‘Travel’ Category

  1. Memories of Washington

    July 2, 2007 :: 10:27 pm

    I mentioned in a previous post from my recent vacation that I saw one of my cousins for the first time in years, and initially thought that his becoming a father had mellowed his angry energy. As it turns out, he’s not actually interested in assuming the responsibility of being a father and is instead “allowing” his wife to do all the work of raising their two young sons, ages 3 years and 5 months. The wife is overwhelmed and cries daily. My sweet generous mom offered to babysit the kids one day a week while she’s living nearby, so the wife can go have some time to herself or with friends.

    It’s so sad how self-centered he has turned out, because he was always such a caring, responsible kid when we were growing up. He is the oldest of the cousins; two years older than his brother and me.

    I listened to an episode of This American Life recently on the subject of summer camp, and the differences between “camp kids” and “non-camp kids.” Kids who go to camp seem to have a shared understanding of this amazing experience, and it can be the most important thing in your young life. They look forward all year to summer. Its a very emotional response, a feeling of belonging to something special that other people don’t understand.

    I felt that way too when I was young, only it wasn’t about camp; it was about going to Washington State each summer to see my grandma and hang out with my cousins John, Reed, and Lissy for a few weeks. I cannot even find the words to express how much these summers meant to me, how much I looked forward to them. I belonged to a special group of kids who got to stay with my amazing Grandma in her house in the forest above the beach, far away from civilization. It was magic.

    Grandma died from ovarian cancer in 1984, when I was 11. That was the end of summers in Washington. My mom and her brother and sister had to sell Grandma’s house, I think because they didn’t think they could afford to keep it, something about taxes (one of the biggest regrets in her life, she now says). I was fast approaching the age where I might not have wanted to spend summers away from my friends, hanging out with my little brothers, so I’m glad in a way that my memories remain as magical as they do, untainted by the bad attitudes of adolescence.

    Grandma’s house
    Grandma lived on Johnson’s point, a little peninsula of land north of Olympia. Her house was a little one-bedroom A-frame with a finished attic, painted red, on 5 acres of wooded land. It sat about 20 feet back from the edge of a bank that, in my memory, was hundreds of feet high, but was probably in reality more like 30 feet above the beach. She had a small deck out the front door that overlooked the water, and a carport and shed in back. Behind the house was a small garden, and beyond that, the 5 acres of wild ferny fir-filled forest.

    The living room had a large picture window overlooking the deck, a wood burning stove, and an open kitchen area. Upstairs was a large open room, and the peaked roof made the whole thing a big triangle. A large wardrobe separated the room into two halves (it was so large that the house was built around it; there’s no way to get it out!) and a bed was on the side nearest to the beach. My parents slept there. Us kids slept on Japanese futon mattresses in the little angled spaces under the eaves.

    Mattress Rides
    The stairs were located near the back door, with a door at both the bottom and the top. We loved to take one of the futon mattresses, position it at the top of the stairs, and take a flying leap, stomach first, sliding down the stairway and tumbling out into the hallway at the bottom. Or, knocking head-first against the door at the bottom of the stairs if we had it closed, which was more fun than it sounds now.

    At the top of the stairway, when you turned right there was a small bathroom (toilet and sink only), and when you turned left, you met up with the door to The Attic Space.

    The Attic Space
    I absolutely adored this little attic space. Through the door, down a tiny hallway, around the corner, and then BAM! Books galore. Boxes of old clothing, magazines, and newspapers. It smelled like a library. It was here that I discovered Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, Japanese story books, and dozens of back issues of Reader’s Digest. I would pick a book, lie on a braided rug on the dusty wooden floor, and read for hours until the daylight coming through the small window faded away. I never thought of Tom Sawyer as a book that we were forced to read for school; it was a fantastic story that I discovered in Grandma’s house.

    The Madrona Tree
    To get to the beach, you had to carefully pick your way down a series of mossy wooden steps laid on narrow tracks cut horizontally into the bank, surrounded by tangly trees and blackberry vines. A few yards away, the stairs met up with another set from next-door neighbor Fran’s house, and from there proceeded practically straight down, ladder-fashion, until they reached the beach.


