Tuesday, July 20, 2010

The eldest oyster looked at him, but never a word he said.


So, that's it folks.  Thanks for reading.  We certainly hoped you enjoyed our accounts of the trip.  We're currently working on making up a photo album of everything that we saw so ask us to share in the not too distant future. Overall, we had an absolute blast and will cherish this adventure for years to come.  Our country has a plethora of completely amazing sights to witness which can only be fully appreciated in person.  While the traveling takes a bit out of you and takes a bit of effort to make happen, the experiences are truly priceless.  So what are you waiting for?  Stop talking about it and go for it.  Quit your jobs.  Sell your children.  Whatever it takes, don't wait for the opportunity to come along because chances are it won't.  Make your own destiny and enjoy the results! 

We leave you with these 10 anecdotes/ lessons learned/ words of wisdom:


1.  Emergency license plate = 1 manila folder + Sharpee + Duct Tape

2.  2.1lb. container of Goldfish is essential to successful road tripping.

3.  If going with the thriftier, camping approach, a general loss of hygiene is simply an indicator that you're focusing on the more important aspects of travel.

4.  Travel during the summer.  Sure, you have to deal with the extra tourist traffic but so many of the Nation's most treasured areas are nearly unreachable during the winter months.

5.  GPSs are great but a good solid atlas is incomparable and doesn't have to search for a satellite to function.

6.  Drivers in the Northeast (excepting upstate New York) top the lis for the least courteous in the country.

7.  At some points in the desert regions, who knows when you'll see the next gas station so utilize your opportunities to fuel up.  Also, it helps to have a spare canister of gasoline with you.

8.  When utilizing a vehicle with a manuel transmission on a road trip, all drivers should be proficient in its operation BEFOREHAND and not rely on mountain slopes to get acquainted.

9.  Invest in a good, solid sleeping pad.  Your back and level of fatigue will thank you.

10.  Best campfire creation: Grill Dog topped with Spanish rice (hot sauce optional)

Much love,

The Walrus & The Carpenter.

PS  We don't actually mean for you to sell your kids.  Just rent them out temporarily.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

We cannot do with more than four, to give a hand to each."

Final Travel Stats:

Days Traveled: 21 (6/25-7/15)
Miles Driven: 7,231
States Traversed: 25
Cities Visited: 76+
License Plates: 49/50 domestic (couldn't come up with Hawaii)
                         6/10 Canadian provinces
                         1 government official
                         1 European
Postcards: 23
# of bug bites: Also 23 (2 - Walrus   21 - Carpenter)
# of bugs splattered on the bumper: 984
    Advantage: Humans
Miles Hiked: 47
Hotels: 6
Campsites: 12
Phil Hokenson's visited: 1
Paranormal sightings: 2
# of rainbows seen: 3
# of National parks/ monuments/ forests / state parks visited: 21
# of people who asked what/ where Delaware is: 5
Average # of showers per person over the last 3 weeks: 5.5


- The W & The C

Saturday, July 17, 2010

"A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk, along the briny beach."

As of Thursday night, finally back "home" in Delaware.  Here's our final itinerary:
TRAVEL LOG
 (STAR DATE: 2010) 
DELAWARE
  Wilmington (Home Base)

PENNSYLVANIA
  Audubon (hello, family)
  Norristown

NEW JERSEY
  Trenton
  Princeton
 
NEW YORK
  Lake George  (Wedding)
  Niagara Falls
  Buffalo

PENNSYLVANIA (2nd x)
  Erie

OHIO
  Cleveland (“At least its not Detroit.”)
  Sandusky (Cedar Point) 
  Toledo

INDIANA
   Nothin'

ILLINOIS
  Chicago (Lou Malnatti’s)

WISCONSIN
  Milwaukee (Miller Brewery)
  Lacrosse

MINNESOTA
  LaCrescent
  Dexter (Wind Turbine central)
  Blue Earth (60’ JGG statue)

SOUTH DAKOTA
  Sioux Falls
  Mitchell (Corn Palace) 
  Badlands National Park
  Wall (Famous Drug Store)
  Rapid City
  Keystone (Mount Rushmore)

WYOMING
  Hulett (Devil’s Tower)
  Moorcroft

MONTANA
  Billings
  Red Lodge
  Cooke City
  Yellowstone

WYOMING (2nd x)
  Yellowstone National Park
  Grand Teton National Park
  Jackson
  Wilson

IDAHO
  Swan Valley
  Victor (world’s largest potato)
  Idaho Falls

UTAH
  Salt Lake City (Oil Change)
  Panguitch (Bryce Canyon NP)
  Springdale (Zion NP)

ARIZONA
  Littlefield

NEVADA
  Groom Lake/ Area 51  
  Las Vegas
  Hoover Dam

ARIZONA (2ndx)
  Kingman
  Williams
  Tusayan
  Grand Canyon
  Flagstaff
  Meteor Crater
  Holbrook
  Petrified Forest/ Painted Desert

NEW MEXICO
   Zuni Indian Reservation
   Bandera Volcano & Ice Caves
   Albuquerque
   Santa Fe (Loretto Miracle Staircase)
   Roswell (Int. UFO Museum)
   Bottomless Lake SP

TEXAS
  Lubbock
  Seymour (Chupacabra Sighting)
  Wichita Falls
  Burkburnett

OKLAHOMA
   Lawton
   Oklahoma City

ARKANSAS
   VanBuren
   Little Rock
   West Memphis

TENNESSEE
   Memphis
   Nashville

KENTUCKY
   Mammoth Cave
   Lexington

WEST VIRGINIA
   Huntington
   Charleston
   Elkins

VIRGINIA
   Harrisonburg (what’s up, JMU?)
   Springfield (hello, other family)
  
MARYLAND
   Baltimore

DELAWARE (2nd x)
   Not just yet….

