The need to be alone.
The need to hear no other voices other than the ones that talk to you in your head.
The sometimes crazy voices.
The often wise voices.
The voices that sometimes answer life's biggest questions and the voices raise life's littlest issues.
Yeah, well, I didn't hear them this time.
No big realizations like "they're all Children of God" or let that anger go or gee, I really do miss them, or she is a truly lovely person, or conversations I should have had or would change or I am going to do that differently or any of that. No-sir-eee, not this time.
This time it was Get on the bike, do miles, get here, ride there, eat, drink, be merry and just be on your own.
Not that that is a bad thing; sometimes you just wanna have fun, right Cyndi? Sometimes, just to get away from it all. A walkabout on two wheels.
So, the possibility of 5-6 days in Arkansas arose and I jumped at it.
Arkansas is where Camaros go to die ( all other brands go to Kentucky, which is next up in a couple of weeks -woo-hoo), but Camaros breathe their last on a two lane chip and seal in a dry Arkansas county, far from redlights and far from the polish of Sally-Jo's cut-offs that made the testosterone interior of this hatchet of an automobile pulse and glow. But, before they do, before they die, they live their last loomin large and loud and fast and squealing before they rest in a field forever. Some say that if you put your ear to the shell you can hear Steppenwolf or Led Zep or Music From Big Pink. Take a load off, Manny, and put it right here on my roads.
Hit the road on a Tuesday morning and I knew it would be good just a short way out of town when that familiar bond between Man (me) and Machine (Stella!) reared its seductive head. You know the feeling when the bike is purring and the road is kind and the traffic is forgiving. You know the sensation that every cubic centimeter of the 1138 is singing its familiar sweet song. A song whose melody is Ride On. A song that touches both Earth and Sky and you ride that song to the horizon and beyond.
Ya know? Ya know what I mean?
Yeah, within about 25 miles of home I felt that, way early compared to previous trips.
But it isn't all sweet...To get anywhere from here I must get out of Louisiana. There may be "better" roads in Louisiana, but "good" roads a few and far between. Plan A is to get outta Dodge ASAP. Decided to try a different route this time, US 167 from Pineville to N La through Dry Prong (If you lived in Dry Prong, you'd be home now) and Winnfield and Jonesboro and Ruston. Only marginally interesting; once is enough. Gonna stick in the future to I 49 and get off at Natchidoches and head north.
I get to Hope, Arkansas by late afternoon getting a taste of what the Razorback State can offer...Ar355 from Magnolia to Ar 29 into Hope. But in Hope I stop at the now familiar Super 8 for the evening and get an early start the next morning and head to Washington, Arkansas, a refurbished village dating back to the early 1800s. It's sort of a Williamsburg type of place but not nearly as extensive. I had ridden through at least three times and now I would stop.





It was early morning and they were just opening so I had the place to myself. There is a groove you can track when you're on one of these rides that on previous ride was elusive for days and days; but, on this ride it hit me early, as I said the first day, and now here in Washington, Arkansas it was in full swing.




The town began to stir. Porches were being swept. Big trucks made big turns from 278 and rumbled through on their way not for Washington, Arkansas. The townspeople who worked as tourguides sauntered down empty streets, slowly, the air of a 200 year old lost purpose thick in the slanting light of the April sun.






The former courthouse, now visitor's center, stands silently, signs whispering "Open" and an RV crunches the gravel drive. A Civic parks. A motorcycle named Stella! lounges in the shade, and the dogwood shows its conceit mocking the fragrance of the freshly mowed lawn.




and it is time to move on...next stop, Nashville...Arkansas, that is.
Nashville's skyline is one story tall, but it, like all small towns has many stories to tell. And it is easy to imagine the tall tales at

or the rumors and gossip at

Let's get closer to where Walk-Ins are always welcome








