    (apologies for the poor quality of the photo; it was taken in 1996 on my very first digital camera, an Apple QuickTake 200, with 640×480 @ 72dpi resolution!)

    Each neighbor owned a little parcel of the beach, but it was a really friendly community and everyone knew everyone else. Nobody minded other peoples’ kids and grandkids playing on their section of beach. Near the Vavers’ property to the west, a madrona tree grew practically horizontally out of the bank at beach level. We loved to climb in, up, and through this tree. Madrona trees have very smooth bright orange flesh and thin green bark that easily peels off. And we LOVED to peel. We also carved all our names into the big branch of this tree one year, and for years and years afterwards we could still see the impressions.

    One of our favorite things to do was have a “weenie roast” on the beach. Hot dogs, potato chips, sodas, sitting on a blanket under the trees, trying to avoid the sand fleas. I never did like hot dogs, no matter how hard I tried, and would often just eat cheese and mustard in a bun without the hot dog messing things up. Sometimes for dessert we’d roast marshmallows and make s’mores. I wasn’t much into the marshmallows and would rather just eat melted chocolate on a graham cracker!

    Fourth of July
    Fireworks were legal where Grandma lived, and so every year around the first of July, Uncle John would take all of us kids to a fireworks stand in town, where we’d blow our hard-earned allowances on black cats, jumping jacks, snakes, tanks, roman candles, sparklers, and such. Uncle John would go to a nearby Indian Reservation and pick up the “grownup” fireworks — bottle rockets, M80s. We were never allowed to touch those, only to watch.

    So on July Fourth, we’d have a weenie roast on the beach, and when it got dark we’d set off all our fireworks. One of our favorite things to do was to enclose a lit Jumping Jack inside an empty clam shell and toss it into the water. We also had our own little family “urban legend’: Supposedly when Uncle John was a boy, he shot off a roman candle but instead of digging it down into the sand like he was supposed to, he held it in his hand while it was shooting off. He dropped it and realized in a sudden panic that he couldn’t see, so he ran screaming back to Grandma that he was blind! Until, of course, she told him to open his eyes.

    Treehouse
    About halfway between Grandma’s house and the road, down her long gravel driveway through the forest, was a most magnificent treehouse. It had been built some time in the 1950s, I think, and I’m really not sure who built it, actually. But it was completely falling apart, totally dangerous, and quite off-limits to us kids. So of course we spent as much time as we could in it without getting caught. It seemed so far up in the tree, up a little rotting ladder of planks nailed to the trunk, but most likely it was only 10 or 15 feet off the ground. Inside was a little kid-sized sofa, a real glass window, and some plates and silverware on a little table. I think it was even carpeted. Everything was dusty and covered in moss and lichens, but we absolutely loved it. A pulley on a metal cable ran from the trunk near the treehouse door down to the base of another tree a few yards away. None of us were ever quite brave enough to haul the pulley up to the top and use it as a zip line, but we all sure thought about it a lot.

    Auntie Fran
    Auntie Fran and Uncle Stu lived next door to Grandma, in their own wonderful house overlooking the beach, complete with an acre or two of apple orchards. They were not blood related, but might as well be, we were all so close. I think we spent as much time at Fran’s house as we did at Grandma’s, especially when her grandson Jesse, who was about my age, was in town.

    Fran also had a pool! Why would we want to swim in a pool when there was a perfectly good beach just yards away? Well, when the water in the Sound is around 50 degrees, it’s hard to swim in it for long without going numb! Fran’s pool was large and rectangular, and surrounded by large glass panels on north and south, the house on the east, and the poolhouse on the west. The poolhouse had a little room with a pullout sofa for guests and a bathroom with a shower and a closet that had pool toys and extra swimsuits in it.

    TRON and Dilly Bars
    When we weren’t in her pool, we might be watching a movie on her VCR. Not many people had VCRs in the early 1980s. I first saw one of my all-time favorite movies, TRON, in Fran’s living room. Sometimes she would take a few of us kids into town in the back of her little blue Toyota pickup (these were the days before it was unsafe to do so!), and we’d stop at the electronics store to pick up a movie (these were the days before Blockbuster, when you rented movies out of a little room at the back of appliance stores that sold VCRs). Sometimes we would stop off at Dairy Queen for some Dilly Bars, which Fran always kept stocked in her freezer for us.

