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Home / Mojave Preserve and Desert bikepacking trips / Fall 2010: Route 66 and Kelso Dunes Wilderness Bicycle Camping / Day 2: Ludlow to Bristol Mountains foothills by bicycle /

Something doesn't feel quite right on the 10-ton bike, so I pull over on the sandy power-line road for a moment

6355-powerline-road.jpg After two miles on the unpaved Crucero Road, I arrive at a billboard advertising the Kelso Dunes Wilderness AreaThumbnailsI plow ahead on the powerline-pipeline road that separates the Kelso Dunes Wilderness from the Bristol Mountains WildernessAfter two miles on the unpaved Crucero Road, I arrive at a billboard advertising the Kelso Dunes Wilderness AreaThumbnailsI plow ahead on the powerline-pipeline road that separates the Kelso Dunes Wilderness from the Bristol Mountains WildernessAfter two miles on the unpaved Crucero Road, I arrive at a billboard advertising the Kelso Dunes Wilderness AreaThumbnailsI plow ahead on the powerline-pipeline road that separates the Kelso Dunes Wilderness from the Bristol Mountains WildernessAfter two miles on the unpaved Crucero Road, I arrive at a billboard advertising the Kelso Dunes Wilderness AreaThumbnailsI plow ahead on the powerline-pipeline road that separates the Kelso Dunes Wilderness from the Bristol Mountains WildernessAfter two miles on the unpaved Crucero Road, I arrive at a billboard advertising the Kelso Dunes Wilderness AreaThumbnailsI plow ahead on the powerline-pipeline road that separates the Kelso Dunes Wilderness from the Bristol Mountains Wilderness

I'm not imagining things... I notice that couple of the screws attaching the robust Old Man Mountain rack to my bike are very loose and need to be tightened.