As the riders
rolled out from Denver this morning, the skies were clear, the air cool, and
the field immediately split. Check out
the public SPOT link for all the riders: https://spotwalla.com/locationViewer.php?id=336 The labels are random so that rider identity
is safe, but it’s always interesting to see the choices riders make right from
the start. This rally is international with
riders from Australia, Germany, Belgium and Mexico. As you can see, the field has already
spread to the borders with Mexico and Canada and to the Pacific Coast.
On Day 1.
Kirsten is
riding her trusty stead – the BMW R1200RT, which has seen her through 2 Iron
Butt Rallies (2011, 2015), the IBR 5000 (2010), and numerous miles
in between. She is Rider #74, starting out
with 161,466 miles on the bike and all systems are go… mostly. The GPS gremlins have taken out 2 of the 5
GPS that she brought with her. The 2610
is dead, the 2720 is funky, finally catching on that the ride was underway
about 50 miles outside of Denver when it caught the satellite.
Not far
outside of Denver, I got the first call from the helmet. “There are hot air balloons everywhere!” she
said. There were still several riders
along the same path this morning, passing each other and waving. Rick Miller gave her a wave. Another rider waved and took a photo of her- its fun to see those "underway" shots later. She said the big sky had big
puffy clouds and she could smell the sage.
Animal viewing so far includes an antelope, a moose, and deer still in velvet.
The day did
have its challenges in pursuit of the first bonus points. Perpetual summer road construction left chunks
of debris that, once seen, required her to pop the front tire up so she could
ride over – too late to dodge.
Everything good, she continued up and over a mountain, saw snow, and
then rode the last 3 miles to the bonus on gravel. She said it felt like riding on ball
bearings. A huge shout out to Steve Anderson and Morton’s BMW for running the dirt course that she took a couple years ago. And to Scott Olson for the GS
loaner for that course – she was repeating the mantra in her helmet today! Head up, stand up, stay loose. On the way back down, she stood on the pegs
and let it roll for the miles out. She
didn’t have time to let some air out of the tires, so it was tight. But, bonus bagged, she was on her way.
As riders
enter the evening of Day 1 and take stock, we look at the map and think about
the checkpoint. All these riders must
get back to Reno, NV by the evening of July 5 for checkpoint, scoring, and
hopefully, at least several hours of their rest bonus. It will be interesting to see where the roads lead them in the next two days. And
tonight, just think of the stars that they must be seeing in those big western skies.
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