All posts by Martin

Silver Linings

I left home on Dec 17 and tonight is my last night before I start the 24 hour drive home.

It’s been months and it does feel that way. Hard to believe that my visit to my cousins in New Jersey was the same trip as this. They were my first night out of Boston in New Jersey as I headed south eleven weeks ago.

My plan was to leave New Orleans a week ago which was the Friday before Fat Tuesday. The Universe had other ideas.

The pickup truck attempted to get through the yellow light. He didn’t make it. And he ended up driving away at the end of the evening.


Plans for after New Orleans before the incident.

Actual plans.
(I will be able to get to these missed places next winter when I head to Texas)

I needed to stay in New Orleans until the insurance adjuster took a look at things. At that point I’d be able to make some decisions. I was here an extra week and had to remove the planned drive taking me further out west to the edge of Texas.

I did, however, end up getting stranded in New Orleans through Mardi Gras. I reconnected with friends I hadn’t seen in 30 years and got to see a small glimpse as to how some of my life may have been if I decided to stay in New Orleans all those years ago. It was really special.


This is Tommy. A friend from 30 years ago… and still a friend today!

This is basket 14 at City Park Disc Golf Course in New Orleans that I had the opportunity to play.

These are friends from Boston that were down in New Orleans on Krewe of Tuck.

And these are my friend from Boston throwing beads at the Krewe of Tuck parade.

And although the car is totaled and I missed out on seeing some new places and visiting some owners I was looking forward to seeing, the silver linings continued to show themselves.

My old friends started Krewe of Clouet a few years after I left. I felt very welcomed and participated on the march to Jackson Square.
I’m Elvis with the sunglasses in the upper right corner.

It’s time to finally head out. I leave tomorrow and decided to stop at a local bar for a cold beer on my last night. It was a bar around the corner that I had visited on one of my first nights here. I sat outside again. It was very peaceful. I thought about the past week… and the past eleven weeks.

As I finished my drink and went to leave, the bartender asked how I was doing. I told her everything was really good. My car is totaled and everything is really good.

I am feeling very grateful.

Signs, Signs, Everywhere are Signs

I don’t quite understand the meaning of this sign.
This sign in Raleigh, NC
I do get the no parking part. That’s pretty obvious.
I will definitely not park my vehicle here.
It refers specifically to parking and what you can do, or more precisely can’t do, with parking here.
It then refers to Stopping. And it refers to Standing.
It doesn’t, as it does for parking, tell you not to stop,
not to stand.
Does that then mean that stopping and/or standing would be, not just approved of, but asked of you?
They are after all, yelling it at us.
STOPPING
STANDING
No parking!! but….
STOPPING
STANDING
I stopped and I stood.
My grandfather built this building 92 years ago.
It is in Pottsville, Pennsylvania.
He and my dad were pharmacists and worked here for as long as I have a memory.
It continued to exist long after they worked there.
Owned and operated locally by trusted town pharmacists
After they worked there.
These are my daughters in front of the store.
I recently stopped in on my way to Florida
This sign and this building are close to my heart
The store has been closed and the sign is gone

Found the above sign in Boise, Idaho.
It was in front of the building next to the Freak Alley sign

Nice perspective on the beer.
Great perspective down the alley.
The sign on the left is at the head of the
Wheeling Suspension Bridge in Wheeling, WV.
It was built in the mid 1840’s,
and was the world’s longest suspension bridge.
The bridge was constructed to extend the National Road which began in Maryland.
The National Road was the first road in the United States that was funded by the federal government.
It was in use for vehicles up until Sept 2019 when it was closed to vehicular traffic due to
“the traveling public’s continued disregard of
weight limit and safety signs”
I walked across this bridge.

This is a sign at the First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park in Cascade County, Montana.
It warns “You are entering the home of the Prairie Rattlesnake.”
What I found amazing was that the first few 100 meters of this hike was through an open field of hundreds of prairie dogs. Doesn’t seem the smartest place to build your home if you are small enough for prairie rattlesnake to eat you.

I found myself on a hillside on a beautiful end of a day
in the middle of nowhere Montana


This sign is in Bradenton, Florida
At D. G. Bray Disc Golf Course.

This is actually not just a sign in Bradenton, Florida,
but two signs on one tree at D. G. Bray Disc Golf Course.

This was my third round in 18 months here. I like this course.

The signs explain that your disk must pass on this side of the tree.

It is mandatory on this particular drive to shoot to the left side of this tree or you would lose a stroke… a mando.

I did not see any live manatees while here in Florida on this particular trip.

I did enjoy this manatee and I appreciated them pointing me in the right direction.

