Day 11 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:  Only three numbers today –  Zero, One, 93

  • 93 degrees – feels like 100
  • Zero:  miles travels, new states, new license plates, change in elevation, or national parks.
  • One:  Very fun relaxing day, historic site, riverboat ride, and historic Supreme Court decision.

We stayed closed to downtown San Antonio today.  Had planned to drive to a few close sites, but after a very pleasant talk with the woman putting out the hotel breakfast items, and based on her advise, we left the car in place and walked.

Visited the Alamo.  Decided not to stand in line for 2 hours in the sun.  I think there were more people at the Alamo than we saw in all of New Mexico.  Could see most of it without the wait in line which was just for the church.  A couple of thoughts about the Six Flags of Texas.

First, they count the governments that ruled over this area: Spain, France, Mexico, Texas, the Confederacy, and the USA, but do not count the indigenous people of America who lived in this area for 1000’s of years before any of the other showed up.  Maybe the native people should have thought to have a flag.

Second, while one of the flags is the confederate flag, it is not even the same flag people are having an issue with today.  The Confederacy never actually agreed on a single flag, so the one used in Texas was different than the one used in South Carolina.  Also, Texas’s attitude is that, “Yes, we were at one time part of the confederacy, but now we are part of the United States of America and the Confederate Flag doesn’t have any more place in our official places than does the Flag of Spain, France, or Mexico.”

Meet,river boat -resize Joseph D.  He was a our tour guide on a river boat ride around the river walk area of downtown San Antonio.  Great tour, reasonable price, and great tour guide.  We learned a lot and had many good laughs along the way.  I hope Seattle can learn a few things from San Antonio as the city tries to figure out what to do with it’s waterfront after the viaduct comes down.  Between Baltimore Harbor and the San Antonio river walk Seattle could learn some good lessons.

Tomorrow, the San Antonio Missions and onto Houston.

Day 10 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 126 miles, all in Texas from Fredericksburg to San Antonio – 2726 total miles for the trip.
  • highest temp:  93.
  • elevation continues to drop:  down to 650 feet in San Antonio.
  • still at 8 total states for the trip.
  • Licence plates spotted: Alabama, West Virginia, and Minnesota – 40 total for the trip plus 3 Canadian provinces.
  • One new National Park:  2 sites – LBJ National Historic Sites at both Stonewall and Johnson City, Texas.  The Stonewall site includes President Johnson’s birthplace and ranch.  The Johnson City site is a Museum covering an overview of his presidency. – 13 total park sites for the trip.
  • One other Museum – The Airman Heritage Museum on base at Lackland Airforce Base.

To my surprise I real enjoyed our time in the Hill Country region of Texas.  Very pretty, reasonable weather, and many interesting places to go.

I was very affected going to the LBJ national park sites.  I always enjoy traveling to places where my ancestors lived because it gives me a feel for the what it might have been like for them to live in a particular place.  Similarly there was something quite affecting about seeing and walking about on the same land and in the same house as this great historical figure.   I know many people associate him only with the Vietnam War, but my connection to him has always been Civil Rights.  Reviewing the many accomplishments of his presidency stands in sharp contrast to the past 15 to 20 years in our country’s leadership.  His presidency was a time when the focus was on identifying problems and actually doing something to try to improve the situation.  There were over 200 major national pieces of legislation put into law during his time, affecting civil rights, poverty, education, health care, the arts, the environment and much more.  The author, Taylor Branch, whose 3 part series on American in the 50’s and 60’s is essential reading for any history buff has said that 3 pieces of legislation personally pushed through by Johnson made more of a change in our society than any other legislation in the past century:  The Civil Rights Act of 1964 (marking the beginning of the end of official segregation in the South), the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (outlawing many of the practices used to keep Blacks in the south from exercising their fundamental right  to vote), and the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 (which abolished the old explicitly racial quota system of legal immigration into this country).

