Millies thoughts:
All during our cross country adventure I kept a daily diary. Usually I wrote late in the evening while Larry was on his laptop diligently entering daily blog information. I tried to document the most memorable things that happened in our travel for the day. Sometimes it was a couple of paragraphs and other times it amounted to quite a few pages of data. In the future I hope to compile a memory book along with pictures to remember this special time of my life.
When we were planning our trip, three months seemed like sufficient time to see everything we wanted to see. However, we soon found out we constantly had to make choices regarding the most important things we wanted to see and do in the different areas. In our estimation it would have taken at least six months or longer to view all the
natural wonders in the over 10,000 mile route we traveled. Regardless of all the things we missed, what we experienced was a motor trip of a lifetime.
I loved the excitement of “breaking camp” each morning, getting on the road by 9:00 am and seeing the open road in front us. Usually Larry would go on line the previous night and together we planned our route and what we might want to see. Sometimes our planned event didn’t work out; sometimes something else might catch our attention. Regardless, in my estimation being flexible is part of what made our trip fun and exciting.
Now that our motor trip has come to an end and Larry, Maggie, Dixie and I are back home in beautiful Myrtle Beach, I’m sure I will reminisce often of our adventure as I stroll our golden sands. These memories will encompass many things, however the rapport and kinship between Larry, myself and our girls is my utmost treasure.
The end of my babbling, until the next roadtrip!
Larry's closing comments:
We’ve been home a week and neither Millie or I have written any kind of conclusion to our trip. Millie hasn’t written a final chapter to her diary in part she thinks, because she doesn’t want the trip to be over and writing a closing would in effect end the adventure. My excuse is I’ve been too busy. With my granddaughter Delaney here last week I wanted to do something vacation like with her every day. I also had some things to do in preparation to getting the motorhome delivered to the body shop. To be totally honest, while my excuses are valid ones, I think my ego was traumatized by the accident.
After 10,000 miles of safe driving I ended on a bad note and haven’t wanted to relive or write about it. After thinking about it some I realized that my summary should be about my feelings of the entire trip and not the ending.
The best way to start is to repeat something I’ve said many times since my 2006 cross country trip, “Everyone should drive across this great country of ours!” And I do mean drive, be it in a car, RV, or motorcycle, the journey is a big part of the adventure.
Driving the open road you see the real America. We stayed off the interstates as much as was practical. The small towns and out of the way communities were some of our best discoveries, life just seemed so much more sane in the small rural areas.
We also stopped for several days each, in selected large cities. In most we did the standard visitors tour and always then explored attractions specific to our interests. We favored museums, gardens, aviation and engineering marvels when in the population centers, but the variety of things to see and do are endless.
Back on the highway, the grander of nature is around every bend and always changing. You never tire of the scenery; it’s all magnificent, we can’t name a favorite place but some of the really spectacular are, the Grand Canyon, Highway to the Sun in Glacier National Park, and the Pacific Coast Highway.
Another question we have been asked several times is, how well did we get along for 3 months in the relatively small confines of an RV? Your millage may vary, but for us, being together made the journey as pleasurable as the destinations. Driving along the highways and byways together we marveled at whatever was passing by. Conversation on the road included everything from music trivia to world peace. We kept advance planning to a minimum and stopped whenever we saw something interesting. We never lost the feeling that it was a grand adventure and got along so well during 10,000 miles on the road that we were reluctant to see it end.
I hope y’all have enjoyed traveling along with us and if you ever get the chance to take a journey like our roadtrip or a dream adventure of your own...... just go!
Update:
It is May 2015 and a lot has happened since the
circumnavigation of the continental US. The biggest event is Millie and I got
married. The wedding took place April 13 2013 on the beach were we met.
Afterwards we celebrated our union at a poolside reception with family and
friends. In the finest southern tradition we had Sticky Fingers BBQ cater the
party. It will long be a memorable event because we had Dave Chaney, a local
Elvis impersonator as the entertainment.
Millie has sold her house and we live at the Cane Patch, our
ocean view condo. The ocean is a short walk down the block, I can ride my
bicycle along Ocean Boulevard
and all the amenities of the city are close by. Even after two years we still
sit on our balcony and tell each other how lucky we are. Of course the best
part is having Millie as my wife, she has made me happier than I ever thought
was possible.
