Los Angeles Times

RARE DAY TO RIDE HIGH

Motorcycli­sts gear up for a chance, available twice a year, to ascend California’s highest motorable road.

- By Charles Fleming charles.fleming@latimes.com

BISHOP, Calif. — In the Eastern Sierra near Bishop is a mountain route unofficial­ly known as the highest motorable road in California.

The dirt section at the top is maintained by the University of California scientific research facility at Barcroft Station and access is open just two days a year. (Dates for 2017 have passed, and those for 2018 haven’t been announced. For informatio­n, call [760] 873-4344 or go to lat.ms/opengateda­ys.)

Hikers can do the last piece of road on foot any time between June and October by driving within two miles of the facility. But riding up is a special treat.

To me, that was catnip. I contacted Bike-urious blogger Abhi Eswarappa, a friend who shares my taste for the offbeat, and we made a plan: Let’s make a motorcycle adventure out of riding up to 12,000 feet.

We selected Independen­ce, Calif., for our base camp for several reasons. First, it would put us within striking distance of White Mountain Road and let us attack the mountain early, before the day got too hot.

Second, it would give us the opportunit­y to visit with Cris Chater, a.k.a. Strider, the charming innkeeper at the Mt. Williamson Motel and Base Camp, one of the most pleasant hostelries along the entire Eastern Sierra corridor.

Third, we could knock two items off our shared bucket list: I would be able to visit the memorial to the Japanese internment camp at Manzanar, and Abhi would get to fulfill his dream of riding a motorcycle into an abandoned mine.

Manzanar came first. Despite what I knew of the history of the wartime internment of Japanese Americans, I left the national historic site impressed by the displays and depressed by this shameful act of racial prejudice.

A visit to the lonely nearby Manzanar cemetery, in 100-degree heat, did nothing to lift my mood.

We continued on to Abhi’s bucket list item. We drove up a rugged, boulder-strewn dirt road, glad we were in a sturdy four-wheeldrive truck, until we reached the Reward gold mine, active from about 1900 to 1950 but now abandoned.

Abhi unloaded his motorcycle, strapped on his camera and rode into the 15-foot-square mine opening. I stood 10 feet deep inside the dark mine, glad of the cool silence.

Ten minutes later, Abhi emerged, grinning and eager to show me photos of the mine’s huge interior galleries.

The next morning we rose early, ate the Mt. Williamson Motel’s compliment­ary bacon-and-eggs breakfast, and hit the road. We drove 27 miles to the turnoff for California Highway 168, unloaded the motorcycle­s from the truck, and started our ride.

White Mountain Road intersects the 168 and heads into the Ancient Bristlecon­e Pine Forest, part of the huge Inyo National Forest. Soon we had left the fields and farms, climbing from 4,000 to 6,000 feet along a road lined with scrubby, low-growing pines.

We stopped periodical­ly to take pictures of the majestic Sierra, disagreein­g over which peaks were Whitney and Williamson and enjoying the cool mountain air.

Though we were eager to complete our “highest motorable road” ride, we took a quick look at the Bristlecon­e Forest Visitor Center, then pressed on, leaving the paved section of White Mountain Road and hitting the dirt.

From there, the climb was sublime along a road designated a National Forest Scenic Byway. The well-maintained unpaved road was the ideal surface for the small dualpurpos­e motorcycle­s we were riding.

We skipped over the washboard and loose gravel, passing the slowmoving SUVs and pickup trucks, quickly covering the 14 miles of rugged road from the visitor center to a gate where, ordinarily, all traffic is halted.

But today was special, one of the two days a year when the operators of White Mountain Research Center at Barcroft Station open the last two miles of road to the research center to vehicular traffic.

Past signs warning “High Clearance Required, 4WD Recommende­d” we rode, stopping only when the road ended in the center’s parking lot at 12,470 feet.

Other vehicles had preceded us, most carrying ardent climbers ready to walk five more miles to summit White Mountain, one of the Sierra’s tallest peaks at 14,252 feet.

We declined a suggestion to join them, feeling the effects of the thin air and not dressed for the occasion.

The research center is not open to the public, but a pair of friendly workers showed us around and explained some of the science that takes place at the high-altitude facility. They also recommende­d some alternate routes back.

We took them up on their suggestion­s, first exploring the unpaved road through Wyman Canyon, then stopping for a proper visit at the Bristlecon­e Forest Visitor Center.

We were clumsy in our motorcycle gear — and huffing from the altitude — but managed a one-mile walk through the gnarled and twisted pines, said to be the oldest living creatures on Earth.

For the ride down, we decided to skip the pavement and test our mettle on rugged Silver Canyon Road. Out of the pines, descending steep rocky sections through sage, scattered oak trees and hairpin turns, we slowly made our way off the hill, stopping regularly to admire the staggering Sierra peaks, still snow-capped in late July.

The road eventually began to flatten, then culminated in a series of six water crossings before depositing us near Bishop — and into 105degree heat.

After the challengin­g and increasing­ly overheated ride, it felt great to shed our protective motorcycle gear and slide into an air-conditione­d truck. We were still talking about the ride when we got back to L.A. five hours later.

 ?? Abhi Eswarappa ?? THE CLIMB IS SUBLIME on White Mountain Road in the Inyo National Forest. At this point, the motorcycli­st is far above the Ancient Bristlecon­e Pine Forest.
Abhi Eswarappa THE CLIMB IS SUBLIME on White Mountain Road in the Inyo National Forest. At this point, the motorcycli­st is far above the Ancient Bristlecon­e Pine Forest.
 ?? Charles Fleming Los Angeles Times ?? THE ABANDONED Reward gold mine between Independen­ce and Lone Pine, Calif., proves to be an irresistib­le mystery for Abhi Eswarappa, a motorcycle blogger. Inside, he saw huge galleries.
Charles Fleming Los Angeles Times THE ABANDONED Reward gold mine between Independen­ce and Lone Pine, Calif., proves to be an irresistib­le mystery for Abhi Eswarappa, a motorcycle blogger. Inside, he saw huge galleries.
 ?? Los Angeles Times ??
Los Angeles Times

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