It was very special to check in with family and with friends in Fonda and Pomeroy, IA.
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Trip Complete - 10/7/08
It was very special to check in with family and with friends in Fonda and Pomeroy, IA.
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Sioux City, IA to Joliet, IL 9/26 - 9/28/08
It was especially pleasing to see the girls' former babysitter, Ann Dresback, who is now 94. It was sad to look at the vacant lot where the Pomeroy church once stood next to our former parsonage which has also been sold. Both of the towns have lost most of their businesses, but it was encouraging to see that a major windmill farm now covers the entire distance between Fonda and Pomeroy.
It was great to see Lynley flourishing at the University of Iowa. She is one of the coxes on the university rowing team; she may get to travel to San Diego and Massachusetts. It was a treat to go to the Amana Colonies for supper on Saturday night.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Hot Springs, SD to Sioux City, IA 9/23 - 9/25/08
Monday, September 22, 2008
Brigham City, UT to Hot Springs, SD 9/17 - 9/22/08
Sorry to be so slow but we have not had access to wifi for the past two nights. The theme of these days has been mountains, fossils, trails, and trains.
We have had some real highs and real lows.
The highs include being led through a large flock of sheep by a sheepdog in northern Utah, seeing three geysers erupt in Yellowstone, picnicking on Jackson Lake with the Tetons reflected in the lake.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Reflections on this Journey 9/18/08
GEOGRAPHY
We began in familiar territory, the woods and prairies of the northeast and the northern midwest, but the last three weeks we have been in the less familiar plains and mountains of the American West. We are both fascinated by this part of our country. Everything exists on a very big scale. Farmers use semis to haul their grain to market. A small city provides services for people from hundreds of miles around. And yet it is an important part of the global economy. Grain prices are at astronomical levels because of demand for fuel alternatives and for food around the world. We have traveled beside the historic Northern Pacific and Great Northern rail lines, and have watched grain go east and west, coal go east, and container trains with Chinese products head all over the United States.
We have been uplifted by the majesty of the mountains, overwhelmed by the vastness of the prairies (the world is so large and people are so small), and humbled by the sacredness of groves of towering firs, cedars, and hemlocks. Washington is not as famous as California for its great trees, but theirs are equally impressive. Bill, in particular, has a big tree fixation.
Throughout the trip we have enjoyed the cultural shifts which manifest themselves in so many ways. People in the Northwest are truly coffeeholics! Right now we are in Mormon Territory. Their aversion to caffeine and nicotine is very helpful to Judy's asthma (just as the dryness of the high desert helps her a lot). We have traced some of the best (the bravery and initiative of early explorers, traders and settlers) and some of the worst (mistreatment of Indians, internment of the Japanese-Americans, and the persecution of the Mormons) of American history. And you have noticed that we are pursuing the food shifts with great pleasure. Bill's birthday dinner was in an excellent Mexican restaurant where one jalapeno almost did him in, but he would gladly repeat the experience!
TENTING
Making this trip has been greatly enhanced by technology. Most campgrounds have WiFi although not all systems are of equal strength. Getting pictures on the blog is slow work and we still cannot get them to go where we want them to go. The GPS has saved us several times (and misled us occasionally). The cell phone has been the least useful of modern equipment, but it is still nice to hear people's voices when we can find service.
Our camping equipment has worked extremely well. The tent is so light and easy to put up and take down, the air matress is super easy to inflate and very comfortable (although we do not get up and down as easily as we once did), our stove and light are far easier to use than the equipment we had thirty years ago when we came to Yellowstone and Glacier, and the sleeping bags really do keep us warm. Cold has been a far bigger problem than rain on this trip.
US
Spending this much time together highlights personality differences. We have negotiated most of them really well. But it will remain true that Bill is right-brained and Judy is left-brained. That means we will need to keep negotiating for many years to come! It has pleased us both to hear from family and friends via blog and email. We are glad to be together and by ourselves, but our family and friends are a vital part of life. We cannot imgine a happy life without all of you. Our best to all of you. Bill and Judy
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Eden, ID to Brigham City, UT 9/15 - 9/16/08
One of the biggest excitements of the whole trip for Bill was seeing the spot where the Golden Spike completed the transcontinental railroad. We walked a mile of the original railbed. This was followed by a visit to the Ogden Depot today where Bill took the throttle of one of the fastest steam engines ever built. There were five tracks of trains at the depot, from a steam engine to a turbine propelled engine capable of pulling 753 cars at a time.
The Adventures of Super Grandpa: Grandpa took a walk in the Wasatch Mountains today and found a mother and baby dinosaur. They followed him back to the campsite. Since they were in need of a home, Grandpa wanted to bring them to one of his daughters as a unique family pet. Grandma (Manga) was very proud that Grandpa had found the first living dinosaurs, but she gently explained that dinosaurs make poor pets because they are difficult to house train. She took them to the Dinosaur Park in Ogden, Utah where they are living very happily.
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Aberdeen, WA to Eden, ID 9/11 - 9/14/08
From the porch of the National Park Inn, we were able to eat scones and watch the sunset over Mt. Ranier. Bill says that it was a transcendant moment.
We have been following the Oregon Trail for the past 2 days. Judy has the greatest empathy for the travails of the women on that trip. We camped at a state park where the emigrants on the Oregon Trail camped as they crossed the Blue Mountains.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Spokane to Aberdeen, WA 9/6 -9/10/08
After one of our quietest nights (on the side of Shadow Mountain- note Bill hauling water up the mountain), we visited the Hoh River rain forest. We were close to a beautiful elk there but were unable to take his picture with our small camera.
Friday, September 5, 2008
West Glacier to Spokane - 9/3 - 9/5/08
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Lewistown to West Glacier, MT - 8/31 - 9/2/08
Mountains, bad weather, and two good national park sites have marked this leg of the trip. Rain accompanied us all day Sunday and it snowed on Sunday night in Helena. On Sunday we visited the C.M. Russell art museum in Great Falls. The most interesting aspect of the collection was the selection of letters to his friends which he had carefully illustrated.
Monday we enjoyed beans and peach cobbler prepared over a campfire, ranch style, at the Grant-Kohrs Ranch in Deer Lodge. We also toured the Big Hole Battlefield, one of the many sites where the US attacked the Nez Perce who would not give up their lands. It is a very sad site. Monday night Judy froze in a national forest campsite named Indian Trees; there was ice on the tent in the morning. The Indians stripped the bark of ponderosa pine to eat the inner cambium about 150 years ago.
We are now in a KOA in Glacier after spending several hours having a brake job. We ate huckleberries today, a local treat.
The Adventures of Super Grandpa: Grandpa has decided to do some archeology during this trip. On his first dig, he found the world's largest buffalo head skeleton. Manga (Grandma) was very proud of his find but decided it was too big for our condo in Easthampton so she gave it to the Montana State Museum.
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Dickinson, ND - Lewistown, MT 8/28 - 8/30/08
Within the plains we enjoyed the badlands of the T.R. National Park. While seeking to take his picture, Judy annoyed a large bull buffalo who stomped his feet and made threatening noises - we left quickly.
The Adventures of Super Grandpa: