Two days and counting
When I submitted my post, One Week and counting, I had intended to start writing daily entries. I thought it might be interesting to have a countdown of the last days — the planning, the training — before my departure.
Well, clearly, I was not able to fulfill that goal. What prevented me from achieving that goal was also my single most time-consuming activity in the past few months: a creative writing class. Last October, before I ever had the idea of riding my bicycle to Alaska this summer, I signed up for an independent study creative writing class. It has been finishing that class that has taken up nearly all of my spare time since early March.
Since the class was offered as an independent study course through the Continuing Education department at the University of Utah, I was able to work through this class at my own pace. I had no classes to attend, but I had quite a bit of reading and writing to do over the past eight months. I would do the assigned readings, prepare the written homeworks, and then hand them in at the Continuing Education office. A week to two weeks later, my graded homework would show up in my mailbox. I never met the instructor or the grader for this course. My college days are a distant, fading memory for me, but I do believe I worked harder at this course than any other course in all my years of undergraduate and graduate studies.
So, I handed in my final project yesterday! Just in the nick of time, I finished it. Pat will have to mail me the graded final project when it arrives from the grader.
Last night, since I didn’t have any writing to do for my class, I was able to spend the entire evening getting together all of the gear I’ll be taking with me on the bike tour. It’s all laid out in a spare bedroom in the basement. It doesn’t look like a lot, but I know from the three-day tour I took a couple weeks ago that I’ll have some difficulty fitting it all into the four panniers. I have about 5300 cubic inches of storage in the panniers themselves, plus the top of the rear rack which is where I’ll strap on my sleeping bag and tent. Tonight’s goal is to experiment with packing it all up in such a way as to provide a balanced load, front-to-back and side-to-side.








Hi Peter!
I´m following your preparations, and I´m really enjoying the reading.
When we went on our tour last year we had some problems in keepingthe insulin cold enough. We did it, but in the end we could notice that it was losing its “efficiency”. Almost every night we froze a small bottle of water, and we used a kind of soft shell - wettened in water it was supposed to stay cold and cooling. Today - weel maybe we should have taken a metal termos and put some ice in it once a day. But - more weight…
I´ve heard that when you have taken all your gear - skip half of it. The rest is just about twice what you really need…
Ive also heard two versions of balanced packing: very little in the front to make the steering easier and quicker or as much veight as possible in front to reduce weight on your rear wheels. God luck with the packing, anyway!
Hi Pete–Good luck and God be with you on this exciting venture. We’ll be looking forward to reading all aboout it as you progress [and find Wi-Fi sites to send them.]
Pete,
After going C2C in 2006 I rode for a month in 2007 in Germany, Switzerland and a bit of France in the Jura Mountains. Also spent a month this year in Germany,Austria, Slovakia, Czech Rep and Poland. Traveled self contained with full camping and cooking gear plus some food. I always seem to have too much stuff to carry but find it difficult to eliminate items. Did switch to lighter sleeping pad and single person tent for this year. Yes one can go ultra light but for travel to Alaska don’t skimp on suitable clothing. Will be looking forward to your on-line journal.
Good luck
Joe