After packing the car the previous night, Carrie and I met at our friend Jim's house on Saturday morning for her send off.
The car was loaded and (mostly) prepped.
There was just one thing missing:
"I never leave Rhode Island".
The next time I would see both Carrie and my car would be a week later, on the other side of the country. I was envious of the things she would get to see, but there wasn't much I could do about it.
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
June 16: Pawtucket, RI
This adventure is going to be slightly different than usual...
In the very early days of June, I had been pondering taking a road trip. My initial plans were to fly out west, rent a minivan and make a large loop of the west - Seattle to Reno to Phoenix to Albuquerque to Denver and then fly back home, or another loop of similar geography. A thought popped into my head, wouldn't it be nice to actually take my car up the Pacific Coast Highway? I realized this was a farce, with only 9 days for my trip, there was no physical way I could make it to California, drive up the coast and back eastward in that amount of time.
But what if I didn't have to actually drive my car out there?
I asked a good friend of mine, Carrie, to join me for lunch on Tuesday, and I outlined my audacious plan: we would load up my car with all of the camping gear and other assorted necessities, and then she would take off for Los Angeles. I would then fly out a week later and meet up with her (and the car) and we would take off up the Pacific Coast Highway to Seattle, and then back home.
I predicted that she would tell I was nuts, but that after some thought, would agree.
I was right.
In a few short days, my friend and my car would set off on the first part of a road trip, without me.
Slightly different, indeed...
In the very early days of June, I had been pondering taking a road trip. My initial plans were to fly out west, rent a minivan and make a large loop of the west - Seattle to Reno to Phoenix to Albuquerque to Denver and then fly back home, or another loop of similar geography. A thought popped into my head, wouldn't it be nice to actually take my car up the Pacific Coast Highway? I realized this was a farce, with only 9 days for my trip, there was no physical way I could make it to California, drive up the coast and back eastward in that amount of time.
But what if I didn't have to actually drive my car out there?
I asked a good friend of mine, Carrie, to join me for lunch on Tuesday, and I outlined my audacious plan: we would load up my car with all of the camping gear and other assorted necessities, and then she would take off for Los Angeles. I would then fly out a week later and meet up with her (and the car) and we would take off up the Pacific Coast Highway to Seattle, and then back home.
I predicted that she would tell I was nuts, but that after some thought, would agree.
I was right.
In a few short days, my friend and my car would set off on the first part of a road trip, without me.
Slightly different, indeed...
Saturday, March 21, 2015
March 21: Carrizozo NM > Albuquerque NM > Phoenix AZ
When we awoke the following morning, I told Steph about my fitful night's sleep, and how I was counting on her ninja-like reflexes to spring into action as soon as she heard our pseudo-attacker cutting into the tent to murder us in our sleep.
She laughed.
Here was our campsite in the light of day. Just beyond the ridge was the lava field.
Friday, March 20, 2015
March 20: Las Cruces NM > White Sands > Carrizizo AZ
All in all, the night spent in a gravel lot just outside the Aguirre Springs Campground was not all that bad.
We didn't have any restroom facilities, but sometimes camping is like that.
Thursday, March 19, 2015
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
March 18th: Phoenix AZ > Tucson AZ > Nogales AZ
My first day in Phoenix, and I was excited! The Airbnb was very nice, and I was glad to have found it. I didn't get much of a chance to speak to my hosts, but the room was just as advertised, and I slept like a log.
I also had a chance to check out the Sonic a bit more thoroughly, and was glad that I had gone for the hatchback. Off in the distance, parked on the gravel was the famous blue Scoot. The last time I saw the Scoot was seven months prior, in Nevada. Since then it had gone to Mexico and back. Must be a tired scoot!
After a bit of a struggle finding a decent breakfast place, eventually we settled on a funky coffee shop that was in an old craftsman style bungalow. The food was decent and the atmosphere was great.
Why does it seem that when I show up, the Scoot is always being abandoned besides someone's house?
