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Lumberg made me do it... My 2024 Tour of Honor Journey...
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Lumberg made me do it... My 2024 Tour of Honor Journey...
Of High Hopes, Failure & Redemption - A Ride Report.
0face made a comment not long ago that included this, “There’s a bunch of unknown things around the country…”
April 6th, 2024.
Saturday, I spend some time visiting some of these places that are in my own backyard. This one stood out to me, specifically, this statement from a Medal of Honor citation, “To silence one of the pillboxes, he wrenched a light machine gun out through the embrasure as it was firing.” Just to frame it up, the barrel of a machine gun when pushed will glow red hot - kevlar oven mitt territory. This soldier snatched one out of a pillbox by the barrel. Reading such feats of courage and determination are humbling, to say the least. That soldier was John C. Sjogren of Rockford, Michigan. The memorial pictured below is in his hometown and is one of the 7 Michigan memorials in the 2024 Tour of Honor rally. There are stories like this in small towns all across this nation. They serve as a reminder of what each of us are capable of. There are heroes amongst us - both past and present..
Let me backup a few days - a week actually.
I typically spend time over the holidays doing maintenance on the FJR. Work can be slower and it’s the time of year to burn vacation time. As usual, life and stuff happens - I found myself near the end of March with FJR parts spread out across the garage and a pair of de-tired wheels on the bench. Thankfully there are very helpful individuals in this world of ours - like D-Eagle, who sent encouraging texts like, “when are we changing my tires?” and “should I bring my torpedo heater to warm up my tires before you put them on?”. There is Lumberg as well - “Can I go another 1400 miles on these crappy RS3’s?” and “I plan to be violent April 1st.”
April 1st? Oh - Tour of Honor. More helpful encouragement from Lumberg, “If you do it, you have to own it”. Stage is set, no pressure.
Tour of Honor Homepage
Why do I do all these maintenance things during the winter? Maybe a better question is “why haven’t I had a trip derailed or detoured because of some piddly nuisance thing? Fork service, brake fluid flush and bleed, clutch fluid flush and bleed, new tires, lube pivot points (all of them - clutch lever pivot, brake lever and pedal pivots, shift linkage, peg pivots etc), fluids (oil, coolant, final drive), ground spiders, etc, etc. and a “knock on wood” for a smooth riding season. And at 100k miles, it is the least I can do for my loyal chariot.
Friday, March 29th, 2024.
The shake down run was uneventful. Smooth, nimble, and ready. What more could we ask for? There may have been a grin, a giggle even - as I was running a short section of nearly curvy road for a second time. After driving the truck all winter, the FJR feels like a rocket.
Sunday, March 31st, 2024
We gathered for Easter dinner on Saturday this year as a means towards making early work schedules a bit less painful on Monday morning. Worked out well for me - having Sunday to pack the bike and get some rest early in anticipation of a pre-dawn launch. The bike was packed, tire pressure confirmed and filled with fuel before noon.
Monday, April 1st, 2024. Failure dripping with disappointment..
No other word stings like this for me. Like a sucking chest wound. I backed the FJR out of the garage at 4:30am - well after my planned departure time. Between 7pm Sunday evening and the moment I backed the FJR out of the garage I managed exactly zero minutes of sleep. I tossed and turned all night - this is not normal for me. Thoughts of work and the ride lobbied for equal time. The main concern about riding TOH on April 1st in Michigan is any memorial sites in the Upper Peninsula. Weather conditions can swing significantly near Lake Superior, or anywhere north and west of the Mighty Mack (Mackinac Bridge). Historical data on the TOH site indicates that there will be at least 2 memorials in the U.P. Last year’s memorial list included a site in Wakefield that is nearly 600 miles from my garage, let alone the fact that it was under 3’ of snow on April 1st. Nothing that any of the TOH participants in the northern tier states aren’t used to dealing with. Work stuff has been deep and heavy the past 6 months. Lot’s of things in the air and I let it get the best of me. Muther Truckers.
There was a memorial site 25 miles from the house - it was to be my first stop; if I was missing anything, I’d be able to stop on the way back past the house on my way west. Temps were hovering in the lower 30’s, rain showing on the radar on the short expressway blast. The memorial coordinates were right on target and had the bike parked with my rally flag staged smoothly - I snapped a close up shot for insurance and was back rolling in short order after submitting the details with the TOH app. Even with my liner and grips on full blast, the temps were cutting through.
The real issue that I had successfully ignored on the ride out was how exhausted I was. It gave me a reality check on the way back to the expressway in the form of crossing the shoulder rumble strips. That will wake you right the f@$k up, right? Nope - a misjudged closure rate on the highway sealed the deal. Being in that state at the beginning of what was a full day’s ride made it impossible to ignore - red flags, bells, sirens, etc. were all screaming at max volume and I knew the only reasonable choice. Sometimes the right and correct thing to do is the hardest thing. scrub the plan - as painful as that was - it was the only way to survive the day. So I rolled back into the garage by 5:45 a.m. I was back in bed, and asleep by 6. I woke up just after noon - WTF…
I followed Lumbergs tracker that afternoon - he laid down a killer opening day ride and locked up the 1st place trophy for Georgia - well done, sir, well done.
Tuesday, April 2nd.
