Category Archives: Long trips

Sandusky and the Tea House of the Dancing Lady

I encountered a lot of rain yesterday, and it came down in great huge waves. Well, okay, maybe not waves, but it sure felt like it for a while. Rain. One of the joys of motorcycling. It either rains, or it pours. Yesterday it poured.

Tea House
Tea House of the Dancing Lady

Then I hit Detroit and the weather miraculously cleared, and I rode with the rising full moon all the way into Sandusky. The 94 around Detroit is a horrible road, with great huge cracks that allow one side to rise up to destroy tires, rims and shocks. I’m surprised that the residents put up with that kind of a bump on an interstate, where the speed is fast. In no time tires and shocks would be a mess.

I caught the 280 south through Toledo and pulled off at a Ho’s (Tim Horton’s coffee and donut shop) for soup and a sandwich in Ohio on U.S. 2. The girl who waited on me gave me the typical local’s lament: there’s not much in Ohio. Little does she yet know that there’s not much anywhere until you make a life of your own.

Liberty BelleI’m here in Sandusky to ride roller coasters at Cedar Point with some friends I met on the internet. I’m looking forward to meeting all of them. Eighteen are supposed to show up, a large enough group that we won’t tire of one another for the short span of two days that we’ll be here.

In the meantime, I’ve checked out the local peeler bar, the Tea House of the Dancing Lady: no cycles allowed. And a very good Thai restaurant in a small strip mall on Perkins. There’s a deli about a hundred feet past the motel that looks interesting also.

I’ll know more tomorrow.

Weather forecasting is a science?

I was headed west with the best of intentions. That is, I was on my way to hook up with the Jennifer of searching for jennifer. Then, on my way back east through Canada I was going to meet with another acquaintance.

Good intentions notwithstanding, and west-coast weather being what it is this year, it didn’t look like it was going to happen. I had earlier spent a somewhat wet three weeks in southern and northern Ontario, and wasn’t in the mood for more rain through the mountains.

And rain is what it did. I had never seen the Going-to-the-Sun Road in weather such as this. The lack of sunlight and blue sky emphasized the stark reality of the landscape: dull lakes, trees, gray rock-face and mountain peaks all darkened and obscured by fog and low cloud.

The motel room in Kalispell, which wasn’t all that far away, was a warm and dry respite. After checking the weather channel the next a.m., Great Falls appeared to be the best escape option, since the west was going to be rained out.

Weather forecasting is a science. Isn’t it? Or rather, it claims to be with high-speed computers and decades of databases. But they don’t call her Mother Nature for nothing. What was to be a dry run east turned into a marathon of rain most of the way to Great Falls.

And so it was, when I pulled into the hotel in Great Falls, that I was looking forward to relaxing at the renowned Playground, home to loud music, dancing girls, road-weary time-travelers and a variety of pleasures – or sins, depending on one’s point of view.

It was not to be. It seems that management had had a problem with the government, related to taxes and drugs and money. Silly feds. They’re always interfering with life’s little pleasures. The Playground was closed, the sandbox empty, the dance floor forever dimmed.

Not to worry. In a desert, there is always water just a little farther down the trail. And so it was that I discovered the Playground’s replacement, a short walk around the corner from my hotel.