After spending a few days with our son and family and getting to watch our oldest grandson run in a cross-country meet, we headed home. A few days later, Kay located the information about her stolen bike, found the serial number and called the Sault Ste. Marie Ontario Police Service to give them the number, as we didn't have it with us on the trip. When an officer called back, he put the number in their database and said there wasn't a match. Since we hadn't heard anything from them while on the trip, she asked what they had found when they had reviewed the security camera video, and other details of the case. He said the officer who was handling the case was out of the office and would call back on Monday. When Jim got home from work on Monday, we discovered they had called his phone instead of Kay's, The next morning while we were both at work, they tried calling again, so Kay called them back at lunch time. The officer reported, "We found your bike tod...
We had a great breakfast with Gary and Debbie and left about 8:30 in the morning. Today was a day of beautiful flowers, a port with huge number of shipping containers and downtown Seattle. We even got to see part of Mt. Rainier when clouds lifted. We discovered Seattle and surrounding communities have some impressive hills.Jim showed his lack of coordination and fell over on his bike when front wheel got just over edge of sidewalk. Dignity decreased, slight scrape to knee and word used that Grandpa shouldn't use. We are staying with Kit and Jan Flowers, friends from Christian Veterinary Mission, great food and fun conversation. Discovered that just putting in an address correctly and assuming it's a certain city can end you up in the wrong town and add about 15 miles to your day. So we discovered legs are in better shape than we thought because we ended up doing 76 miles today. Started in Puya...
Today was supposed to be hot--up in the mid-90s so we made sure we had plenty of water and left shortly after. Thankfully the sky was somewhat overcast in the morning and we appreciated not having the sun blazing down on us. As we rode along at first, the sun's rays shone through cracks in the clouds behind us, and we hoped that they weren't breaking up. Then about midday it cleared off as predicted. We had about 56 miles to travel to Chenoa, and it was a very straight route. It was amazing how few trees we saw today, just beans and corn and then occasionally some trees by a house, which were few and far between. So we took one rest stop in the shade of a grain bin. Near the end of the ride we came to an intersection with a "road closed" sign straight ahead. We went straight ahead anyway, rode about a mile and came to the construction. New concrete had just been laid through the next intersection. A person was down...
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