Back at the Airbnb, we packed our food in the the coolers.
An then packed Hedgehog (Sonic the Hedgehog...get it?) and departed southward.
Before we left, I stopped at a cul-de-sac for a formal portrait of the Sonic. I was interested in see in how it compared the Ford Fiesta I had rented from Payless Cars a few years back on my trip to Las Vegas, Reno and everywhere in between. It was a base spec Sonic, with AC, cruise, iPhone input and surprisingly, remote start.
My first real taste of south west desert, and boy was I happy to be there.
On our way south towards Tucson, I happened to spot something way off in the distance. It was the Pinal Air Park. It is now primarily a boneyard for commercial aircraft (one of the largest, if not the largest, in the world). It has an interesting history, including being the base of operations for the CIA's covert air operations during the Vietnam war (including the famous Air America). It was sad to see so many 747's awaiting scrapping.
I was so excited to go to the Pima Air & Space Museum - it felt like it was the Smithsonian Air and Space on steroids! I promise I'll try not to bore you with lots of plane pictures.
A Boeing B-52 Stratofortress that was used in the X-15 rocket program.
Boeing B-50 based inflight refueling plane (based on the B-29 design, but with uprated engines and removed armements, these old planes were used into the early '70's).
Another B-29 based plane, the C-97 cargo plane.
Yet ANOTHER B-29 based plane, this time a Super Guppy - used to move massively large items, including the Saturn booster rockets used in the Apollo Space program, and amazingly enough, up until the 1990's, every single fuselage for any Airbus plane. And yes, it can fly.
A Convair B-38 Peacemaker, one of my all time favorite planes, of truly massive proportions.
Another B-52 lurking behind a roped off area, this one dark and mysterious in all black.
And finally, an actual B-29, in all it's restored glory. There were so many other planes there, that I really couldn't take it all in. Unfortunately, the weather started to turn cold, windy and even a little drizzly, so it was time to move on.
As we headed closer to the Mexican border and our campsite for the night, the weather got progressively worse. The dark skies started to open, and it began to rain. Somehow, I managed to miss an important turn, and we headed off into the wilds of Arizona.
We were very much not in the right place, but at least I got to see an real live arroyo, with concrete in place of the asphalt so as not to be washed away when the sudden flooding happened.
Determined not to backtrack, we kept going further south on a road that became increasingly bad. eventually, some 30 miles from the missed turn off, we gave up. The road signs didn't make any sense, our GPS was without signal, and darkness was approaching.
We spotted a lonely calf wandering the road while retracing our steps.
Eventually we made it back to the main road, and the skies that looked like they were no longer threatening opened up again. We still ventured into the campground we wanted for the night, but for some weird reason, it was completely full. Thoughts of trying to set up camp in the cold rain and darkness just weren't that appealing, so we headed into the border town of Nogales, Arizona for the night, and found a Motel 6 with reasonable rates. Figuring that we had nothing to lose, we checked in.
I had a tiny bit of forethought while in the hotel room, and decided to prepare some of the food we had bought for the next night. Onions + red wine + steak, left to marinate seemed like a good idea.
The rest of the night was accompanied by a bottle of wine, and a good nights sleep.
I also had a chance to check out the Sonic a bit more thoroughly, and was glad that I had gone for the hatchback. Off in the distance, parked on the gravel was the famous blue Scoot. The last time I saw the Scoot was seven months prior, in Nevada. Since then it had gone to Mexico and back. Must be a tired scoot!
After a bit of a struggle finding a decent breakfast place, eventually we settled on a funky coffee shop that was in an old craftsman style bungalow. The food was decent and the atmosphere was great.
Why does it seem that when I show up, the Scoot is always being abandoned besides someone's house?
Back at the Airbnb, we packed our food in the the coolers.
An then packed Hedgehog (Sonic the Hedgehog...get it?) and departed southward.
