For the second time in little over a year, I point my car northwest on a 1000-mile journey, and then retrace it, through some of the bleakest land in the country. There and back in 32 hours last year, and there and back again a few weeks ago, this time sweetened in the middle by a most joyous event: the birth of our first grandchild. That the trip follows on the heels of a solid two months sequestered at home makes it all the more liberating, and I savor the trip almost as much as the heart-bursting reason behind it.
Like the previous trip, I do this one alone and almost in silence – no podcasts for me, or playlists, or even the radio most of the way (there really is no radio reception most of the way!). These are the times my thoughts get to meander as far as the land does, without limits or defined edges.
My mind yawns open like the arroyos out the window; the past and future wander into my head while the present plays out amid the rocking horse oil pumps, the wind turbines, the fields of grain and cattle, the ridges and folds and dusty flats that are palpable beneath my wheels. I point my phone camera out the bug-splattered windows over and over again, trying to capture a strange bliss I could never properly explain.
I savor mile after mile, hour upon hour, of the Texas Panhandle – beige and chalky, then red and earthy, reeking of cows, and beaten by wind. For long stretches I hear what sounds like a thin metal whip flaying the roof of my vehicle. It abates as I slow from 80 mph to pass through tiny, rural towns – a few battered houses, a feed store, a gas station from the ‘50s, a BBQ joint, a Chinese or Mexican restaurant from time to time.
In a few spots, I might catch a glimpse of a strip joint like the (surely beachy) Player’s Bikini Club, or perhaps a big-ass gun shop, or an ad for a steak the size of New York, none of which feature in my daily life and are therefore endlessly amusing to me.
In a matter of seconds, I’m through these towns and back on the open road. Many people would find the sere landscape dull or depressing, but I find its scoured featurelessness profoundly pleasurable. It’s a blank backdrop for old camp songs, writing ideas, life-plan reviews, a phone call here and there. I barely need to turn the wheel, and the hours effortlessly slip by.
I’ve started from barely above sea level, and by the time I hit Amarillo, Texas, I’m at 3000 feet, riding the high plains ever higher, to almost 4000 feet by the time I reach Dalhart, nearly 5000 by the Texas-New Mexico state line. I never feel I’ve left flat ground, though, inching through those feet of ascent ever so slowly.
Deeper into New Mexico, the gradual rise becomes steeper; by the time I get to Raton Pass and thunder down into Colorado, I am at almost 8000 feet, and both before and after the pass, my views become more three-dimensional and colorful. Late spring growth softens the land, and pine trees begin to replace the drier juniper, cottonwood and mesquite varieties. Distant peaks poke out of the corrugated foreground, some still snow-covered, adding a depth of field that I welcome in spite of my contentment with the monotony.
There are even some less natural sparks of color from time to time. My favorite is Cadillac Ranch, a field of half-buried cars outside of Amarillo, a scene I have wanted to see on the first three passes over this route. On the way home, I finally go out of my way to stop.
The installation is surreal – a garish row of spray-painted Caddies with their tail fins rising out of a sun-bleached cow pasture – and I roam the perimeter as much as I can, avoiding the painters who are encouraged to make their own marks on the “sculpture” of ten cars, originally buried nose-down here in 1974.
It is an hour before sundown on a scorching evening; the western rays are blinding, and the hot wind out in the field has me parched within minutes. Still, I walk slowly back to the car, prolonging what will be my last night in the vast emptiness.
As I drive closer to low ground, humidity, and the big city, I don’t want the trip to end. I choose an alternate way into Houston, sticking to smaller roads that bisect horse farms and white-fenced meadows. And then I am back to the 13-lane Katy Freeway, the gauntlet I must run to get home. Muscles tensed and brain overloaded for the first time in weeks, I finally snap the radio on. Already buffeted by stimuli, I figure a little more won’t hurt. I’ll stay in overdrive in my lush green surroundings for the next month, and then … I’ll make the same soothing trip all over again!
Congratulations on your new grand baby Lexi!! What a beautiful gift during this unpleasant time!!! Love your writing about your road trip!!! I really connect with the part where you talk about the wide, flat, open space being a back drop for old camp songs, life plan reviews, brain-storming, etc. I feel exactly the same way. I used to drive all over WY, western NE, SD, and MT for work. I loved the wide open, flat spaces. I felt tension fall away, I literally played old camp songs I learned as a 13 y/o at camp in Cody WY, belted out other songs at the top of my lungs, thought so much about my life, and just watched the vast scenery go by. It was so peaceful and so moving in many ways. Thanks for evoking those moments for me again.
