Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Lessons from the road



Here are the lessons we learned and what worked well on this journey.

Good tips for road trips:

- Give each child a job. Hannah kept track of expenses. I gave her the receipt everywhere we went. James was in charge of food and had to keep track of what we needed. Beti was the postmaster. She kept stamps and had to mail postcards. Berhanu was in charge of Hank, the hedgehog given to us by our friend Beth. We were supposed to take his picture wherever we went, but poor Hank was left in the car more often than not. The older three took their jobs seriously.

- Camping breeds responsibility. The camping jobs are even more important. In teams, they started the fire, set the table, helped make dinner, then washed the dishes. They also helped set up and take down the tent.

- Personal plastic bins. They each had their own plastic bin for paper, crayons, books, journals, etc.

- Junior Ranger at National Parks. This is a great program. When we arrived at each park, we'd go to the visitor center, get the JR book and start on our way. It gave some focus to our visit, and we all learned unique details about each park. It was a lot of work for me to help each of them, but it was worth it because I learned along with them.

- Don't let the fuel go below 1/2 tank. Great advice I followed diligently. It came in handy when we saw nothing for miles or when gas was expensive

- Get AAA Plus. We didn't need it, but I was glad we had the extra towing mileage, just in case.

- Get a GPS. We named ours "Margarita" and she made the trip so much easier.

- We still need paper maps. While the GPS got us to our next destination, the good old-fashioned paper maps were important for seeing the big picture. We also used our USA map to track and highlight where we had traveled.

- Use redbox videos. We would rent a DVD at a redbox location for $1 a day, then return it at another redbox location along the way. Redboxes are located at McDonalds, grocery stores, Wal-Marts, Walgreens, etc. throughout the country. It helped a lot for the long car rides.

- McDonalds are great for travelers, and not because of the Big Macs and the redbox videos. The 99 cent ice cream cones are a great afternoon treat. No choices - one size vanilla soft serve, take it or leave it - so much easier than our usual ice cream orders. Also, I could use WiFi while they played in the playspace. When you're traveling for hours, it's a good break.

- Try to swim every day. Water melted all the bad moods away, even if it's just playing on the edge of a creek.

- Give way to some rules from home. (I let them eat Pop Tarts along the way and we listened to more rock music than we otherwise would have.)

- Don't drive past 9 pm on a trip like this. This was particularly important when I was the only adult with the kids. Everything gets more complicated at night.

- Books and stories on CD help fill up hours and hours of travel time.

- Buy your tent from LLBean. (See blog entry re: tent catastrophe.)

- Keep in touch with your second cousins and dear friends when they move away.

Interesting observations:

- It's the people, not the places, that are most important. We saw beautiful, amazing scenery and we all loved that, but the best memories are with the friends and family we met along the way.

- Lowest gas price: $2.43 in South Dakota (second lowest: $2.49 in Mississippi)

- Highest gas price: $3.49 near Yosemite National Park (another benefit of not getting below 1/2 tank - you don't have to buy the most expensive gas)

- Most interesting road kill: Armadillo in Mississippi

- Nicest grocery store: Dillons in Lawrence, KS

- Animal we saw that we'd never heard of before: Pronghorn

- Most amazing night sky: Moab, UT - incredible amount of stars and a few planets

- Most beautiful sunset: It's a tie: Yosemite - as the sun set in the West, the reflection shone on the mountains to the East, or Moab - the arches changed color as the sun set.

- Total miles driven: 10,798

- "It's not the heat, it's the humidity:" When it's above 100, it doesn't matter. We learned that we don't do well in the high heat (especially mama!)

- Snow in July is just as cold on your toes as snow in January.

- White water rafting had it all - history (Native American petroglyphs), excitement (Class II and III rapids), relaxation (lunch on the beach, floating in the river alongside the rafts), scenery (beautiful canyon walls)

-People are generally kind and helpful.

-I'm much more relaxed now that we're home.

Well, this is the end of the blog. It was fun to do this as we traveled along. Thanks for reading and for the comments and emails. It was a great trip. The bickering was a bit much, but it would be like that at home too. We have a lot of great memories that will last a long time. I am hoping that the friends we visited will now come and visit us in Maine - Vactionland.

Love to all of you,
Mary

Almost home




Well, we're back where we started with our friends, the McCarthys. It is feeling more and more like home. We had a fun night with Anita's high school friends, then drove to Springfield to have dinner with my brother Lenny and his family, arriving home in Maine Saturday night. As we drove up Route One, we rolled down the windows, sang "Get Out The Map" at the top of our lungs and hooped and hollered our way home. I was going to stop for a photo with the "Welcome to Maine - The Way Life Should Be" sign, but we were too anxious to get home. We had a great time, and it felt so good to be home again!!

Michigan






We stopped in Michigan to see our friends, the Pinciaros, and to meet Anne's family. It was a short but fun visit - sailing, tubing and seeing a live performance of the Thriller video by Anne's niece and nephew. Very impressive. Did I tell you that this was the Michael Jackson funeral tour? Everywhere we went, we heard MJ songs, saw t-shirts and posters for sale, saw his videos, learned to moon walk, etc. The whole country is reacting to his death.

