arrived shortly after that with a very surprised look. Mr. Mic explained the whole situation and the Gordon Family took us in for a night. They were an amazingly friendly family. The next morning Paul and I went to the school to thank Mr. Mic for what he did, and ended up staying 2 hours to talk to his class about what we were doing. Mr. Mic is an avid bike tourist and has logged about 100, 000 miles on a tandem with his wife.


The next friendly person we met was the next day at Bully Dog Bikes in Guilford, Conn. We stopped in there to get Paul a new tire, and ended up having both bikes serviced, tuned and lubed, as well as 4 brake pads for me and a new tire and tubes for Paul for the low price of 10$ each. Our bikes could be heard purring at that point. We spent the night camped in a Wal-Mart parking lot, and had our first “bad” run in with someone, a worker at the store who didn’t like us camping there and threatened to phone the police if we didn’t leave. It was soon rectified when he talked to the manager, whom we had talked to before setting up camp, and only had to move farther away from the building. Everything worked out in the end.


In New Haven, Conn. We met up briefly for coffee with another one of Paul’s friends, and then went to the local bike shop where I traded in my low rider rack for one that I can attach things to the top of, which has helped to take some of the weight off the back tire. Then we headed up one very large hill. About half way up, we stopped to celebrate having climbed that hill, only to bike around the corner and realize we were no where near the top. At the top were a lot of very nice, but very huge and very similar houses. Knocking on these monotone behemoths proved to be useless, as no one could spare 1 out of 3 of their garage doors, or 4 square meters of their several acre back yards for some travelers. We eventually found the Sibley’s house. They put us in their garage, then left to go to a Christmas party, the second time that has happened. They came back later that night and we shared travel stories.


We spent 2 more days fighting hills and headwinds in New York State and Connecticut. The hills there are massive, and there are a lot of them. We camped one night at a resort at Bear Mountain state park and the next in a yard with a nice fire place before arriving at the much anticipated Delaware River. The road there follows the river and it is almost perfectly flat, except one very hilly section where the road goes inland. Christmas night was spent in a plastic garage in Bushkill, Pennsylvania in the pouring rain and making play dough animals for the little guy in the house. The real treat for us was Christmas morning. We left without eating and by the time we got to the next town, my stomach was beginning to eat itself, but it was all worth the excellent pancake breakfast we had.


At this point we entered into one of the most beautiful spots I have been to in the states yet, the Delaware Water gap. The Delaware River carved huge cliffs along its banks so you can see all the individual layers of rock from millions of years past. I met a man there who was quite vulgar and told me some jokes not worth repeating, but he let me in on the location of a cave that I found off to the side of the road and explored. It only went about 40 meters back, but was still fun to explore. It remains 38 F all year long.


Paul’s tire popped once again in Easton outside an apartment building. As we were sitting there a woman called down to us from the second floor asking if we wanted a beer. We declined, but at the offer of cookies, I couldn’t resist. By the time Paul finished with his tire I had secured us a place to stay on their floor for the night. We had vegetarian pizza and Stella beers for supper with our hosts.


We carried on through the water gap and crossed a small ped bridge into New Jersey to follow a lovely tow path along the Delaware canal. We camped that night in Washington Crossing state park, which is at the stop on the river where General Washington, who later became the first President, crossed the river on Christmas night in the snow and the cold to launch a surprise attack on the British in Trenton, which he won. We left the flatness of the river banks the next morning to find a bike shop for Paul’s wheel, which was now falling apart. We ended up in Etra that night camped in a very nice forest with a small camp fire. I slept outside that night by the fire watching the stars and the orange clouds floating passed.


We are now staying in Brick, NJ, at one more friend of Pauls. We met Ian last night at a Scottish Fish and Chip shop where he works, and spent several hours in Barnes and Noble reading a book waiting for him to get off work. Last night was very entertaining, with about 7 people (I think) and several cases of beer. Needless to say we have decided to stay a day in favor of writing this update as to biking with a hangover.


So as you may be able to see, you can’t really believe everything people tell you, especially those who have never been to the place they are talking about. It may sound strange, and even most Americans I tell this to are surprised, but it has been easier to find places to sleep and to meet people in the States than in Canada. People really are good if you just look hard enough, and smile pretty while they are eyeing you up on their door step.


