Travel, backroads and memory in Daydreaming on the Porch

  • May 18, 2020, 2:24 a.m.
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  • Public

Deep in the stillness of another night of the coronavirus quarantine, my mind is relaxed and wandering off into the past where the present has taken me. So many things are different now that I’m wondering what it will be like when and if things return to more or less what they were before the pandemic.

It now seems that the simple pleasures we completely took for granted before are now weighed down by questions and concerns about when and where it’s safe to go out and whether we should go at all.

I used to take day trips of 50 to 100 miles from where I live. Now if I’m thinking of going to Columbia, our capital, and it’s a beautiful day, there are concerns. What if I have car trouble way out in the country. I’d have to call AAA to come from somewhere out there to tow my car to the shop in Charleston. But Co-vid 19 restrictions would prevent me from driving back with the man from AAA. I wouldn’t want to, anyway. These are not normal times. I’d have to call my brother to come 30, 60 or 100 miles to pick me up and bring me home. Never gave this a thought before. And my car is 15 years old, a Honda Civic, true, but….

So I want to travel long distances again butI won’t or can’t. I fear there might be more crime up ahead. I might not want to leave the house with no one here to go anywhere for more than a day.

So I can travel now that am freed from the restrictions of caregiving, but who wants to travel? Too many complications. Where would I sleep at night? Where would I eat? Again, the simplest things in pre-pandemic life are now suddenly complicated and fraught with danger, real or imagined.

Travel has always been my great escape, my adventure. The road to freedom for me. Ever since I read the book “Blue Highways” in 1982.

Now traveling the backroads on countless highways across many states on my way west and northwest like I used to do seems like some impossible dream. Every city and small town would seem strangely quiet and empty. Where is everybody? Far from the familiar places I know at home it might now seem like I’m venturing into some kind of “Twilight Zone.” Nothing seems the same.

All this pondering on the new realities makes me look with yearning back 3 and ½ decades ago to the mid 80’s when it seems like I was forever planning cross-country road trips which would end in Seattle and the Pacific Northwest. Now I’m retired and don’t have to worry about this, but back then road trips were lifeline to the future, an escape from a world of dashed hopes, lost jobs and ceaseless uncertainty and anxiety.

Back in 1983, my teaching career goals had collapsed and what followed was literally a decade of wandering from place to place and one temporary job to another. The only thing that kept me from going out of my mind and falling into another period of depression was travel, not in Europe or Asia and elsewhere, but seeing the USA, every corner of it except the northern tier of the Midwest and New England. In preparation I pored over guidebooks, maps and those series of best road trips in America guides. This was well before the World Wide Web and broad availability of Internet connections. There were loads of printed materials on my bed as I dived into my travel research. The excitement and anticipation of each long trip easily took my mind off the troubles and uncertainties I faced. Beginning in the spring of 1984, and continuing for each of the next four years, I’d embark on solo road trips across the county, stay in Seattle for awhile and then head back South through Oregon, Idaho or California. I wrote a lot about those travels, kept a diary account of the places I’d been for the first time, and took lots of pictures with film cameras instead of digital, as everything is today.. My faithful and utterly dependable car for every one of those trips was a 5-speed manual shift Nissan Sentra, by far the best car I ever had.

I don’t know when or if I’ll travel long distances by car, and I’m certainly not going anywhere by plane. So I’m going to do some armchair traveling and reminiscing. I’m going to finally start going through file folders and boxes of stuff upstairs. I’m going to be sorting and prioritizing dozens of those file folder stacked up in my study and boxes full of documents, photographs, letters and countless other bits and pieces of memorabilia, all precious to me for some reason from far in the past.

It’s really good to finally have some time to think about and relive visits to many of the places I traveled to on my long road trip odysseys. I’m starting with a small blue file box that contains a collection of brochures from historical sites I visited during the 80s. At every stop, whether it was a national or state historic site, a regional museum, living history museum, or historic home open to the public, I would purchase books, pamphlets, brochures, postcards and at the end of a long and very satisfying and happy day of travel, I’d empty the bag of all the day’s accumulated purchases, lie down in bed and read and go over everything, as well as my road atlas and travel guides (I relied on the Mobil guide series), and stayed up late into the night planning the next day’s sites to visit and back road routes to explore. Many days from 10 in the morning til 5 or 6 in the evening I never covered more than 200 miles.

