• Jump to Content »
  • Jump to Side-Bar »
  • Jump to Navigation »
  • Jump to Far-Bar »
  • Jump to Footer »
  • home
  • differences
  • questions
  • conversations
  • paintings
  • cartoons
  • US cycle
  • KC events
  • gaeilge
  • about

Irish KC is a one-man site on Irish news and events in Kansas City and its hinterland, along with Irishness in general and how it relates to Irish-America.

It is authored by an artist from Ireland who has lived in Kansas City.

Other sites: Bicyclistic (personal), American Hell (cartoons)

[ Irish KC ]
Kansas City Irish Festivals, Music, Pubs, & Events by an Artist in Ireland

« Cycling Across America #80
Cycling Across America #82 »

Cycling Across America #81

Anza-Borrego Desert

Part 81 of the Cycle-Across-America series. (Read from the start in Boston or see the full index)
Cycle Across America #81

Excerpts of the journal from the handwritten section somewhere in a desert in California:

After talking at the outdoor stand with my Philadelhia host for a good half an hour, I put the phone down. Almost immediately I saw a coyote. I had started running to keep warm but now I was stopped just looking at him. He stopped also and we looked at each other for a couple of minutes. He was maybe 25 to 30 feet away. It was cold so I moved on.

Back here only a few minutes and I heard a racket. I turned off the lights and stood outside. Coyotes all around, howling. Like a fantastic orchestra. For a full 5 minutes there was this wonderful noise filling the valley. And then it stopped completely and it was time for me to come back in and try and warm up.

[The rest of this post, is continued below the fold]

I had left Ocotillo later than I wanted to. By the time I’d eaten breakfast and then loaded up with food and drinks it was almost 9 o’clock. While the pancakes were cooking I rang Amtrak only to be told it was too late for the tickets to be mailed. Using words like “bicycle” and “desert” and “please” I got her to extend the reservation twice so now I have until Thursday to get to a travel agency or the San Diego Amtrak station itself and pay for the tickets. Then the waitress came out to tell me my pancakes were ready.

Back down in the village I chatted for a few minutes to the man at the store. I’d met him the previous night in the dark. I kind of felt uncomfortable talking. I was nervous, excited. I could sense the end of the whole trip and didn’t know how to react. I just know I wanted to keep it to myself.

Highway S2 changes name as you change counties. From Imperial Highway it becomes the Sweeney Pass Road once you leave Imperial County and enter San Diego County - my last county. Already the desert was beautiful. The road was gradually climbing between the Coyote Mountains to the north and the Jacumba Mountains to the south.

When the desert is flat it’s compelling. I find 10 mph almost too fast. I have to look at every plant, every detail. So many times yesterday I noticed tiny little flowers on plants I’d seen so often before. Compelling. Even though I’m looking at vegetation that I’ve been seeing for hundreds and hundreds of miles I still have to keep looking. It was beautiful.

People design gardens like this but the Anza-Borrego Desert is real. When the desert is mountains I find it arresting. Its forms and colours subtly changing all the time. You have to stop if you want to view the landscape when it’s still.

The drop and the twisting in the road was dramatic at Sweeney Pass (elevation 1′065 feet) with a speed limit of 20 mph. I broke it. Before reaching the bottom of the Carrizo Valley from there, there was a staggering view of the Carrizo Badlands. In front of this is the Canyon sin Nombre which cuts through the western end of the Coyote Mountains.

The canyon drops through layer upon layer of contorted sediments deposited over millions of years. Some of the sediments, the fine grain silt stones and mud stones were actually deposited by the ancient Colorado River which is quite some distance away now. A lot of the features such as the dramatic folding and buckling, are caused by fault action forcing the soft sedimentary rock against the more stable, metamorphic crystalline rocks of the Coyote range.

This was how the day went. Along canyons and valley climbing gradually then very steeply and then dropping into the next canyon and on down to the next valley. The road changes name again, to the more cumbersome but self-explanatory “Great Southern Overland Stage Route of 1849″.

At the bottom of the Tierra Blanca Mountains was an airstrip. No buildings, no nothing, just an airstrip. Half a mile up the slope is the Agua Caliente Springs. The sign said food so I went for drink. It was about 80 degrees and I was already halfway through my 3 bottles.

Eating my biscuit from breakfast and drinking a cup of tea outside I noticed something move in the bottom of an Agave plant. It was a mouse. I went over to it. It wasn’t a mouse. It was a Kangaroo Rat. A rich shade of grey that I’ve only ever seen on cuddly toys or fake furry hats. He wasn’t bothered by me at all so I went and got my camera. When he heard the motor wind the film on he ran. I watched him for another 10 minutes then it was time to move on.

I saw a lot of animals yesterday. The day had started with several vultures circling overhead which is exciting if cliched. Apart from crows and sparrows I recognised no more of the plenty of birds I saw. Lots of flashes of colour, of white, black, grey, and particularly blue. I looked through a bird book of California later in the day but it merely asked more questions than it answered. A jack rabbit, some prairie dogs, a tarantula, and I was told there’s a mountain lion around here.

The route I was following was one used by what now seems like a host of old friends: The early Spanish explorers; Kit Carson leading General Kearny’s army; the Mormon Battalion on its way to the Mexican American War; Sonoran gold seekers; the first transcontinental mail service; and the Butterfield overland stage as it made its way from Tipton, Missouri to San Francisco.

The Vallecito Stage station was built in 1852 and restored in 1934. A newspaperman on the Butterfield stage wrote in 1858 “Vallecito, or little valley, is a beautiful green spot - a perfect oasis in the desert; it is about 5 miles square, surrounded by rugged timberless hills, and the green bushes and grass are most refreshing relief from the sandy sameness of the desert.” I felt the opposite. When I saw its greenness I was disappointed. Drunk on the beauty of the desert I wanted no interruption.

My stomach cramps were now so bad I needed to stop but time was against me if I was to make it to Julian before sunset. The lady in the shop at Agua Caliente had confirmed there was nowhere to stay before then. I lay down beside the historical panel for the San Diego mail route - about 8 miles further up the road. The sight of the tiny little yellow and green leaves against the blue sky had me thinking this would do as a bed for the night. Was the sky ever more blue?

It was from this point that the mail line from San Antonio, Texas, departed from the main route and ventured west over the mountains to San Diego, while the Emigrant Trail continued north. This was James Birch’s mail line and it lasted less than 2 years succumbing to the faster Butterfield Stage. The first trip took 53 days and was driven by James E. Mason after whom the valley was named.

I climbed up into Box Canyon. Here you can clearly see where Lt. Col. Philip St. George Cook’s Mormon Battalion had carved a gap wide enough for their wagons to pass through. The road then dropped by Blair Valley and I stopped at Shelter Valley for something for my stomach. Robert and Michelle had just bought the campground / RV park 3 days ago and said I could stay in the overnight trailer. So I have a huge campsite all to myself. I’ve 15 miles to Julian of which the last 8 is the big climb and then it’s another 60 to the coast. Nervous and excited I should clean up and go.

As ever in the desert fighter jets scream overhead. The sun, I watched rise and paint the surrounding mountains various colours. I can hear birds all around. The greater valley is called Earthquake Valley with the Pinyon Mountains to the north and Granite Mountain behind me to the south. In a few miles I reach Scissors Crossing, then it’s a gradual climb through the Cigarette Hills to the bottom of Banner Grade. I’ve been told the Grade has more bends in an 8 mile stretch of highway in all of North America, but I don’t believe that. The same person told me all the women in Boston were ugly.

I’ll have to do some talking in Julian as I have a choice of 2 routes.

It’s hard to know what to think. Is this really the last day? Should I think big thoughts, important thoughts? Or is it just another small day, of which the small thoughts and the frivolity are the essential constituent parts of the overall trip? I don’t know. I do know there’s so much practicalities to deal with I have not the time to dwell and to wonder, but I do think I know why Americans don’t put contours on maps.

- They’re not straight.

California is full of designated areas like this desert. There are Indian reservations, state forests, state parks, national forests, naval air stations etc. All of them have straight edges, and mostly north to south or east to west straight. They’re very reluctant to even use diagonal straight borders. So how could they possibly represent contours - they’re natural, curved, they upset the format America has tried to impose upon the landscape so they simply pretend they don’t exist. It’s a wonder they bother with the coast.

One more day. Just one. It’s almost over. Even if something goes wrong I can make it the next day (excepting the expected pedal break). Julian by 11 and then one more climb. I’ll still be fighting the sunset. I’m looking forward to this. One more effort, one more day. Blue sky, mountains, desert, will I see the ocean?

Read the Next Entry (#82) in My Bicycle Trip Across America
Read the Previous Entry (#80) in My Bicycle Trip Across America

Read more from my Cycle Across America

The excerpts forming Part 81 were written in Shelter Valley, California at 6 a.m. on November 19, 1996.

Share |

This entry was posted on Friday, May 28th, 2010 at 7:16 am and is filed under 1-eolai, Cycle Across America. You can follow responses via my RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.


Sorry. Comments are closed.

|Top | Content|


HOT on Irish KC

Cottage Chronicles
Damo Interview
Irish Paintings
KC Irish Bands
Gaelic Games in KC
KC Mail to Ireland

  • Irish KC Author

    Eolai gan Fheile Eolaí gan Fhéile:
    • (816) 256 3366
    • Author 101
    • On Twitter
     Contact me 

Main Content

Irish KC Home
KC Events Calendar
Reviews
Photos
Irish Paintings
Irish Conversations
Ireland-USA Differences
F.A.I. Questions
Irish-American Cartoons
As Gaeilge, a Glossary
Gaelic/Gaeilge Lessons
Immigration
Irish Festivals
Celtic Comment
The Elders: KC Celtic Rock

Categories

  • 1-eolai (885)
    • Cycle Across America (85)
    • Meanderings (34)
    • Nostalgia (68)
    • Pencil Parings (1)
    • The Cottage (26)
  • Accordion (14)
  • Ads/Notices (16)
  • Animals (50)
  • Art (218)
    • listing (25)
  • blogs (233)
  • Books (64)
  • Branson (20)
  • Cartoons (46)
  • Classical (11)
  • England (50)
  • Events (1033)
  • FA Irish Q (33)
  • Festivals (283)
  • Fingal (1)
  • Food & Drink (159)
  • Gaeilge (42)
    • Irish / Gaelic / Gaeilge Lessons (20)
  • Genealogy (25)
  • Gilhouly's (1)
  • History (86)
  • Holidays (119)
  • Housekeeping (165)
  • Immigration (90)
  • Ireland (494)
    • 1916 Rising (11)
  • Ireland & USA: Differences (65)
  • Irish Business (219)
    • Brownes' Irish Market (62)
    • Cafe & (61)
    • Doherty & Sullivan's (14)
    • Sheehans Irish Imports (18)
    • The Celtic Ranch (5)
  • Irish Conversations (102)
  • Irish Dancing (52)
  • Len Graham (1)
  • Lists (94)
  • Literature & Irish Writers (92)
  • Midwest Irish Focus (33)
    • Celtic Comment (12)
  • Miscellaneous (118)
  • Movies (140)
  • Music Lessons (8)
  • Musicians (1333)
    • Altan (4)
    • Anthony Delallo (1)
    • Anuna (3)
    • Ashley Falls (2)
    • Bagatelle (3)
    • Bell X1 (4)
    • Beoga (2)
    • Bill Morris (1)
    • Black 47 (32)
    • Black Family (9)
    • Bob Geldof (9)
    • Bob Reeder (93)
    • Bohola (6)
    • Bono & U2 (69)
    • Bosko (1)
    • Bothy Band (8)
    • BP Fallon (2)
    • Brendan Loughrey (1)
    • Brett Gibson (23)
    • Brian Hart (5)
    • Brigid's Cross (8)
    • Brock McGuire Band (1)
    • Call of the Raven (1)
    • Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh (2)
    • Capercaillie (2)
    • Cathal Dunne (3)
    • Cathie Ryan (9)
    • Celtic Spring (4)
    • Celtic Thunder (2)
    • Celtic Woman (6)
    • Cherish the Ladies (9)
    • Cherry Cokes (2)
    • Chieftains (10)
    • Chipper Thompson (8)
    • Christy Moore (18)
    • Chulrua (1)
    • Clancy Brothers (14)
    • Clannad-Enya (15)
    • Clumsy Lovers (1)
    • Connacht Town (25)
    • Connie Dover (14)
    • Cottars (4)
    • Craobh Rua (1)
    • Creel (3)
    • Crowded House (1)
    • Damien Dempsey (16)
    • Damien Rice (20)
    • Daniel O Donnell (7)
    • David Munnelly (9)
    • De Dannan (2)
    • Different Drums (4)
    • Dirty Old Towne (2)
    • Dog Tree (5)
    • Doug Goodhart (6)
    • Dropkick Murphys (7)
    • Dublin City Ramblers (1)
    • Eddie Delahunt (224)
    • Eileen Ivers (14)
    • Elders (210)
    • Ellis Island (19)
    • Enter The Haggis (33)
    • Eric Bogle (4)
    • Fionn Regan (2)
    • Flannigan's Right Hook (81)
    • Flogging Molly (20)
    • Forest Green (2)
    • Four of Us (1)
    • Frames (26)
    • Fuchsia Band (93)
    • Gabriel Reyes (16)
    • Gaelic Storm (35)
    • Gerald Trimble (3)
    • Giordaí ua Laoghaire (2)
    • Girsa (1)
    • Glen Road (23)
    • Glengarry Bhoys (7)
    • Goats Don't Shave (2)
    • Grada (8)
    • Great Big Sea (5)
    • Hazel Whyte (5)
    • Heatons (3)
    • Hooligans (1)
