Sunday, July 21, 2019

Day 41: Home Sweet Home

Today was a sleep in day before our last leg of the trip. I’ve never been to Michigan and our hotel was a half mile from the border, so we popped over just to say we had. I've also fallen way behind in my blogging, so I’m hunkered down in the back seat working on this while Dad drives. We’re on the Ohio Turnpike right now and I’m hoping to get these posted from our next WiFi spot – Havertown!



Pennsylvania's Welcome Center on I-80 has a Peter Toth statue, too!

The last one we saw was in Valdez, AK

Today was a slog for me. My allergies are in full swing because I keep forgetting to take my medicine, so I was pretty cranky all day. Poor Mom and Dad. We stopped for lunch at the Twilight Diner near Lock Haven, PA where Dad accused me of posting a dorky photo of him at Mount Rushmore on Facebook. I had no recollection of doing so, and was gratified to learn that he himself posted the photo. Headache or no, Mom and I had a lot of fun laughing at him over that one.

We pulled onto Prescott Road at 8:47pm and thanked our lucky stars for wonderful friends and family who equipped us with fresh food staples like milk and eggs, turned on our A/C so we didn't melt when we got home to this heat wave, and kept Beaky and my worm farm alive. Between the physical support and the emotional support it's been an adventure, and our clan helped make it all possible! We love you guys!!!


Days 38 - 40: The Final Countdown


Wednesday morning was our second attempt at Glacier National Park. On the way west we had planned to take the Going to the Sun Road through the park, one of the best-known scenic drives in the world. The road travels through the mountains though, and the park service has to clear out the snow each summer before it can open “sometime in late June or early July.” Apparently, it takes about 10 weeks to clear the 50 mile road, so there’s a lot of snow involved (nearly 80 feet fell in Glacier in winter 2017/2018!). When we drove through back in June, we were 3 days too early – the road hadn’t yet opened. So Wednesday was our second chance to see its marvels. And, despite the rain and murk and wind that followed us for the second half of the drive, it was marvelous.


Lake McDonald Lodge

Sacred Dancing Cascade


McDonald Creek

Glacier has LOTS of colorful rocks


Bear Grass

Heavens Peak


"What, do you think you're in the Sound of Music?" - Dad

Sun Point

Sun Point was VERY windy




Wild Goose Island

Glacier was our last big planned side trek on our 6 week journey, so when we left the park around 5pm we were keen to hit the ground running. Dad suggested early on that Billings, MT would be a good stopping point. Mom and I weren’t convinced we could hang on that long. We started driving and figured we’d see where we ended up. We ended up in Billings.

Exiting the Blackfeet Nation

I was momentarily convinced these were mountain goats, but there was a dog shepherding them along. He stopped at the side of the road and was watching the cars go past before guiding the goats along. Hard working pupper!


At first I was mad this turned out blurry, but it's grown on me



The hotel I found online at the last minute was gross. It didn’t look gross online, the reviews didn’t say it was gross, but our room decidedly was. M & D think I’m a diva for not wanting to shower in a pile of gravel and dirt, or to sleep in a bed with stained blankets, but I committed to finding better hotels for the remainder of the trek (and have been successful, you’ll be pleased to learn).

Thursday was our last day for little side trips, including stops at Devil’s Tower, WY and Mount Rushmore in SD. Team, you’ll be thrilled to learn, I think, that I was successful in my mission: we made it to Mount Rushmore! I am now 1/3 in meeting Dad’s requests for this trip!



Dad thinks he's a cowboy


The Black Hills near Mt. Rushmore
We stopped for lunch in Sundance, WY in hopes that we’d meet Robert Redford. No dice, but I did the first 300 miles of morning drive so I got to order a nice big cold beer at lunch and relegate myself to the backseat for the rest of the day. We ordered entirely too much pizza and were grateful for the leftovers when we made it to Oacoma, SD for the night.

Friday was a heavy drive day. We decided early in the trip that none of us should do 300 mile drive days because the biggest tiffs that we’ve had have happened on those days. I drove 316 miles on Thursday but mostly escaped notice because of my wit and charm. Friday, though, we really nailed it. Dad drove 296 miles, I drove 298, and Mom had 250 (she was still raring to go at the end of the night when her drive ended but I was a wreck, Dad was wiped, and we had booked a hotel over dinner, so we were stopping, thank goodness). Nailed it!

The day was pretty uneventful otherwise. We drove through Minnesota (M&D had never been) and Wisconsin (Mom and I had never been), stopped in Wisconsin just before the Illinois border to have dinner and had to try 3 different spots before finding a place without a wait (Midwestern fast food chain called Culver’s). They had great milkshakes and cheese curds, so I was happy. I’m gonna have to eat a lot of veggies when I get home to counteract all the fries and sandwiches from the last 40 days though. We planned to stop in Elkhart, IN because it’s a familiar stopping point on the journey to Notre Dame. Every hotel in 40 miles was booked solid though, so we continued past Elkhart to a town called Howe. That’s when we reined Mom in to stop for the night.