I wrote this at OD in February 2007 in an entry titled “Thoughts on Travel and Home” :

“*It has been 15 years since I started out on my first trip around the country, filled with equal measures of excitement, apprehension and longing for new adventures after some major setbacks in my life. That trip opened up the country to me, from the spring-fed rivers of the Arkansas and Missouri Ozarks, the Sandhills of Nebraska, and the Powder River valley of Wyoming to the immense grasslands of eastern Montana, the Yellowstone River and the Palouse hill country of eastern Idaho and Washington. I started in May 1984, got to Seattle and worked there that summer, and returned to New Orleans in August. It was my first big, open-road sojourn, the trip that altered my life as any grand new experience will.

“The following Spring I did it again, in the months before I was to start graduate school. I had saved up money from a dead-end job, was reaching another low point, and couldn’t wait to have miles of open, two-lane “blue highways” up ahead of me stretching to the proverbial horizon. I couldn’t think of much else for weeks prior to the start of the trip. Each night I filled my journal with entries chronicling the day’s experiences visiting national parks, historic sites, small out-of-the way towns, scenic river drives, museums, state capitols, and colleges and university campuses, and more.

“By late afternoon I was so filled with exuberance and the wonderful exhaustion of just packing each day full of new experiences that when I stopped for the night, I fell into a kind of reverie, reliving the day’s events. It was like it could go on and on and never want it to end. By about the fifth or sixth day, I had settled into a kind of backroads-explorer role, so thoroughly that I could neither contemplate the end of the adventure or imagine doing anything else. Surely this must have been what William Least Heat Moon felt as he made his way across the country in his van, “Ghost Dancing”, and began the great saga that led to the classic road book “Blue Highways,” the inspiration for my travels.

“When I think back on those journeys today, or read journal entries about them, there’s a slightly unreal quality about it all. Once upon a time there was this person, me, who had as his major responsibility getting a job and settling down somewhere, but who blundered into and out of one disastrous job and school situation after another, through no fault of his own, and who sought the open road to escape from the downward spirals of life. The road opened him up, infused new life into his tired 30-something-year-old psyche, and gave him hope and courage to try new things.”

I couldn’t possibly express those roadtrip feelings any better today than I did 13 years ago.

That single blue file box I mentioned earlier contained information about these places I visited:

• Montana (Montana: The Magazine of Western History)
• Dodge City Kansas: Cowboy Capitol…Beautiful, Bibulous Babylon…Queen of the Cowtowns… hope he Delectable Burg.…
• Pueblo Bonito: Chaco Culture a National Historic Park, New Mexico
• Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas; Canyon Notes, McKittrick Canyon
• Cloudland canyon State Park, Georgia
• Arrow Rock, Missouri; Along the Old Trail: Pioneer Sketches of Arrow Rock and Vicinity
• Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, Baker City, Oregon
• Santa Fe Trail; A.H. Boyd: entrepreneur of the Prairie
• Living History Farm, Des Moines, Iowa
• Photo History of a Livingston-Bozeman, Montana
• Pecos National Monument, New Mexico; Pecos Ruins: Geology, Archaeology, History, Prehistory
• Wind River, Wyoming; Wind River Mountaineer: Fremont County’s Own History Magazine
• Old Cowtown Museum, Wichita, Kansas
• Historical Butte, Montana
• John Day Fossil Beds of Eastern Oregon

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My trusty 1983 Nissan Sentra which took me around the country, four times with only tune-ups and oil changes.

