21 April 2011 (posted the following evening). It’s not like I wasn’t warned about the wind not always being out of the west here in Texas! Ellen Martyn had been pretty clear on that front: count on headwinds. Well, I’ve got ‘em, and they’re doing me in!
I was only pedaling about 32 miles today, so I spent a while this morning dealing with some software issues and spam problems with my blog. Needing more cash, I went out looking for a bank. On the way there, I passed my friend from the pool yesterday, John Seniff, and asked if he wanted to get some breakfast. He hadn’t eaten yet, so the two of us met a few minutes later at iHOP (used to be International House of Pancakes) and had a leisurely breakfast and conversation about everything from religion to passive survivability.
By the time I got back and dealt with buying a piece of photo-management software I’ve been using for the past month (Adobe LightRoom) and had some exchanges with Jon at our office about controlling the spam comments that had been posted on some of the earlier blogs (120 comments on the U.S. Postal Service blog, for example, that were mostly about selling pharmaceuticals!) and checked out of the Motel 6, it was 11:30 am. That was just about the time I started my second leg of yesterday’s 60-mile ride—after an early lunch in Comstock.
I had the same wind today as yesterday—even stronger it seemed! Those 32 miles came pretty hard! With about six miles to go, I was sitting at the only little roadside picnic area I passed today talking with Jerelyn on the phone, and I saw a bicyclist go by. It was odd that he hadn’t stopped to say hi; my bike was quite visible. (I had placed it in full view, leaning against a picnic table, hoping that someone with a cooler of sodas would stop by!)
Seeing the biker was great, because it inspired me to get back on my bike and try to catch up to him. I wouldn’t have, except that he stopped and was walking with his bike for a few minutes to get some respite from the wind. We ended up riding together and chatting for perhaps four miles.
Ben Green is his name. He’s from Baltimore where he owns a couple comic book stores, and he and a friend are taking 2-1/2 months to bike across the country. They started in St. Augustine, Florida and are following the Southern Tier route. So what was he doing biking east, into the wind today? I didn’t quite understand that, but he and his friend somehow have two vehicles and they do some sort of leapfrogging. He said both of his vehicles sustained hail damage last night, with large hailstones denting the vehicle roofs and actually cracking a sunroof.
He had just a tiny rear bag on his lightweight, carbon-fiber bike, and after a while we said goodbye and he moved on at a faster pace than me—to Brackettville, where one or both of this vehicles were. I think he figured we’d meet there, but I called my Pinto Paradise Bed & Breakfast host, Rhonda Marquart, from the Dollar General store just as I got into town and never made it into the center of town. She had offered to pick me up with my gear and bring me out to her B&B—about five miles out of town. (That was an important factor in deciding to stay here!) While she normally charges $100 per night, she let me have a room at half that—seems very reasonable.
The only problem was that I didn’t get into town where there are restaurants and buy something for dinner. I’m going to have to make due with the assortment of snack foods I have with me: nuts, granola bars, and some peppered beef jerky (that I had bought as lightweight “emergency†rations). She’ll bring breakfast over at 7:30 tomorrow morning then drive me back into town at 8 am. I think I should survive!
The B&B is at their ranch, though she and her husband are kind-of winding down their cow-calf operation (raising a crop of calves each year). They lose money at it, apparently. Both she and her husband, Charlie, teach in the local school. I have free reign of the ranch property while here and staggered down to take a look at the creek after arriving. It’s an actual creek—with water in it! It’s plenty deep for swimming, so I wore my swim trunks, but the bottom was pretty mucky and I decided to stick to a shower at the guest house.
At the creek, I got a glimpse of a bright-red bird that I thought might be a vermilion flycatcher, but I didn’t get a good enough look at it to be sure. Right here, though, where I’ve been sitting on a porch swing writing this blog, I just got a great look at one of these gorgeous birds! When I first saw it, I ran in and got my binoculars, so I could really see it—such brilliant red! Unmistakable! In fact, I was checking the Sibley app on my iPhone and played the flycatcher’s song, and the male flew right over to check out the competition! Is that cheating in the birding world?
As I was watching the vermilion flycatcher and bluish bird caught my eye: a blue grosbeak!
To top off what’s becoming a great evening, Rhonda and Charlie just brought over a full plate of dinner: wonderfully seasoned grilled wild turkey wrapped in bacon, butternut squash, cucumber salad, and a mixed salad! So I won’t have to break into my beef jerky after all! I had a great chat with them. They’ve seen over 80 species of birds here. The creek is spring-fed and always runs, though Charlie said it’s three feet low right now—the lowest it’s been since 1951, apparently!
Rhonda mentioned on our drive out here that she’s had trouble getting the word out about their B&B. I’m their first guest in a month. I plan to e-mail her and suggest that they promote the place through birding networks. It’s full of birdlife.
And just now I got a great look at a hooded oriole—another new species for me. Again, when I played the song, both the male and female flew over immediately, the male quite agitated. He’s still sitting on the fence chirping in my direction! What a birding spot!
Well, dinner beckons. If I’m not too tired, I may watch a movie tonight.
Hey Alex- congrats on spotting the vermillion flycatcher-beautiful bird! That is a gecko. They are not indigenous but come over in loads of building material from central and south America. They have established healthy populations along the gulf coast. Great to have around, nocturnal critters that devour spiders, roaches and other pests with gusto!
Alex, I’ve had remarkable success with a WordPress plugin called Invisible Captcha. I put it on a site I’m maintaining and in the last four months it’s caught a couple thousand of the sort of bot spams that are plaguing you. Simple install and completely maintenance-free. I haven’t caught any false-positives. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/invisible-captcha/
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