Till next time, may your hills be small and few.


Peace Out


Steve Fox







#15 Out of the Northern states


So, it's been a few days since my last update. I have been really busy biking, covering lots of ground in an attempt to get to the Mexican border before my visa expires, which is getting closer and closer. I am now in Spartanburg, South Carolina staying with some amazing people I met on the Outer Banks in North Carolina.


I last left you in Brick, New Jersey on Dec 30th. Paul and I left his friends house that morning heading south along the coast. We ended up in Stafford, New Jersey and made camp in a forest in the middle of town. While setting up my tent I managed to break one of the poles in half, so I picked up some logs off the ground and threw a lean to together, with my tent draped over it. It worked well until the rain started. I was very wet the next morning. Just as we went to bed in the lean to I heard some screeching tires and the sound of metal on metal and glass breaking. I grabbed my little first aid kit and dodged out of the bushes to see if I could help out and found a head on collision. No one was hurt, just a little shaken up, but it really made me want to stay out of cars as much as possible. That night instead of going to sleep I went out wandering down to the beach, watched some New Years fire works and stumbled into a garage party. I stayed there most of the night doing keg stands and bringing in the new year, stumbling home (to the tent) around 7 am to find Paul getting ready to leave. We agreed that since I was in no fit condition to bicycle that day, and because I had been offered some work by the guy whose party I was at last night, that I should stay and sleep and go make some money, and that we may meet up somewhere down the road. I think I asleep before Paul left. I didn't get to go to work however. I broke camp after a few hours of being rained on and made my way to the house in Manahawkin. When I got there I found some Jewish Apple Cake in the refrigerator, so I had a small piece. That small piece left me very sweaty and shivery on the couch, and several times wrapped around the toilet that night. The cake was not so great...


I left the next day as I had the feeling I had outstayed my welcome, although i was kind of delirious all day. Late in the afternoon I pedaled passed a bike shop on the side of the road. I didn't pay any attention at first, but after getting down the road in my delirium, realized I needed water, so i turned around. A few minutes of taking with Quas and Terry in the shop and I was invited to stay in their yard in Seaville, just down the road. I met them there and was put up on their couch for the night. In the morning Quas rode with me for half the day to the ferry terminal at Cape May. I took that ferry to Lewes in Delaware and found a very nice camp site near the beach in Henlopen State Park. I spent the night outside by my fire playing by drum.


I left late the next morning because of a long walk I took to the beach and a quick swim in the icy water. It also began to rain soon after I left, so rather than fight the weather I found a beach house to hole up in under the roof. It rained pretty hard all day and into the night, but the next day riding into Ocean City, Maryland was gorgeous. it was +20 degrees Celsius all day, which is amazing weather for January. In Ocean City I stopped in at Continental Cycle where the guy there told me about a restaurant called SeaCrets and that they had a radio show. I found my way there and was invited in to do a quick radio show for the guys there, then was treated to an excellent meal. the cool thing about this place was the floor was made of sand. It was like walking on the beach. They had a lot of plants and greenery in there as well. Very cool resturant. I made my camp in a farmers yard that night.


I had a very uneventful day on January 7th, aside from a flat tire which i fixed in the rain. I started again in the morning but right away I had a blow out on my back tire that shredded most of my sidewall, and conveniently enough for me, there were no bike shops to be heard of in the area. I left my bike near where the blow out happened and hitch hiked into the nearest store that had tires to pick one up and bring it back to my bike, but the girl who picked me up took me back to my bike and took everything to the shop so as to not let it sit in the rain. I get the tire fixed, but had very little will to move that day in the pouring rain, so I chilled out in the store talking to all the customers that came in. A big thanks to Jason Kirby at the Western Auto store for letting me hang out there and letting me camp in this back yard.


I spent most of the next day hitch hiking again, this time to cross a bridge tunnel into Virginia Beach. I had no luck until I got a flat about 1 mile from the tunnel and someone picked me up in their truck. I would have liked to bike the bridge tunnel, but it is 20 miles long and has no shoulders to speak of. It's also illegal for bikes, pedestrians, tractors and horses. I met a very nice guy shortly after that as he was walking his dog down a path. He immediately invited me to sleep in his back yard and spent the night in his beach-front island-house resort/fire watch tower of a tree house in his back yard.


