Showing posts with label road trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label road trip. Show all posts

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Breaking in Newt (Caution: media heavy)

Newt is finally starting to feel like "my" car.

Last week, we got the parts that Jay ordered for her: a warm air intake, a strut tower brace, and a set of cold air inlets.  We invited ourselves over to Deejo's to use his garage to put all of her new stuff on. 

The inlets are the only visible change
Since we had a new car and new performance-enhancing toys on the car, we decided to take a road trip.  You know 9HealthFair season begins for me in February and runs through May, so getting away is tough.  Last Saturday was my sixth Saturday in a row teaching phlebotomy to the RN students, so the thought of running away was enticing.

Our plans were to go to Mom/Autobot's birthday party and then head out to South Dakota immediately after.  Plans never work out that way, do they?

Ashinator's car broke down and left her stranded, so we had to deal with that before we could leave.  We did get it back on the road for much less money than we anticipated it would take (Bonus!), but also left a couple of hours later than we had hoped (bummer).  I don't know why the drive through Wyoming always takes days but, man, that's a long, tough drive.

We landed in Hot Springs, SD for the night and when we got up the next morning, headed into the Black Hills.  One of the parts we put on Newt was a strut tower brace to stabilize the suspension and take some of the body roll out while driving on the mountain roads.  There was one road in particular that we wanted to try, the Iron Mountain Road.  We weren't sure it was going to be open since it was still technically winter.

We took our time getting there.  We went through Wind Cave National Park, where we saw bison.



We took Newt's picture with a fake bison and drove past some young mountain goats.



We were pretty happy that the road we wanted was open.  There was a warning sign that the road received no winter maintenance, but it was in good shape.  As we left the one of the tunnels, we saw this view:

The view as you clear one of the tunnels on Iron Mountain Road
It was pretty cool, perfectly framed by the trees.  Makes you wonder if they cut away the trees on purpose, doesn't it?

I wish we had out GoPro for the road, but we forgot it, so we had to make do with my camera for video.




It was a lot of fun.  There are a total of three corkscrews in the road and each one is just a ton of fun.


Once we met up with the highway again, we got a much clearer view of Mount Rushmore.


We've both been to Mount Rushmore and had no desire to go to the visitors' center, so we kept driving on toward Crazy Horse.  The amount of work that it takes is astounding, and they accomplish more every day, but I'm afraid it won't be finished in our lifetime, which makes me sad.  I'm also very happy that it's absolutely, 100% privately funded, without government assistance whatsoever.



Statue in front of the visitors' center
From Crazy Horse, we drove up to Deadwood and stopped in a little town along the way to (attempt) to grab something to eat.  There are definite pros and cons to traveling in the off-season.  Pro: no tourists.  Con: nothing is open.  By this time, the places we were driving through were just a blur, so I don't remember where I took these pictures, but I love the artwork.



We did manage to find the one open restaurant in Hill City.  Despite the waitress's best efforts to forget us, we were able to eat and head back out on the road to Prairie Berry Winery for "free" wine tasting.  Free, my ass.  We walked out of there with almost $100 worth of wine.  To be fair, the wine was amazing and I'm sure we'll enjoy it.


Deadwood and Sturgis didn't warrant much other than a quick pass through town to say we've been there.  We still had some time to burn before we called it a day and the Devil's Tower was calling our name.  Back to Wyoming we went.  What astounds me is how close everything is once you're in the Black Hills.  I mean, it was maybe a half an hour from Sturgis to the Devil's Tower.  I had no idea they were so close.




On our way back to South Dakota, around Beulah, we hit 1000 miles on Newt.  They were darn fun miles, too.  A lot more fun than if we would have racked them up driving back and forth to work.

I did not take this picture while I was driving.  Jay did :)
Despite all of the road time and everything we packed into one day, we still managed to find a hotel in Spearfish, grab dinner, and watch The Walking Dead (OMG!  Best. episode. ever.).

Unfortunately, Monday morning, we had to head back home so I could go to work that evening.  Why is it heading out for a road trip is so fun that even driving through Wyoming is tolerable, but driving through Wyoming on the way home seems to take days and days?