I lost 3 days of vacation time (our “use-it-or-lose-it” end date is March 31st annually) in our fiscal year that just ended.. I took these 2 days off for me. I spent this second day enjoying some quiet time in the garage - some mindlessness with a favorite playlist on - some weapon’s maintenance time, and generally thinking about nothing. It was a day I didn’t know I needed. Lumberg’s day one dominance of the Georgia Memorials was certified. Legend level stuff there. The rider who earned the Michigan 1st place trophy put in somewhere north of 1100 miles that day and was on the road just after midnight.
The winter months have been difficult to find and manage an equitable work-life balance. During the summer, I have yard work at my folks place that provides the opportunity to tune out the world and carve some killer mower lines in the yard. I need to do better next winter with keeping active with things that unplug me from work. I lost focus of that this past winter. I realize all this talk has some of you scratching your head and thinking, “what the heck is this ‘work’ thing he’s bitching about…”
But all is not lost. The Tour of Honor event runs from April 1st through October 31st each year. A rider can earn “finisher” status by visiting the primary memorial sites (usually 7) for any given state. Beyond that, there are additional sites that fall into categories such as “Searching for the Lost Generation (Doughboys)”, “War Dogs and K9 Heroes”, “Huey Helicopters”, “Gold Star Family Memorials”, “9/11 Memorials”, “Veterans Cemeteries” and “Sea-to-Shining Sea Tour”. I was shoved down this rabbit hole by Mr. Lumberg. There are plenty of destinations that give a sunday morning ride purpose and a potential history lesson.
Saturday, April 6th, 2024. Redemption…
The FJR settled into its warmed, steady state idle by the time I had backed it down the driveway and pointed it towards the street. It was 3:30 am. I was rested, focused, and ready to ride.
I decided to run west first; this would let the sun do its thing and bring temperatures in northern Michigan closer to tolerable ranges by the time I moved through. This strategy also reduced the potential for forest rat encounters since most of this first section would be on the expressway. It also met the return run south on I-75 in the dark - and put most of the two lane road travel during daylight hours. I mean, it sounded like a solid, reasonable plan.
First memorial stop was in Battle Creek (home of Kellogg), then a 90 minute hop north to Rockford (outside of Grand Rapids), then a long leg north to Gaylord. Temperatures hovered between 29 and 38 degrees during that first leg; sunrise pushed the colder air down and I felt it. My liner, gloves, and grips were set to max and they just barely kept the cold from cutting through. Taking inventory, my current Warm’n’Safe liner is pretty old - 10 plus years I think. Might be time for a replacement.
Sojourner Truth Memorial in Battle Creek, Michigan.
Sunrise in Kalamazoo Michigan - gas in the FJR, hot chocolate in the pilot…
Note to self - make sure you tell them to hold all the “foo-foo” add ons they think should be added to simple hot chocolate…
CMOHR John C. Sjogren Statue in Rockford, Michigan
Veterans Memorial in Gaylord, Michigan
Ironworkers Memorial in Mackinaw City, Michigan
The Mighty Mac.
It was 12:30p when I rolled away from the Ironworkers Memorial. The time / distance puzzle in front of me was solved with about 7 hours on the north side of the bridge in the Upper Peninsula. The weather was fantastic at this point - 50 degrees and sunny. Time to burn some carbon off.
I ran north towards Brimley first. I dropped each memorial site into my Zumo as a favorite. I set up a route, but opted to navigate to each site individually. I selected MI2 and Go - Brimley is just south and west of Sault Ste. Marie, so I knew I’d drop off the expressway at some point. Normal settings in my Zumo for avoidances include “non-paved roads” and “tolls”. One would assume that “non-paved roads” include gravel roads. I was clipping along nicely on a rough, but paved 2 lane headed north when it changed to gravel. No sign, no indication and the color of it all blended nicely as well. When pressed, the FJR can be a halfway decent dual sport…
Brimley, Michigan.
Brimley site collected but not submitted (TOH has an app for that..) due to no cell service. South and West - 3+ hours or 200 miles. The Zumo’s ETA displayed 3:30p and I accepted that at face value. Making the turn by 3:30 (call it 3:45p) back towards the bridge meant I’d make Mackinaw before sunset. Mackinaw to home is about 4 hours of ride time. Rough math put me home between midnight and 1am (accounting for gas stops, etc). That was doable. I’d find a fast mover and tuck in to use them as a deer deflector.
There are some wide open spaces in the U.P. Long sections of straight flat roads with long site lines where the forest has been cut back away from the road by 75 to 100 feet. It’s the “in-between” season up north. The snow has mostly melted and shut down the snowmobilers. It’s not yet warm enough for the OHV crowd to drag their UTV’s, dirt bike and quads up for spring and summer riding either. There were long stretches with no other cars in sight. I was not looking forward to any miles in the dark. The northern section of I-75 is a forest rat alley after sunset.
At one point, I think I went a solid 20-30 minutes without seeing another car on the road. It was eerily empty. I found myself dialing in a bit more throttle every now and then. I was reminded just how comfortable the FJR is at these velocities. It just purrs along, or rather, at a low scream that you realize was there when you close the throttle while you’re identifying oncoming traffic. Every state trooper or LEO I saw up there was in a Chevy Tahoe. Fortunately, none of them were in my mirrors or hidden. The last memorial on the list for the day was 30 miles west/northwest of Escanaba. That’s nearly cheesehead country!
