I resolve to
- add more outdated exclamations and interjections to my vocabulary (“neat!” just isn’t enough sometimes)
- learn how to play the ukulele
- hula hoop more
- make more art
- smile more
- do well at doing good
What are your resolutions?
I resolve to
What are your resolutions?
I feel like I’m currently in this limbo land. I’ve finished a tasting tour of the United States and I’m on the precipice of starting Peace Corps and all I can think about is adventure. My brain is starting to storm adventures that I want to go on and rough plans for them. I wanted to catalog my ideas someplace before this storm rages away from me. Maybe they will inspire you as well. more “Dream Adventures and Bucket List”
After spending the night in Oklahoma city, I followed state highway 66, which follows the old Route 66 to the Kansas border, cuts through Kansas for 14 miles and then goes into Missouri. more “Road Trip: Route 66 to Chicago”
After spending the night camping at the Grand Canyon, I made my way to Flagstaff to finally start making some real progress eastward. I really wanted to follow Route 66, also known as America’s Main Street and the Mother Road. more “Road Trip: Route 66 to Santa Fe”
This was my second trip to the Grand Canyon and I still don’t know how to put a description into words. I took lots of panoramic photos which I will share here. But they don’t do the view justice. more “Road Trip: Grand Canyon National Park”
After spending the day in Bryce and the evening nearby, I woke up on Monday, December 4 and made my way to Zion National Park. Zion’s history is really interesting. The landscape and presence of the Virgin River lent itself easily to being farmed, and not just by settlers of European descent. There is evidence of the indigenous people farming on the land as well. In the mid-1800s Mormon settlers came to the area and named the area Zion, a biblical reference, and named many of the features with religious overtones: the Altar of Sacrifice, the Great White Throne, the Three Patriarchs (Abraham, Isaac and Jacob) and Prodigal Son among others. more “Road Trip: Zion National Park”
After leaving Death Valley I set my sights on Cedar City, Utah. There is no real direct route to that part of Utah from Death Valley because there is a large military area and the Nevada Test Site right in the way. The Nevada Test Site is an area, also known as the White Sands (that was a pub trivia question I got once), is where the US Government tested the nuclear bombs before dropping them on Japan. Most of the iconic mushroom cloud photos were made here. Testing stopping in 1992, honoring the articles of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (even though the treaty was not ratified by the US). more “Road Trip: Extraterrestrial Highway and Bryce Canyon”
After getting thoroughly soaked and being unable to do a lot of the things I would have liked to and see generally anything in Yosemite I changed course. Additionally, I needed a new plan to get to Nevada and Utah since Tioga Pass had closed. Solution: use the National Parks Annual Pass even more than planned and hit up Death Valley National Park. After reading more about it in my National Geographic Guide to National Parks of the United States, I got even more excited about going. There is so much neat stuff there! And I did not feel like the pioneers who crossed the valley, who described their passage as filled with “hunger and thirst and an awful silence.” more “Road Trip: Death Valley National Park”
One of my main missions for this trip is to avoid interstate highways. Which made the drive from Sacramento to South Lake Tahoe to Yosemite extremely beautiful. more “Road Trip: Lake Tahoe, Highway 49 and Yosemite”