Another morning where we were advised to miss breakfast as we would be having very good cinnamon rolls later with excellent coffee at West side Lilo's cafe in Seligman.
Breakfast was as promised and the poor soul who ordered the cinnamon roll were gobsmacked when it arrived on a dinner plate. Luckily they had been advised only to get one between two. It did however make the rounds of all 17 of us. John settled for easy over eggs with sausage patty and hash browns. Wendy had french toast which arrived smothered in icing sugar with maple syrup.... yuck! Wendy carefully shook all the icing sugar off and left the maple syrup.

We then continued on to Snow Cap to meet Angel Delgadillo who is the guy instrumental in getting Route 66 Associations to work together and to lobby government to keep this historic route open. 84 years old now, and previously a barber, his town died in a matter of days when I40 went through - 9000 vehicles every 24 hours to maybe 90 every 24 hours. The town is now mainly tourist type shops set up for Route 66, and it is to be hoped that their efforts of maintaining the Mother Road continue. The road continues to carry its passengers hopes and dreams in so many different ways.
We tried hard to get Andy to get his long overdue haircut at Snow Cap, however Angel wasn't cutting that day!
Next stop was Hackberry, now just a shell of a garage converted to a gift shop. However the stop gave us a welcome break to the 40+ temperatures in some shade and provided a smile at the museum part of the stop. The restrooms are very interesting and reminiscent of the historical heritage of the stop from time gone by when male visitors were directed to the rear of the building for "additional services". Wendy has been riding pillion now for a couple of days, but is advised not to travel as the road condition deteriorates and later in the day we are heading for Sitgreaves Pass (also known as Dead Man's Pass)
 |
| Dee enjoying the pleasures at Hackberry |
 |
| The ladies restroom, we gather the gents was equally tastefully decorated. |
We were meant to head off to another Harley Davidson dealer, however most of the group were Harley'd out so instead we went to a local Museum in Kingman. Much to Wendy's delight John was classified as a "Senior" and charged reduced rates. Hehehe. Another example of the Santa Fe steam railway was there too, which created much interest.
 |
| Dead Man's pass - this was a sharp curve on the old Route 66 - as you can see it claimed many lives |
 |
| The road down.... gulp! |
After lunch Wendy went back into the support vehicle as we started the climb to Sitgreaves Pass. Haripin curves, sheer drops and no rails, mining traffic coming the other way. Even in the support vehicle Wendy's heart was in her mouth most of the time. However John tootled along at his own speed at the back of the pack with no problem.
 |
| Welsh Ronnie standing on suicide rock |
There were many little tarns in memory of those who lost their lives at this point, and it seemed appropriate to remember Young John's desire to place the nipple on the tarn at Carmichael by doing the same here.
The continued climb of hairpin bends and we reached Oatman, an old gold mining town which is virtually a ghost town overrun with burro's (donkeys). We paid a visit to the million dollar bar... another eccentricity of Route 66 and were bought well deserved lemonades, although Wendy could quite easily have had a gin in hers as her heart was still in her mouth. Gary decides as he is loading everyone back up to spray them with water to cool them down. It quickly almost became a wet t-shirt contest!
From Oatman we make our descent down the opposite side - equally as scary and finish off after a long hot day with all sorts of challenges in Needles for the night.