Before we left, I stopped at a cul-de-sac for a formal portrait of the Sonic. I was interested in see in how it compared the Ford Fiesta I had rented from Payless Cars a few years back on my trip to Las Vegas, Reno and everywhere in between. It was a base spec Sonic, with AC, cruise, iPhone input and surprisingly, remote start.
My first real taste of south west desert, and boy was I happy to be there.
On our way south towards Tucson, I happened to spot something way off in the distance. It was the Pinal Air Park. It is now primarily a boneyard for commercial aircraft (one of the largest, if not the largest, in the world). It has an interesting history, including being the base of operations for the CIA's covert air operations during the Vietnam war (including the famous Air America). It was sad to see so many 747's awaiting scrapping.
I was so excited to go to the Pima Air & Space Museum - it felt like it was the Smithsonian Air and Space on steroids! I promise I'll try not to bore you with lots of plane pictures.
A Boeing B-52 Stratofortress that was used in the X-15 rocket program.
Boeing B-50 based inflight refueling plane (based on the B-29 design, but with uprated engines and removed armements, these old planes were used into the early '70's).
Another B-29 based plane, the C-97 cargo plane.
Yet ANOTHER B-29 based plane, this time a Super Guppy - used to move massively large items, including the Saturn booster rockets used in the Apollo Space program, and amazingly enough, up until the 1990's, every single fuselage for any Airbus plane. And yes, it can fly.
A Convair B-38 Peacemaker, one of my all time favorite planes, of truly massive proportions.
Another B-52 lurking behind a roped off area, this one dark and mysterious in all black.
And finally, an actual B-29, in all it's restored glory. There were so many other planes there, that I really couldn't take it all in. Unfortunately, the weather started to turn cold, windy and even a little drizzly, so it was time to move on.
As we headed closer to the Mexican border and our campsite for the night, the weather got progressively worse. The dark skies started to open, and it began to rain. Somehow, I managed to miss an important turn, and we headed off into the wilds of Arizona.
We were very much not in the right place, but at least I got to see an real live arroyo, with concrete in place of the asphalt so as not to be washed away when the sudden flooding happened.
Determined not to backtrack, we kept going further south on a road that became increasingly bad. eventually, some 30 miles from the missed turn off, we gave up. The road signs didn't make any sense, our GPS was without signal, and darkness was approaching.
We spotted a lonely calf wandering the road while retracing our steps.
Eventually we made it back to the main road, and the skies that looked like they were no longer threatening opened up again. We still ventured into the campground we wanted for the night, but for some weird reason, it was completely full. Thoughts of trying to set up camp in the cold rain and darkness just weren't that appealing, so we headed into the border town of Nogales, Arizona for the night, and found a Motel 6 with reasonable rates. Figuring that we had nothing to lose, we checked in.
I had a tiny bit of forethought while in the hotel room, and decided to prepare some of the food we had bought for the next night. Onions + red wine + steak, left to marinate seemed like a good idea.
The rest of the night was accompanied by a bottle of wine, and a good nights sleep.
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
March 17th: LaBelle > Ft. Lauderdale > Phoenix AZ
Today was my last day with my parents, before setting off on the second part of my vacation. It wasn't going to be a short day, but I was ready for it.
The day started off foggy, which was unexpected, and made for a pretty morning at the campground. I say campground, but this place was a bit strange.
If you look closely at this "house", you'll notice that it has a Florida license plate hanging just below the window. I assume this is for insurance purposes, since mobile homes in south Florida are highly regulated, if they're licensed with the state as a portable vehicle, they can dodge all the requirements and get insurance at a cheaper rate. It's hard to feel pity for people who do such stupid things.
We loaded up the truck and headed south shortly after breakfast.
I've always wanted to drive down Tamiami Trail, which is further south than I-75 / Alligator Alley.
Alligators, of course.
Lots of alligators. Sunning themselves in the warmth, and not really doing much else.