PENNSYLVANIA (3rd x)
   Collegeville (Family visit)
   Audubon (Truck retrieval)

DELAWARE (last x)
   Done





DISCLAIMER: Qualifying landmarks had to have been visited, major cities driven through, and minor cities stopped at for one reason or another.  Minor cities simply driven through did not qualify as this would have extended the list by hundreds of spots.

TW & TC

(still a few more posts to come)

Thursday, July 15, 2010

"Oh Oysters, come and walk with us!" 
the Walrus did beseech.
"

Travel Date: 7/14

The odometer now reads over 7,000 miles for our trip.  Gooood gracious.  Fortunately, we are almost there.  We’ve had a blast but the copious amounts of driving has a way of making you bit weary.  In West Virginia, the terrain of the East truly began to take shape which was a welcoming sight.  Admittedly, we were a bit unsure how the landscape of the East Coast would appear by comparison to the spectacular sights further West but home is home after all and we were glad to see it.  Driving over the Appalachians were not quite the challenge of the Rockies but again, they brought not only their beauty but their sense of comfort and memories of many a past hiking and camping experience as well.  Out of the Appalachians, we reemerged in Virginia and took the convenience of the opportunity to give a quick hello to the campus of JMU.  My have they been busy. 

Still rolling on the road at the moment but the day shall end with our last overnight of the trip in “The S’field [Springfield, VA] - smack dab in the middle of NOVA.”

A few more entries still lay ahead so stay tuned.

- The Carpenter

"I doubt it," said the Carpenter,
 and shed a bitter tear.

Travel Date: 7/13

From Kentucky, it seemed just a matter of making back to home base.  Still, another 700ish miles lay ahead.  With most of our camping gear now drenched and the thought of a warm bed and hot meal beginning to tease our tired bodies, we pressed on a little further to make the final few legs of our drive a bit easier.  Post spelunking, we mustered up whatever remaining energy we could and put ourselves another 250 miles closer to home, bunking up for the night in Huntington, WV (home of the Marshall Thundering Herd).  One particular moment on the road that deserves mention came just outside of Lexington, Kentucky as we drove due East.  Several miles ahead of us, we learned that some manner of biohazard spill had shut down all four lanes of the interstate.  [Editor’s note: Local news stories revealed this event led to be the beginnings of a zombie uprising, quickly quelled by the shotgun to farmer ratio of the local populace].  My life’s experience (and federal law) typically dictates that this is where you moan, curse and sit in bumper to bumper traffic while an inefficient detour eventually diverts your course.  Not in Kentucky, however.  One by one, and then all at once, dozens of cars began coming straight at us, mind you they were now driving toward oncoming traffic while changing across multiple lanes at once.  Somehow we survived this dangerously bizarre encounter.

- The Carpenter

"If seven maids with seven mops swept it for half a year, 
do you suppose," the Walrus said,
 "that they could get it clear?"

Travel Dates: 7/12-7/13

From West Memphis, it seemed only logical to continue on to original recipe Memphis…. so we did.  Though neither of us are big Elvis fans, it seemed only right to make a quick salute to Graceland before chugging along any further.  Not far from there, we began to head back Northward, cruising through Nashville and on into Kentucky.  Having journeyed a bit further the previous day than originally planned, we arrived at our next destination, Mammoth Cave, a bit early which gave us time to hike around and explore some of the local flora and fauna before sundown.  This ended up working out well as the heavy storm systems which had previously been tailing us caught up during the night and thoroughly compensated for the ample nice weather we had been graced with prior to that point.  It took our combined weight and every firmly planted stake we had to keep our tent from floating away.  


Fortunately, cave systems are inherently underground so no amount of downpour could disrupt our agenda for the morning.   Mammoth Cave, the most extensive cave system on Earth, lies underneath hill country and weaves carefully together within about a 36 square mile area.  There are roughly 365 miles of surveyed passages with geologists estimating that there could easily be another 600 miles still undiscovered.  Though it would take dozens trips to truly explore the majority of the passageways, we felt fairly accomplished with the 3 miles we managed to traverse between two different hikes.  The caves offer everything from Native American artifacts and waterfalls to drip formations (think Lurray Caverns) and crawl spaces like the aptly named “Fat Man’s Misery.”  

It was also entertaining to reflect on a particular moment when the trail guides shut off all the lights to truly experience the natural pitch black of the cave and a couple dozen cell phones and digital cameras promptly lit the darkness back up.  Oh, the digital age….

- The Carpenter 

Monday, July 12, 2010

"If this were only cleared away,"
 They said, "it would be grand!"

Travel Date: Sunday, July 11

After a delicious breakfast with our gracious host, we hit the trail on our way to Arkansas to camp at Hot Springs National Park.  As we entered the state, we noticed as the sunny skies became dark, streaks of lightning flashed in the sky, and rain poured on the windshield.  Despite the rainbow that appeared to the north, the radio declared severe thunderstorms with tornado warnings.  As much as we love a good adventure, camping outdoors with tornado warnings doesn’t sit too well with us.  We decided to adapt to our surroundings and get a head start on the travels for the next day and drove to West Memphis where a motel with a hot shower awaited us.

Not much else to say on that.  

-The Walrus


PS.  We've added travel dates to each of the entries since we've been adding a few at a time!