    Jesse
    Jesse was one of my best friends, and during the school year we would write each other letters in a secret cipher code that we invented. Jesse and his little brother Jeff had a gasoline-powered go-kart! Under adult semi-supervision, we were even allowed to drive it. We had great fun tearing up and down the long gravel driveway out to the road, and back again. Once my cousin Lissy, when she was probably only six years old, panicked and forgot where the brake was and almost ran full-speed into Grandma’s house. The semi-supervision increased to full-on overprotectiveness after that.

    Once, Jesse and I got ahold of an old hammock somewhere. We cleared out a little space in the forest behind Grandma’s garden, tied it between two fir trees, and decided that we would make a little money by charging for hammock rides. (Who we planned to charge, I have no idea!) We needed something announcing our new business, so I got some magic markers and a sheet of paper and made a sign to tack up to a tree in front of our shop. Being practical, we realized that we probably needed to put a weight limit on the hammock, so we did what any reasonable 9 year olds would do: we asked my mom how much she weighed. We were just thinking, well, adults are adults and they probably all weigh the same, so we’ll just ask the closest one. My mom, on the other hand, was probably thinking, “These kids think I’m the biggest person around!” She decided to have some fun with it and told us “I weigh 379 and 3/4 pounds!” Having no concept of scale, or even any idea how much WE weighed ourselves, we took her at her word and wrote, “Weight Limit: 379 and 3/4 pounds!”

    *****

    I guess I don’t have a really good closing to this whole story, other than to say that these few memories are only the first ones that popped to mind. I have so many others. These were some of the most amazing and wonderful times in my childhood.


  2. Memories to come…

    July 1, 2007 :: 8:44 pm

    I’m writing about some memories of my Grandma and her house and my cousins and some wonderful times when we were kids. However, it’s turning into a short novel so I need some more time to write. Stay tuned!


  3. Last Day of Roadtrip: Coming Home

    June 26, 2007 :: 11:48 pm

    No matter where you’ve been or how good a time you’ve had, it’s always nice to come home from vacation to your familiar environment. Your family, your cats, your own bed, your own shower.

    However, it took me twice as long as it should have to actually arrive home.

    My plane was delayed for 90 minutes due to bad weather in Dallas. Once airborne, things went fine until the pilot announced that we’d have to change the flight path and go way out of our way to avoid some bad weather. Then we flew in 300 mile diameter circles around Dallas for a while before turning around and heading to San Antonio to land, refuel, and wait out the storms in Dallas. Originally we were scheduled to arrive in Dallas at 5:30 p.m., and we didn’t get there until well after 9.

    To add to the fun, a few minutes after landing in San Antonio the flight attendants announced that the bathrooms were “full” and would be closed until further notice. I had just taken advantage of the facilities and so I remained comfortable until we finally deplaned in Dallas, unlike some of the unluckier cross-legged passengers.

    I guess this is not really that interesting of a story, other than to say I was on a plane for 8 hours instead of the normal 4, and also that airplane food is no longer free, which I find mildly insulting considering the rather dubious quality of said food in the first place. I strongly feel that when you pay anywhere from $250 to $1000 or more for a plane ticket, the least they can do is throw in a soggy turkey sandwich and dried out carrot sticks gratis.

    And do you remember when airlines would charge you to rent a set of earphones? Doc notes that their little jacks were proprietary, utilising some sort of whooshing air-based sound transmission system of a horribly tinny quality, and if you owned your own set of earphones you were out of luck because they wouldn’t fit in the jacks.

    Of course, that was also when in-flight entertainment was free (even if it was just nine channels of radio through the arms of your seats). Now you’re charged $10 to rent a little device that plays, on a 5″ screen, a select (read: crappy) set of films or television shows, chock full of advertisements.