I did manage to throw my disc to that side of the tree.
More signs to come

Close Ups of My New Red Dots

So I’m a good way into this trip that started when my folks rented a place in Orlando for a week. This was my map of red dots before I left.

My Travels

A week traveling to Orlando and then 6 and a half weeks of exploring Florida, this is what my map looks like now.

The density of the dots has increased in the center of Virginia due to my visit to Raleigh and I’ve created an anchor on the end of Florida.

Here are some close ups of my new red dots …..

Still another month to go…. more red dots to come.

My Day in Richmond – Dec 2021

The first thing I did this morning was to get a Covid self test and take it. I am heading to see my family and I wanted to ensure I wasn’t bringing Covid along with me. I grabbed a cup of coffee and took the test while sitting in my car. I swabbed my nose as it says to do (and as we’ve all had done so many times in the past two years), dipped the swab into the little vial of solution and waited. When the ten minutes had passed, I checked, and low and behold… it says positive and I had Covid! Crap!!! I’m going to have to quarantine for 10 days which puts me on the last day of my stay in Orlando!

I wanted to make sure so I did it again…. and again… it was positive. I’ve heard these tests can be inaccurate so decided to get this professionally done to make sure. I found a clinic in Richmond that could see me and made an appointment. I went in early in the afternoon and the first thing they did was give me an instant test. That test came back negative!! NICE!! Due to the mixed results, they sent a sample away to get, what they called the gold standard test, a PCR test.

I was supposed to stay with my older cousin that night and even though I did not have a fever and had no symptoms, I didn’t feel comfortable staying there that night. So it looked like I was going to quarantine in my van until the test results came back.

I did do some exploring of Richmond anyway and just made sure I didn’t go inside anywhere, masked up and I avoided people. I enjoy seeing capitals so headed towards the downtown area of Richmond where the capitol building is located. The area around the capital building was fenced off with some kind of stands set up and areas under construction so I couldn’t really see much. There were some cool statues which I enjoyed reading about.

A day later, my test came back negative! The trip continued on.

Boston, MA to Richmond, VA – Dec 2021


Friday – Boston, MA to Summit, NJ

Saturday – Summit, NJ to Richmond, VA
Visiting cousins in Summit, NJ
I left Boston after work on Friday and arrived at my cousins in Summit, NJ later in the night. It was really great seeing them as it has been years since we’ve spent any time together. We had a nice dinner and caught up on out lives. In the morning I sat at their kitchen table talking some more and, although it was Saturday, logged into their wi-fi and checked in on work. I headed out in the late afternoon with plans to come back and visit again soon. They are close enough that I can go down for a week specifically to see them and not just a stop on a longer trip.
Pottsille, PA
The day before I Ieft on this trip, I received a picture of a store in my hometown with its sign being removed. Just over 90 years ago, my grandfather started the Yorkville Drug Store in Pottsville, PA. When my dad finished college, he came back to Pottsville and worked the store with my grandfather. It seems, after 92 years, that store is closing and the building may be torn down. I’m a very sentimental guy and this news was very sad to me. My grandparents lived above the store and I have such fond memories of being there. Since Pottsville was just a few miles out of my way, I decided to stop in. I drove by the store as well as the house I was raised in, which is just a few blocks away.

Since I was in town, I had to stop for a Coney dog. I do love my Coney dogs!

Coyote Hills Disc Golf, Carlisle, PA

This course has been on my radar for some time since it has some really great reviews online. Discgolfscene.com has it listed as number 4 in Pennsylvania and UDisc has a 4.4 rating with almost 1000 reviews. I’ve driven by here close to a dozen times, however, it was either to late in the day, raining or I had somewhere else to be. Today I was able to play and I was not disappointed. I found the course to be well maintained with some beautiful views and a nice hike through the woods.

The course is very challenging with many of the baskets playing through tight tree lines. Although most were through trees, I though it had a nice mix with some nice elevation changes, some very long open shots and a few possible ace tees. The distances range from about 150 feet to about 700 feet. As I was playing the course, I was thinking how there are definitely ace potentials (like 7 where I hit the basket on my drive) but also double bogey potentials if you hit a tree at the wrong time.

I finished at plus 5 and I was happy with that. For me, it was a tale of two courses. I shot two under on the front nine and seven over on the back nine.

Gus’s Bar & Grill, Richmond, VA

The Patriots were playing tonight and I wanted to watch the game. It turns out I was going to be getting into Richmond right around game time so I Googled “best sports bar in Richmond”. Google recommended Gus’s. I made it almost in time for kickoff. I did enjoy the bar. There were plenty of televisions, the staff was friendly and it wasn’t crowded. If only the Patriots didn’t play as poorly as they did.