Any day with Anne and Doug is sure to be fun, and this was no exception. Anne's family is wonderful and they were very warm and hospitable as we crashed the family vacation for a night. Doug had me "hiking out" off the Laser (sail boat), and I survived with my back in tact. It was fun - never a dull moment with him! We ate a lot of delicious Michigan corn and felt like we were really getting close to home.

Chicago photos












Millenium Park - the kids played in the fountain and we saw the interactive sculpture referred to as "The Bean"




Photos:

The McLaughlin girls

The Douglass Family

Cathy the bee-keeper in her beautiful garden. The honey is delicious

My friend Mike















Chicago

In Chicago, we visited my cousin and friend, Cathy, her husband, Kevin, and three of their five boys. It was fun to see the boys so grown up. Unfortunately, Cathy's sister, Maureen, was away during our visit, but that meant we could stay at her lovely home. We were sorry to have missed Mo, but we loved staying at her home and seeing her husband, Mike, and son, Brian. Brian's a talented musician, and I'll post a video of him singing. We toured around Chicago, walked a lot, visited Millenium Park and saw some good friends, like my old friend Mike Lannan. We also had lunch with our friend Katie's sisters, Kelly and Bridget. The kids had a therapy session with Bob Newhart - I think he was overwhelmed, he didn't say much.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

South Dakota














South Dakota was interesting country.  To begin with, there are several Native American reservations in South Dakota. This is the area of Little Big Horn and Wounded Knee -  the area where the Sioux 

people tried to hold on to their land and culture at the end of the nineteenth century.  I picked up two books in an effort to learn more about present-day Native Americans and the Indian civil rights movement of the 1970s:  Lakota Woman by Mary Crow Dog and In the Spirit of Crazy Horse by Peter Mathiesson.   Both books are about the extreme racism against Native Americans in S. Dakota and elsewhere in the region.  This is one form of racism that I have not been exposed to in New England.  In speaking with a Native American woman, I learned that the racism still lingers, and she told me about a hate crime committed against some young Indian girls just recently in Rapid City, SD.  

We visited the Crazy Horse Memorial - a work in progress for the past fifty years which will result in a huge granite carving of Crazy Horse in the side of a mountain.

We stayed in a cabin in Custer State Park and saw a lot of wildlife there.  The heavily-advertised Wall Drug in Wall, SD was a waste of time.  The other corny tourist trap is the Corn Palace in Mitchell, SD (believe it or not, there is only one corn palace in the world.)  It is decorated with corn cobs.  While this is another gimmicky tourist trap, it was interesting to see the murals inside and outside made completely of corn cobs.  Note the Mt. Rushmore of corn and the real Mt. Rushmore.

The other interesting thing about our visit to South Dakota was the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.  Perhaps you are like us, and perhaps you don't know about Sturgis "bike week."  Perhaps, like us, you have never even heard of Sturgis, SD.  Well, friends, be warned ...  each year during the first week of August, Sturgis, SD holds its annual motorcycle rally.  Bikers from all over the USA come to South Dakota for bike week.  Louden, NH and Daytona Beach, FL have nothing on Sturgis.  It seems that bike week is being held in the entire state.  Towns block off the middle of their main street so that motorcycles can park along the double yellow line in the middle of the street.  Tee shirts advertising bike week are sold in gas stations many hours from Sturgis.  We met bikers all across the state who were making their way to Sturgis.  These bikers are not the motorcycle gang members that we used to hear about.  These are very nice, fun-loving people who are enjoying the countryside by motorcycle.  They were with us in the state park, in the national park, at Mt. Rushmore, Crazy Horse Memorial and just about everywhere we went.  We weren't in or near Sturgis, but we felt like we had been to bike week ourselves because the bikers were everywhere.  It added some color and excitement, of not noise, to our visit to South Dakota.

Why did no one warn me of Sturgis Bike Week?  Can it be that none of you know of this phenomenon?


Photos:

Chris at Crazy Horse Memorial - Face can be seen in background

Badlands National Park.  Cool geology.  Our hike took us up a steep ladder and around some dangerous rocks with a big droop off.   We arrived at a beautiful overlook with contrasting views of the green prairie, and the gray barren rock.

Mt. Rushmore of stone and Mt. Rushmore of corn

Some bikers we met on the way.


The center of Custer, SD is reserved for motorcycles.





Wildlife photos















Elk - Rocky Mountain National Park, CO









Moose - Rocky Mountain National Park, CO








Elk - Grand Canyon (walking right behind Beti and Berhanu)








Big Horn Sheep - Glacier International Peace Park, MT








Mountain Goat - Glacier International Peace Park, MT








Bison - Custer State Park, SD








Prairie Dog - all over South Dakota.  I think we saw a thousand prairie dogs.  








Pronghorn - Badlands National Park, SD and Custer State Park, SD






Donkey - Custer State Park, SD - this one was looking for a snack in our car.