    • Horslips (9)
    • Indulgers (13)
    • James Galway (1)
    • Jed Marum (6)
    • Jessica Kroh (2)
    • Jiggernaut (1)
    • Jimmy Crowley (15)
    • Joanna Newsom (2)
    • Joe Dolan (1)
    • Joe Heaney (2)
    • John McDermott (2)
    • John Morris (20)
    • John Spillane (13)
    • Jonathan Ramsey (15)
    • Kelihans (56)
    • Kelly (43)
    • Kieran O'Hare (1)
    • Kila (12)
    • Killdares (1)
    • Kirk Lynch (2)
    • Líadan (1)
    • Leahy (1)
    • Lenehan (1)
    • Liam O Maonlai (35)
    • Liam's Fancy (3)
    • Lick The Tins (1)
    • Lisa Dee (2)
    • Lisa Hannigan (10)
    • Liz Carroll (2)
    • Lucky Charms (50)
    • Luka Bloom (26)
    • Luke Kelly & Dubliners (12)
    • Lunasa (5)
    • Majella Murphy (8)
    • Mason Brown (10)
    • McCabes (4)
    • Mic Christopher (3)
    • Mick O'Brien (1)
    • Mickey Finns (3)
    • Miles From Dublin (2)
    • Millish (2)
    • Morrissey (16)
    • Mundy (4)
    • New Shilling (2)
    • Nine Mile Burn (1)
    • O'Shea Sisters (3)
    • Pale (3)
    • Patrick Street (1)
    • Paul Brady (2)
    • Peter Adams (1)
    • Pogues (29)
    • Potcheen Folk Band (2)
    • Prodigals (6)
    • Rattle and Hum (27)
    • Richard Thompson (5)
    • Rob Gavin (6)
    • Roger Landes (12)
    • Roscommon (4)
    • Rowan (8)
    • Royal Shamrock (1)
    • Runrig (4)
    • Saw Doctors (16)
    • Síocháin (2)
    • Scartaglen (4)
    • Scythian (4)
    • Sean McRactagan (1)
    • Sean O Riada (3)
    • Searson (7)
    • Seven Nations (34)
    • Sharon Shannon (2)
    • Shenanigans (2)
    • Shortleaf Band (9)
    • Sinead O Connor (13)
    • Snow Patrol (8)
    • Solas (9)
    • Something For The house (11)
    • stepcrew (2)
    • Sweeney's Men (1)
    • Teada (10)
    • The Croagh Patrick (1)
    • Thick Lizzy (3)
    • Thin Lizzy (6)
    • Three Dollar Band (4)
    • Tom Dahill (2)
    • Tommy Martin & Misla (7)
    • Tommy Meehan (6)
    • Tossers (3)
    • Triflemore (11)
    • Trinity (5)
    • Tullamore (43)
    • Tullintrain West (8)
    • Turlach Boylan (18)
    • Valley Project (1)
    • Van Morrison (15)
    • Vandon Arms (3)
    • Waterboys (7)
    • Wild Clover Band (30)
    • Wild Colonial Bhoys (15)
    • Wolfe Tones (6)
    • Xiles (5)
    • Young Dubliners (27)
    • Young Wolfetones (2)
  • Organizations (217)
    • AOH (6)
    • Celtic Fringe (10)
    • Harp & Shamrock (12)
    • IAC (1)
    • IMA (1)
    • IMCC (58)
    • KC GAC (44)
    • KC Parade (4)
    • MVFS (4)
  • Photos (158)
  • Pubs (536)
    • 75th St Brewery (4)
    • Claddagh Irish Pub (4)
    • Daily Limit (1)
    • Dempsey's (2)
    • Fathead's Irish Pub (7)
    • Fitz's Blarney Stone (3)
    • Governor Stumpy's (21)
    • Greenwood Triple P (14)
    • Harling's Upstairs (24)
    • J. Murphy's (5)
    • Kelly's of Westport (14)
    • Kennedy's (14)
    • Kyle's Tap Room (13)
    • Lew's Grill & Bar (17)
    • Llywelyn's Pub (10)
    • Maloney's (3)
    • Marfield's Irish Pub (8)
    • McFadden's (9)
    • Mickey's (11)
    • Molloy's (17)
    • Norty's (2)
    • O'Dowd's - Plaza (89)
    • O'Dowd's - Zona Rosa (15)
    • O'Malley's Irish Pub (131)
    • O'Neill's - PV (4)
    • Paddy O'Quigley's (27)
    • Raglan Road (38)
    • Record Bar (23)
    • The Brick (6)
    • The Gaf (39)
    • The Office (2)
    • The Public House (3)
    • The Well (2)
    • Walsh's Corner Cocktail (7)
    • Waxy O'Shea's (14)
    • Waxy O'Shea's Shawnee (13)
    • Westsider (25)
    • WJ McBride's - KCK (32)
    • WJ McBride's - OP (25)
  • radio (29)
  • Religion (37)
  • Reviews (97)
  • Scotland (67)
  • sessions (20)
  • Shows (57)
    • eurovision (17)
  • Sport (196)
    • Setanta (26)
  • St Patrick's Day (336)
  • Sunday Shorts (20)
  • Tech (45)
    • twitter (14)
  • Translations (2)
  • Travel (115)
  • Video (157)
  • Wales (1)
  • weather (50)

