I went on a three week cross country trip (solo) in Aug 2019. I started on a 2016 Harley-Davidson Street Bob, and ended on a 2019 Harley-Davidson Road Glide. I mean isn't the ONLY way to fix a shift linkage bar to buy a new bike? :) I saw this page last year and decided to make it part of my road trip this year. I came close to dropping my Street Bob. Definitely bottomed out a bunch of times. Even though I was negotiating my line fairly well. When I finished the stretch of rocky unpaved road, I realized I just had the time of my life! Thank you for your blog, happy to donate! Scroll through the August portion of my blog for this specific trip: https://donmontalvo.com/2019/08/18/short-day-but-technically-challenging/ PS, I was so goose-bump-y during the stretch I didn't take any GoPro footage, and only took a few pictures, hope to post them. Cheers! Don Montalvo
Ab der Abzweigung zum Sandia Crest nicht befahrbar
Sandia Crest road to the Crest is my preference, rather than the dirt route 165 to Placitas, which doesn suit my Ducatis. 8) An excellent road with a passable surface, although expect some bumps. There are a few decreasing radius turns and several turounts for tourists, along with lots of deer and the occasional squirrel or elk, so always be on guard. Also, the Bernalillo County Sheriffs Department occasionally sets up traffic stings just for bikes near the summit, so be careful and ask around at Coffee at Dawn in Cedar Crest (just south on 14, a local biker hangout, especially on the weekends) about road conditions and LEO disposition.....oh....and they have good coffee, too.
This is a must-not-miss side trip from the Turquoise Trail trip. This road rivals some of the best hairpins in Europe as it winds up the back of the Sandia where one can look over Albuquerque and about 100 miles of central NM. I had a friend who wore grooves in the sidewalls of his Yamaha on this road, but take it easy or well have to pull you r bike out of the top of a tree. It is also a decision point: its a round-trip to the top of the Sandia Mountain and back down to the Turquoise Trail, or a turnoff halfway back down takes you over to Placitas and connects you to the end of the Jemez Valley trip. A decent unpaved road (NM 165) will be no problem for dual-purpose bikes, but sketchy for Harleys and loaded tourers especially in the rainy season. About five miles north on NM14 from Tijeras, turn left on NM536, the Sandia Crest Road and wiggle your way up to the summit. If not continuing on to Santa Fe, on the way back down the Crest Road, turn off onto NM165, which winds down through the woods to the village of Placitas, where pavement resumes. This route takes you all the way to Bernalillo, where it becomes US 550. Food, fuel and lodging here. Forty miles west, you will find San Ysidro, and the bottom of the Jemez Valley route listed elsewhere on BBR. Or, you can bomb up Interstate 25 to Santa Fe and points north.
Your bike will parked on the cliffs in the top center of the photo
View from near the top of the Sandia.
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