It was a beautiful night so I walked around the area for a little while before crawling into the van for the night.

Bison Tales

There were moments on this trip were I felt I was able to get a better understanding of different perspectives of people and why they may do the things they do. On this particular day, it was that of the stupid tourist. You know….THAT guy.

One of my pre planned stops on my way east through North Dakota was the Painted Canyon Visitors Center at Theodore Roosevelt National Park (F on the map).  I was in search of somewhere to stay while driving from Billings, MT (D) to Fargo, ND (H).  This location was almost half way and was advertised as a good place to boondock.  I had called the visitors center while still in the planning phase of the trip and they confirmed this.  It also looked to be in a location that my hotspot would work and had a one mile hike loop through the Badlands.  I often mentioned this stop when asked about my trip plans and I was very much looking forward to it. 

I arrived very late. The rest area was very dark.  There was only one little light above the restroom doors.  I quickly parked, found my way to and from the bathroom, crawled in the back and fell asleep.

I woke around 6:30 to this view. I continue to be in awe of the things I’ve been seeing.

 

(Click on the pictures to enlarge)

 

I gazed for awhile (in awe) then headed off on the mile loop. 

About half way through there was a small sign that read “overlook” and pointed up a small incline, so I walked up the slope.  I could see the path that was ahead of me and there, just across the ravine from the path, stood a bison!

 

Pretty amazing creature!  He was just standing there, grazing.  Just right over there!

I finished the walk and made my way back up to civilization. I stood there for awhile at the parking lot edge looking out on the BadLands.  I have been amazed by the sights I’ve gotten to see in my travels and this one was towards the top.  I was able to spot, way out in the distance, a few more bison!  I pointed them out to a few people that were also looking out and had a few conversations about the beauty of it all.  

 

It was time to start my day and decided to drive to the other side of the rest area where there were some picnic tables.  I could set up my stove to make some breakfast and coffee and set up a work area to settle in for a few hours.  The picnic tables were in two sided covered structures with the opening out towards the scenery and was such a peaceful place to be. I had my own little office and kitchen area!

 

As I drove towards the tables, passing the bathrooms, I noticed the bison. I saw it standing there on the grass between the bench, the sign and the tree…. a full sized, stuffed bison!  There have been statues of bison everywhere on the trip so far but they were typically very large and metal.

 

This one was different than those!


SO COOL!  I pulled into a spot, hopped out and headed towards it, phone camera in hand.  My mind was excited with what to do… how to capture this moment.  I definitely wanted to feel the tufts on its head.  I internally laughed as I thought to wrap an arm across its head and take a selfie.  I wondered what the horns felt like……

….. then as I was nearing the blue line…
IT MOVED!
Stupid tourist.  Walking up to a bison. What was he thinking!!??
I think back on the evening before when I was wandering through the dark to the bathrooms.  Pretty happy I didn’t stumble upon a bison in the darkness?
Later as I left…. he was still wandering around the parking lot.
See… he moves!

Salt Lake City, UT to Craters of the Moon – Sept 2021

I left the Salt Lake City area pretty early expecting alot of activity for the day. My plan was to get to the Craters of the Moon National Park in Idaho before the end of the day. Beginning to end it wasn’t that far, but I had numerous stops planned and its nice to have a full day to travel. You never know what I might discover.

Riverpark Disc Golf Course

Planned to get a round of disc golf in first thing. I really enjoyed this round. It started raining after I played the first basket so ended up sitting under a tree with a local golfer waiting out the storm. It only rained a few minutes and we played the round together. Nice kid who dreams of one day getting himself a van and traveling around the United States!

A view from the road in Utah
Corrine, UT

Corrine, UT is an historic city on the road heading north. It’s a small railroad town that was established as the Union Pacific Railroad and the Central Pacific Railroads neared completion. Corrine is the closest city to where these two lines met and were commemorated with the Golden Spike. I stopped in town at a few memorials and dedicated historic spots.



Travel then and travel now.
Golden Spike National Historic Park

In 1869, the Central Pacific and Union Pacific Railroads met and the first transcontinental railway was completed. A ceremonial spike was driven to commemorate the completion of this event. I enjoyed learning about the event and these two railway companies. The more they completed, the more they would earn so they built as fast as they could, racing across the country. I stopped at numerous spots along my drive that explained how it was done.

Spiral Jetty

The Spiral Jetty was such an amazing stop that it gets its own post (Spiral Jetty post). The Jetty is located in Corrine, UT, however, you have to drive down a 14 mile long gravel to get there. It was worth it. I walked out to the edge of the Great Salt Lake and watched pink water lap onto the shore.

