August 2, 2001. Council, ID to
Copperfield Park Campground, Oxbow, OR. (62 mi.) Mile 3758
Bound
for Oregon
If you feel so strong that you
could ride forever, it usually means one thing: you have a tailwind. We had
been angling south into the headwinds since Missoula, but this morning our
route took a zig to the north, giving us a rare tailwind and helping us climb
through the hot sagebrush country to Brownlee Summit. There we dropped 2,000
ft in 6 miles to Hell's Canyon and the Snake River. The narrow highway curves
between towering canyon walls of dry grass and basalt outcroppings. It was
another of our trip's most awesome and scenic rapid descents, the full effect only
possible from the 360 degree, open-air perspective of a bicycle. We were glad we were not traveling in the other
direction because of the heat.
1)
2)
1) Into Hells Canyon: over 100 degrees and no shade.
2) The Snake River behind Brownlee Dam
Near the bottom, we had lunch at
the Hell's Canyon Cafe, an oasis of shade and air conditioning, before
crossing the man-make reservoir at Brownlee Dam and entered Oregon, our final
state.

A boat speeds up
Brownlee Reservoir in Hells Canyon, forming the border between Idaho and
Oregon
Temperatures continued
to climb as we rode along Brownlee Reservoir until it was 100 degrees in the
shade by the time we reached Oxbow Dam. We changed our minds about continuing
to climb up from the reservoir after a few miles, and rode back down to Oxbow,
where there was an attractive RV park administered by Idaho Power. We didn't
see a Campground Nazi, but there were signs that one existed.
Campground rules were posted everywhere; stuck on buildings, planted on signposts,
and stenciled on the asphalt and picnic tables.
All of the tent spaces
were taken and we couldn't find a friendly looking bicycle tourist or
motorcyclist who looked willing to let us share a space. That meant we had to
pay for an RV site, where the rule was that tents had to be pitched on the
asphalt. Our campground host explained, "No exceptions". Even though
tents could be pitched on the grass in the tent area, they could not be
pitched on the grass in the RV area. However, it was OK if we wanted to sleep
on top of our flat tent on the grass, we just could not erect the tent. Our daughter and son-in-law had their own
experience with this type of logic. They had been car camping across the West,
alternately sleeping in their tent and in the back of their pickup. At one
campground, they
pulled into a campground tent site, but decided to spend that night in their
truck. The campground host said that if they slept in the truck, they had to
move to the RV sites, but if they slept out of the truck, they could stay in
the tent sites.
Our ThermaRest
mattresses are adequate but we know from experience, that we do not sleep well
on pavement without extra padding. I also discovered that my beloved camp
pillow had been hiding behind the door back at the motel room in Council when
we packed up this morning. We won't see it again until we pick it up General
Delivery a few days down the road. After an evening of observing the way many
RVers camp (in general, a study of excesses), we stacked our sleeping bags
over our ThermaRests in our tent, and hoped for a good night's sleep on the
asphalt.

We think we've
met this driver on the road.