  4. Roadtrip Days 8 & 9: Redmond

    June 24, 2007 :: 7:08 pm

    Saturday we spent mostly with Mike. We ate breakfast at what is apparently the only bagel shop in the entirety of the Seattle area (with Mike, as usual, not eating). Then we went with Mom to an appliance shop where she is ordering her new kitchen appliances for the new house. Good thing, too, ’cause she changed her mind about all of them once she was able to see them in person and talk to a salesperson. She picked a dishwasher, stove, oven, refrigerator, range hood, and microwave oven.

    Then we accompanied Mike to the liquor store for a bottle of his favorite tequila (which, I worry, serves as his dinner on many nights). Don’t let it be said that my family can’t drink. I’m the odd one out, it would seem, as far as alcohol habits; one or two drinks per week is more than enough for my tastes.

    Mike seems to be opening up a little as the days wear on, and by that I mean he’s not responding entirely in monosyllables and occasionally you can actually hear what he says. I really feel bad for him and feel like I should be a good sister and do something to help him, but I think he’s still at a point where he doesn’t want help and doesn’t particularly even want to feel better, and I totally understand that. So I’ve been giving him his space, not forcing conversations, trying to make him smile on occasion, and talking with him about things that interest him (food, wine, migraine).

    His house is in such disrepair it’s depressing. All the renovations that he and Vanessa started (actually I think it was entirely Mike doing the work) just sit half finished. He has no motivation to complete them, and I don’t think I would either in his situation.

    Katy Across America, Day 9: Mike's House

    Katy Across America, Day 9: Mike's House

    We sat around the house in the afternoon, working on our computers or watching the TV. In the evening, Mom and I drove out to a place called Triple XXX Root Beer Drive In in Issaquah to pick up dinner (burgers, fries, root beer floats). The place was a retro-nostalgia 50s style drive in diner, with 50s music on the loudspeakers, people with their classic cars in the parking lot, and 50s memorabilia plastered over every square inch of the place. Mike asked us to bring him some insanely large super special burger that was at least 8 inches in diameter.

    Last night the moon and clouds looked particularly pretty, so I took some long exposure pictures after it finally got dark enough, which was about 10:45 p.m. (the days are longer here in the summers than in Texas because of how far north it is).

    Day 173: Northern Night Sky

    Katy Across America, Day 8: Moon and Firs

    Today we drove out to Sequim to show Mike the house and get his opinions on things that might need to be done, such as reinforcing the floors underneath the kitchen and bathroom. Mike has done a lot of renovation on his house and he does beautiful work, so Mom wanted to see if he thought that they needed to make any changes. I told him that he could get a second job as a contractor.

    That drive to Sequim is LOOOOOONG. It’s about 140 miles from Mike’s house to there, each way. I’ve done it 3 times now. I think, all told, I’ve probably been in the car for 3500 miles in the past 9 days. I’m really tired of it, but the funny thing is, these drives back and forth to Sequim seem MUCH longer than the 650 mile days we were doing to get here in the first place.

    At least on the way back we stopped by John’s (about the halfway point) so Mike could try to get Mom’s outgoing e-mail to work (no dice), so it was nice to have a little break. I laid under their cherry tree outside and called Doc. I can’t wait to see him tomorrow.

    This evening we went to a nice Italian place called Grazie’s (in Factoria) for dinner. The food was nice, and I even tasted Mike’s CALAMARI, if you can believe it! Not the little deep fried rubber bands that a lot of places serve as an appetizer, but a calamari steak. It had a nice taste, but the texture was a little odd and smooth. I could probably dig it if I didn’t think about what it was. And for dessert: the most amazing thing in the world, a taste I had no idea existed. Flourless chocolate cake – not too sweet – and a glass of port wine. Oh. My. God.

    Tomorrow I go home. My flight gets in to Dallas at 5:30. I have had a nice time but am looking forward to my cats, my own bed, and especially my Doc.


  5. Roadtrip Day 7: All Over The Place

    June 22, 2007 :: 11:17 pm

    This morning I got up early again and went walking in Gig Harbor with Mom, Aunt Sue, and family friend Yasuko. We walked around the harbor and marina and through the downtown area, then stopped for coffee and scones. Yasuko is a bit older than Mom and Sue, and as a teenager Mom babysat her kids.