In my opinion… this is a must for anyone making this trip.

ATK (Northrum & Grumman) Rocket Garden

I was driving on after the Spiral Jetty when I saw this Rocket Garden so I stopped. What a cool little rocket museum. The large rocket is actually a booster for the space shuttle.


Entered Idaho

What it looks like to drive through Idaho
Lava fields at Craters of the Moon National Park

I made it to Craters of the Moon National Park right around sunset. I watched the sun go down over the lava fields and noticed how I was in such an opposite kind of place from the Bonneville Salt Flats, just a few days earlier. I never knew there were lava fields in the continental United States. It was a beautiful night. I pulled into the Lava Flow Campground and stayed up late thinking about my day and looking at the stars.

Bonneville Salt Flats – Sep 2021

Sometimes I find myself on a different planet!

Bonneville Salt Flats

I left early in the day and headed out to see the Bonneville Salt Flats.  It was about an hour and a half drive west of Salt Lake City.  I figured that I would head out there, drive out onto the flats and then head home.  It turns out I spent over three and a half hours there.  It was fascinating! I stayed very entertained.

On my way out to the Salt Flats and stopped at the Tree of Utah.  The Tree of Utah is an 87 foot tall, mostly concrete structure built along route 80 in the Great Salt Lake Desert.  It was constructed by Karl Momen, a Swedish artist, and dedicated in 1986.  It is said he had the inspiration for the structure after having a vision of a tree while driving across the Bonneville Salt Flats.
It’s tough to miss the tree as it arrises in the distance as you approach driving down route 80.  It’s just sitting there in the middle of nowhere.  There is no parking area, one just pulls over to the side of the road.  It is bizarre.

“A hymn to our universe, whose glory and dimension is beyond all myth and imagination”

– Karl Momen

Looking out at me parked on route 80
A few miles further down the road is a rest area.  I have learned in my travels that sometimes rest areas are more than just a rest area.  They often have historic relevance or fun things to see and learn.  Luckily I decided to stop at this one as it was the entrance to the Bonneville Salt Flats.  There were no signs stating this on the highway, you just need to know.  If you pass it, it will be close to a half hour to make the loop back around.  There is no entrance on the eastbound side of the highway.
Experience driving onto the Flats and U-turning back towards the highway.
Then I wanted to see how far across I’d get if I drove a mile out onto the Flats….

I definitely enjoyed myself while hanging out on the Flats.  As barren as it is, I found it to be a great place to take some fun pictures.  I also played my guitar for a little while and was able to get internet through my phone hotspot!

This is what it looks like if you panorama shot as a car drives by.  There was a continuous flow of cars flying by.


Spiral Jetty – Corrine, UT – Sep 2021

A few hours north of Salt Lake City and on the north east shore of the Great Salt Lake is the Spiral Jetty.  I visited here as a recommendation from a friend and it didn’t disappoint. What a magical place.  I felt as if I were on a different planet.

The Spiral Jetty is an earthwork sculpture built in April, 1970 by Robert Smithson. The Jetty is made of mud, salt crystals, and basalt rocks, forming a 1,500-foot-long, 15-foot-wide counterclockwise coil jutting out into the lake.  I was there when the water level was low enough to walk out onto it.

To get to the Jetty, it’s necessary to get off of the main road and travel along 14 miles of gravel road.  The road was ‘ribbed’ and I found that if I traveled too slowly, the car would bounce up and down along each rib.  There were two options to deal with this.  The first was to drive very slowly, which would then take me hours to get to my destination, while the second was to travel very fast and just go over the ribs.  It was an interesting journey traveling 40+ mph along this gravel road in the middle of nowhere.  Even though it was in the middle of nowhere and a desert, I found it to be beautiful.  I stopped frequently just to enjoy the sights and to take a break from the stress of the drive.


If you enlarge, you can see the ribs.

Upon arriving at the Jetty parking lot, I opted to hike up the rocky hillside to get a view first.  It was a short 1/4 mile hike to the top.


Looking up at the parking area
and the hillside hike.

Taking a moment at the pedestal
looking out onto the Jetty.

I walked back down and onto the Jetty.  I walked the Spiral very slowly and meditated along with it.  Then I set out towards the lake. I had been told about the water here and wanted to see it for myself.


On the Spiral.

On the Jetty looking out towards the lake.

Like being on a different planet.
Places like this make me realize why I love getting out on the road and exploring. There are so many unique places throughout the United States.  There are places that are magical and so different from our every day lives.  At the Jetty, the water was pink.  Amazing!
How Google saw me on my trip to the Spiral Jetty. (It even caught my meditative spiraling walk.)
Dark blue is driving.  Light blue is walking.