Where Does That Highway Go?

Month: November 2022 (Page 2 of 3)

Day 86

At the grocery store, I felt the holiday season rear its head for the first time. The coffee cups had garlands and ornaments printed on the side; wreaths were hung on the walls; the store radio played Rudolph (B-tier carol). And, of course, it was chilly. I love this part of the year, even the days shortening. I think it forces us inside to reflect and regroup. I have been reflecting for the past three months, however, and worry about overreflection. I distracted myself with coffee. This tends to work.

Some highways in Missouri aren’t numbered, but rather are lettered. On my way toward the Ozark Plateau, as the plains gradually became hillier, I passed routes K, Z, N, F, CC, and O. These are supplemental highways, connecting larger and more “important” roads. It took the entire trip to Clinton to get used to them. Once I was in town, I pulled into the CVS to use the restroom and realized I should get my COVID booster. I trotted back to the car to get my vaccine card from the safe, which is hidden in the car’s [REDACTED]. I was perturbed to find I could not remember the three-digit combination to open the safe. I tried numbers with meaning, abbreviations of my normal PIN, and the funny numbers. Nothing. I suppose I’ll have to brute-force it once I get home.

I’ve been relatively fine after past vaccinations, but I figured I ought to have a full stomach just in case. I went to a Mexican restaurant down the street and was disappointed. The Southwest has spoiled me. I hit the road grumpily, in search of a better meal. I darted through Springfield and soon pulled into Branson, the Tacky Roadside Nexus of America. Branson is confident in its tastelessness, which I suppose is an asset. But the roadside attractions lack charm or genuine weirdness, instead catering to the lowest common denominator that is the American tourist. The Hollywood Wax Museum! Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Vaguely-themed attractions offering vague entertainment! Meh. I could just be too young for the town—at the barbecue restaurant where I picked up dinner, the average age was seventy-three. 

The benefit of Branson is that its hotels are cheap in the off-season. I booked a very serviceable room for fifty dollars. I’ll sleep off the vaccine and head somewhere more to my liking tomorrow.

Day 85

CW: Racial slurs

Staying in hotels is ruining my sleep schedule. I stayed up until 12:30 last night and got up at 9:15, missing the free breakfast in the process. Starting today, I am publicly announcing my commitment to a 10pm bedtime (barring extenuating circumstances). Keep me honest, everyone.

My first and only stop in Topeka was the Brown v. Board of Education museum, located inside the old elementary school where Brown et al. went to school. Wow. This museum may be the best museum I have ever attended. It’s small, and only takes an hour or two to tour. But every moment is crafted to pose hard questions and demand answers. Thank you to Preston, the ranger who gave me a dynamic off-the-cuff talk that detailed the case’s history. There’s far too much to go into here, so here are some highlights:

  • The NAACP, which sponsored and led all arguments for these cases, couldn’t break through the “separate but equal” barrier by focusing on economic injustice. So they turned to the Topeka school system, where black and white schools were logistically and economically similar, and instead focused on the psychology of the students. This is a summary of the heartbreaking research of Drs. Kenneth and Mamie Clark that was included in the case.
  • One wall displayed this poem.
  • Occasionally, visitors were encouraged to answer questions on sticky notes and post them to the wall. The toughest: “If your child were selected to integrate a school, would you allow them to go?” The best answer: “Our auntie was one of the first students to integrate. She is our HERO. We want to be just like her.”

Still processing, I made the hour-long drive to Kansas City in search of barbecue. I was expecting this to be an in-and-out, surgical procedure, but found myself shocked at how vibrant and cool the Arts District was. Psychedelic murals covered the buildings, and the architecture was a mix of repurposed brick and flashy new construction. Throw in the nearby jazz and Negro League museums, and I think I’ll make a return trip here at some point. For now, I enjoyed the barbecue (good, but not life-changing) and, after the tough morning, enjoyed the simplicity of the afternoon.

Bird Lives, baby. Kansas City, MO

Day 84

A television in the hotel lobby was set to the local news. A local school board had unanimously voted to begin restricting graphic novels, and to remove language promoting diverse authors and free library access. Time to go! I booked it to the northeast. 

