Showing posts with label Harley-Davidson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harley-Davidson. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Nevada Rides Motorcycle Guide now available

The 2012 Nevada Rides Motorcycle Guide—a pocket-sized publication produced by Nevada Magazine that caters to motorcyclists and highlights the many scenic roads available to navigate in the Silver State—is now available. You can view the e-edition here.

E-mail carrie@nevadamagazine.com, or call 775-687-0610, to reserve your hard copy. Or, you can pick one up at the following locations:

A Cowboy’s Dream, Alamo
Best Western Hi-Desert Inn, Tonopah
Carson City CVB
Elko CVA
Eureka Opera House
Freedom Cycle, Reno
Freedom Cycle, Las Vegas
Longstreet Inn, Amargosa Valley
Mizpah Hotel, Tonopah
Pyramid Lake Visitors Center
Town of Pahrump offices
Wells Chamber of Commerce
Wildflower Village B&B and Art Gallery, Reno
Windmill Ridge, Alamo
Winnemucca CVA

Throughout these territories:
Nevada Silver Trails
Pony Express Territory

And at the following events:
Run-A-Mucca in Winnemucca: May 25-27, 2012
Street Vibrations Spring Rally in Sparks: June 1-3, 2012
Octane Fest in Fallon: June 7-10, 2012
Elko Motorcycle Jamboree in Elko: June 15-17, 2012
AMA’s International Women & Motorcycling Conference in Carson City: July 26-29, 2012
Street Vibrations Fall Rally in Reno: September 19-23, 2012

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Chance Meeting on the Loneliest Road in America




BY BOB & NANCY BECK

My wife and I have spent the majority of this year participating in a Harley-Davidson Owners Group (HOG) ABC's of Touring game, collecting points for visiting various states, Canadian provinces, cities, counties, various H-D sites, and state HOG rallies. One of our planned rides was from our home in Enid, Oklahoma to the Oregon state HOG rally. Our planned rides are on mostly scenic highways rather than the interstate system. During our travel research we found the Highway 50 Survival Guide, and we included it on our route to Welches, Oregon.

While cruising west on U.S. Highway 50 (the Loneliest Road in America) from Ely to Eureka we were approximately 30 miles east of Eureka when we passed four to five bikers headed east. As is the biker custom, we waved to the passing bikers as we passed each other. About three to four miles later I noticed a single biker pulling up next to me in my rear view mirror.

Thinking the biker was planning to pass me, I waited for the bike to pass. Rather than passing me, the biker pulled up next to me and stayed right on my left shoulder. Looking over to see why the biker had not passed, there is this guy with a huge grin on his face. After a second I recognized a working friend (Terry Johnson) from the Oneok Hydrocarbon plant located in Medford, Oklahoma.

We pulled off the road and talked with Terry for 15 to 20 minutes laughing the whole time. Terry, in a roundabout way, was returning from the Sturgis, South Dakota bike rally. He related that when we passed each other he recognized the color of my bike and with the trike right behind he told his friends that he knew who we were. The friends must have thought he was nuts but he turned around to track us down to say hello. What are the odds of something like that happening?

Terry and his group had left the Sturgis rally and were riding home. Almost 1,500 miles from home we ran into each other on the loneliest section of roadway in America. Can you imagine? The chance meeting has left my wife and me talking and smiling about the chance meeting since. Although Nevada Highway 50 is advertised as the loneliest highway in America it does not mean you can not be surprised and end up meeting a hometown friend while traveling across it. It could happen to you. It happened to my wife and me.