    It turns out that her daughter, Christine Wada, works in Hollywood and was the costumer for one of my favorite movies, O Brother Where Art Thou. She’s done costumes for a lot of movies, including a few Coen Brothers films.

    We drove up to Sequim with John and Sue so Mom could meet with the plumber and get the fixtures and tub choices finalized. We walked around the property for a bit first, and it had rained earlier in the day, so everything was wet. It was cold, too! I would say between 50 and 55 degrees.

    Later we ate lunch at a little cafe on the waterfront, more of a dive really. It looked like a place where old people go to sit all day and smoke cigarettes. The fish and chips were excellent, very lightly battered so not too heavy. I really and truly love malt vinegar on my fish and chips. Who needs tartar sauce?

    While Mom was at the plumber’s shop, the rest of us went to a few antique/junk shops to see if they might be places Mom would like to go to search for old doorknobs and other authentic house accessories. Then we got blizzards at Dairy Queen.

    Note to self: Never eat fish, chips, and ice cream for the same meal. Ever. Again. You will regret it.

    Traffic was awful coming back home; a bad accident had shut down the highway. We exited and tried to take back roads. John was driving mom’s car and knows the ins and outs, but as it turned out, so did everyone else. It probably would have been quicker to stay on the highway.

    I took a few photos at John’s, of his house and the surrounding forest.

    Katy Across America, Day 7: My Uncle's House

    Day 171: Mossy Goodness

    Day 172: Foxglove Grows Wild

    Katy Across America, Day 7: My Uncle's Forest

    Later, we left John and Sue’s as they had to pack up for their monthlong vacation at their Alaskan island cabin, and drove back to Redmond to Mike’s house. I was not feeling well at all (again: fish, chips and ice cream are a bad combination) and so I pretty much laid around for the rest of the evening, reading and feeling sorry for myself.

    We’ll spend tomorrow with Mike. No idea what we will do.


  6. Roadtrip Day 6: Seattle

    June 21, 2007 :: 9:55 pm

    Not a whole lot to report for today. We came out to my Uncle John’s house this morning and hung out here all day, talking, having cheese and diet Pepsi on their patio, running errands. Brittney calls him “the flip off uncle” because I have a photo of me and my brothers and my mom and him on the sofa in my house on the night before my wedding, and he has a huge grin on his face and he’s flipping off the camera.

    Late afternoon I took Tilly and went running up and down the HUGE hill on the main road near their house. We didn’t go very far, partly because there was not much of a shoulder to the road and I was afraid she would get into the street, but mostly because I don’t do 20% grades very well. Texas is FLAT and that’s what I’m used to!

    This evening my cousin John Evan and his wife and kids came for dinner, along with family friend Yasuko, whose kids my mom used to babysit for in the early 1960s. The Richardson kids seemed to get all the energy in the family while the McCormack kids are much calmer. It took a lot out of me, to be “on” for that long. John seems a lot calmer than he used to; not as much angry energy. I think being a dad has helped him a lot.

    Tomorrow we go back to the property in Sequim for Mom to meet with the plumber. She was hoping that would happen today but he needed to meet tomorrow instead. Hopefully we will also be able to take Tilly to the beach to play in the water.

    I know I’ve only been gone six days, but I feel a little homesick for Doc and the cats and my own bed. Actually I am VERY homesick for Doc… it’s really hard to not be with him for this long. I’ve loved spending a lot of time with my mom but I really wish he was here too.


  7. Roadtrip Day 5: Sequim

    June 20, 2007 :: 9:27 pm

    So since we’ve arrived at our final destination in Washington State, my post titles aren’t really a record of where I started in the morning and ended up in the evening as much as they are my activities for the day.

    This morning I slept in (8 a.m.! Woot!), despite Tilly’s best efforts to root me out of bed with her wet nose at 6 a.m. We stopped at Starbucks for Mom’s morning coffee and then drove the 2-1/2 hours up to Sequim. It wouldn’t take nearly as long if only there was a bridge from Edmonds to Kingston. That would save at least an hour’s drive time. There is a ferry but it’s so expensive to take a car on the ferry.