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The Laramie River in Wyoming

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Abandoned one-room schoolhouse in Montana

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Deserted small-town Main Street in Georgia

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Old hotel in the ghost town of Bannack, Montana

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Elkhorn River in north central Nebraska

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Restored pioneer log cabin where I stayed for two nights in southeast Ohio

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Little Muskingum River, Ohio

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Old barn, southeastern Ohio, I took a long road trip to Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana in 2002. Shown is my 1990 Nissan Sentra. This car had air conditioning as opposed to my 1983 Sentra which had not but that never discouraged me from making four trips around the country in it.

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Waterfall in West Virginia

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Magnificent “Big Sky” country in Montana

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Ham’s Fork River, southwestern Wyoming


Last updated May 18, 2020


Jinn May 18, 2020

How interesting ! In theory I have always wanted to travel but then I found the times I did , it stressed me out :-) . I do better picking a destination and staying there . Preferably a beach destination with limited people . I love to read about traveling though.

Oswego Jinn ⋅ May 19, 2020

I agree with you in many ways. There’s a very special place up in the NC mountains that if I could live there I’d be close to a never-ending number of day trip or longer locations . Sighs. One day!

Telstar May 18, 2020

Great pictures.

We had a 1985 Nissan Sentra. Dark blue in color, 4 door, square and boxy. Inexpensive to purchase and operate. Traded it off at 145,000 miles. Good basic transportation.

Oswego Telstar ⋅ May 19, 2020

There was never better basic transportation than those Sentras, and they are probably just as good today!

Kristi1971 May 18, 2020

Those are great memories and pictures! My mom had a Nissan Sentra (it was in the 80s but I don't know the year of the car). It was a red one, and she ran it until it had over 300K and then I think my brother took it over until it died. My memory is foggy at those details, because I was no longer living at home. Those Sentras were the BEST little car.

Oswego Kristi1971 ⋅ May 19, 2020

You are absolutely right. The next best, I think, are the Honda Civics and the Toyota Corollas.

TL May 18, 2020

Gorgeous views in those pictures! I feel trapped too. However, my wanderlust is not as bad as yours. Hang in there

Oswego TL ⋅ May 19, 2020

It’s bad only at times. When I did all those road trips I was much younger. Now I’m pretty content being a homebody and letting my mind and imagination carry me to inner and outer worlds and distant places. 🌞

Wranglingal May 18, 2020

I live not far from that Laramie River in WY. It is approximately 280 miles long, in the U.S. states of Colorado and Wyoming. The river was named for Jacques La Ramie, a fur trapper who visited the area in the early 19th century. I truly enjoy reading your entry! Great Pictures!

Oswego Wranglingal ⋅ May 19, 2020

Thank you for the info. I’m glad you enjoyed this entry. I think that photo of the Laramie River was taken at or near Fort Laramie National Historic Site. I’m fascinated with Western history and Fort Laramie sure has a lot of it. The river itself is quite pretty in that picturesque landscape with beautiful cottonwood trees along the banks.

ODSago May 18, 2020

This certainly took me back. How I loved Blue Highways and I remember you and I exchanging notes on OD about the book and about your travels. Oswego, I find I cannot go back into the that part of the river of life, I, too, traveled and imagined that I'd do that if I were widowed. But for some of the same questions that are at the present blocks for you...I don't make the trips. Suppose my car broke down? Etc. I think about tours...suppose I being somewhat deaf missed the wake up alarm...I do here. Etc. But I believe either of us would cheer the other on should/when/if a trip were to be planned and undertaken.

Oswego ODSago ⋅ May 19, 2020

I know exactly where you’re coming from. The river of life flowed across this magnificent and beautiful country back in the 80s for me, and I was young and couldn’t get enough of it. Today I’m really content for now being a homebody in this beautiful, walkable city. If I’m not too feeble in a few years, I would like to embark on a long trip, but it very likely will be with my sister and possible my brother-in-law after I move to Washington State. It’s only a matter of time. I can’t stand hurricane season much longer.

