Thursday, October 16, 2014

Day 78 - HOME

We drove the last 80 miles and arrived home at about 11:30. Now we unload and I have to hook up all the electronics in the house. Can't wait for a long hot shower. Lots to do before we are back to normal.
Day 77 (11 Weeks) - Homosassa Springs Florida

Drove a short way from Perry to Homosassa and camped on the inlet. We found a new seafood restaurant in Homosassa called the Seagrass, We will be sure to come back here again. We has a really great seafood dinner. We wanted to get an early start home so we hit the sack early. 80miles more and we are home.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Day 76 - Florida Panhandle

From Destin we drove the rt 98 along the Florida panhandle coast to Perry, Florida.  It was pooring rain all day so no photos.
Day 75 - Henderson State Beach, Destin, FL

Today we drove from Biloxi to Destin Florida and Henderson State Beach where we spent the night.



Boardwalk to the Beach

Rough surf warnings
 



Monday, October 13, 2014

Day 74 - Natchez Trace and on to Biloxi, MS

We finished the last 90 miles of The Trace in the morning and then drove to Biloxi, MS where we spent the night. We went to the Palace Casino and spent a few bucks. For our gambling efforts Jackie got a 50% discounts on the buffet and Jackie won $12.60, I lost $19.80 but managed to get a discount on the buffet as well. Tomorrow we start for home with stops in Destin, FL at Henderson State Beach and a few other State Parks on the way home. We intend on getting home by Friday. That will be 79th travel day.
Day 73 - Natchez Trace

We left West Memphis early and headed south to The Natchez Trace Parkway. We drove about 2/3rds of the way and stopped for the night just outside of Jackson, Mississippi. The Natchez Trace was a series of Indian paths that the early settlers adopted as the main route from Natchez, MS on the river to Nashville, TN. There were inns and taverns about every 10 miles all the way and the road was notorious for bandits.




Part of the original trace
Parts of the road were and still is 12 feet below the ground level due to all the traffic on the roadway over many years.


This is a plantation home in use until the 1940 and built in the 1700s. It was an Inn or Stand as they were known during the traces most use in the 1820s and 1830s.

Day 72 - Graceland in Memphis, TN

A short drive from our site today found us in Memphis, TN and I had to go to Graceland. Elvis's spirit still is strong there. Graceland could almost be called a theme park. I took a few photos there and we had lunch in one of the cafes. We also sat down and watched Elvis's 1973 Hawaii TV Special. Did'nt realize that he would be 79 year old this year. I guess I'm rejecting the fact of life and my own age as well. After leaving Graceland we drove into Memphis along the riverside. The Mississippi runs right through it. Tomorow we drive south down through The Natchez Trace Parkway.







Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Day 69, 70 and 71 - Driving from Santa Fe, NM to Memphis, TN

Day 69
We drove 300 miles today and stopped in Amarillo, Texas for one night. We are back into summer temperatures and shorts. Tomorrow we drive to Fort Smith, Arkansas. It is almost a straight shot along the I-40 from New Mexico to Tennessee. Along this route there are many segments of the original cross country highway, The Mother Road, Route 66. Some day we hope to drive the original road or at least what is left of it from Chicago to LA through 8 states. Lots of 60s memorabilia along the way.

Day 70
Another 450 miles today driving from Amarillo, TX to Alma, Arkansas

Day 71

The last 260 miles today from Alma, AR to Memphis, TN staying in West Memphis area in Marion, Arkansas.

Tomorrow we go to Memphis to tour Graceland and sample BBQ.


Day 68 - Bandelier National Monument and Los Alamos, NM

We drove about an hour to the north to see Bandelier National Monument which is in Los Alamos county, NM. At Bandolier we explorer the Pueblo's (Cave dwellers) of the Indians that occupied the area 1500 years ago and in some cases still live in them. After our walk through Bandelier we drove to Los Alamos where the first atomic bombs were researched, made and then dropped to help stop WW2 in the Pacific.

In the cave dwelling

Entering a cave

The mud buildings at the base of the caves
The Cave Dwellings




Los Alamos, New Mexico. Still being used by the Atomic Energy Commission.



Saturday, October 4, 2014

Day 66 & 67 - Santa Fe, New Mexico

What a neat city. We drove to Santa FE and passed through Albuquerque on our way there. Today was the first day of the Albuquerque Balloon Festival which lasts 9 days. Didn't see and balloons since they were all done by 10:00AM. Along the I-40 jackie snapped some photos of lava that had erupted from the Colorado Plateau.
We saw these lava fields in Idaho, Utah and now New Mexico. It is caused by the same events that created the Rocky Mountains (the collision of the Pacific and North American Plates).

Santa Fe is at the foot of the Santo D'Christo Mountains. A very very nice location. We are staying here for at least 3 nights and hope to see a whole bunch of neat stuff. Days are warm, low 70s, Nights are cool, low 50s.

One of many shopping streets
St Francis of Assisi Cathedral

 We have learned to remove the camper from the pickup making it easier to get around and saving about 2 hours a day when we are at a camp for more than 1 night.
Day 65 - Today was an off day.

I had to get da Beast serviced. I was getting messages on our dashboard instrument cluster. Everything OK just $425 poorer and 1 day waiting at a Gallop, New Mexico Ram Dealer.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Day 64 - Monument Valley, Utah and Arizona

After we went to the Canyonlands NP we drove about 120 miles south to Monument Valley. We camped at the location where John Ford and The Duke used as a home base when the filmed the movies that featured Monument Valley and made it world famous.

The view that John Wayne had of the valley from his cabin





On our way out of the valley and on our way to Gallop, New Mexico we came across 2 interesting sights, Mexican Hat Rock and The  Four Corners Monument.
Mexican Rock about 35 miles north of Monument Valley
Standing in 4 states at the same time (New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona and Utah)
The exact Spot of The Four Corners
Some people are not satisfied with standing in 4 states at the same time and have to show off. That's me.

Day - 63 Canyonlands National Park, Utah

we drove 45 miles from our campsite to The Islands in the Sky (Canyonlands NP). We could only see a small portion of the park. That portion that can be seen from the roadway which only passes about 15% into the park lands. We drove the roadway and hiked one spot to Mesa Arch. It took about 2 1/2 hours to see what we could see. A rain storm Came in as we were leaving and our view of the canyons was no longer available through the clouds and rain.

Video - Panorama of Canyonlands NP
Canyonlands Overlook



Wild flowers on the trail
Prickly Pear Cactus

Trail markers
Mesa Arch
Wild flowers along the trail

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Day - 62 Arches National Park, Utah

A short 5 mile drive from our campsite was Arches National Park. Another scenic wonder and geology lesson. When the Colorado Plateau (which encompasses Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona) was forced upward by the collision between the Pacific plate and the North American Plate an inland sea that had dried and filled many millions of times was exposed to the dry arid landscape and monsoon rainfalls. Within this plateau was a huge salt mound from the many times the seas had dried up. This salt mound eventually dissolved from the rain water and exposed the hidden cracks in the sandstone that were created when the plateau was forced upward. As more and more rain fell it eroded the sandstone and continues to this day create more sand sculptures. Arches National Park contains over 2000 naturally formed arches. All of which will some day collapse. New arches are being formed and subtle changes in the surface occurs with every significant rainfall.

Frozen Sand Dunes


Balanced Rock


Elephant Rocks

Arches in the making


Cracks in the sandstone eroded by the rainfall