It was certainly a whirlwind weekend, but it felt good to get away, even if it was only for one (very) full day.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Road Trip 7/16/2011

The day before my birthday, RCC and I got a wild hair and decided to load up in Ripley for a road trip.  It was a good choice, as I finally got to see a moose.  Nebalee had told us that the Poudre River was running high and that we needed to see it before it receded.  That was our excuse, but once we got on the road, we decided to just keep going all the way to Walden, down to Grand Lake, and across Trail Ridge Road.  It took us six hours, but just for you here it is in 5:56.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

The Scariest Road Trip I've Ever Taken

As I was writing about .38 and River for Tales From The Trail, I couldn't help but think about the trip to Arizona.  Since I was working as a medical assistant at the time and the clinic I was working at was open right up until the day before Thanksgiving, the kids and I didn't leave until really early Thanksgiving morning for our fifteen-hour drive to southern Arizona.

At that point, road trips with the kids were actually not too bad.  They were small enough that I could put one on each side of the backseat with a cooler in the middle and the oldest in the front seat.  We'd leave at four a.m., because, by my reasoning, the drunks were either home or had already killed themselves and the morning commuters wouldn't have left for home yet.  The greatest part was that we'd be in Colorado Springs, almost out of the state, before the kids would wake up and want breakfast and we'd be in need of a fill-up at that point anyway.

The morning started off well; I got the kids loaded in the car and we got out on time, which is pretty amazing.  They slept until we were almost to Raton, which made me think the trip was going to go unbelievably smoothly.  Boy was I wrong.  The kids woke up, dove into the cooler and ate some of the road trip crap I'd packed.  Beef jerky, Coke, Twizzlers.  You know, the stuff you can't live without when traveling.  They didn't whine too much about being in the car and didn't even start fighting.  Really, really thought the day was going to go well.

About twenty miles north of Albequerque the car started sputtering and acting up.  It was missing and acting like it wasn't hitting on all four cylinders, so I pulled off to check under the hood.  I wiggled the spark plug wires and one came off in my hand.  Not a big deal, I'd just pop it back onto the spark plug...wait, where the hell's the spark plug?  It's not in the little holey-thingy where it belongs.  I start looking around the engine, thinking that it had fallen out when the plug wire popped loose.  It wasn't there.  Just as I was thinking I'd lost my mind, I happened to glance at the end of the plug wire and there was my spark plug.  I tried to pluck the spark plug from the wire and couldn't, so I grabbed a hold of it and yanked.  And out came the spark plug and a little surprise.  The connector thingy that is supposed to be part of the plug wire that clamps onto the spark plug itself.  Oops.  Not a big deal, though, because waaaaaaaayyyy back when, I had learned to tune up a car when there weren't different lengths of spark plug wires, you just cut them to size, slid the boot back, and clamped on the connector thingy.  Hell, it hadn't been so long that I couldn't remember how to do that.

Except, apparently, things had changed since then.  The wires were fixed lengths and the boot wouldn't slide back.  I mucked around and mucked around before I finally just said screw it, screwed the spark plug back into its hole and jammed the plug wire on as tightly as I could, fully intending to pull into the next open place I saw and buy new damn plug wires.

I managed to limp into Albequerque and pull into the only freakin' open place...WalMart.  Yep, Thanksgiving day and the only thing open is WalMart.  Does WalMart have spark plug wires?  Not the one I went to.  Nor the second one I went to.  Finally, I got smart and had them call the other stores to see which one might have spark plug wires for me to buy.  After much cajoling and maybe a little bit of threatening, I managed to talk someone in the automotive department into chasing some down for me and giving me directions.

Finally, after a delay of more than two hours, the kids and I were back on the road and headed to Arizona.  The plan was to drive south through New Mexico and hang a right at Hatch.  From there I had some less-than-clear directions that I was assured would make sense once I got there.  Uh.  Okay.  It meant riding in warm southern Arizona and I figured I could always find a gas station or something/someone to give me directions to the ranch.

Despite the delay, the kids were still pretty much rock stars.  I only had to threaten them a couple of times.  I do believe that I promised to dump their bodies in the Arizona desert where the critters would scatter their bones far and wide and their bodies would never be found.  Surprisingly, it worked.  Eventually flat-out boredom struck and they all fell asleep as the sun went down.

I did okay until I made the right turn at Hatch.  By that time, it was dark and the landmarks were hard to find, so each time I thought I was approaching an intersection, I slowed to a crawl, which put us even further behind schedule.  From Hatch, I'd called the ranch to let them know where I was and verify the directions.  They told me I was only a few hours away.  Heck, after all the time we'd already spent in the car, what was another few hours?

I managed to find the correct county road and I was on my way!

I was the only car on the road.  There was nothing, and I mean nothing, to see in front, behind, to the left, or to the right.  Just the stars in the sky above.  The kids were asleep and I'd gone into cruise mode, just me and the car and the road.