I must re-read “Blue Highways.” 🌞

ODSago Oswego ⋅ May 20, 2020

Yes, and I want to do that, too. I'm trying to get a out of state E-library card at a Brooklyn library and join Libby, which I think you must be familiar with having worked in the library at a university there. I have finally worked out the problems with my not having an ID card currently ... and the computer seems to have eaten my application. But I'm sure it will work out. Blue Highways! How could I have sold my copy when I moved. I'm excited about your move to Washington State when you are ready. I loved my little sojourn there when we drove up the pacific coast to Canada...just a bit of a venture into that area was thrilling.

Newzlady May 19, 2020

Ah yes, now I see captions for those Flickr images. Wonderful memories.

Marg May 24, 2020

A wandering minstrel for sure! I loved this and ironically John Denver’s song Country Roads started playing in my head as I was reading! What stories each of those buildings featured in your photos could tell eh? Or the cars that took us there :)

Oswego Marg ⋅ May 24, 2020

Oh yes, “Country Roads”. I remember it so well from 1972. And of course, my favorite road anthem, Wilkie Nelson singing “On the Road Again.”

That old hotel I’m sure has many stories. I distinctly recall walking theough the building more than 30 years ago!

Deleted user May 31, 2020

I really loved looking at the pictures. For me, seeing memories of the past, no matter whose they are, especially of a time during which I was not yet alive, there is an indescribable quality to it. I've not met many people my age who derive the same joy of learning and witnessing history in this way. Often I hear, history, in the context of the world at large i.e. the Revolutionary War, the Industrial Revolution, the building of the Great Wall, the Cold War, etc. But history is anything that anyone did.

My dad loves to travel, mom not so much, but growing up he took us on innumerable trips. It wasn't even where we were going that I enjoyed so much, it was the journey itself. I learned a lot and had the opportunity to see a lot of places and things, even though we rarely left our state. But even just traveling around one state will offer a wealth of learning and experiences.

Before I graduated college last year, I was commuting, not often, mostly holidays, between Maine and Vermont. It was about a four or five hour drive, give or take. I found myself looking forward to the trips, whether it was from my parents in Maine back to campus or vice versa. I would take Route 2 through New Hampshire and near the White Mountains. I knew the route by heart, I still do. I'd reach my destination and feel nostalgic but also vaguely sad, like missing an old friend. I could have taken I-95 then connected to I-83 in Vermont and I did take that route once but the experience and the feeling wasn't the same. For me, it was just traveling at 70, 75, maybe 80 miles an hour along endless stretches of highway that all looked the same. The "backroads" route, if you will, was different for me. There were landmarks, little stores, all these things along the way that I looked forward to seeing. I still remember the little towns I'd pass through, a huge yellow house on a hill, the stores I liked to stop at for a snack or gas, the lakes, the rivers I passed over or by. Truly an experience that I actually find myself missing to this day. I don't miss college though. But the trip, very much so. I want to travel more eventually, solo. Right now, it seems to uncertain. I've started just going for very long drives. Going north from where I live, I'm about 2 and a half hours from where the Maine border meets Canada to the east. Obviously, I can't cross the border right now but I really hope to one day. I've been to Arizona, New York, Massachusetts, All of New England a few other states but I don't feel I've truly traveled. Most of it was by plane anyway, which to me, isn't what I think of when I consider going on a trip. As they say, it's less about the destination and more about the journey and I suppose that's very true for me. You can learn a lot about yourself.

Sorry for my long entry, but I enjoyed this entry and reading about your experiences traveling and seeing some of the places you went. That's one thing I've always done when traveling, take lots of pictures.

Oswego Deleted user ⋅ June 02, 2020

Thank you so much for your comments here about my traveling. Honestly, you travel just like I did, even on shorter trips in my own state of South Carolina. And as many places as I have been in this state over my lifetime, I know there are many, many more interesting historical and scenic places to visit.

I always prefer the backroads to the interstates. There’s absolutely no comparison. I recommend you read “Blue Highways” some day. It was my inspiration.

Deleted user Oswego ⋅ June 02, 2020

I plan to try to visit more historical places as my finances allow when the pandemic ends, hopefully. There's a lot of places I want to see. Ah, I will order Blue Highways on Amazon. I love reading, especially non fiction!

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