I was floating along and revisiting the time / distance puzzle to see what the evening might shake out to be. That’s when the anomaly hit me. Arrival time on the Zumo stated 3:45p. That put me back at the bridge by 7pm. Then I noticed the current time on the Zumo screen - 3:25pm. And then the time on the FJR screen - 4:25pm. WTF? Destination was in the central time zone, an hour earlier. Well, that skews things a bit. I was east bound by 4:05p (which was actually 5:05p) after logging the memorial at Foster City and finding a OHV trail turnout to water the bushes at. Now Mr.Smartarse Zumo was stating ETA to Mackinaw City as 8:15pm. I was making good time trimming that ETA down. US2 is a 2 lane road, but they have added passing lanes on each side every few miles. The one trooper along that stretch already had a customer and made that known for miles in either direction via the illuminated signature red bubble on top of his Tahoe.
Foster City, Michigan - Oscar G. Johnson - CMOH
Link to citation - Medal of Honor Society - Oscar G. Johnson
The boss called just after my gas stop an hour from the bridge. A question and answer session ensued. The Spanish Inquisition seemed pale in comparison. The boss was not pleased with my plan to get home and said plan’s ETA.
“It will be dark soon, right?” - Yes.
“It’s going to get cold again?” - Yes.
“What time do you think you’ll be home?” - between midnight and 1am.
“That’s really late”. Probably.
“I am not waiting up wondering if you are coming home or carving up a deer you sliced in half…” - Ok.
“Why don’t you get a hotel?” - Hotels are expensive.
“There are plenty in Mackinaw City” - they are all probably closed until spring - it’s off season up here.
“That’s silly”. Well, it’s not exactly simple or safe for me to googlemap hotels while I’m going this fast.
“HOW FAST are you going?” - The speed limit is 65.
“That is not what I asked you.” awkward silence…
Somewhere in my numb state, I managed to turn the tables.
“Hey - why don’t you look up hotels in Mackinaw City” Ok.
“If you make a reservation, it will force me to stop for the night.” - Done.
I had wanted to get further south, but once the sun set and the temperature started to drop off, I realized I was all out of piss & vinegar for the day. The Holiday Inn Express was a few hundred feet from the base of the Mackinaw Bridge on the right side of the road - sometimes the boss is on her game - it was just what I needed after 940 miles.
North side of the Mackinaw Bridge - it looks tiny, but that first tower is about 2 miles away…
Sunday morning arrived as another bright and sunny day. It also arrived with the realization that anything that had been occupying space and lobbying for processing time a week ago was absent yesterday. I was solely focused on the ride and challenge at hand. Right now, being on two wheels is that one single place in my universe where I can clear all the day to day complications out for a short period of time. It is my “fortress of solitude” - as oxymoronish as that sounds. I realize many of you reading this are already well past this point in life and career. That fact fuels me in pursuing advancement.
The Great Lakes National Cemetery is a TOH site as well - and just a few miles off the expressway on my way south. I rode each loop within the cemetery. I stood there for a few minutes. The wind moving old glory. It’s an extraordinarily peaceful and humble landscape. Fitting final resting place for the heroes here.
There will be addendums to this ride - I plan on visiting more Tour of Honor sites through the summer here in Michigan as well as along the way when I head to the Ramble and EOM.
Addendum 1 - “Get to the Choppa!!”
Sunday, April 14th.
Time is precious. It was after 4pm by the time the day’s tasks and projects were put to rest. What to do? Go ride, of course…
I’m going to visit as many of the “Huey” Tour of Honor sites that I can this year. Finisher status in this category needs 10 or more sites - details here. They include Huey’s and Cobra’s in the category.
Stop 1 - American Legion Walter Fraser Post 108 in Oxford, Michigan.
Stop 2 - VFW Post 439 in Lapeer, Michigan
Awesome mural on the front and side of the VFW Hall.
Next stop was going to be the American Legion in my home town of Croswell. On my way, I passed through Brown City and remembered there is a Fireman’s 9/11 Memorial there, which was also on the TOH memorial list - so I stopped and grabbed that one. Brings back memories. Where were you that day?
From there, on to Croswell and the American Legion Post 255 for this Cobra display.
The sun fell below the horizon before I made it home to the garage. It was in the upper 70’s when I departed, temps fell into the lower 50’s on the final stretch, but my warm’n’safe liner kept me comfy. Stay tuned for more…
0face made a comment not long ago that included this, “There’s a bunch of unknown things around the country…”
April 6th, 2024.
Saturday, I spend some time visiting some of these places that are in my own backyard. This one stood out to me, specifically, this statement from a Medal of Honor citation, “To silence one of the pillboxes, he wrenched a light machine gun out through the embrasure as it was firing.” Just to frame it up, the barrel of a machine gun when pushed will glow red hot - kevlar oven mitt territory. This soldier snatched one out of a pillbox by the barrel. Reading such feats of courage and determination are humbling, to say the least. That soldier was John C. Sjogren of Rockford, Michigan. The memorial pictured below is in his hometown and is one of the 7 Michigan memorials in the 2024 Tour of Honor rally. There are stories like this in small towns all across this nation. They serve as a reminder of what each of us are capable of. There are heroes amongst us - both past and present..
Let me backup a few days - a week actually.
I typically spend time over the holidays doing maintenance on the FJR. Work can be slower and it’s the time of year to burn vacation time. As usual, life and stuff happens - I found myself near the end of March with FJR parts spread out across the garage and a pair of de-tired wheels on the bench. Thankfully there are very helpful individuals in this world of ours - like D-Eagle, who sent encouraging texts like, “when are we changing my tires?” and “should I bring my torpedo heater to warm up my tires before you put them on?”. There is Lumberg as well - “Can I go another 1400 miles on these crappy RS3’s?” and “I plan to be violent April 1st.”