I left Will's house in Virginia Beach after an excellent breakfast of pancakes and made my way south to Knot ts Island to catch a ferry. This was kind of by accident as I had made a wrong turn, but it worked out in the end and I don't think I lost any time in the process. I got a sunset ferry ride out of the deal. I camped in the Waddels house that night.


From there I followed the coast to the outer banks, which was an amazing ride. I spent about 5 days cycling down a perfectly flat road with sand dunes on both sides. The outer Banks are simply a long sand dune pushed up by hurricanes about 20 miles off shore. The first night out there was spent at Kitty Hawk, the site of the Wright Bros. first flight. The second night there I met some very amazing people, who I am staying with in Spartanburg now. It was under some strange coincidences that I found them, too. I first talked to a man named Richard, asking if I could camp in his yard. the problem there was that he didn't have a yard, but he told me about a nice camp site his friend owned, so I went to find it. i saw the sign, but saw no vehicles there, so I guessed no one was around to ask and carried on. The next spot I stopped was apparently an auto shop. There were a lot of broken VW's in the yard. I asked the guy there and he said OK, but as I was setting up my tent, I realized I didn't want to camp near all the broken cars, so I packed up again and went a little farther down the road. That's when I stumbled into the Fort's home. Before I could ask to camp in their yard, John explained that he had seen me biking on the road, and Tricia asked me if i needed a place to sleep and a meal. Within 2 minutes I was being hugged, and escorted to the kitchen where supper was almost ready. It's always amazing to meet people like the Forts who are so good to people. I was even treated to a bubble bath, which was excellent. I stayed with them an extra day.


I had a ferry to catch the next day, so I boogied to Hatteras to catch the 4 o'clock one. I biked late that night so as to be in the right spot for the very early morning ferry to get me off Ocracoke Island and back onto the mainland. I camped right at the ferry terminal and got up for the 7 AM departure.


I have now entered the Bible belt. I have also had better luck with sleeping at churches than ever before. I camped under one of their picnic areas, then I was sent to a church to sleep inside the next night, and the following night was spent pitched behind another church. One reflection I have so far of the south is that most people are very nice, but some are extremely rude when approached. For instance, I ran out of water at one point and knocked on a door to fill my bottles. The lady there told me to drink out of the ditch...I have also had more doors slammed on me and more people yell at me than ever before. It is very strange. In the end I always manage to find nice people though.


This past week has been one of many bike problems. I broke my chain twice, have had no luck with derailleurs, and I have discovered that I have two very loose wheels. In Lumberton, North Carolina I had to fix my very broken chain in a tire shop, and turned my bike into a one speed for a while, till it broke again. Thanks to the guys at the shop for letting me hang out in the dry warm shop for a while. I ended up staying in a motel that night after it broke the second time and hitched a ride to Fayetteville to get a new chain and sort out some other bike troubles.


I made it to Laurinville that night and stayed in the Hester's yard with their goats. After another uneventful day crossing into South Carolina I made it into Chester where I stopped at the fire department to warm by bones, as i saw a light on in there. The man there called some people and eventually got me a place to stay in another hotel and police escort through the rain.


January 22nd was a very solid day. I made it into Spartanburg in a hurry, and barely stopped all day, except to eat, and get more water. I arrived around 2:30 PM at the Forts house after 8 days of riding from their beach house in Salvo on the Outer Banks. they have a huge house, big enough to get lost in for several days at a time. Being in Spartanburg also means that i am back into the mountains. From the time Paul and I got to the Delaware river till about 4 days ago, the roads were perfectly flat with no more than a 2-3% grade at any given time. It's been very nice riding. Back in the hills though, it's much different.


Well, to cut this short, I have a newspaper meeting to make it to in about an hour and a bike that really needs some work done to it, so I need to get to work. thanks for tuning in my friends.


