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Bikepacking Idaho Our Trips

Crossing Crutcher Crossing: Bikepacking Overnighter

The Crossing
The Crossing

It’s Friday afternoon about 4:30 and I’m in the weeds. I’ve had pretty steady walk in traffic  and I am just starting to fulfill the online orders which came in today. Don’t get me wrong; these are good problems and I really appreciate every customer. But I’m tired, and the thought of going to a dinner party tonight and then getting the bikes ready for an overnight bikepacking trip tomorrow is actually depressing. That’s the opposite of how it’s supposed to work: we go to dinner parties and plan trips in order to relax and rejuvenate and get away from the grind, I think. Maybe the depression was just from feeling too tired to do the things that normally are enjoyable. Luckily, Sky King never cuts me any slack, and so I change my clothes and trudge off to the dinner party, which turns out not to be horrible. The other attendees are wine aficionados, which the Bike Hermit is not. I feel a little intimidated and inadequate as I quaff my Josephsbrau Heller Bock. But I do learn some stuff about wine and sample most of the varieties which were paired with the different courses. The hostess is a great cook and the company is highly entertaining. In spite of my plans to be irascible, I enjoy myself and by the time we walk home I feel quite a bit better. (maybe it was all the wine sampling?)

We have the bikes loaded in the truck along with all our gear by mid-morning and we head south out of Boise. It is probably 2:30 PM or so by the time we start riding. Even though it is over 100 degrees in Boise today it is not even 90 here at 7,000 feet. A rancher rides up on a four-wheeler with his horse’s saddle slung across the front. We ask him for directions and about the road and we discover that he and his fellow wranglers just drove some cattle down to Bull Basin- where he left his horse.  His speech is slow and deliberate, as if he is carefully considering what he is going to say.  I imagine I see the beginnings of a grin as he thinks to himself things he decides not to say. I’m sort of disappointed that he is wearing a ball cap, even if his boots appear authentic cowboy. Why not be totally awesome and wear a custom West Texas Cattleman if you are living the life?

We roll generally downhill for 9 miles to Bull Basin where the road t-bones at a posted gate, behind which stands our cowboy’s paint. We turn left and through a second gate, which is posted with a bleached out sign which is unreadable, into a fenced  compound where the cattle are chilling. The road crosses a swampy spring with water the color of black tea, passes through another gate and heads up out of the basin. This last gate is not signed which makes me believe the short section of private land we just crossed is de facto not posted.

Big country!
Big country!

Western Sky

Gravel grovelling.
Gravel grovelling.

It was almost 7 PM by the time we reached Crutcher Crossing. We drank our cans of Dales Pale Ale, bathed in the Owyhee River, ate dinner and passed out. In the morning we ate breakfast, packed the bikes and headed back up the trail. This was a very workmanlike S24O bikepacking overnighter, but I still felt as though I had escaped the grind.  I was physically very tired but mentally prepared to get back to the salt mine on Monday.

Evening in the canyon
Evening in the canyon

Sunflowers

The Crossing
The Crossing
Pushing out of the Owyhee river canyon
Pushing out of the Owyhee river canyon
Desert mover; Surly Troll with 2.75 inch Dirt Wizard tires.
Desert mover; Surly Troll with 2.75 inch Dirt Wizard tire in front and Schwalbe Rock Razor 2.35 in back.

 

 

6 replies on “Crossing Crutcher Crossing: Bikepacking Overnighter”

It was great to meet you last week, although we were one of the reasons you were pressed for time on Friday. We really enjoyed seeing your shop.

Regarding your comment about the preparation for your S240 weekend being depressing… my husband and I felt similarly about our own preparation for brevets. Once the brevet started, I was glad we had committed to it, but the running around to get ready, packed, and organized was quite stressful this year. It’s a good thing to have jobs that engage us and keep us busy, but it is a balancing act with how we spend our leisure/weekend time.

Thank you again for taking time to talk with us, and next time we go back to Idaho we’ll show up with wider tires!

Great write up, Jim. I needed a story like that to reboot my memory to the things we like most. P.S. Sweet ride!

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