April 1st? Oh - Tour of Honor. More helpful encouragement from Lumberg, “If you do it, you have to own it”. Stage is set, no pressure.
Tour of Honor Homepage
Why do I do all these maintenance things during the winter? Maybe a better question is “why haven’t I had a trip derailed or detoured because of some piddly nuisance thing? Fork service, brake fluid flush and bleed, clutch fluid flush and bleed, new tires, lube pivot points (all of them - clutch lever pivot, brake lever and pedal pivots, shift linkage, peg pivots etc), fluids (oil, coolant, final drive), ground spiders, etc, etc. and a “knock on wood” for a smooth riding season. And at 100k miles, it is the least I can do for my loyal chariot.
Friday, March 29th, 2024.
The shake down run was uneventful. Smooth, nimble, and ready. What more could we ask for? There may have been a grin, a giggle even - as I was running a short section of nearly curvy road for a second time. After driving the truck all winter, the FJR feels like a rocket.
Sunday, March 31st, 2024
We gathered for Easter dinner on Saturday this year as a means towards making early work schedules a bit less painful on Monday morning. Worked out well for me - having Sunday to pack the bike and get some rest early in anticipation of a pre-dawn launch. The bike was packed, tire pressure confirmed and filled with fuel before noon.
Monday, April 1st, 2024. Failure dripping with disappointment..
No other word stings like this for me. Like a sucking chest wound. I backed the FJR out of the garage at 4:30am - well after my planned departure time. Between 7pm Sunday evening and the moment I backed the FJR out of the garage I managed exactly zero minutes of sleep. I tossed and turned all night - this is not normal for me. Thoughts of work and the ride lobbied for equal time. The main concern about riding TOH on April 1st in Michigan is any memorial sites in the Upper Peninsula. Weather conditions can swing significantly near Lake Superior, or anywhere north and west of the Mighty Mack (Mackinac Bridge). Historical data on the TOH site indicates that there will be at least 2 memorials in the U.P. Last year’s memorial list included a site in Wakefield that is nearly 600 miles from my garage, let alone the fact that it was under 3’ of snow on April 1st. Nothing that any of the TOH participants in the northern tier states aren’t used to dealing with. Work stuff has been deep and heavy the past 6 months. Lot’s of things in the air and I let it get the best of me. Muther Truckers.
There was a memorial site 25 miles from the house - it was to be my first stop; if I was missing anything, I’d be able to stop on the way back past the house on my way west. Temps were hovering in the lower 30’s, rain showing on the radar on the short expressway blast. The memorial coordinates were right on target and had the bike parked with my rally flag staged smoothly - I snapped a close up shot for insurance and was back rolling in short order after submitting the details with the TOH app. Even with my liner and grips on full blast, the temps were cutting through.
The real issue that I had successfully ignored on the ride out was how exhausted I was. It gave me a reality check on the way back to the expressway in the form of crossing the shoulder rumble strips. That will wake you right the f@$k up, right? Nope - a misjudged closure rate on the highway sealed the deal. Being in that state at the beginning of what was a full day’s ride made it impossible to ignore - red flags, bells, sirens, etc. were all screaming at max volume and I knew the only reasonable choice. Sometimes the right and correct thing to do is the hardest thing. scrub the plan - as painful as that was - it was the only way to survive the day. So I rolled back into the garage by 5:45 a.m. I was back in bed, and asleep by 6. I woke up just after noon - WTF…
I followed Lumbergs tracker that afternoon - he laid down a killer opening day ride and locked up the 1st place trophy for Georgia - well done, sir, well done.
Tuesday, April 2nd.
I lost 3 days of vacation time (our “use-it-or-lose-it” end date is March 31st annually) in our fiscal year that just ended.. I took these 2 days off for me. I spent this second day enjoying some quiet time in the garage - some mindlessness with a favorite playlist on - some weapon’s maintenance time, and generally thinking about nothing. It was a day I didn’t know I needed. Lumberg’s day one dominance of the Georgia Memorials was certified. Legend level stuff there. The rider who earned the Michigan 1st place trophy put in somewhere north of 1100 miles that day and was on the road just after midnight.
The winter months have been difficult to find and manage an equitable work-life balance. During the summer, I have yard work at my folks place that provides the opportunity to tune out the world and carve some killer mower lines in the yard. I need to do better next winter with keeping active with things that unplug me from work. I lost focus of that this past winter. I realize all this talk has some of you scratching your head and thinking, “what the heck is this ‘work’ thing he’s bitching about…”
But all is not lost. The Tour of Honor event runs from April 1st through October 31st each year. A rider can earn “finisher” status by visiting the primary memorial sites (usually 7) for any given state. Beyond that, there are additional sites that fall into categories such as “Searching for the Lost Generation (Doughboys)”, “War Dogs and K9 Heroes”, “Huey Helicopters”, “Gold Star Family Memorials”, “9/11 Memorials”, “Veterans Cemeteries” and “Sea-to-Shining Sea Tour”. I was shoved down this rabbit hole by Mr. Lumberg. There are plenty of destinations that give a sunday morning ride purpose and a potential history lesson.
Saturday, April 6th, 2024. Redemption…
The FJR settled into its warmed, steady state idle by the time I had backed it down the driveway and pointed it towards the street. It was 3:30 am. I was rested, focused, and ready to ride.
I decided to run west first; this would let the sun do its thing and bring temperatures in northern Michigan closer to tolerable ranges by the time I moved through. This strategy also reduced the potential for forest rat encounters since most of this first section would be on the expressway. It also met the return run south on I-75 in the dark - and put most of the two lane road travel during daylight hours. I mean, it sounded like a solid, reasonable plan.
First memorial stop was in Battle Creek (home of Kellogg), then a 90 minute hop north to Rockford (outside of Grand Rapids), then a long leg north to Gaylord. Temperatures hovered between 29 and 38 degrees during that first leg; sunrise pushed the colder air down and I felt it. My liner, gloves, and grips were set to max and they just barely kept the cold from cutting through. Taking inventory, my current Warm’n’Safe liner is pretty old - 10 plus years I think. Might be time for a replacement.
Sojourner Truth Memorial in Battle Creek, Michigan.
Sunrise in Kalamazoo Michigan - gas in the FJR, hot chocolate in the pilot…
Note to self - make sure you tell them to hold all the “foo-foo” add ons they think should be added to simple hot chocolate…
CMOHR John C. Sjogren Statue in Rockford, Michigan
Veterans Memorial in Gaylord, Michigan
Ironworkers Memorial in Mackinaw City, Michigan
The Mighty Mac.
It was 12:30p when I rolled away from the Ironworkers Memorial. The time / distance puzzle in front of me was solved with about 7 hours on the north side of the bridge in the Upper Peninsula. The weather was fantastic at this point - 50 degrees and sunny. Time to burn some carbon off.
I ran north towards Brimley first. I dropped each memorial site into my Zumo as a favorite. I set up a route, but opted to navigate to each site individually. I selected MI2 and Go - Brimley is just south and west of Sault Ste. Marie, so I knew I’d drop off the expressway at some point. Normal settings in my Zumo for avoidances include “non-paved roads” and “tolls”. One would assume that “non-paved roads” include gravel roads. I was clipping along nicely on a rough, but paved 2 lane headed north when it changed to gravel. No sign, no indication and the color of it all blended nicely as well. When pressed, the FJR can be a halfway decent dual sport…
Brimley, Michigan.
Brimley site collected but not submitted (TOH has an app for that..) due to no cell service. South and West - 3+ hours or 200 miles. The Zumo’s ETA displayed 3:30p and I accepted that at face value. Making the turn by 3:30 (call it 3:45p) back towards the bridge meant I’d make Mackinaw before sunset. Mackinaw to home is about 4 hours of ride time. Rough math put me home between midnight and 1am (accounting for gas stops, etc). That was doable. I’d find a fast mover and tuck in to use them as a deer deflector.
There are some wide open spaces in the U.P. Long sections of straight flat roads with long site lines where the forest has been cut back away from the road by 75 to 100 feet. It’s the “in-between” season up north. The snow has mostly melted and shut down the snowmobilers. It’s not yet warm enough for the OHV crowd to drag their UTV’s, dirt bike and quads up for spring and summer riding either. There were long stretches with no other cars in sight. I was not looking forward to any miles in the dark. The northern section of I-75 is a forest rat alley after sunset.
At one point, I think I went a solid 20-30 minutes without seeing another car on the road. It was eerily empty. I found myself dialing in a bit more throttle every now and then. I was reminded just how comfortable the FJR is at these velocities. It just purrs along, or rather, at a low scream that you realize was there when you close the throttle while you’re identifying oncoming traffic. Every state trooper or LEO I saw up there was in a Chevy Tahoe. Fortunately, none of them were in my mirrors or hidden. The last memorial on the list for the day was 30 miles west/northwest of Escanaba. That’s nearly cheesehead country!
I was floating along and revisiting the time / distance puzzle to see what the evening might shake out to be. That’s when the anomaly hit me. Arrival time on the Zumo stated 3:45p. That put me back at the bridge by 7pm. Then I noticed the current time on the Zumo screen - 3:25pm. And then the time on the FJR screen - 4:25pm. WTF? Destination was in the central time zone, an hour earlier. Well, that skews things a bit. I was east bound by 4:05p (which was actually 5:05p) after logging the memorial at Foster City and finding a OHV trail turnout to water the bushes at. Now Mr.Smartarse Zumo was stating ETA to Mackinaw City as 8:15pm. I was making good time trimming that ETA down. US2 is a 2 lane road, but they have added passing lanes on each side every few miles. The one trooper along that stretch already had a customer and made that known for miles in either direction via the illuminated signature red bubble on top of his Tahoe.
Foster City, Michigan - Oscar G. Johnson - CMOH
Link to citation - Medal of Honor Society - Oscar G. Johnson
The boss called just after my gas stop an hour from the bridge. A question and answer session ensued. The Spanish Inquisition seemed pale in comparison. The boss was not pleased with my plan to get home and said plan’s ETA.
“It will be dark soon, right?” - Yes.
“It’s going to get cold again?” - Yes.
“What time do you think you’ll be home?” - between midnight and 1am.
“That’s really late”. Probably.
“I am not waiting up wondering if you are coming home or carving up a deer you sliced in half…” - Ok.
“Why don’t you get a hotel?” - Hotels are expensive.
