Day 10 – August 31, 2004

{Photos}                Ride from Denison, Texas to Our Home in the Ozarks             {Home}

 

As much as we hate to head home, we can hardly wait. It is funny how much you want to go home while at the same time you want to stay on the ride. This years ride seems so short but at least we have this last day.  As we leave our friend behind still looking forward to the next time we can visit, we realize that we have crossed into Oklahoma only a few short miles away. As we top the hill and join the main highway {69} we look across the Red River and into a great valley that in years gone by was likely looking out over a Choctaw Reservation. Although I am not so sure they were happy to have been moved here from Mississippi, I still feel a sense of pride knowing that I am partially descended from these Native Americans. I ponder my ancestors need, on both sides of the family, to hide this fact from their families even to the point of denying it. Still we all got here from some combination of parents and it is interesting to consider.

I find the roads so much quieter today than the last couple of days. I truly love riding the byways of this country much more without all the truck traffic. A few still pass us, but most of the time we have the road to ourselves. These are the times I am so proud to be an American, to live in a place so beautiful and to have the freedom to explore it as we do today. The curiosities you can come across can make a person wonder why at times. We pass a cemetery in a remote location, and I notice a guard standing inside the gate almost hiding behind the gate post. Why there? Was he keeping someone out, or in?  Meanwhile Diamond is just cruising along having a great time. I think she likes ride as much as I do. She doesn’t much like it when we stop for breakfast though. We leave her in the shade outside a restaurant where we can see her. I make sure she has water and is close enough to know where we are. Still shortly after we start eating, she disappears. Karen went out to check, but before she can find Diamond, here she comes running straight to me across the dining room floor. I guess she thinks she should be able to go in and eat with us. Perhaps I’ll have to find a stronger leash.

As we arrive in McAlester, where we had originally planned to stay last night, and I missed the turn onto 270. I notice almost immediately and we need gas, so we pulled off and stopped at a station in a place called something Gap. I feel kind of bad about this one because the girls there made a point of telling me the name. I can tell you it was 1st exit past the 270 on the 69 and the street was Gene Stipe Blvd. I got a picture of the place and the girls that told me the name of it. If you see this, drop me a line and I’ll correct that little error. They were more interested in the dog riding than us though so I doubt they will. After doing a short backtrack and heading east we shortly found that we should have took a little longer. It was a very hot day and the traffic was piled up for miles just outside of town. No one knew what was going on, so I cheated a little and passed the cars on the shoulder. About a mile or so ahead the police had the road blocked off because there was a “suspicious” bag in the road. It seems that it had fallen off a truck and it was possibly toxic. Fortunately we had gotten there toward the end of the cleanup and had to wait only about 20 minutes before the road cleared. Here we are in the middle of  Oklahoma, miles from any populated area, yet we are affected by the terrorist concerns of the Hi-way Patrol. Sometimes I think in some small way they have got a hold on us even this long after 9-11. I don’t blame the police, but still we have lost a little freedom.  We move on as we get closer to the east side of Oklahoma I am surprised by the change in the road from a 2 lane road to a 4 lane freeway. It only lasts for a few miles and then returns to a 2 lane road for the short ride to the Arkansas boarder. As we get closer we start to notice signs indicating Arkoma. I never knew it was a town, I always thought it was just a general area. We finally cross the state line, I keep looking for the river. My memory tells me that the Arkansas River wraps around the city of Ft. Smith. It turns out that the road I picked runs south of the river and then crosses it later as we leave the Ft. Smith area. I think to myself as we take the {540} where it joins the {40} for the short 5 mile stretch east, that we are almost done with the freeways. Boy was I wrong. The {540} runs about 90 miles from the south to the north. Still it is not all that crowded and it is a beautiful ride through some very isolated country. If you ever want to make the trip from north to south, try this road. It has some outstanding views and is still a great road for either car or bike. There is even a tunnel cut through one mountain that looks like you are riding into the end of a double barrel shotgun. As you blow out the other side it is like crossing into Rocky Mountains for the first time. It is not the slow ride I prefer, but for making up time, it is perfect. And then we see the rocks carved through for roads that tells us we are getting close to home. I noticed that Diamond fell asleep for part of this ride. As we got close to the north edge of Arkansas I had planned to stop a little while in Rogers, but we were running late, so we just gassed up and headed for Missouri. As we made the final turn north to the Missouri state line, I saw it. The reason we had kept coming back to the Ozarks. The sky was a deep dark blue, but there just over the horizon was that color of blue that you see when you look into the clear blue pools called eyes of that person you just can’t forget. The person I forget, but the eyes I never will. As we get closer to Springfield we notice the traffic, but it quickly clears as we leave the main road and head for home. Diamond seems to smell it as she stands and stretches to the end of her harness trying to get closer. Best of all, we arrive to find guests waiting for us. My Air Force son and my brother on the porch and deer wandering around our front yard, Diamond wasn’t too happy about that part, but quickly sends them running. It’s good to be home. There was one guest we found on the back porch that we had to evict, but that was to be expected around here when you are gone for awhile. I guess it is time to get back to work for now, but we will start planning the next trip soon so stay tuned and until then, I’ll see you on the byways…