Everywhere I looked, I saw Cherokee Nation license plates. I hadn’t realized it, but I had stayed overnight in the reservation. It seemed exactly the same as the rest of the Tulsa suburbs. I wondered if that’s a good thing, or a bad thing, or if it just is. I drove down Route 66, out of the Cherokee reservation, and was promptly pulled over by a sheriff’s deputy. He very politely informed me that I was going 60 in a 55 and issued me a warning. I straddled the speed limit all the way into Kansas.

I stopped in Pittsburg for lunch, hoping to go to one of several fried chicken restaurants the Food Bible refers to as “legendary”. In true small-town fashion, they were all closed until dinnertime, so I found a brunch restaurant instead. To my surprise, the decor and the staff were very, very progressive—and the food wasn’t bad, either. I was inspired to further investigate the town.

Pittsburg was already decked out for Christmas, and banners hung from the  streetlamps in support of the local state college. The shops on the main drag were fascinating. In addition to the dentist, the contractor, and the mattress store, there were trendy boutiques, yoga studios, and upscale pet groomers. But two in every five storefronts were empty or filled with construction machinery. The streets were clean and the buildings were in good repair. I left town with more questions than answers.

Pittsburg, KS

Another long chunk of driving took me past sundown and up to the edge of Topeka, where I’m staying the night. As an added bonus, I’ll leave a puzzle I solved earlier today, which I found delightful.

  • English is filled with words that start with one letter, then have that letter as a double letter later in the word. Examples include “nanny”, “tattle”, “pepper”, and “sassafras”. The puzzle is: find three words that fit this condition and start with, respectively, the letters ch, and k. All of these are things you could pick up on a road trip. I have seen all of them, picked up many of one, and thought about picking up another. The third is a no-no.

Day 83

I said goodbye to the Spears and set off to the northeast. One of the more refined qualities of Oklahoma is their concentration of Dunkin’ Donuts (you can take the kid out of New England, etc.). I stopped for a coffee and was astounded to find they offer kolaches. I had one in Utah, which was a glorified bagel bite filled with eggs and cream cheese. The Dunkin version was a gigantic pig in a blanket. Research indicates this may actually be a klobasnek, and the higher-ups got the name wrong. I chickened out on it today; maybe I’ll give it a go tomorrow.

I spent the next two hours on Route 66. Getting my kicks, I suppose. I like the Oklahoman November. Even though the trees are stripped of leaves and the tall grass has browned, it’s still naturally beautiful. You can imagine the future blossoms and greens, and sometimes imagining is even better than seeing the real thing. Finally the suburbs emerged around the highway, and I arrived in Tulsa.

As previously mentioned, one of the classic Oklahoman dishes is the Coney dog. The toppings out here are no-bean chili, onions, and lots of powdery sprinkle cheese. I tried a pair at a local shack, and my experience was similar to when Zack and I tried Chicago-style hot dogs. They’re good! But they’re still hot dogs. I have never had a Coney dog from New York, so I cannot compare the two. My stomach grumbled for a few minutes afterward, which means I’ve grown weaker in my healthiness.

They taste better than they look.

I checked into a hotel shortly thereafter and began my slate of Monday phone calls. I enjoyed catching up with my friends, but I’m also ready to do some more exploring. We’ll see what I find tomorrow.

Day 82

The hotel breakfast was pretty bad, but it was free. I sat and enjoyed the conversation of the nearby Christian conference. The subject of the summit: how Christian views should be influenced by Jesus’s Judaism. The topic seemed quite interesting, but I wanted to see Oklahoma and not the Hampton Inn. I promptly checked out.

There are two “famous” dishes from El Reno, Oklahoma: the coney and the onion burger. We will discuss the coney tomorrow. Today, I stopped at Robert’s Grill on Route 66 and ordered an onion burger. The burger is grilled with a near-equal amount of onions on top—simple but delicious. I do enjoy the cheap, simple hamburgers that pop up from time to time. 

The rest of the day was a treat. My cousin Madi is in school at Oklahoma City University, so I swung by her junior voice recital and caught up with the rest of the Spear family. They graciously took me out to dinner, then dropped me back off at the OKC campus, where Madi snuck me into a practice room. I blew the dust off my piano chops and settled in for a long practice session. Life was good.

The beauty of the practice room. Oklahoma City, OK

I’m staying with the Spears tonight. Tomorrow, I will try the mysterious coney.

