Bike tour/Sep 2020

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Revision as of 00:50, 24 August 2020 by Mika (talk | contribs) (→‎Day 1: 9/18 Friday: updated info)

This page is for planning a bike-touring trip from Seattle to Portalnd via Yakima.

When

  • September 18-26 (8 days; tentative)

Where

  • Seattle to Yakima to Carson to Seattle.

Biking Yakima2020.png

Schedule

Day 1: 9/18 Friday

  • Note: Iron Horse Trail is now called Palouse to Cascades.
  • Note: Mika will be moving at ~5 miles/hour on gravel, so it'll take ~5 hours for North Bend -> Hyak Parking Lot (~24 miles). Home -> North Bend (~4 hours), so the suggested schedule would be 8/9AM-6PM, with all the stops.
Route
Home to 1) Carter Creek Primitive Campsite (52 miles/4000ft), or 2) Hyak/Cold Creek Primitive Campsite (~60 miles/4500ft), or 3) Meany Lodge (~70 miles/5000ft) [Google Map Link]
Plan
  • Stop for water and beer in North Bend before heading onto the trail
Food
  • Breakfast: home
  • Lunch: pick up/consume something at supermarket
  • Dinner: camp food/beer/cider
Overnight
Camping in [1]:
There are four campgrounds along the trail (not all are on Google Maps), each with three to four campsites, one picnic table, and a vault toilet. They are located at milepost 2109.5 at Roaring Creek, milepost 2113.2 at Cold Creek, milepost 2123.2 at Carter Creek, and milepost 2127.1 at Alice Creek. [[2]]
Camping is primitive but it's free and first-come. Toilets and picnic tables are available at each campsite. When we stayed at Cold Creek last time, it was very clean and only 1.5 miles from Hyak Parking lot, so we got water there.
The last campsite for the day is Roaring Creek at the end of Keechelus Lake.
Sunset in Snoqualmie Pass is 7:09PM; sunrise at 6:50AM next morning.

Other camping options from west to east:

Day 2: 9/19 Saturday

Route: Outside Easton to Yakima Canyon

Plan:

  • Stop by bakery and/or cafe for snacks or lunch in Cle Elem or Ellensberg
  • Scenic bike trip down the Yakima River canyon
Overnight
Camping at Yakima River Canyon Campground?
Sunset at PM; Sunrise at AM next morning.

Day 3: 9/20 Sunday

Route
Yakima to Brooks Memorial State Park?
Alt destination
all the way to Maryhill State Park (long day)

Plan:

  • Be sure to get water in Toppenfish as it will be another ~50 miles before the next water stop and it will likely be hot and dry.
  • Pick up food for the night in Yakima?
Overnight
Camping in Brooks Memorial State Park, 2465 US-97, Goldendale, WA 98620?
Sunset at PM; sunrise at AM.
Other options

Day 4: 9/21 Monday

Route
Brooks to Carson
  • Could pass through Maryhill Stonehenge although the route by the water doesn't have much shoulder and I remember this part of the route being a little stressful. There were cyclist-in-the-tunnel lights for most of the tunnels on Route 14. If we skip Maryhill, we'll avoid part of 14.
Stay (to be reserved)
Carson Hot Springs and SPA
Sunrise at PM; sunrise at AM.
Other options
Bonneville Resort

There are two routes, with and without bus.

The hood river shuttle is a dial-a-ride and runs four times a day across the bridge. No bicyclists and pedestrians are allowed on Hood River State Bridge and the nearest bridge is 20 miles away. The bus leaves Port of Hood River at 8:25, 12:00, 1:40, and 4:30 and costs $1 per person. Runs only on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. We must call (509) 493-4662 in advance to make sure that the bike space is available.

We want to arrive in Carson before 4:30pm to take advantage of the bath and wrap which is available only until 18:00. Google suggests ~5 hours (48.6 miles) from Maryhill State Park to Port of Hood River. It should 97 minutes (17.2 miles) to Carson from the other side. If we make the 1:40 bus, we should make it to Carson in time.

Day 5: 9/22 Tuesday

Route
Option 1
Carson to Swift Forest Camp, 280 Rd, Cougar, WA 98616 (38 miles; 3200ft)
  • After Carson, it gets hilly, so I suggest shorter distance each day.

Day 6: 9:23 Wednesday

Route
Option 1
Swift Forest Camp to Iron Creek Campground, Forest Road 25, Randle, WA 98377 (36 miles; 3800ft)
Option 2
Swift Forest Camp to Cowlitz Falls Campground, 889 Peters Rd, Randle, WA 98377 (51 miles; 4300ft)

Day 7: 9/24 Thursday

  • M has meetings on Friday, so she needs to be in a place where she can take calls in AM. Wifi would be nice.
Route
Option 1
Iron Creek to Camp Lakeview?
Option 2
Iron Creek to Elkamp?
Option 2
Cowlitz Falls Campground to Camp Lakeview?


Day 8: 9/25 Friday

Route
Option 1
Elkamp/Camp Lakeview to home
Option 2
Elkamp/Camp Lakeview to one more campground

Day 9: 9/26 Saturday

Route to home!

Resources and Links

Meals

copied from 2015; modify

  • Day 1: Breakfast - Before leaving
  • Day 1: Lunch - Cold lunch (e.g., sandwiches, etc)
  • Day 1: Dinner - Hot dinner cooked at camp (with stove, etc). (STOVE)
  • Day 2: Breakfast - Hot breakfast cooked with camp stove, etc. (STOVE)
  • Day 2: Lunch - Lunch at diner or similar in Ellensberg?
  • Day 2: Dinner - Tamales from Los Hernandez or, if we're feeling lazy, cooking at Yakima campground (STOVE)
  • Day 3: Breakfast - Hot breakfeast cooked at Yakima campground (STOVE)
  • Day 3: Lunch - Cold lunch eaten on road (e.g., sandwiches, etc)
  • Day 3: Dinner - Hot dinner cooked at Maryhill campground (STOVE)
  • Day 4: Breakfeast - Hot breakfeast cooked at Maryhill campground (STOVE)
  • Day 4: Lunch - Hot/cold lunch in Port of Hood River while waiting for shuttle bus?
  • Day 4: Dinner - Restaurant at Carson brewpub (e.g., Barnstormer)
  • Day 5: Breakfeast - Breakfast at cafe in Stevenson, WA
  • Day 5: Lunch - cold lunch and/or snack at Multnomah Falls?
  • Day 5: Dinner - early dinner at Deschutes brew pub in Portland before train

Review from 2015

  • we should have brought more hot sauce.
  • we need heat-resistant/non-scratch utensils.
  • heat packs were useful.
  • REI Huevos Rancheros looked/felt a little too digested. Pad Thai was great.
  • french bread breakfast is great.
  • bring salt/pepper and peanut butter/jam packets.
  • tea/hot chocolate was great.
  • avoid gravel road as much as possible.
  • lots of camping options in the canyon.