June 13th, 2026
Cache Creek, BC, Canada
Woke at the usual time today,
7:00am.
Sat in the dark for a while, then
finally made myself get up and shower and start packing things up.
After getting packed, I geared up
myself and took everything out to load the bike.
Once loaded and checked out of the
motel, I rode down a block to fuel up the bike.
Back on the road the Canadian
Border arrived in about 10 minutes. Slowly
rode through trying to make sure I did not miss something and then pulled up to
the checkpoint.
Border officer came out and did a
quick visual of the bike, then asked for my passport and had me open up my helmet,
all expected things. Then asked a bunch
of questions, some which were not really relevant, but whatever.
Then after a few speeches on penalties
if I did not declare things like a firearm, and a bit of a lecture on having health
insurance (as the medical costs for a tourist are not covered by Government, so
could be costly) I was in the country.
Did a quick stop for the welcome
to BC sign and then went to plot my course on Google Maps, only to find I no
longer had data services.
Before I left, I updated my cellular plan (I was still on a plan from ages ago) which gave me far more stuff while in the US, but also added Canada and Mexico to my Call/Text/Data abilities (and all for same price I was already paying).
I notices on phone that I had cell
signal, and I did get some text messages a bit later, but no data.
So, I had to mess around with my Garmin to get
a route plotted. While it is nice being
a real GPS and not needing internet to work, it is a pain to plot as it always
wants an actual address, or you have to scroll around and point to where you
want to go, but scrolling is far less usable on it versus the phone.
But it got me going in right
direction.
About 20 minutes in and I decided
to stop at a bank and see if the ATM would give me local currency, and
thankfully it worked (not sure what kind of fee my bank will charge me).
Ride was pretty easy at this
point, highway was busy, but not crazy, views were nice and winds were low.
We arrived in a larger town and I rode
into the city center to find food as I had not had breakfast, so was
hungry. Found a Burger King and decided
to just eat there since I was going to be quick, and many of them have free Wi-Fi,
so I could check on some things.
I ate and then using the Wi-Fi I
was able to download the offline maps for the region my trip was going to use,
so at least navigation will work. I will
need to think about downloading the next few provinces’ data as well before I
get there.
I then verified that, yes, I
should have data, so either network in this region is weak, or does not partner
with the roaming data services. Sadly, I
do not see this improving as I head farther north and into more remote
areas. May need to see if I can find a
local SIM card somewhere.
Need to replace my phone so I can
use eSim services. This phone does not
support them.
I then got back on the road with
both GPS working, and was interesting to see them recommend different routes,
and also how the Garmin is a lot more annoying about trying to re-route you
back to its preferred route instead of immediately seeing the new route you are
taking.
Google Maps seems to pick up on it
immediately if you take a different highway than it recommended (this might be
because it had recommended both routes, but was giving preference to the one I
did not take, but quickly saw I was using the other one?
The ride along this huge lake near
the town was nice, and views were amazing, but traffic was much heavier.
Finally reached another highway, this one a 4-lane running into the mountains. I thought it would be busy, but was about the only thing on the road. Think maybe 10 cars when past me over the 1.5 hours I was on this route.
This route was nice quality road,
and faster speeds, but lots of hills, and started to climb up in altitude.
We eventually reached a top of
around 5900 feet, which meant it was much cooler up there. I had already expected it to get colder and
put on my 2nd layer under the riding jacket, but was still chilled.
After we came down a bit, I
stopped at a rest area and warmed up some, it is much colder when moving!
At the next town the GPS and
Google Maps both routed me onto the wrong road.
Well, wrong for Google Maps as just a few hours earlier it had routed me
on a different road and that was the one I said start too, but again, it
changes its mind part way through a route.
Thankfully I noticed right away and took the next exit, which had more
options for fuel than the original route would have, but still annoying.
Fueled the bike (might have made
it all the way on the tank I had, but would have been close, not worth the
chance) and then headed back toward the highway I wanted to be on.
This little highway was also
practically empty, for the first 30 minutes I saw maybe 2 cars, but was busier
on the later part of the route.
Lots of nice views in this narrow valley,
and no really high altitudes this time, actually started to come down in
elevation and it started to warm up again.
Part way in the views became less
pretty, but still unique. The entire
forest had burned, probably just a few years earlier, and every tree going up
the entire mountain side was dead, eventually on both sides of the valley.
Roughly half way through this
route, I saw as spot to try doing a photo shoot with the bike. I tried to turn around in the narrow road and
almost lost it as the road was newly poured asphalt, and lots of loose stuff on
it still (had been going much slower on this route than others). I also lost my balance in the process of
correcting that and about hit the concrete barrier wall. I then stopped and thought it odd that I smelled
something hot, only to see the temperature gauge near the top.
This bike has never shown any
extra engine temperature, even in Arizona summers, so this freaked me out. I could smell the heat as well.
Shut off the engine and coasted
the bike down a short hill to a better parking spot (better in that the bike
would not tip over, but still not far off the road and uneven surface)
I got off the bike and took off my
gear as it was getting warmer in the air as well.
I then turned the bike back on and
now the temperature was fine??
I turned if off, spent a few
minutes taking some photos, and finding a bush to relieve my bladder in and
then checked it again. Still normal.
So not sure why it heated up so much so quickly and went away just as quickly. I can only suspect that since I was in a high gear and running the engine at low revs in the hills, perhaps that overheated something. I have been trying to keep engine revs low as that impacts fuel economy on this bike (If I ride at 6000 RPM versus 4000 RPM, I will use fuel twice as fast.)
As I was in the middle of nowhere
and on an Indian Reserve as well, I needed to get to the end of this highway
segment 12 miles down the road where there was at least a small town.
I got on the bike and kept the
revs a bit higher since I had plenty of fuel for this last short ride, and temperature
never blinked again the entire hour I was riding.
We made it to the small town and
turned up another highway with some great views, but did not do any stopping
this time.
Finally arrived in the small town
of Cache Creek, where I have booked a small motel room for 2 nights.
Been riding all day for 5 days, so
time to take a day off the bike, and I desperately need to edit video.
I really thought I could edit a
video each night, but the laptop slows me down over using the desktop back
home, and the new 360 camera is going all kinds of stupid things to my videos,
and costing me lots of time trying to get the framing done so I can edit the
footage into the final cut.
After checking into the motel, I unloaded
the bike and sat and rested for a bit, then got back on the bike and rode up
and down the main highway to see what food options there were. Decided to eat at a little drive-in
restaurant and then came back to motel.
Walked across to the market to buy some drinks for the next 2 nights and then settled in to write this blog entry.
Then I will keep working on
converting 360 camera footage so that I hopefully can edit up all the videos
for the last 5 days tomorrow.
Its only 7:45 pm now, so hoping I
can get this done, thankfully I have been recording shorter segments on the
camera instead of letting it run non-stop for 3 hours. While that allows you to catch some
interesting things, it mostly just gives you 1.5 hours of the same scenery on
the same highway and I only use maybe 30 seconds of that.
Probably will not write an entry
for tomorrow except to announce the video posting, but will see what happens.
Catch ya down the road.
Chris
Todays Route:

