I suddenly realized that there was a car behind me with the headlights off.  I'll admit that I'm hyper-vigilant about cars following me, as the kids and I had been trapped in a drive-through a couple of years earlier by my ex-turned-stalker.  Needless to say, a large vehicle pacing me with the headlights off pegged my "Oh Shit" meter.  I reached down with my right hand just to make sure that my Glock hadn't slipped back from where I'd put it between the seat and the console.

The car kept pace with me for a half a mile or more before another large vehicle, also without headlights, turned on to the road next to me.  The second vehicle rode just forward of my left bumper, not leaving me any maneuvering room should the first vehicle crowd me.  I started looking for an escape route, but there wasn't any.  The car to my left kept me from moving into that lane and the car behind me was pretty much on my bumper.  To my right was a large concrete irrigation ditch.  There was nowhere but forward to go.  I was essentially being herded by people I couldn't identify.  Suddenly, my .40 caliber Glock didn't really seem sufficient, but I knew I'd go down shooting if I had to.  I reached down again with my right hand and loosened it from the holster to make sure there wouldn't be any glitches if I had to draw.  At the time Iwas thinking that I'd inadvertently interruped a drug exchange and was hoping that my non-descript gold Honda wouldn't draw too much attention from them.

By this time, I'd been a competitive defensive pistol shooter for over a year and knew I could hit anything I aimed at, but sure the hell didn't want to have to.  As my "Oh Shit" meter continued to climb higher than I ever thought possible, a car pulled out in front of me from a ranch access road on the right. 

As the car turned, my headlights caught the Border Patrol insignia painted on its side.  It was painted in non-reflective paint, so I was lucky to get a look.  I'm pretty sure that the driver's timing was off; if he's pulled out sooner, he would have been outside the range of my headlights.  Or maybe he did it on purpose to see if they'd get a reaction out of me.  As they herded me it dawned on me that I was so close to the border that they were suspicious of me.  Me!  A single woman with three kids in an old, hardly running Honda Accord.

They escorted me like a prisoner for another mile or so, before the one in the back flashed his headlights and the peeled off, one by one, until it was just me and the car and the road.  I slammed the Glock back down into its holster, relieved that I hadn't chosen to try to defend myself against the freakin' Border Patrol.  'Cause guess what?  I'd've lost.

The adrenaline dump, courtesy of the United States Border Patrol, lasted me until I saw the most welcoming sight in the world: the ranch lights.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Wilson Family Luck

We got back from Logan, Utah yesterday. The trip was definitely an adventure! We left Thursday night for the forever drive through Wyoming (surprisingly, it wasn't as horrible as I had imagined) into Utah. Initially, we had planned to stop in Wyoming and find a hotel room, but since the drive was going so well, my darling "driving machine" RockCrawlinChef decided we'd push through to Logan. Seemed like a good idea at the time. Until we got to Logan at 1:30 in the morning only to find that EVERY hotel/motel was booked full due to the Cache County Fair.

No problem, just down the road a few miles is Brigham City, surely they'd have rooms. Ha! Apparently the fair had a bigger turn-out than usual. There wasn't a room for rent anywhere in Brigham City. Again, no problem. Just twenty miles down the road is Ogden. Certainly a city the size of Ogden would have even one room we could rent and puppy-pile in (there ended up being six of us on the trip).

Double Ha! When I went in to the Best Western only to find that there were no rooms (we'd literally hit 10 or so places - every one in Logan and Brigham City), I finally asked why there weren't any rooms. Seems that there was a mudslide that closed Highway 6, an Outdoor Trade Show in Salt Lake, and all of the county fairs. There literally wasn't an open room ANYWHERE. But there was an open dirt lot that we were welcome to park in if we wanted to sleep in the car. Turns out that was the best offer of the night. Not wanting to believe the guy, we drove around for another hour, even stopping at rent-by-the-hour hotels (where we saw some seriously suspicious activity) in a vain attempt at finding a place to lay our weary heads. No go. At 4:30 in the morning we were back at the Best Western, parked in their dirt parking lot trying to get some sleep. Luckily, we took the Excursion which has plenty of room for five adults and one pint-sized kid to toss and turn and try to find a comfortable position to sleep in.

After an hour and a half, we gave up and went for breakfast then headed to RockCrawlinChef's aunt's house, where we all crawled gratefully into bed and slept away the morning. The hotel thing could have been an absolute disaster, but was actually hilarious. We couldn't help but laugh at the whole thing. Even once we got sort of settled into "bed" in the Excursion we couldn't get to sleep because somebody (RCC) would start giggling and set us all off again. Honestly, it was the most fun I've had sleeping in a car!