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Tokyo to L.A. - The Hard Way - In a Suzuki Kizashi: North American Saga Begins

2010-09-02 12:09:00 | Motor Trend

DAY 14: ANCHORAGE TO BEAVER CREEK, YT, CANADA Frank Wisniowicz recommends the venison sausage. Although he's not a breakfast kind of guy, he tried it the morning of my arrival from Detroit and liked it. It's a bit spicy.I'm trying to be good, trying to stave off the ravages of too many press trips, so I choose grapefruit, oatmeal, and coffee. Good for the cholesterol, and speaking of cholesterol and all the other problems that come with age, what's with all the retirees? It's 7:02 a.m. Alaska time. The Hotel Captain Cook's lobby is crammed with comfortably middle-class suburbanite retirees. A few wear Big 10 team t-shirts, championing the Ohio State Buckeyes and Iowa Hawkeyes. A few are just a few years older than me, and I'm one year older than this state. Most are in their 60s and early 70s. Some use walkers."Airport people! Airport people!" a tour coordinator calls out. Perhaps the airport people are dreaming of the kind of adventure we're about to experience. I hear one retiree say she never wants to see another airport. I understand. Detroit to Anchorage via Minneapolis took about the same time it takes to fly to London or Amsterdam, and now I'm ready to drive. Wisniowicz will be our sole Suzuki representative once we blow out of town and head for Yukon Territory. Alert the Mounties.Our Tokyo to L.A. - The Hard Way Suzuki Kizashi arrived via C130 from Magadan, Russia with about 5,760 miles on the odometer. It has averaged 20.9 mpg. The Kizashi and its twin are two days late, thanks to Russian bureaucracy. Petersen's 4Wheel & Off-Road executive editor Kevin McNulty joins us in a fresh black Equator, while the Tokyo-to-Magadan V-Strom has been replaced with a new bike ridden by Motorcyclist contributing editor Jack Lewis. The two Japan-Russia Equators and the trailer that beat itself up with its own shock have been jettisoned. The Suzuki logistics crew who have been with this ragtag selection of cars and trucks and bike and drivers and rider for some 5,800 miles are heading home, leaving us to our own devices with the help of Wisniowicz, who is Suzuki's West Region service and technical manager. Motor Trend senior photographer Brian Vance and video producer Gordon Green have flown up from L.A. for the third and final leg of this saga. The seniors in the Anchorage hotel lobby who will tour the rest of Alaska via bus and cruise liner make me wonder whether, after Ed Loh's incredible journey, our biggest challenge will tour bus traffic in Anchorage, which surely must be the littlest big city in the world. As I drive out of the Hotel Captain Cook's driveway, the temperature is an October-in-Michigan-like 55 degrees Fahrenheit.Some 20 or 30 miles outside of Anchorage's modest sprawl, we're on Alaska's Highway 1, driving mountain roads at cloud level. A road sign implores drivers to "Give Moose a Brake." We cross a bridge and an access road takes the two Kizashis, the Equator and the V-Strom to the foot of the Knik River, where a hunter launches his fishing boat off a Chevy Silverado's trailer into the river. He's not going fishing. Moose season started five days earlier. He'll ride upriver, find a place to land and hunt Bullwinkles. Moose will not be given any breaks.Our entourage presses on to the east. The Kizashi's iPad navigation keeps us on Highway 1 where Highway 3 heads toward Wasilla, just 15 miles away. No rearing our heads in her airspace.Lewis breaks away with his V-Strom. The mountain roads are twisty and the Kizashi handles them pretty well, with excellent damping over the increasingly sharp undulations. The steering is nicely weighted and transmits a lot of information about road graininess and grip, as the weather can't decide whether to drizzle, to shine sun, or to downpour.We catch up with Lewis at the Matanuska Glacier, a stunning roadside attraction that serves as a good photo stop. We're off, and Lewis disappears again.Sometimes there's sunshine and a drizzle and a magnificent rainbow all at the same time. Th

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