Peace Steve


Fox in Spartanburg, South Carolina







#16 Of Southern Hospitality…


Last I left you, I was in Spartanburg, NC. I had planned to take a day or two off to work on the bike, get some laundry done and relax. A week later I was back on the road. I had a lot of fun in Spartanburg, hanging out with Emily and her friends, cooking amazing food and doing some very heavy relaxing. I managed to fix the bike eventually and get back on the road around Jan. 30th as the Mexican border was calling me. Given more time, I would have stayed longer. The Fort Family was truly amazing to me, and I’m not sure I have met nicer people.


Back on the road I caught wind of a news report or two forecasting heavy rain and a good possibility of snow. With this in mind I knocked on a door around 7 pm, well after the sun had set and asked if they could help me out. I was invited in by the son, and soon after the father arrived and I ran my request passed him. He didn’t really say anything, but walked out the door with hid phone in his hand, leaving me with his 2 kids in their 20’s and his frail old mother who looked about 80. Within 20 minutes or so 3 police officers walked through the back door, all packin’, and almost arrested me, but I was so cooperative in getting my ID and explaining what I was doing that they really couldn’t take me in. They gave me to ultimatum that I could go get a hotel room 10 miles down the road (keep in mind its already after 8 pm and very dark) or they could arrest me and I could sleep in a cell. My budget and sense of adventure told me I should go with them, but my better half told me to carry on down the road and not cause trouble. I ended up following a pastor (everyone down south is a pastor) to the Salvation Army where I got a bed to sleep in.


7 AM in the pouring rain and heavy, sticky snow, the Salvation Army kicked me out. Within an hour or so I was drenched, as the moisture permeates even the heaviest of rain gear. I stopped at a church and asked if I could warm up, then pedaled to the pastors house where I was able to dry out a bit and get some food. I crossed the Savannah River later that afternoon after the snow had stopped falling and went to TG’s house to fill up on water. He quickly invited me inside, fed me, and insisted on getting me a hotel room for the night. TG is another pastor, and they hand out hotel rooms like they hand out socks in Newfoundland, which is often.


In the morning I met with TG and a very eccentric reporter who took all day to get my story, which included taking me out for Mexican food and giving me the grand tour of the town of Lincolnton. We finished up late in the afternoon, and with the sun on its way down, I asked if I could stay with one of the reporters, who took me home and took me out to karaoke that night.


The next afternoon I pulled down a little back road and found a nice place to eat lunch on a fallen tree. I reclined after that and had a little power nap until the wind picked up suddenly and almost knocked me off the tree. I packed up quickly and just as I was pulling out of the road a man with a gun pulled up asking what I was doing on his property. I explained my lunch situation and he put the gun down and let me go. I passed through Greensboro that day and camped in a hunting blind 15 meters in the air.


The next 2 days were uneventful aside from having a cup of soda thrown at me from a passing vehicle. On Feb. 6th I stopped at a beautiful house and asked if I could camp in the yard, but they invited me inside, so I cooked them supper of salmon steaks and rice. They were very impressed so they gave me the address of their niece in Tallahassee, Florida.


While in Albany, Georgia, I passed a little shop called BioBuzz and spent most of the afternoon there hanging out. It’s a very cool little store, if you’re a little left wing. I camped in a Pecan grove near Camilla that night.


The next morning I made it into Florida and headed straight into Tallahassee. I phoned the contacts I had there to find a place to crash and ended up following the address of Eve, the niece of the people I cooked for. Her room mate was a little leary about me staying there, but I turned down their offer to take me out to supper and cooked for them instead, after which they agreed to let me stay. The next day I left, bound for a bike shop to fix my cones again, as I didn’t get them fixed properly in Spartanburg. I ended up going to Krank It Up a free community bike shop where I fixed almost every thing, until I found out that my chain had popped off the gears at some point and tore the spokes on my rear wheel to pieces. Luckily it held together long enough for me to get to a bike shop the next day. I was invited to a pot luck dinner that night and enjoyed a very cool game of bike polo. That was a lot of fun. Bike polo is like polo on horses, only on bikes. I went to Joes Bikes where I got a new wheel and had my bike looked after.


While in Joes bike shop I met Jason, who had just hobbled back form mountain biking on a broken bike. He had toured across the states last year and knew how cool it was for locals to approach him with cool ideas about things to do in town, so he asked if I wanted to go spelunking, or caving. I agreed so we grabbed some food and took off to the caves. We spent about 3 hours under ground wading through creeks and crawling through mud and tiny holes. It was really a beautiful cave with lots of stalactites and a very nice fissure. I also went for a swim in the little under ground lake. That night we went to a Sheesha bar in town and smoked a hookah. I met the owner and told a lot of people about what I was doing.