“There are plenty in Mackinaw City” - they are all probably closed until spring - it’s off season up here.
“That’s silly”. Well, it’s not exactly simple or safe for me to googlemap hotels while I’m going this fast.
“HOW FAST are you going?” - The speed limit is 65.
“That is not what I asked you.” awkward silence…
Somewhere in my numb state, I managed to turn the tables.
“Hey - why don’t you look up hotels in Mackinaw City” Ok.
“If you make a reservation, it will force me to stop for the night.” - Done.
I had wanted to get further south, but once the sun set and the temperature started to drop off, I realized I was all out of piss & vinegar for the day. The Holiday Inn Express was a few hundred feet from the base of the Mackinaw Bridge on the right side of the road - sometimes the boss is on her game - it was just what I needed after 940 miles.
North side of the Mackinaw Bridge - it looks tiny, but that first tower is about 2 miles away…
Sunday morning arrived as another bright and sunny day. It also arrived with the realization that anything that had been occupying space and lobbying for processing time a week ago was absent yesterday. I was solely focused on the ride and challenge at hand. Right now, being on two wheels is that one single place in my universe where I can clear all the day to day complications out for a short period of time. It is my “fortress of solitude” - as oxymoronish as that sounds. I realize many of you reading this are already well past this point in life and career. That fact fuels me in pursuing advancement.
The Great Lakes National Cemetery is a TOH site as well - and just a few miles off the expressway on my way south. I rode each loop within the cemetery. I stood there for a few minutes. The wind moving old glory. It’s an extraordinarily peaceful and humble landscape. Fitting final resting place for the heroes here.
There will be addendums to this ride - I plan on visiting more Tour of Honor sites through the summer here in Michigan as well as along the way when I head to the Ramble and EOM.
Addendum 1 - “Get to the Choppa!!”
Sunday, April 14th.
Time is precious. It was after 4pm by the time the day’s tasks and projects were put to rest. What to do? Go ride, of course…
I’m going to visit as many of the “Huey” Tour of Honor sites that I can this year. Finisher status in this category needs 10 or more sites - details here. They include Huey’s and Cobra’s in the category.
Stop 1 - American Legion Walter Fraser Post 108 in Oxford, Michigan.
Stop 2 - VFW Post 439 in Lapeer, Michigan
Awesome mural on the front and side of the VFW Hall.
Next stop was going to be the American Legion in my home town of Croswell. On my way, I passed through Brown City and remembered there is a Fireman’s 9/11 Memorial there, which was also on the TOH memorial list - so I stopped and grabbed that one. Brings back memories. Where were you that day?
From there, on to Croswell and the American Legion Post 255 for this Cobra display.
The sun fell below the horizon before I made it home to the garage. It was in the upper 70’s when I departed, temps fell into the lower 50’s on the final stretch, but my warm’n’safe liner kept me comfy. Stay tuned for more…
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Well done Wayne. I was in Escanaba and other parts of the UP on a solo trip when I was 20...so, well versed to where you were...you were a LONG way from home! One question, did you eat a pastie?
Seriously, well written. I could feel all the emotions...I've been there, or close to it.
Seriously, well written. I could feel all the emotions...I've been there, or close to it.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Amazing feat, and amazing writeup.
Sounds like it was the perfect combination of suck and zen.
Sounds like it was the perfect combination of suck and zen.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Great job Marine!
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Nice write up Wayne. I rode TOH for several years and always saw interesting memorials and learned a lot of history not taught in schools.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Saaa-lute! Well done, Wayne!
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Good read - enjoyed it.
The TOH stuff stands on its own merit. The part of the ride report that really spoke to me was your decision to stop. In my younger days, I pushed it. Now I realize that was stupid and dangerous for a number of reasons that we all are aware of. The only person I was trying to impress was myself, and I failed miserably. When you retire, you will truly get it.
Before I go under the grass, I'd like to see that bridge and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
The TOH stuff stands on its own merit. The part of the ride report that really spoke to me was your decision to stop. In my younger days, I pushed it. Now I realize that was stupid and dangerous for a number of reasons that we all are aware of. The only person I was trying to impress was myself, and I failed miserably. When you retire, you will truly get it.
Before I go under the grass, I'd like to see that bridge and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
One thing I always know I can count on when out on a ride, my wife loved jumping in and scouting hotels. I don't even hesitate anymore. When my campground was closed for fires in California, I only had to call her and say "I'm re-routing to Bakersfield, can you find me a hotel?" She was on it. Rain drenched and noticing that there's standing water everywhere, which means my campsite will be under water, "Honey, I need a place to sleep in Lubbock tonight." Done. It's nice to have that support system when you need it so you can keep focusing on keeping the wheels on the bike turning, nice that you were able to get that support as well. Looking forward to the rest of your tour.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
I’m just glad Wayne made that shit happen. The hotel, that is.
That’s really the way to do it. Especially (!!!) with Michigan April temps.
That’s really the way to do it. Especially (!!!) with Michigan April temps.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Thank you all for the comments. I'll add a few thoughts here....
the Marine Corps is steeped in tradition and history; upon earning the title, "Marine", one inherits the reputation of every extrodinary feat and complishment of those who came before us - Chesty Puller, Dan Daily, Carlos Hathcock, Ira Hayes, John Basilone, Smedley Butler and Jordan Haerter (our Axeman's own son); learning about each of these legends is a history lesson itself. Standing on the beach in Okinaw where 6th Marines landed, Hacksaw Ridge drive home that we are warriors who accomplish the impossible - our history documents it. Young Jordan stood his ground next Cpl Yale, both firing thier weapons that day in Ramadi when every fiber of their being should have been screaming "RUN". There is so much history we are obivous to, and TOH is one way to discover a small slice of it...
