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Fri, 26 Jun 2009
Royalton, MN -- Across the Mississippi!
But no, things were not askew. Soon enough I realized that the surface waves were flowing north because of the brisk south wind that had been blowing all day. The current was certainly flowing south, as it should, a fact I confirmed when we rode by a dam that made the flow direction obvious. We were detoured onto "Great River Road" and then crossed on a nondescript bridge on county 26. There was no sign saying "Mississippi River". We had 100 miles in our legs and the event was rather "subdued". Still, I felt a thrill. We did it! By every measure, we are past halfway. Observed from the unheralded spot we crossed, and from our nearby campsite, the Mississippi appears a very pretty river. It reminded me of the Delaware in terms of width and turbidity -- clear, cool water that was not muddy at all. As I watched from shore, two boys set off on a small launch. They didn't make it 100 yards down the center of the river before they crunched their outboard against some unexpected snag. No, this isn't the Delaware. It's Mark Twain's Mississippi for sure. Actually, psychologically, I think the Mississippi represents the beginning of the final third of the trip. We conquered the Rockies. We conquered the Great Plains. Now we ride through the populated east to our homes. Tomorrow we'll be in Wisconsin. We are less than ten days from Niagara Falls. Because of the wind, the riding was sneaky tiring today. We rode by "Inspiration Peak" and were not inspired. It was nowhere as bad as the straight, flat, windy, nothing of North Dakota, the scenery continues to improve, but it was still work to ride against the wind all day. After we crossed the Mississippi there was a campground immediately on the other side where we stopped for the day. Even though town was less than 3 miles further, we didn't bother to ride in for dinner, so it was trail food and rusty water. And sleep.
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© 2009 C.T. Nadovich |