Jason and I left the next morning and headed west. Jason came with me for about 30 miles then caught the tail wind back into Tallahassee. I camped that night on the banks of the Chipola River and had a near run in with what I thought was an alligator…turned out to be fish jumping in the river. If only I had known that the night before, I would have slept better.


I stopped at a natural spring the next morning and met chuck who gave me a fishing rod. I caught a little bass but nothing worth keeping. That night I stopped at Remonia’s house, and she insisted that instead of camping in her yard that I should stay in the motel in Ebro, courtesy of her. I had no choice, so I went. That night I over heard a man come into the hotel looking for a room after the lobby had closed for the night. The cranky lady at the front desk told him to leave so he offered her cash and said he could go sleep in his truck. She told him to leave again, so I asked him if he needed some help. He had run out of gas and needed to phone home to let his family know what was going on, so I let him use my room phone. He gave me his phone # before he left and told me to stop in the next day when I got to Destin. In the morning I went to thank her and got corralled into some tea, and just as I was getting ready thunder cracked the air and the rain started, so I opted out of riding and went to the race track to watch some dogs run around in circles all day long. Fun stuff…


I made Destin the next day and stayed with Tim, the guy I met the night before. He owns a barber shop in Destin, and no matter how hard he tried he couldn’t make me beautiful. No point fighting a losing battle. Travelling into and out of destin along highway 98 is insane. It’s nothing but tourists behind the wheel and they drive like animals, but I survived. I ended up that night camped beside a lake in someones back yard.


Into Mississippi the next day and headed into Mobile. I caught my first Mardi Gras Parade there and loaded up on all sorts of different colored beads and things. In Mobile is Africatown, which is where the last ship of slaves landed after slavery was abolished, so they set up the first free town in America there.


I made it into Biloxi the next day with some difficulty. The bridge on highway 90 was out from Hurricane Katrina and the detour took me to the Interstate. I got pulled over there within 2 miles and was told to go back to the exit I took to get there. So I tried hitch hiking across. I stood there in the baking sun covered in Mardi Gras beads looking for someone going to New Orleans for about an hour before another cop pulled over and tried to arrest me before I talked my way out of it, playing the dumb tourist. He told me hitch hiking was illegal and that I had to go back a mile and take a back road, which took me to the parade. I tried passing the parade until I got pulled off to the side by yet another officer of the law and told I couldn’t ride my bike. I gave him the excuse that my visa was running out but he didn’t care. So I sat there under police surveillance for 3 hours while the parade slowly floated by. Around 4 I managed to get out of town and around the washed out bridge. I ended up in Free port at the Gospel Singers Of America’s house sleeping on the floor of a spare room.


I had banked on making it to New Orleans that day, but I ran into some bike trouble with my chain near Slidell, Louisiana and had to take highway 190 as opposed to 90 into New Orleans. The bike shops were all closed that day for Mardi Gras. So I had no choice but to keep on keepin’ on. Highway 190 is a bad road. Heavy traffic, no paved shoulder and what shoulder there is is covered in debris which resulted in 4 flats that day and I ran out of patches. I also had an interesting run in with a trucker. I was riding the white line and he didn’t like that so he honked, his way of telling me that he wasn’t going to move and I had to. So I dove off the road and he followed me into the shoulder, going about 70 miles per hour in traffic. I wasn’t ready to take that, so I flipped him off. So he stopped. Then he started backing up. I dove into the ditch and he stopped a few feet short of me. Then he got out, sporting a large knife on his belt. We had some words, he approached me and I quickly talked my way out of the situation by subtly telling him to piss off as I hid behind my bike. He left and as he pulled out he spun his tires, spraying my with gravel. It must have been soon after that when he got on his CB and told every trucker in Louisiana that some biker was being disrespectful, because all the truckers honked at me and gave me dirty looks. Its not a good thing to get on the bad side of the truckers. I ended up with my last flat of that rough day and pushed my bike to a gas station to inquire about buses bound for Mexico, of there were few. I ended up staying that night and the next with Jim at his house while I worked the kinks out of my bike and washed everything I had. I sent a large box of things home, mostly Mardi Gras souviners and junk from the bottom of my bags that I had been carting around uselessly. My bike is much lighter now.