    The house is absolutely gorgeous! And it’s only partially finished. The builder and construction foreman are very nice guys, and Mom was able to answer a lot of the questions they had about window placement and changes to a few of the initial plans. Apparently you can draw up all the plans in the world, but once you start building, things come up and sometimes need to be shifted around.

    Katy Across America, Day 5: Mom's new house

    Katy Across America, Day 5: Mom's new house

    Tilly made friends with the foreman’s labrador, Boonedog, who is definitely alpha. Tilly is not used to being around alpha dogs and so they play-fought for long stretches of time. I think in the end she finally realized that she was not in charge. They ran and played and jumped around through the bushes and wildflowers, and tore up and down the staircase.

    Katy Across America, Day 5: Mom's new house

    In mid-afternoon we were finished at the house so we stopped in town for lunch (DQ, a must on a roadtrip) and drove the 3 hours back to Mike’s (LOVE that Seattle traffic… sigh).

    We ordered pizza for dinner (Mike would not eat… sigh). And I’ve been uploading photos, writing blog entries, and IM-ing with Kathryn.

    Tomorrow we take our stuff to my Uncle John’s house for a couple days, then drive back to Sequim so Mom can meet with the plumber to to over some faucet questions.


  8. Roadtrip Day 4: Washington State

    June 19, 2007 :: 11:39 pm

    We made it to our final destination! I cannot believe we drove 2500 miles in 3-1/2 days, especially with a dog and cat along for the ride.

    Mom and I are now staying with my brother Mike in Redmond, just outside of Seattle.

    Too tired to type now. Will recap in the morning.

    Okay, I am now a bit more refreshed than I was when I started this post yesterday.

    We had breakfast in Couer d’Alene, Idaho, with Doc’s mom this morning. We ate at a lovely ritzy resort restaurant on the lake. Not that the restaurant was that ritzy, but the resort sure was. It was really great to see her, and now that she’s moving to Derby, Kansas, we’ll be able to visit more often.

    Katy Across America, Day 4: Me & Kerry

    Our drive was mainly uneventful. Eastern Washington is surprisingly plain and flat.

    Katy Across America, Day 4: Eastern Washington

    The Columbia Valley Gorge is somewhere in the middle, and it is quite beautiful.

    Katy Across America, Day 4: Columbia Valley Gorge

    Western Washington, however, is much more interesting.

    Katy Across America, Day 4: Western Washington

    We got to Mike’s house in the early evening and sat out on his back porch for a little while until he got home from work. Then he took me for a ride on his new motorcycle. I cannot believe I got on the back of a bike! The last time I was on one, I was an infant in a cardboard box on the back of my dad’s motorcycle in the early 1970s.

    Katy Across America, Day 4: Oh my god I rode a motorcycle.

    My brother’s girlfriend of four years recently left him and it’s like all the life has gone out of him. He won’t eat, he barely responds when you talk to him, and doesn’t smile. I know he’ll pull through it eventually but he’s in a bad place right now, and it makes me really sad that there’s nothing I can do.

    Tomorrow Mom and I will go to Sequim to see her new house in progress.


  9. Roadtrip Day 3: Montana & Idaho

    June 18, 2007 :: 9:35 pm

    We are making seriously good time on this roadtrip. I think we are a full day ahead of schedule! We have driven about 650 miles each day since Friday, and are now in Couer d’Alene, Idaho.

    Today’s route:

    90 from Sheridan, Wyoming straight on through to Couer d’Alene, Idaho. One road, 650 miles!

    Montana is much more picturesque than Wyoming. It is named Big Sky Country for a good reason. It seems to be rather sparsely populated and everyone has a view of verdant hills teeming with evergreens or snow-capped mountains. The skies are enormous and blue and filled with puffy white and gray clouds.