There really wasn't much else to see as we moved eastward into the Florida Everglades, just mile after mile of flat swampland and blue skies. Eventually we reached the far western edges of Miami, and the urban sprawl set in.
After slogging through early-afternoon Miami traffic, I made it to the Ft. Lauderdale airport and said goodbye to my folks and the red truck.
For this leg of the trip, I was flying on US Air. It was a fairly unremarkable flight.
Nice view of Fort Lauderdale coastline.
Flying above the clouds somehow felt magical, as it always does.
Fantastic sunset, flying over what I believe was Mexico.
Hello, Phoenix! My first view of the city since 1996, and then I was only passing through.
I finally arrived, and made it to the rental car counter. I was early by a few hours, but I figured they'd surely have a car for me. Oh, how wrong I was! I had to kill almost 3 hours, so my friend Steph's friend in Phoenix came to pick me up, and we all went out for Ethiopian food. That beer, whatever it was, was one of the best tasting drinks I've ever had.
The jet lag, combined with the warm Phoenix air and the fantastic food made me supremely tired, but I still had to return back to the airport to pick up my rental car.
Not tired enough to accept a ratty 2013 Hyundai with 47,000 miles on it.
Of course the Chevy was an "upgrade" for some weird reason, but it only had 17k on the odometer and was a hatchback, far more preferable than the sedan. So I splurged, and set off to find my Airbnb that I was staying at with Steph. A short while later I was showered and in bed, thankful to finally be resting.
The day started off foggy, which was unexpected, and made for a pretty morning at the campground. I say campground, but this place was a bit strange.
There were quite a few RV's like my parents, fifth-wheels, trailers etc, but more than a few had been modified into something that was far more permanent. Even trailers that are supposed to move around from place to place seem to have sprouted permanent roofs.
And then there are the "park model" trailers that are never going to move again, with porches, carports and concrete driveways. When I say they'll never move again, there is one way they'll go someplace: the moment a hurricane swipes through. Which leads to the next strange thing:
And then there's this sign that was posted on the shower house door. I...don't even know what to say. Yes, this was a strange place indeed.
I've always wanted to drive down Tamiami Trail, which is further south than I-75 / Alligator Alley.
I don't know what I expected to see or find down that way, bug the Big Cypress Natural Preserve was an interesting place for sure. I wish I had been able to spend more time poking about, but sadly I had a plane to catch.
Alligators, of course.
Lots of alligators. Sunning themselves in the warmth, and not really doing much else.
There really wasn't much else to see as we moved eastward into the Florida Everglades, just mile after mile of flat swampland and blue skies. Eventually we reached the far western edges of Miami, and the urban sprawl set in.
After slogging through early-afternoon Miami traffic, I made it to the Ft. Lauderdale airport and said goodbye to my folks and the red truck.
For this leg of the trip, I was flying on US Air. It was a fairly unremarkable flight.
Nice view of Fort Lauderdale coastline.
Flying above the clouds somehow felt magical, as it always does.
Fantastic sunset, flying over what I believe was Mexico.
Hello, Phoenix! My first view of the city since 1996, and then I was only passing through.
I finally arrived, and made it to the rental car counter. I was early by a few hours, but I figured they'd surely have a car for me. Oh, how wrong I was! I had to kill almost 3 hours, so my friend Steph's friend in Phoenix came to pick me up, and we all went out for Ethiopian food. That beer, whatever it was, was one of the best tasting drinks I've ever had.
The jet lag, combined with the warm Phoenix air and the fantastic food made me supremely tired, but I still had to return back to the airport to pick up my rental car.
Not tired enough to accept a ratty 2013 Hyundai with 47,000 miles on it.
Of course the Chevy was an "upgrade" for some weird reason, but it only had 17k on the odometer and was a hatchback, far more preferable than the sedan. So I splurged, and set off to find my Airbnb that I was staying at with Steph. A short while later I was showered and in bed, thankful to finally be resting.
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