I left Jims on the bike trail, which was a nice change from the horrible 190. I took highway 22 out of town bound for Baton Rouge. That night I stopped in at Mikes yard and left the next morning back on 190, which had gotten much better although there were some patchy spots. I found a strawberry stand around noon and had some berries for lunch, then continued on to Baton Rouge. I got into town late in the day and had no choice but to push it late that night to get out. Crossing the bridge over the Mississippi River was insane. It was about a kilometer across with no shoulder, very heavy traffic and fading sunlight. Most people there were very respectful, thankfully, and gave me a lot of room. On the other side of the bridge I started looking for a spot to camp and took the first driveway I saw, only to be chased out by a very angry old man who called me several nasty names and followed very close behind me out of his driveway in his car, honking all the way. I managed to find a very nice lady who let me camp in her yard a little way down the road. One thing about camping down south here is the humidity at night. I often wake up in the morning very damp and sometimes very cold, even in the sleeping bag. This would explain why I got sick about a week ago. Being sick while riding isn’t fun at all, when your body aches more than it normally would.


I left her house around noon after a very entertaining conversation. A few miles down the road I met up with 2 hitch hikers. I stopped and talked to them for about an hour, and found out that they were from Seattle and were headed to Florida. They also said they had never had a more difficult time thumbing than in the Southern states. I hope they made it across that bride in Baton Rouge alright. Later that day however, I was in their shoes when my chain broke outside of Krotz Springs…and so did my chain tool…making it impossible to fix. I stuck out my thumb and stood around for about an hour until Art picked me and took me into Opelousas where he had some tools. Last night we tried to fix it but decided it was best to head to a bike shop and get the parts I needed to do it right. So I stayed at his house, camped in his back yard. I also go the opportunity to sample some local Louisiana food, known and crawfish. They are little lobster looking bugs that like in the mud and are kind of like shrimp. We got 10 lbs of them and between the 2 of us, we killed the whole bag of deliciously seasoned mud bugs. They are a lot of fun to eat and if you really get into them, you can make some gross sounds as you suck the juice out of their heads and crush their shells to squirt the succulent innards out. MMMM. We watched the movie Cars last night as well. This is for you Art: The word of the day today is Mallow Mint Marsh Pepper…also known as Marshmallow Peppermint spelled sideways. Just for you, man.


So now it is today. My visa expires In 6 days and I am still 400 miles from the Mexican border. 400 miles converts to about 640 KM, so I would need to put on some huge days to make it on time. So here I am, cruising down I 10 going about 70 miles an hour bound for the Texas Line, courtesy of Art, who drove me to Laffeyette to Precision Bikes where Josh hooked me up with some great service. I normally wouldn’t take rides, but this 100 mile head start will save me a lot of time, and possibly put me back on track to making the border in time. It will be tight, but there’s a good chance ill be on time. Hopefully.


I would just like to say a little bit about the “Southern Hospitality”. It doesn’t exists anymore. After Hurrican Katrina blew through it has taken a turn for the worst. People no longer open doors. I have had more guns pointed at me in the last week than in my entire life. I have had more people yell at me and call me names and be out right rude than on this entire trip. I have had more things thrown at me from vehicles in the last few weeks than I ever had. People have become paranoid. If you recall in my last email I said that all the stereotypes and opinions I had about Americans were completely backwards, I still hold true to that. I was told by everyone that the south would be better than the north, but it is a changed place. People just don’t like people anymore. This is not to discourage anyone from coming to the swamp. It is a lovely place full of panthers and gators and skeeters oh my, and there are still a lot of people who are friendly and helpful and very nice, but there are many scared people. Now, to try to discourage people, my advice for traveling by bike is: Don’t. Its rough. Especially the roads. Save yourself some gray hairs. However, I urge you to do what I do. Don’t take peoples advice seriously and do it any way. Mexico here I come.



Peace and love, and happy Mardi Gras


Steve Fox