Second - I've been in scenarios where stopping was not an option; I have always applied that approach to all activities in my life. Accepting and embracing the idea that "die trying" is not the only option is not new to me; I’ve always been aware. Executing on a “fight another day” theory is. The sting of that initial failure fueled my determination to complete what I’d set out to accomplish, even if it did not ring the bell on the TOH website.
There was no time budgeted on the outbound side to stop, and by the time I was on the return course, all the shops were closed up... For those who don't know, Wheaton is talking about this type of pasty, not this sort.
In most situations (but not all), a little less suck would be preferable, but then a bit more "suck" can make the Zen even more rewarding...
the Marine Corps is steeped in tradition and history; upon earning the title, "Marine", one inherits the reputation of every extrodinary feat and complishment of those who came before us - Chesty Puller, Dan Daily, Carlos Hathcock, Ira Hayes, John Basilone, Smedley Butler and Jordan Haerter (our Axeman's own son); learning about each of these legends is a history lesson itself. Standing on the beach in Okinaw where 6th Marines landed, Hacksaw Ridge drive home that we are warriors who accomplish the impossible - our history documents it. Young Jordan stood his ground next Cpl Yale, both firing thier weapons that day in Ramadi when every fiber of their being should have been screaming "RUN". There is so much history we are obivous to, and TOH is one way to discover a small slice of it...
First - Mackinaw Island is a destination worth seeing, along with both Tahquamenon Falls and White Fish Point (and the Great Lakes Shipwrech Museum there) at the eastern end of the U.P., but also Copper Harbor and Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore.Hppants wrote: ↑Wed Apr 10, 2024 12:11 pm The part of the ride report that really spoke to me was your decision to stop. In my younger days, I pushed it. Now I realize that was stupid and dangerous for a number of reasons that we all are aware of.
Before I go under the grass, I'd like to see that bridge and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
Second - I've been in scenarios where stopping was not an option; I have always applied that approach to all activities in my life. Accepting and embracing the idea that "die trying" is not the only option is not new to me; I’ve always been aware. Executing on a “fight another day” theory is. The sting of that initial failure fueled my determination to complete what I’d set out to accomplish, even if it did not ring the bell on the TOH website.
An untapped resource here, but apparently my current state earning potential is greater than the value of my life insurance policy payout…gixxerjasen wrote: ↑Wed Apr 10, 2024 1:00 pm It's nice to have that support system when you need it so you can keep focusing on keeping the wheels on the bike turning, nice that you were able to get that support as well
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
That's fantastic work Wayne! Great RR. When I rode over the Mackinac Bridge into the UP in 2014, I did have a pastie and some smoked fish on a picnic table along Lake Superior. I took off my shirt to expose my nipple for the pastie. I later learned that removing my shirt wasn't necessary. It was a pastie that I wasn't familiar with.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
A very important balance to maintain.extrememarine wrote: ↑Wed Apr 10, 2024 9:43 pm apparently my current state earning potential is greater than the value of my life insurance policy payout…
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Congratulations on certified Trophy status, Mr. Reeves. Badass.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Awesome report brother. I am humbled by what past warriors have done. I have regularly asked myself how I would have responded under the same circumstances. Well done.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Addendum 1 - “Get to the Choppa!!”
Sunday, April 14th.
Time is precious. It was after 4pm by the time the day’s tasks and projects were put to rest. What to do? Go ride, of course…
I’m going to visit as many of the “Huey” Tour of Honor sites that I can this year. Finisher status in this category needs 10 or more sites - details here. They include Huey’s and Cobra’s in the category.
Stop 1 - American Legion Walter Fraser Post 108 in Oxford, Michigan.
Stop 2 - VFW Post 439 in Lapeer, Michigan
Awesome mural on the front and side of the VFW Hall.
Next stop was going to be the American Legion in my home town of Croswell. On my way, I passed through Brown City and remembered there is a Fireman’s 9/11 Memorial there, which was also on the TOH memorial list - so I stopped and grabbed that one. Brings back memories. Where were you that day?
From there, on to Croswell and the American Legion Post 255 for this Cobra display.
The sun fell below the horizon before I made it home to the garage. It was in the upper 70’s when I departed, temps fell into the lower 50’s on the final stretch, but my warm’n’safe liner kept me comfy. Stay tuned for more…
Sunday, April 14th.
Time is precious. It was after 4pm by the time the day’s tasks and projects were put to rest. What to do? Go ride, of course…
I’m going to visit as many of the “Huey” Tour of Honor sites that I can this year. Finisher status in this category needs 10 or more sites - details here. They include Huey’s and Cobra’s in the category.
Stop 1 - American Legion Walter Fraser Post 108 in Oxford, Michigan.
Stop 2 - VFW Post 439 in Lapeer, Michigan
Awesome mural on the front and side of the VFW Hall.
Next stop was going to be the American Legion in my home town of Croswell. On my way, I passed through Brown City and remembered there is a Fireman’s 9/11 Memorial there, which was also on the TOH memorial list - so I stopped and grabbed that one. Brings back memories. Where were you that day?