The first of those laws, as it applies to our nations schools and colleges, is what I spent the entire 34 years of my federal government employment working to implement and enforce.  For me that law and subsequent additions which strive to ensure that everyone in this country has an equal assess to educational opportunities without regard to race, color, national origin, gender, or disability, are foundational to what is unique and great about our country.  Obviously, I could go on but let me just repeat how moved I was to visit such well created and presented memorials to this man.

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Day 9 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 300 miles all in Texas from Odessa to Fredericksburg – 2600 total miles
  • highest temp:  90.  – Coolest day of the trip
  • elevations: from 2890 in Odessa to 1718 at Fredericksburg.
  • still at 8 total states for the trip.
  • Licence plate spotted: Louisiana – 37 total for the trip plus 3 Canadian provinces.
  • No new National Parks but a very interesting visit to the National Museum of the Pacific War.  

It was a very enjoyable day driving today.  Drove through a town called Harper, Texas.  I wonder which of my cousins might find that interesting?

We spotted a place for lunch in Fredericksburg and found it to be a treasure of a find:  The Old German Bakery & Restaurant.  One of the things we always look forward to in returning to Iowa is finding a place that serves a good pork tenderloin, pork chop, or other pork dinner.  Seattle has many good and varied types of restaurants but almost no German restaurants and very few that serve a good pork dinner.  In recent times our favorite place to hit in Iowa is Darrell’s Place in Hamlin, Iowa a few miles east of Harlan.  We love their famous pork tenderloin.  2015-06-24 13.47.36 - Copy All I will say beyond the pictures below is that Darrell better be glad Fredericksburg is a long way from Iowa.2015-06-24 14.05.27 - Copy

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Museum of the Pacific War was surprisingly good.  I am enough of a history buff that I have been to a good many museums focused on many aspects of history, including all of the various Smithsonian Museums.  This Museum was one of the most well planned and presented history museums I have ever been too.  My particular interest was somewhat narrow.  My father served in World War II, mostly in the states, and was part of the Medical Corp with the Pacific army on MacArthur’s late war return to the Philippines.  I wanted to learn more about that part of the war and I came away with a much better understanding than when I went in.  In addition, I found myself much more captivated by all of the rest of the very narrative displays which walked the visitor through from the 1930’s and earlier precursors to the war up to the post-war reflections of some of the leaders involved.  For anyone with any interest in history I would highly recommend this museum.  We spent over 4 hours there and were as filled as we could be with new information and insights.  There was more to take in and we will return if we come through this area again.

Tomorrow we visit the LBJ ranch and then move onto nearby San Antonio for a few days.

 

Day 8 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 253 miles from Roswell, NM to Odessa, TX –  2300 total miles
  • highest temp:  91.  – Coolest day of the trip – Also the first high humity -77% this morning.
  • highest elevation: 3573 at Roswell where we started.  Now at Odessa, TX = 2890 feet – I know people think Iowa is flat but there are many places much flater than Iowa and Western Texas is one of them.
  • 2 states : New Mexico and Texas.  Total for the trip: 8
  • Licence plates spotted:  2 new states, South Carolina & Mississippi – 36 total for the trip plus 3 Canadian provinces.
  • No new National Parks but 2 other stops.
  • One Time Zone change from Mountain to Central.  Remember to adjust your clocks.

We continued listening to our Audio Book –  The Wright Brothers written and read my David McCullough.  Excellent book and a fascinating story.  We thought we had already learned a lot about the Wright brothers from previous reading and from visits to their bicycle shop in Dayton, Ohio, the site of their early flights at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, and many visits to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum.  However, the personal story told by McCullough is rich in details about the Wrights as people, much of which we had not heard before.  Just one quote:  When asked how to be successful, Wilbur wright said: “I would say choose good parents and begin life in Ohio.”  Very humble advice.

Related to the ability to choose your parents or your ancestry in general, today we drove past the childhood home of George W Bush.  We saw a lot of presid2015-06-23 14.45.40ential homes when we were living in DC so are continuing to see others as we travel.  In addition, George W is a distant cousin of mine.  My only comment is that contrary to Wilbur Wright’s advice we don’t have any choice about who are parents or our blood relatives are.

 

Day 3 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 374 miles from Boise, ID to Tremonton, UT –  1045 total miles – The first thousand of 12 to 15 expected
  • highest temp:  95.
  • highest elevation: 6338 feet as we came into City of Rocks National Reserve from the North and West.
  • 2 states : Idaho & Utah.  Total for the trip: 4IMG_20150618_112902638
  • Licence plates spotted:  7 new states and provinces – 28 total for the trip – Among those spotted today were both Iowa (where we are eventually headed for our family reunion) and Alaska (proof here)
  • 1 new National Park site:  City of Rocks National Reserve – 6 parks total for the trip.
    • This was a pretty amazing place.  It was formed by a magma flow that pushed up to near the surface of the earth millions of years ago and cooled as Granite rock.  Then over the eons the surrounding land was eroded away, leaving some amazing and amazing large stone structures.   People traveling by between the 1840’s and 1870’s along the California Trail thought it looked like the remains of an ancient abandoned city and referred to it when talking to others as the Silent City.
  • 1 major river crossed:  That snaky Snake River – twice more.  The entire Treasure valley area around Boise is basically a flood plain from the Snake River and is a very rich agricultural area.  We drove past both Jerome and Burley Idaho where many of the potatoes you eat in the form of French Fries probably come from.
  • Also today we crossed from the Pacific Time Zone to the Mountain Time zone.  So those of you wanting to stay in touch with us as we are traveling adjust your clock accordingly.
  • One last number for today – we listened to our first audio book of the trip – A spy/action thriller that wasn’t good enough to go into specifics.  We have better ones on the iPod and I will report when we listen to a good one.

Tomorrow we head south in Utah.  Two parks on the planned list: Timpanogos Cave and Arches National Park.  However, the Park service has an advisory out that temperatures are going to be at all times highs, possibly above 105, and they advise extreme caution for any hiking.  So we may make our stops there brief on this trip and come back at a better time of year.

Day 7 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 375 miles from Farmington to Roswell, NM –  2047 total miles
  • highest temp:  99.
  • highest elevation: 7380 feet at the Continental Divide on Highway 550.  We drove for several hours at or above 7000 feet and then for more above 6000 feet.  At Roswell we are down to about 3500 feet.  I think the high altitude was harder on us than we realized.  Of course its hard to tell when you also have temperatures near 100.  We live in Seattle at an elevation of less than 100 feet, the highest point in the city is about 500, and the ski areas nearby are only a bit above 3000, so we don’t see 7000 feet elevation very often.
  • 1 state : New Mexico all day.  Total for the trip: stays at 7
  • Licence plates spotted:  just 1 – Kentucky – 37 total for the trip
    • The list of states still to spot in the order I expect to find them are: MS   LA   AL   SC   WV    DC   DE  NJ   NY  RI   CT  NH   VT  ME MN   HI – That last one might be a challenge!
  • no new National Parks today

Nothing particularly exciting to report today.  Listened to part of an excellent book but will report on that when finished.  Feels like we are starting phase 2 of our trip.  Phase one was mostly a scouting expedition for future trips through the Southern Rocky Mountain region.  Today we are on the western edge of the middle part of the country.  Saw a very pretty prairie sunset today.  Different than the quick sunsets when you are in the mountains.  Also, can tell we are getting closer to the south as we got our first “Y’all have a nice day” from a waitress.  From here we are totally in parts of the country we have never been before.  We have a long list of parks, historic sites, and museums we want to see.  One last number:  Our 6 year old 90,000 mile Prius is averaging 52.5 mpg for the trip.

Well that’s all from Roswell – If we figure out what’s going on with the strange green light and unusual noises coming out from under the door down the hall are, we will let you know tomorrow.

Day 6 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 32 miles – stayed in the Farmington area  – Trip total = 1672
  • highest temp:  102
  • highest elevation: 5642.6 feet at Aztec Ruins – very precise because there was a USGS survey marker embedded into a step of a portion of the restored ruins
  • no new states and no new license plates
  • One new park, The Aztec Ruins, and another park stamp for the Old Spanish Trail – 11 different National Park sites and areas for the trip so far.

After skipping longer tours for a couple of sites in a row we did a very thorough exploration of the Aztec Ruins.  First thing you have to know is that they have no connection to the Aztecs of Mexico.  This area, when first explored by the Spaniards coming up from Mexico, was given that name.  The people who built and lived here where the Pueblo people of the Chaco culture, the same people who built at Chaco Canyon and at Mesa Verde.

Our thoughts as we learned about these people kept comparing them to our ancestors at this same time period.  At about 1000 AD there were at least 50 to 60 thousand people living in this valley.  The ruins we visited were the cultural center structures.  In a cultu2015-06-21 12.20.48re with no long term written language they designed and built, over a period of 30 years, a major structure that was 3 stories tall including very complex internal structures.  The materials to build this were carried here from 5 to 30 miles away without any mechanical devices to assist and in an era when there were no beast of burden (no horses, donkeys, or cattle in the Americas at that time).  The primary ceremonial place was an impressive piece of architecture.  Some parts of the ruins included multi-layered wooden ceilings which have survived for 900 years.  The primary ceremonial structure, or Kiva, had collapsed but has been IMG_20150621_120046894reconstructed as exactly as possible.  It took the better part of the year to build using all of our modern technologies.

The reminder for me from the day was how important it is to understand that the many peoples of our world and our nation have many different histories and backgrounds and we need to try our best to step outside of our own shoes from time to time to try to see the world from one or more of those other perspectives.  This place has been labeled “abandoned ruins” by one group of people.  Another group, the Hopi people who are descendants of the Pueblo, believe these ruins where never abandoned.  They were built as footprints to mark part of their journey in this world and they believe their ancestors still reside here.  In a time when so many in our culture are only concerned with being “right” and making sure they let others who think differently know they are “wrong,” I think we might all benefit from considering our situation from another view.

 

Day 5 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 250 miles from Moab, UT to Farmington, NM – 1640 total miles
    • we are about 1/10th done with our trip
  • highest temp:  99 –  but it felt a lot hotter.
  • highest elevation: 7,070 feet at Monticello, UT
  • 4 states: Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico.  Total for the trip: 7
    • One of the those states was primarily me standing on the Arizona side of the four corners monument where these 4 state meet:
    • The tradition is to stand on the exact spot where the 4 states meet and take a picture of your feet simultaneously in all 4 states.  To do that 2015-06-20 15.54.43would have required waiting in a line in near 100 degree weather with no shade for probably and hour and a half.  I decided getting one picture of me in each of the four states would be good enough.  As my son Jacob says:  “Perfect is good.  Done is better.”
  • Licence plates spotted:  2 new states and provinces – 36 total for the trip
  • 1 new National Park site: Mesa Verde – 10 parks total for the trip.Meas Verde climb
    • Once again the heat kept us from doing much actual exploration at the park.  Here’s a picture of what would be involved in going on a tour to see the cliff dwellings up close.  I think that climb will be much more feasible in spring or fall with temperatures somewhere below 80 degrees.

This whole region of the country is amazingly beautiful and varied.  Our plan for this part of the trip was to treat this first portion of our trip as a scouting expedition to plan for a more extensive visit at a future date.  I think we have accomplished that.  I was a bit apprehensive about the road conditions here but found them to be in wonderful condition and most of the area is reasonably flat at the top of the whole uplifted plateau.  There are about 40 parks within a few hundred miles of the four corners.  I think it will take many more trips here to see most of them.

One more park in this area tomorrow, the Aztec Ruins, just north of where we are staying in Farmington.  Then we are off to the southern mid parts of the country, starting with Texas.

Day 4 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 345 miles from Tremonton, UT to Moab, UT–  1390 total miles
  • highest temp:  103.
  • highest elevation: 5666 feet at Timpanogos Cave
  • 1 state : Utah.  Total for the trip: 4
  • Licence plates spotted:  6 new states and provinces – 34 total for the trip
  • 3 new National Park sites:  Timpanogos Cave,  Arches National Park, and Old Spanish National Historic Trail – 9 parks total for the trip.
    • We decided not to do the actual cave tour on this trip but will definitely be back. The geology of cave formation and trying to get my head around the 100’s of thousands of years long process of their creation has always fascinated me.   Visiting Jewell Cave in the Black Hills was one of my first visits to a national park and has stuck with me ever since.
    • T cave
    •  Even though I have seen many pictures of Arches National Park, none of them compare to actually being there.  I have a bit of an issue with switchback, hang on the side of the mountain, type roads, and you had to travel a bit of that to get into the park.  However, it wasn’t at all bad for me and, once inside, well worth the travel.  We spent a few hours in the park and walked a couple of short paths but will have to come back for a longer stay.
    •  2015-06-19 19.10.59

At the end of the day we found a great restaurant, the Broken Oar (if you ever go, ask for Trisha as your waitress).   Excellent food in a nice rustic decor.   As a bonus, it was a short walk from the hotel.  More importantly a short walk back to the hotel.  Nice not to have to get back in the car after a long day driving.

The recent parks we have visited have caused me to reflect on how many of my greatest interests in the world relate to the wonder of Evolution.  At Arches the park film used a phrase that really struck me.  In stating that we often think of arches built by people and in comparing them to the arches in the park they said:  One type is the result of Intentional Creation and the other the result of Erosive Destruction, but at least for a moment in time they look the same.  Arches park has more natural arches than any other place on earth.  They emphasized that this statement can only be made for this specific time because all the arches are like living things.  Erosion slowly forms them and then slowly destroys them.  Some arches here today will not be here in 100 or a 1000 years.  New ones will be.

Having triggered this line of thought I found myself refelecting on several of the areas of scientific, historical, and cultural understanding which I find fascinating and about which I am always interested in learning more.

  • Astronomy and the evolution of the universe, our galaxy and our solar system;
  • Geology and the evolution of the physical nature of our planet;
  • Evolutionary biology and the history of life on this planet;
  • History and particularly the evolutionary history of human ideas about how we can and should live together and interact with each other;
  • and more specifically the history of humanity’s thinking about civil rights, human rights and what we currently refer to as race relations.  I hope and believe we, as a people, will get to a better place in our understanding of these issues.  One small step might be the current effort to eliminate the use of the Confederate Flag in an official manner in South Carolina after the recent shooting there.
  • Our personal ancestral history and development.  The part of my ongoing ancestry and family history research I love the most is developing a better understanding of where my ancestors lived, what circumstances they had to deal with in their lives, what traits and skills enabled them to survive and what events caused them to relocated to new places.
  • In short, I have always been fascinated with the process of things.  Where did things start from? How did and do they evolve into something else?  What happened along the way?

 

Day 2 – 2015 Transcontinental Trip

By the numbers:

  • 400 miles from Walla Walla to Boise –  671 total miles
  • highest temp:  93.
  • highest elevation: 4245 feet at White Bird Hill, between Lewiston and Meadows Valley.   With a 7% downgrade off that peak we could smell the brakes getting a little hot.  Then Peg figured out that the letter “B” on our Prius gear shift stood for “Brake” and is a special mode, like down shifting on a manual transmission.  We used that on later grades and it works great.  After having the Prius for 7 years I guess its good to learn one of its more useful features.
  • 3 states : Washington, Idaho & Oregon.  Total for the trip: 3
  • Licence plates spotted:  6 new states and provinces – 21 total for the trip
  • 3 new National Park sites and/or stamps:  Nez Perce, Lewis & Clark Trail, and Big Hole Battlefield. – 5 parks total for the trip.
  • 1 major river crossed:  The Snake – 4 times.  (There is a reason they call it the Snake River.
  • 51.8 miles per gallon so far.  Filled up once at about 400 miles: 8 gallons.
  • Also today we crossed the 45th parallel which is the point exactly halfway between the equator and the north pole.

It’s late and I have no other thoughts to share tonight.  Tomorrow we stop by City of Rocks and end the day in Utah