Archives

  • December 2021
  • March 2021
  • March 2019
  • November 2018
  • March 2018
  • December 2017
  • September 2017
  • May 2016
  • March 2016
  • May 2015
  • March 2015
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • March 2014
  • January 2014
  • August 2013
  • May 2013
  • March 2013
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • May 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • December 2011
  • October 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
  • March 2006
  • February 2006
  • January 2006
  • December 2005
  • November 2005
  • October 2005
  • September 2005
  • August 2005
  • July 2005
  • June 2005
  • May 2005
  • April 2005
  • March 2005
  • February 2005
  • January 2005

And There’s More

THE 1916 EASTER RISING

1916 Rising

1916 Dublin Rising:

Langerland's Rising
1st Military 1916 Parade for 37 yrs
Black Shamrock and W
90th Anniversary of 1916 Rising
Commemorative Concert for 1916 Rising
KC Drill Teams Salute Irish Rebels

|Top | Sidebar|


Art

My Paintings on Sale
Irish Paintings for Sale
  • Feeds

    • • Subscribe to All Posts
    • • Or just Main Features

Main KC Irish Events

Submit Your Irish Event

Mar 20 Hoffenpurpenburger Day
See List of All KC Events

Latest Comments

  • Is Ireland Really Green, Potato-Eating, and Red-Haired ?  (14)
    Leigh Pagenkopf, cyrell, Eolaí, Nicolas Martin, Ellen K., eolai [...]
  • Driscoll School of Irish Dance in Shawnee, Kansas  (1)
    Theresa Gavila
  • An Irish Sausage is NOT a Banger  (9)
    Stee, fred beamish, Arnold, Donald McCall, Marie Hughes, Eolaí gan Fhéile [...]
  • One Million Views: Avicii Vs Lurgan  (1)
    Logtar
  • Midwest Irish Focus Changes Location  (2)
    Edna Smith, cricket
  • Panda Playtime!  (5)
    Eolaí, Nina, Jenny Krizman, Elly Parker, Eolaí
  • Biggest Irish Festivals in America  (3)
    Eolaí, Howard, NW Irish Fest
  • Eolaí gan Fhéile, author of Irish KC  (17)
    Eolaí, jill, Nance, e, J.R. McFadden, eolai [...]
  • Leaping Pandas, It's A Lovely Day!  (4)
    Eolaí, Nina, Eolaí, Jenny
  • Thanks A Million  (2)
    Kaylah Nealy, Shop Irish

Search Irish KC

Search 

Most Popular Posts:

An Irish Cottage
A KC Call to an Irish Mother
St. Valentine's Day
David Shaughnessy
A Bad Pint
Songs Learned in School
Turas : Trip
Irish Odyssey in Kansas City
Dublin Walls: Photos
Damo & Me: Audio Interview
Ireland/US Difference: Fun
Irish Inventions
Prison Interview with Philo
A KC Phone Call to Ireland
U2: Dublin 1979 & 1987
History of an Irish Pub
An Ice Oratory
Online: Staying Irish
Irish Place Names & Illegals
Turkeyed Out
Traveling By Train
1st Mosquito Bite
Feast or Famine: Emigration
Temperatures
How Do You Find America?
Customer Service in the US
Why Are The Irish Guilty?
House of Pain
25 Things About KC
Little Judy's Watching TOTP
Meeting Maradona

Paintings Recently Sold

  • painting Hover thumbnail
  • painting Heuston thumbnail
  • painting Stone Walls, No Sheep thumbnail
  • painting Parkgate Street thumbnail
  • painting Westport II thumbnail
  • painting Ormond Quay thumbnail
irishblogawards.gif Irish Trad School
Eddie Delahunts Cafe and

Twitter

    Follow IrishKC on Twitter >>

    Facebook

    IrishKC creator on Facebook

    FriendFeed

    An aggregate of my postings, along with the same from friends. On FriendFeed

    Tumblr

    Irish sKCraps

    YouTube

    Eolaí's Videos

    MySpace

    Kansas City Irish

    Irish & Ish

    • David Maybury
    • Primal Sneeze
    • Musical Rooms
    • Thirsty Gargoyle
    • Damien Mulley
    • Fat Mammy Cat
    • Well Done Fillet
    • Dante and the Lobster
    • Annie Rhiannon
    • Problem Child Bride
    • Bock The Robber
    • Sniffle & Cry
    • Hangar Queen
    • Conortje
    • I Can Has Cook
    • Flirty Something
    • Íomhá an lae
    • Máthair Gaelachais
    • Stranded on Gaia
    • Two Wheels on my Wagon
    • Nialler9
    • Avoiding Life
    • One More Hour
    • Eoin Purcell
    • Head Rambles
    • Paddy Anglican
    • Redmum
    • The Indie Hour
    • Darren's Photo Blog
    • Irish Eyes Art Studio
    • News From Nowhere
    • Maman Poulet
    • An Spailpín Fánach
    • Homebug
    • One For The Road
    • Donal
    • Grannymar
    • A Bit of Bonhomie
    • Writing It Down Fills In...
    • Slugger O'Toole
    • Tuppenceworth
    • Argolon
    • Irish Politics
    • The Persuaders
    • Filmbase
    • Blather Abroad
    • North Atlantic Skyline
    • In Photo Dot Org
    • B&W Photos of Ireland

    Kansas City & Missouri

    • American Hell
    • Happy In Bag
    • Hip Suburban White Guy
    • Sugar Britches
    • Farmer Bob
    • Three O'Clock in the Morning
    • Erin in the Real World
    • General Blather
    • FileGirl
    • There Stands The Glass
    • Gone Mild
    • Midtown Miscreant
    • My Spyder Web
    • Well Hell Michelle
    • KC With a Russian Accent
    • Tony's Kansas City
    • KC Gaelic Athletic Club
    • KC Beer Blog
    • So Many Books
    • The D Rules
    • Wayward Blog
    • Chimpotle
    • Average Jane
    • Scoot Utopia
    • Daily Photo Kansas City
    • KC Sponge
    • Frighteningly Uncommon Sense
    • All Astonishment
    • Scéalta
    • Fallible
    • The Kansas City Post
    • Death's Door
    • Observant Bystander
    • Pomegranate Pretty
    • K City
    • Photog Blog
    • Branson Blog
    • Down The Byline
    • Greetings From Waldo
    • Alonzo Washington
    • KC Bike.Info
    • Bike Friendly KC
    • KC Bloggers
    • The Celtic Fringe
    • MVFS
    • Tuesday Folk
    • KC Library: Irish in KC
    • City of Kansas City, MO

    Recent Readers

    Aggregators

    Irish Blogs

    Stats

    Meta

    • Log in
    • XHTML
    • CSS

    |Top | FarBar|


    Copyright © 2006-2023, [ Irish KC ]. All rights reserved. |Top|
    [ Irish KC ] is powered by WordPress and has had (Stats Disabled) unique visitors
    A Modification of Accessible “SeaBeast” theme v.1.2 © 2006-2023 by Mike Cherim


    Attention: This is the end of the usable page!
    The images below are preloaded standbys only.
    This is helpful to those with slower Internet connections.