From there, on to Croswell and the American Legion Post 255 for this Cobra display.
The sun fell below the horizon before I made it home to the garage. It was in the upper 70’s when I departed, temps fell into the lower 50’s on the final stretch, but my warm’n’safe liner kept me comfy. Stay tuned for more…
Cav47, Hppants, blind squirrel and 1 others loved this
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
2024 TOH addendum 3 - October 2nd, 2024 - More Choppa’s or “Where the hell did the summer go??”
The summer has evaporated and September has been a disaster - work travel and other commitments forced the forfiet of our annual EOM gathering trip. These things do not make for a tolerable Wayne (work according to Annette)... Bikergeek posted and is hosting the fall techday the first weekend in October. “You should go” was the mandate from the home front, and when I suggested adding a few days to the front end, “You definitely should do that.” was the response I had no intention of questioning.
AND what better way to spend a sunny day on two wheels working south and east than folding in a few Tour Of Honor rally stops? None. There is nothing better - especially when you haven’t ridden locally but a few times all summer.
Carrying on the Huey theme, I headed along the Lake Erie shore towards Camp Perry - home of the CMP - Civilian Marksmanship Program and the famous Camp Perry national match ranges. There were 2 TOH memorials on display at Camp Perry - H833 (a UH1 Huey) and H834 (a Cobra). Both of these aircraft were very well intact - something I’ve noticed isn’t the case with most public static displays. My guess is that most VFW’s, American Legion Posts, etc. would have the displays raped and pillaged if they were this complete. Camp Perry is an open campus, but I imagine the security that is present is a deterent. The Cobra cockpit had most, if not all, of the flight controls in place, along with the 20mm gatling gun turrent ib the nose and rocket / missle pods on the port and starboard sides.
Onward - southbound. The next stop was at H2xx outside Holms, Ohio at the American Legion Post. This Huey display is more on par with what you see at these public displays - a fairly stripped down air frame - but it’s there and I’m sure a point of pride for members of the post.
Time to make tracks south - OH83 flowed well and dumped me out in Zanesville, Ohio. Choices were to be made - the “easy” option included I-70 East to I-77 South to Caldwell. OR the “fun” option that included the northern half of OH555 and a portion of OH78. If you know, you know. It all came rushing back - throttle induced lightness of the front end over crests, the uncertainty of direction beyond a blind crest. This type of riding is a rush for me. It’s challenging, an element of unknown, and blind trust in your machine and self. The miles dissolved as quickly as the daylight…
Tomorrow, we absorb some of Southeast Ohio’s Flat, Straight, and Boring roads… Along with a TOH stop or two…
The summer has evaporated and September has been a disaster - work travel and other commitments forced the forfiet of our annual EOM gathering trip. These things do not make for a tolerable Wayne (work according to Annette)... Bikergeek posted and is hosting the fall techday the first weekend in October. “You should go” was the mandate from the home front, and when I suggested adding a few days to the front end, “You definitely should do that.” was the response I had no intention of questioning.
AND what better way to spend a sunny day on two wheels working south and east than folding in a few Tour Of Honor rally stops? None. There is nothing better - especially when you haven’t ridden locally but a few times all summer.
Carrying on the Huey theme, I headed along the Lake Erie shore towards Camp Perry - home of the CMP - Civilian Marksmanship Program and the famous Camp Perry national match ranges. There were 2 TOH memorials on display at Camp Perry - H833 (a UH1 Huey) and H834 (a Cobra). Both of these aircraft were very well intact - something I’ve noticed isn’t the case with most public static displays. My guess is that most VFW’s, American Legion Posts, etc. would have the displays raped and pillaged if they were this complete. Camp Perry is an open campus, but I imagine the security that is present is a deterent. The Cobra cockpit had most, if not all, of the flight controls in place, along with the 20mm gatling gun turrent ib the nose and rocket / missle pods on the port and starboard sides.
Onward - southbound. The next stop was at H2xx outside Holms, Ohio at the American Legion Post. This Huey display is more on par with what you see at these public displays - a fairly stripped down air frame - but it’s there and I’m sure a point of pride for members of the post.
Time to make tracks south - OH83 flowed well and dumped me out in Zanesville, Ohio. Choices were to be made - the “easy” option included I-70 East to I-77 South to Caldwell. OR the “fun” option that included the northern half of OH555 and a portion of OH78. If you know, you know. It all came rushing back - throttle induced lightness of the front end over crests, the uncertainty of direction beyond a blind crest. This type of riding is a rush for me. It’s challenging, an element of unknown, and blind trust in your machine and self. The miles dissolved as quickly as the daylight…
Tomorrow, we absorb some of Southeast Ohio’s Flat, Straight, and Boring roads… Along with a TOH stop or two…
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Still subscribed.
The waiting is the hardest part....
The waiting is the hardest part....
"I guess it comes down to a simple choice, really. Get busy living. Or get busy dying."
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Thursday, October 3rd, 2024.
I managed to fit in a quick stop at one of the 2024 Ohio TOH memorials today while bombing around Southeast Ohio. This was one of the 5 official state memorials for 2024 and was located just outside of Sardis, Ohio.
I managed to fit in a quick stop at one of the 2024 Ohio TOH memorials today while bombing around Southeast Ohio. This was one of the 5 official state memorials for 2024 and was located just outside of Sardis, Ohio.
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Re: Lumberg made me do it...
Wayne- post a photo of your trophy, so I don’t have to.
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