Day 81

Last night, I sketched out a route for the rest of the trip. If I combine those places with the places I’ve already visited throughout my life, I’ll have visited all forty-eight contiguous US states. Except Iowa. Shoot. Will I add 500 miles to sneak into Iowa? Probably not. Will I be miffed about it? Absolutely.

I loaded the car back up, then set off to breakfast. The diner was spacious and packed with characters. I noted at least a half-dozen ten-gallon hats; a boy, no older than eight, sporting a tank top and a sweet Def Leppard flatbrim; a party of eight uniformed in camo; and a guy my age rocking the Ziggy Stardust mullet. The food was good, if simple, and incredibly cheap. I munched on a biscuit while staring at the shrine to John Wayne in front of me. 

Amarillo, TX

I stopped at the hardware store for a can of spray paint, then drove a few miles out of town to the oddball roadside stop Cadillac Ranch. The namesake cars are anchored in the ground, and have long since been stripped down to their frames. Everything at Cadillac Ranch is spray-painted: the cars, the trash cans, the access road, the walkway to the access road, the dumpsters, the barrier that holds off traffic from I-40. The Cadillacs are bumpy and warped from thousands of layers of paint. The wind was intense, so I couldn’t show off my well-developed tagging skills. I made some minimal contributions and admired the absurdity of it all.

Cadillac Ranch, Amarillo, TX

It was time to leave Texas. I set off down Route 66, the Texan stretch of which has been subsumed by I-40, and was in Oklahoma an hour later. Route 66 is its own road here, its magic slightly spoiled by the interstate in the background. I passed the Joads and admired the scenery. I was fully out of the desert and into the plains. Trees stood in small groups, the kind under which you could imagine a farmer sleeping, hat over head. So far, I like Oklahoma better than the Texan Panhandle.

Day 80

North it is! I struck out into the desolate oil fields under gray skies, with the strange chicken-like oil rigs pecking at the ground. Within half an hour, I was in tiny Wink, Texas, where Roy Orbison grew up. He said that life in Wink was “football, oil fields, oil, grease, and sand.” Doesn’t look like much has changed. I continued through Kermit and Andrews; the towns became more developed and modern, but the gloominess remained. It wasn’t just the weather. I rebuked the feeling with puzzle podcasts.

It’s been a while since I felt I was just driving to get somewhere. If I don’t count my time on the interstate, I might have to think all the way back to the carbon-copy Indianapolis suburbs. There’s not a lot to note here; while my listicle yesterday reminded me that every place I go is filled with detail, I failed to find many details worth detailing. 

While the plains stayed the same, the temperature was falling, and I resigned myself to the first of what I presume will be many hotel rooms. I pulled into Amarillo around 4pm with a roaringly hungry stomach. The Food Bible recommended the brisket at Tyler’s Barbecue, which was an absolute winner. The meat was intensely flavorful, the green beans were crisp and full of umami, and the sauce had some kick to it. Without question. This was the highlight of the day.

I’m in my room now, luxuriating in a real bed. Tomorrow I set out for some legal vandalism.

Day 79

I ate breakfast in Terlingua, which is advertised as a ghost town. It looked more like a trailer park to me. The café was also half full, which showed two signs of life—the people and the place of business. Thoroughly unimpressed, I harrumphed back through Big Bend. It was too hot to hike, so after rehydrating at the visitor center, I kept on to the north.

In his book Blue Highways, William Least Heat-Moon takes a moment to observe the desert. He tries to observe as much as he can to refute the idea that there’s nothing out here. About two miles outside Big Bend, I did the same for a strict ten minutes. I then checked out the plants on the miraculous PictureThis app, which will identify about any plant you throw at it.

I noticed:

  1. The road, paved with black and red rocks
  2. The sky (duh)
  3. Rows of mountains along the horizon
  4. A truck with a teardrop trailer
  5. Reflective roadside posts, presumably for that Texas Flood Stevie was talking about
  6. A tube running through concrete under the road, for flood control
  7. An obnoxiously yellow tractor
  8. Gravel
  9. Sand
  10. Dirt
  11. Large rocks
  12. Dead grass
  13. Buffel-grass
  14. A gray moth with delicate black spots
  15. Bahia flowers
  16. Sumac
  17. Honeysweets
  18. Mock vervain
  19. Verdant grass
  20. A brilliant orange butterfly (not a monarch)
  21. Wooden fence posts
  22. Barbed wire
  23. Birds, unseen, squawking away
  24. Crownbeard 
  25. A spiny hackberry bush
  26. Whitethorn acacia
  27. Old man’s beard
  28. Spanish daggers
  29. A large yellow butterfly with black edges
  30. Creosote bushes
  31. A Mallard RV with aftermarket mud flaps
  32. A silver Silverado
  33. Ragweed
  34. Globemallows
  35. Pinkladies
  36. Sage
  37. Heat in varying amounts (strongest on the road)
  38. Metal fence posts
  39. Cracked mud
  40. Driftwood
  41. Flies
  42. Ants
  43. Haze cloaking the mountains
  44. Swooping, stretchy clouds
  45. My car
  46. Me, myself, and I
Nothing to see at all.

Another two hours brought me to Fort Stockton, where I set up shop. There’s nothing much to write home about here. I have to start planning ahead more, as the weather is turning cold. I might end up in more hotel rooms than I’d like, mostly for the guitar’s sake. I also haven’t decided where I’m going next. I’m leaning toward north, with a quick swoop through Kansas and Missouri. Find out next time.

Day 78

I quite like Alpine, Texas. It’s small—under 6,000 people—and it still feels full. It’s also not a backwater town. There’s a reasonable library, quality restaurants, and art in public spaces. I grabbed a coffee at the hipster-lite café next to the bookstore. The staff was young and happy. Alpine is a quietly joyful town; I hope it continues to do well. 

I continued south through pure countryside. It took an hour to find Terlingua, population 58. I banged a left and found myself in Big Bend National Park, right on the Rio Grande and the Mexican Border. Big Bend is in the Chihuahuan Desert, which is the third major desert I’ve visited so far. The fourth and final desert in the US, the Sonoran, will have to wait for another trip. The land is dusty, without the onslaught of sagebrush I’ve seen in the Mojave, the Great Basin, and the plains. The jagged Chisos Mountains dominate the landscape. This is classic American desert. 

The only shady oasis in Big Bend National Park, TX

On a 90-degree day, there’s not much to do but wait out the heat. I hunkered down in the shade until an hour before sundown, then ventured toward Santa Elena Canyon. On the bank of the Rio Grande, I found my second wedding party of the trip. I thought this location much more suitable than the Washington rainforest. The Rio Grande is heavily dammed upstream, but it’s still wide and pretty. The canyon walls are high and majestic, and the trails take you through the pricker bushes along the edge of the river. It was well worth the wait.

The Rio Grande, Big Bend National Park, TX. US on the left, Mexico on the right.

There’s a lot more to see in the crook of Texas, but my time here may be limited due to how unbelievably hot it is. We’ll see how much more sun I can stomach tomorrow.

Day 77

Hundreds of millions of years ago, the Capitan Reef was the shoreline of a gigantic sea. Time and nature took their course, drying out the region and uplifting the coastal limestone deposits. The Capitan Reef is now considered the largest reef of its kind in the world. This is how a geologist would think. I think it’s a bunch of cool mountains. The Reef includes the Guadalupe Mountains, the Carlsbad Caverns, and today’s hiking destination, McKittrick Canyon.

I learned about the canyon from the rest stop I stayed at last night. The complex had a fairly impressive exhibit detailing the area’s attractions. McKittrick stuck out as especially beautiful and especially close—a perfect combination. The park’s water pump was shut off for the season, so I wasn’t able to fill up for the full hike, but what I saw in three miles was glorious. The sheer variety of plant life is captivating. Agaves and yuccas are especially common, and while trees are few, they tend to be strange and colorful. 

McKittrick Canyon, Guadalupe Mountains National Park, TX

I settled in for a solid chunk of southeasterly driving. Though I clocked in at close to 200 miles, I only passed through four towns: Van Horn, Valentine, Marfa, and Alpine. Lobo will show up on your map, but there’s nothing there. There are no farms or buildings on the solitary stretches, and not even cows on the ranches. It was lonely. Music, podcasts, and the radio kept me company. Eventually, in Alpine, I grabbed a late lunch. At 4pm, I was the only customer. The relleno was delicious and reasonably portioned—another success. 

I’m staying at a rest station outside town tonight; I pulled over to play some music earlier in the day. There’s no cell service there, so I won’t be rabidly checking the election results. It’s probably healthier that way. Enjoy democracy, everyone!

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2024 On Tour

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