We spend winters in Florida
in our motorhome, not the one we had for the big trip, sadly the insurance
company totaled it. We replaced it with a 2000 Winnebago and it is working well
for us. It is probably for the best, the old one was mine from a previous life,
the Winnebago is ours.
In 2013 we did two summer trips, first we met friends at a
RV Rally in Syracuse New
York and then we toured all of the New
England states. The area is rich in Early America history and we
stopped at many of the sites. In addition to meeting our friends at the rally
we then stayed on their New York
farm for a few days. Lake George was also on our itinerary as was, New York
City, Newport RI, Hyenas Port, The Kennedy Library in Boston, On Cape Cod we
felt like visitors to another planet when we drove thru Providence, In Salem we
took a Segway tour, on the way to Bar Harbor Maine we stopped and visited an
army friend and also took in the scenic splendor of Arcadia National Park. We
spent 47 days on the road and traveled 3500 miles. We visited family on the way
up and also on the way south. One last stop on the way home was at Pigeon Forge
Tennessee where we attended several musical venues. It was a good trip.
After a brief stop at home in Myrtle
Beach we used the motorhome to pull a U-Haul trailer to Los Alamos New Mexico. It was a
five day drive straight to New Mexico
with the trailer. After delivering the heirloom furniture to Millie’s daughter
and visiting them for a couple weeks we enjoyed a leisurely paced trip home
which we called “The road less traveled tour.” We found Jesse James grave in New Mexico, We stumbled upon the Waylon Jennings RV Park
in Littlefield Texas, dug for diamonds in Arkansas and also visited the Clinton presidential library. We stopped in Memphis and toured Graceland and stayed at a state park in
Georgia
named for the vise president of the confederacy.
In 2014 We stretched our winter sojourn by leaving Florida in
the spring and traveling a route that followed the gulf coast to Mexico, then
on to west Texas, and up thru New Mexico before turning east for home.
Along the way we strolled the French quarter of New Orleans,
Biked the beach front promenade in Biloxi, toured the Tabasco Factory on Avery
Island, took the motorhome on a ferry boat across Galveston Bay, rode the
gondola 700 feet to the top of the St Louis Arch, saw four musical shows in
Branson Missouri, Crossed the border and spent a day in Mexico, Climbed to the
ruins of an ancient Indian community on top of a mesa in New Mexico, toured the
corvette factory in Bowling Green Kentucky, visited big bend National Park in
Texas, played the ponies at Churchill downs, went to the Grand Ole Opry,
climbed the dunes at the White Sands National Park, explored the caves at
Carlsbad Caverns, visited the Angel Fire Vietnam Veterans Memorial in northern
New Mexico, in San Antonio we stood in the shadow of greatness at the Alamo.
It goes without saying that Los
Alamos is an important part of every trip out west and this time
we spent two weeks camped in Dave and Rae Anne’s driveway. We got to see the
grandkids everyday, Millie got to spend time with her daughter and the dogs and
I got to do a lot of hiking in the National Forest that adjoins their house.
Our 6000 mile road
trip lasted four and one half months and took us thru fifteen states. Whenever
we could we traveled on secondary roads, that’s were the real America is.
It’s the best advice I can give about Rving in the USA, get off the interstate and
take the road less traveled.
We did two more short trips in 2014 both large loops
stretching up to Delaware and west to southern
Virginia. On
both trips we visited family, did some sightseeing and even attended a wedding.
At home we did a few projects around our home, we also did
some work for the Cane Patch HOA and generally just enjoyed life at the beach.
Here in 2015 we were home for most of April and May. As I
write this we are in Martinsville
Virginia for a week. We go home
for two weeks and then depart for our Middle America
tour. It’s open ended, we’ll be back when we get back, probably sometime in
August. Looking ahead to 2016 we’re signed up for an RV caravan tour of the
Canadian Maritime States.
We’re still marvel at how lucky we are, for having found one
another, for being able to travel in our motorhome and for living at the
beach. Life is good!
See you down the road!
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