Thursday, July 18, 2019

Days 36 & 37: Idaho into Montana


Monday morning’s trip to the Columbia River Gorge was so, so beautiful. The gorge was filled with lush, green plants; startlingly yellow rocks; and a crisp, blue river. The combination was remarkable and left me wishing I had artistic abilities so I could capture the views. We stopped at the town of Hood River on the recommendation of my cousin Dave – we thought to grab an ice cream cone and carry on in short order but ended up wandering around the town for nearly two hours. Hood River is, apparently, the kite boarding capital of the US and it was easy to see why: the gorge is protected enough to have lovely water, but angled such that the wind breezes along with predictability. We watched the kite boarders and wind surfers for a while, ate our ice cream cones from Mike’s, and window shopped at the many artisan shops along the main drag.

Mural in Hood River

Along the Columbia River Gorge

Even the view from the back seat was stunning



 When we finally dragged ourselves away from Hood River it was to seriously cover some ground. We planned a final stop before leaving Oregon so that we could get cheap gas pre-Washington. That backfired, as so many of our plans do, and the gas was $0.20/gal cheaper on the other side, but we didn’t learn that until AFTER we had a lovely little local diner lunch at a spot called Rae’s Dayz in Umatilla, OR. Realizing that, yet again, our gas purchase was done at precisely the wrong time to maximize savings was a little easier with full bellies. AND this diner had maybe the best beef barley soup ever.

Our stopping point for the day was to be Coeur d’Alene, ID at the recommendation of a work colleague. He was so right; the town was very cute. We got checked into our traveler’s motel and headed out bar hunting. We ended up at a spot called Moose’s Lounge (apt) and then strolled around town a little bit. One of Coeur d’Alene’s claims to fame is that Condé Nast took a liking to it and named the town’s namesake hotel the Best Inland Resort in the US. Part of the reason for that determination is Coeur d’Alene’s other major claim to fame: home of the longest floating boardwalk in the world. We wanted to scope this out and had images of fudge shops and tacky tee shirts floating in our heads. We were disappointed to discover that Idaho doesn’t take its boardwalk styling cues from Wildwood, NJ and instead its boardwalk was basically a publicly-accessible marina with a foot bridge so boats can get out. Not an ice cream shop in sight. We were bummed to be leaving Coeur d’Alene in the morning (add it to the list of places we wished we had more time to explore), but Montana was calling.

Coeur d'Alene boardwalk


Murals in Coeur d'Alene

Street Art




Coeur d’Alene is in Idaho’s panhandle up north, so getting to Montana was quick business in the morning. Getting to Kila, a little town west of Glacier National Park, took a bit longer and meant lots of time to appreciate Montana’s beauty. You’re hard pressed to find a road in the area we were traveling that isn’t designated scenic highway, but fortunately for us, Dad’s Peace Corps friend, Allyson, is from the state and gave us suggestions when we saw her on Saturday. We did a little detour through the Camas Prairie to see – bear with me here – dirt ripples.

Somewhere, ID



In case you didn’t know it, we’re a nerdy bunch. So when Allyson told us on Saturday about this mega lake that drained in the last ice age (several times, apparently) and left behind ripples in the ground (like those you’d see at the bottom of a creek or any flowing water, really) we were intrigued. Except unlike creek ripples, these ripples at 45 FEET HIGH in some places. Glacial Lake Missoula was so huge (over 1000 ft deep when it drained) that the ripples from its rapid draining are correspondingly huge. Looking out over a grassy prairie and realizing that we were standing at the bottom of an ancient lake bed and seeing the evidence of it before our eyes was pretty neat.






Our drive from there extended northward along the edge of Flathead Lake. It seemed like the entire hillside next to the lake was filled with cherry orchards, so we spent most of the drive Zillow-ing prices for buying a lake-front cherry orchard.

Flathead Lake cherries
Our AirBnB for the night (the final one planned for the trip, to Dad’s delight) was a bit off the beaten path. Kila is a tiny town, but we were on a side road, 3.5 miles off into the blue. Our instructions were to drive to the end of the driveway when we arrived, and, if we had a 4x4, to take the hill up to our cabin. There was some confusion about what “end of the driveway” meant when the drive split into two, and Mom was fed up with listening to backseat drivers. We saw the cabin and she wasn’t at all perturbed by the giant hill in front of us; she went for it. Dad’s Daily Report may have exaggerated the 45° hill, but honestly, it didn’t feel like he exaggerated by much. There were trees in tight on both sides of the drive and the gravel and dirt was dry and dusty from lack of rain so we were slipping the whole way up – maybe 20 feet of drive. I was sure we were about to be REALLY glad we paid for the optional insurance on our rental car. But Mom, bless her, showed that hill who’s boss and we made it. Our hosts later told us that they wouldn’t ever take a car up the hill – they use it with their 4-wheelers. Good to know.

The place was a little bit of a menagerie. I walked back down the hill after we were settled in (almost slipped and slid on foot, too) to say hello to our hosts and poor Tammy was in the middle of cooking dinner. She had a baby goat trailing her when she came out to greet me; “Have you ever fed a baby goat?” So that’s how Willie the Goat and I met, and that’s how I bottle fed my first baby goat.

Bella

"we're offering kittens to everyone who stays with us... do you want to take a kitten home?"

Obviously we did. But allergies.

Willie

Ted
The local critter population extended much beyond the domesticated bunch, though, and the cabin we were in had beautiful big picture windows for watching them. Hummingbirds zipped through the area all evening and in the morning, deer munched on the corn we left out for them with barely a second glance at us, 3 feet away through the window.

Dad secretly loves these rustic cabin AirBnBs

Morning visitors

"Can I help you?"


Before hitting the hay, Mom and I walked to the end of the road to check out Rodger’s Lake: