Saturday, August 1, 2015

Trip Recap

I have spent a good deal of time avoiding the clean-up associated with coming home after a journey such as ours.  Of course the first thing we did was all take a bath...  then came finishing the laundry, putting away the food, washing the kitchen items and repacking them for later use.  I have yet to even open the camper or tent to clean those areas ...  however I've spent a lot of time thinking about when I am going to get moving on that.

We are considering our Memorial Day Weekend trip to New York City a part of this vacation.  This makes it the NYC to LA trip we planned ... or, as I dorkily call it "Sea to Shining Sea 2015".



  • 3 flat tires
  • 1 lost front end
  • 1 trailer hitch fail
  • 34 days away from home
  • 8,533 miles driven
  • 1370 photos taken
  • 8 campgrounds camped
    • Cedar Bluff State Park, Ellis, Kansas
    • James Robb Colorado River State Park, Fruita, Colorado
    • Thousand Lakes RV Park, Torrey, Utah
    • Mather Campground, Grand Canyon Village, Arizona
    • Anthony Chabot Regional Park, Oakland, California
    • The Redwoods RV Resort, Crescent City, California
    • Stagecoach State Park, Oak Creek, Colorado
    • Cherry Creek State Park, Aurora, Colorado
    • Mormon Island State Recreational Area, Doniphan, Nebraska
  • 6 hotels stayed(we achieved Hyatt Platinum Status on this trip)
    • Hyatt House Parsippany/Whippany, NJ
    • Hyatt Place Indianapolis, IN
    • Hyatt Place Topeka, KS
    • Hyatt Place Riverside, CA
    • Hyatt Place Reno, NV
    • Hyatt Place Salt Lake City, UT
    • Hyatt Place Champaign, IL
  • 10 National parks visited and toured  (many more that we drove through!)
    • Independence National Historic Park/Liberty Bell, Philadelphia PA
    • Colorado National Monument, CO
    • Bryce Canyon National Park, UT
    • Capitol Reef National Park, UT
    • Grand Canyon National Park, AZ
    • Joshua Tree National Park, CA
    • Rosie the Riveter/WW2 Homefront, CA
    • Redwood National Park, CA
    • Dinosaur National Park, CO 
    • Dixie National Forest, UT
  •  Other notable parks/attractions
    • Liberty State Park, NJ
    • MOMA Museum, NYC
    • Times Square, NYC
    • Philadelphia Art Museum Steps, PA
    • Petroglyphs of Moab, UT
    • Mohave Desert, AZ/CA
    • Give a Shoe/Take a Shoe, Mohave Desert, CA
    • Glass Beach, CA
    • Harry & David Village, OR
    • Glen Canyon Dam Bridge, Page, AZ
    • Unitarian Universalist Church of Grand Junction, CO
    • Downtown Grand Junction
    • Santa Monica Pier, CA
    • Hollywood Blvd, CA
    • Facebook Headquarters, CA
    • Google Headquarters, CA
    • Former home of Steve Jobs, CA
    • Yoda Statue, CA
    • Jedidiah Smith State Park, CA
    • Homestead of Josie Morris, CO
    • Bonneville Salt Flats, UT
...  the list is not complete!!



It was a fantastic journey.  I will be sorting through all of our photos and posting them a few at a time.  It is a daunting task, but so wonderful to relive the trip.

We have done a lot of talking as a family and we've made the decision that next year we will embark on a journey to the Pacific Northwest. We will take the northern routes, and Interstate 90.  Hopefully stopping at Craters of the Moon National Park, The Badlands, Glacier National Park, Mount Rushmore, Crater Lake ...  and more.  I have alarms set on my phone and on my computer for the first minute campsite booking is available for these places and will jump at the opportunity to begin planing 2016 adventures.


Saturday, July 25, 2015

After the long journey ... thoughts

I am wrestling with the idea that a family takes a vacation together for 3 weeks and then when we come home ... life goes back to normal.  Actually ...  I should change my wording.  When a family goes on a TRIP (not as relaxing as a vacation!) together.  When we were on the road, we worked together daily ...  Oscar set up the tent - every time.  Milo and Tuesday unfolded the chairs around the fire.  We all worked to make sure that Casper was comfortable.  Brian and I talked and planned and worked together to get to the next destination while ensuring we could see the sights along the way. Then, when we came home it went back to the "every man for himself" way of living.  Each of us on our own path, intersecting briefly throughout the day.  It seems that this is a "modern" way of raising a family, doesn't it?  That we all "do our own thing".  The pioneers were more of an all for one and one for all mindset.  I believe that there is still time left that we have together as a family to try to get back some of that closeness. Is it just a matter of "gathering around the fire" every night?  Or perhaps we need more travel time together?  Once a month should we just take off in our little camper and sleep away from home together?  There's a way ...  and I will find it.



Thursday, July 9, 2015

CC Log #7922

Today is the last day of our vacation. It is a bittersweet day. While it is wonderful to be arriving home it is sad that our cross country adventure has come to an end. We have done so much in the past three weeks that it is mind boggling that we had a life at home. Anyways, 

This is Oscar signing off, for the last time

Monday, July 6, 2015

Backroads

We are on our last little leg of this wonderful trip and we are taking some smaller back highways through Colorado.  Gorgeous.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Sleep

I so sleepy now

At Jedediah Smith's park in Crescent City, CA, we drove through an off-the-beaten-path redwoods dirt path trail called "Stout Grove". It was amazing, and far off the more touristy redwoods trails. The trees were huge, silent, and plentiful. The air was sweet and pure. My favorite tree we only discovered on our second drive through. It had a huge cave at its base, which the kids promptly all went into - even Casper. No fears about spiders or bugs or bats or anything else, they just wanted to get into the belly of the behemoth. Once all four were in, they shined flashlights around inside and made declarations of amazement. They begged Angie and me to go in. It took some courage, but we both went in. The craziest thing was that when I shone my flashlight up inside the huge tree, I noticed that the whole thing was completely hollowed out - and I could see all the way to the top!! Incredible!!

We had a loooooooong day of driving yesterday, I fixed a flat in the middle of a desert, we visited the Bonneville Salt Flats, and got bored of being in the car. We found out that people raced cars at over 600MPH on those flats. We dared not drive the van out though.

Today In Salt Lake City we swam all day, in fact we did two rounds: the sunny round and the dark skies round. Both were fun. The hottub was a little too hot, but the pool was just right. Everyone got plenty of Vitamin D. There were also plenty of stokes that arrived to sun themselves without even getting in to swim. Well, one bearded stoke with a Jamaica bathing suit got in for about 3 minutes but that was it. I was glad because I really didn't want to swim in stoke beardy pool water.

The best part of the day to me was our short venture out into town for pizza just about 10PM. As we left the hotel, we found a small overlook that gave us a panoramic view of the entire metropolitan area. Now fireworks are legal in Utah, and I'll say that EVERYONE was exercising their right to shoot them off. If I told you we could see hundreds of firework displays all at once, you wouldn't believe me. But we DID. We saw huge ones, small ones, colorful ones near and far. It was literally impossible to count the number of explosions we saw across the sky - easily in the hundreds every second. It was probably the most amazing 4th of July display I'd ever seen. Instead of seeing one display, we saw ALL of them!!  I wish my dad could've been there. But my family was, so it was cool.

Saturday, July 4, 2015

4th of July

As planned, we spent last night at the Hyatt in Salt Lake City.  We are on break 1 from a day at the pool.  Happy 4th of July, everyone!