    Katy Across America, Day 3: Big Sky Country

    Katy Across America, Day 3: Big Sky Country

    Here is a photo of our hotel from last night, which used to be a flour mill:

    Katy Across America, Day 2: The Mill Inn

    I can’t believe I’ve been getting up at 5:45 every morning since Friday. It’s actually not as hard to do when you go to bed by 9:30 p.m.! First thing after waking up, I put on my shorts and hoodie and running shoes and take Tilly outside for a short jog. We’ve been going about a mile or so, which is not very far for someone who’s supposed to be training for a marathon, but I’m on limited time and I’ve got a dog who probably can’t go as far as I need to. Anyway, I think I’m doing good to be getting any exercise at ALL on a cross country roadtrip.

    This morning I let Tilly off-leash in the hotel parking lot (it’s fenced on 3 sides from the street with a nice grassy area at the back), and ran her from one side to the other at top speed for a few minutes. She can outrun me, easily, even when I sprint. She has this awesome bounding run and she’ll cross diagonally in front of me as if to trip me up, and then she’ll stop at the end of the parking lot and look back at me like she’s laughing.

    Katy Across America, Day 3: Tilly Looks Guilty

    As we drove through these beautiful hills and valleys today, I wanted to stop on the roadside and let her out to just run up and down the hillsides. Too bad most of them had fences a few dozen yards back from the highway. I guess somebody owns every square inch of America.

    We stopped to pee in a cute little town called Livingston, where I overheard the woman behind the store counter at the Exxon station tell a local customer “And she actually asked me, ‘How safe are your hotels?’ And I told her ‘Honey, I’m at work and my house is unlocked, that’s what kind of town this is!’ And she sniffed and walked out without a word!”

    We ate lunch at a Quizno’s in Butte, where Tilly charmed everyone who walked past our patio table. And later in the afternoon we stopped for gas in Wallace, Idaho, a tiny town nestled along a river in a valley, that is very well kept up and apparently just held some sort of weekend festival. There were far more cars parked in the antiquey looking downtown area than could possibly belong to just the residents.

    Katy Across America, Day 3: Stardust Motel

    And now we’re at the La Quinta in Couer d’Alene. We got a bottle of wine and had cheese, fruit, snap peas and crackers in the room for dinner.

    Tomorrow morning we are having breakfast with Doc’s mom, who is driving down from Sandpoint about 40 miles north of here. I’m looking forward to seeing her.


  10. Roadtrip Day 2: Colorado & Wyoming

    June 17, 2007 :: 9:49 pm

    Today was a pretty damn boring drive. We covered the entire states of Colorado and Wyoming from south to north.

    Today’s route:

    25 from Trinidad, Colorado to Buffalo, Wyoming (600 miles)
    90 from Buffalo to Sheridan, Wyoming (30 miles)

    As we were leaving Trinidad, I noticed that it has a Stargate!

    Katy Across America, Day 2: Not Cheyenne Mountain

    That 600 mile stretch from Trinidad to Buffalo was, nearly without exception, unendingly boring.

    Katy Across America, Day 2: Boring Midwest Landscapes

    Outside of Colorado Springs we drove past Pike’s Peak, but we weren’t sure exactly which one it was in the mountain range because nothing looked impressive or terribly peaky and we kind of thought it was supposed to be rather pointy. I called Doc a bit later to express my disappointment in Mr. Pike and his so-called “peak,” and he said that when you’re travelling across America at 25 miles a day on horseback, after going through Kansas you tend to be easily impressed.

    The most interesting event of the day was the windstorm that blew through as we were standing outside the Loaf ‘N Jug gas station in Casper, Wyoming (seriously, it was called the Loaf ‘N Jug, how awesome is that?!), trying to get the dog to pee. The gust slammed into us and then a cloud of dirt and gravel came roaring in without warning. We ran for the car, dirt in our eyes and stinging the backs of our legs and arms. We waited until it subsided a little before getting back on the highway, but the muddy rain made it hard to see for a while.

    Katy Across America, Day 2: Loaf 'N Jug

    Katy Across America, Day 2: Dirt Storm in Casper, Wyoming

    Katy Across America, Day 2: Dirt Storm in Casper, Wyoming

    Tonight we are staying at the Mill Inn in Sheridan, Wyoming. It is an old flour mill converted into motel rooms, very nicely decorated with Old West art, wooden furniture, track lighting, and Starbucks coffee in the room. Instead of going out for dinner, we bought cheese and crackers and fruit and snow peas at a grocery store, and looked in vain for some place to buy wine.

    Tilly and Tigger are doing really well. Tigger has had some intestinal upsets in her carrier, but once you let her out to roam around the backseat, she does fine. I think the carrier makes her nervous. She loves being in the motel rooms, she just wanders a bit and then curls up on the bed and goes right to sleep.

    I have some photos of the hotel but it is late, we are getting up at 5:30 a.m. tomorrow, and I will just post them tomorrow instead.


  11. Morning in Colorado

    :: 7:01 am

    I woke up at 5:50 a.m. (no, I have not been replaced with an a robot that is a morning person) and walked out of the motel room in my pajamas to take the dog outside, and it was 57 degrees. In June. This does not compute, my brain is short circuiting.

    I’m really glad that I brought my hoodie with me, I’m going to have to dig it out of the trunk of the car!

    Gotta go, time to pack up the car and get on the road. I’ll write more tonight.


  12. Roadtrip Day 1: Texas & New Mexico

    June 16, 2007 :: 7:47 pm

    Mom and I began our Crazy Summer Roadtrip A La Thelma And Louise But Without The Murders and Driving Off Cliffs this morning.

    (I’ve posted my photos on Flickr.)

    It’s funny how your perception of how long you’re spending in the car (or, I suppose, any mode of transportation) is relative to your total travel time. For instance, the 4-1/2 hour drive to Houston from Dallas seems to take absolutely forever, yet the eleven hours we spent in the car today seemed to go by fairly quickly, and I think that it’s because I know we have another three or four full days still to drive. So does 1/4 of a journey always feel like 1/4 of a journey, no matter how long that journey is?

    At any rate, we spent most of today in Texas. I’ve lived here my whole life (sigh) and I still marvel at the fact that one can drive literally all day and still be in this same damn state.

    That being said, West Texas skies are amazing. So big.

    Katy Across America, Day 1: Texas Skies

    Here is the route for today:

    635 to 35 in Dallas.
    35 to 380 in Denton.
    380 to 287 in Decatur.
    287 to 40 in Amarillo.
    40 to 385 in Vega.
    385 to 87 in Dalhart.
    87 to 25 in Raton, NM.
    And 25 to Trinidad, CO, which is where we are right now.

    Just outside of Amarillo, we stopped at Cadillac Ranch. I have wanted to see Cadillac Ranch ever since I first heard of it years ago, and now I am very happy that I can cross this one off my Must Do Before I Die list. It seems a little less “larger than life” than I was expecting (Cadillacs 20 feet tall? Not so much), but it was still pretty cool.

    Katy Across America, Day 1: Cadillac Ranch

    Normally I really like New Mexico, but today it completely sucked. The little northeast corner that we drove through had road construction literally the entire way, and the speed limit averaged 45.

    Tilly and Tigger (mom’s black lab puppy and stripey cat) did amazingly well in the car. Tigger spent most of the time curled up in her litterbox on the floor behind the driver’s seat, and Tilly slept on her fuzzy sheepskin dog bed on top of the luggage in the backseat. We made a lot of puppy pee stops (although Tilly was much more interested in chasing grasshoppers), and it was really nice to stop frequently just to get out and stretch.

    In fact, I really like travelling without a set schedule. We don’t have to be in Seattle on a particular day and we don’t have motel reservations anywhere along the way. It is so much more relaxing this way.

    So now we are in a motel in Trinidad, which is just inside the Colorado border. We found a nice place that has free wi-fi (woot!) and takes dogs and cats, but the tradeoff is that we are in a smoking room that smells really awfully strongly of tobacco. We were just too tired to drive any further to look for another place, though.

    Sprint tells me that I have full coverage in Trinidad, but it lies. I am on stupid Roaming, which I do not use, so I cannot call anyone. Not that I particularly enjoy talking on the phone, but I did get two calls that I couldn’t answer so as not to rack up hideous roaming charges.