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Thanks, Lexi! I know there are others who enjoy these long, remote drives like me, and it does not surprise me that you are one of them! It was just what I needed – an escape from the house and, of course, the joy of arriving in my destination to meet a brand new baby, the first child of my first child!
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Beautiful Lexie. Congratulations on your grandchild! What joy!
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Hey, Bon – thanks for reading! We are beyond thrilled to have this sweet little girl in our lives, and I’d do that drive over and over again to spend time with her and her parents! (Do you know how lucky you are to be right there with your grandkids? Of course you do; I’m just so envious!) Stay safe and healthy; I swear we are coming out there someday to see you again.
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Beautiful road trip pictures! I went to school in Canyon, TX. I fell in love with that desolate landscape.
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That desolation can get to you, right? Canyon must be sort of near Palo Duro Canyon State Park, which I hope to hit on our next trip that way.
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Yes it is near the Palo Duro. If you have time stop by the Panhandle Plains museum on the WT campus in Canyon. It’s wonderful!
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Thanks for the tip! I will add that to the list for next time!
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And no one to be seen. Love those cars (I think?) 😊
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It was blissfully devoid of humans most of the way. Little traffic, and since I carried my own food and only had to stop occasionally for gas or a rest stop, I rarely saw a soul. I think the line-up of Cadillacs might have been the most traffic I saw outside the major cities I passed through! And yes, they are … interesting! I did appreciate their milieu, and I guess I also thought it was cool that the original artists (a group called Ant Farm) always anticipated people scribbling more paint onto these things.
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Well we all can do with a bit of quirky in our lives 🙂
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I agree!
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Congratulations, Grandma Lexie! I can imagine the freedom you felt on that road trip. Americana at its finest. The West is the best for road trips. Last US road trip I took was over a decade ago from Miami to Michigan. It just wasn’t the same feeling. I’ve driven through the Panhandle a couple of times. Silence is the perfect soundtrack for that vast emptiness. I don’t know if it’s because of the current situation or not, but I’ve got the sudden urge to explore more of our own country. So good to see a new post from you!
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That makes me sound so old! But that’s OK because it’s fine with me to be getting older, and I don’t feel any older anyway!
I totally agree about the allure of western US road trips, and I’m eager to cover even more territory soon. We were supposed to drive from Idaho to the Pacific NW in late June, but an event I had out west was canceled, and the new grand baby just makes us want to stay put in Colorado for a little bit longer. Even though it’s nice to have company sometimes, as I will next trip, I do love a solitary, silent drive every so often. I rather enjoy my own company, as I know you do, too!
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I’m in total agreement with your feelings on open space, Lexi. No surprise there. 🙂 I’ve driven across Texas a number of times over the years and have always been amazed with how the west part of the state just goes and goes. And then there was bicycling across it! It was a lot farther. (grin) Peggy and I went across Raton Pass on Amtrak in January. Quite spectacular. We are now busy planning a long road trip that I am pretty sure will take us across portions of Texas and New Mexico again. Part of the journey will also take us to visit our families in Virginia and Florida. Which brings me to my final thought: Congratulations on being a new grandmother! –Curt
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Oh, man, I bet bicycling across West Texas felt endless! At least it’s pretty flat. Your upcoming trip sounds awesome! Do I remember correctly that you have seen those Cadillacs near Amarillo? For some reason I thought we “discussed” that before, but maybe I’m remembering that you passed through Marfa in the years before it got super popular; both involve quirky W. Texas art installations after all!
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We had the discussion about Marfa, Lexi. I’ve been through Armarillo a couple of times but not seen the Cadillacs. If I go through there again, I’ll be sure to check them out. As for riding across Texas on a bike, I’m surprised I’m still not out there somewhere! 🙂 –Curt
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Mazeltov on becoming a grandmother!! How exciting!
I love your description and photos of this long road trip with the wide open endless spaces creating space in your mind. I totally get that! Sounds as though it was very meditative and calming. Reminded me of the drive we used to do to visit our son at camp every summer. It was six hours through the Midwest – mostly cornfields and huge open blue skies with the occasional old barn or farm. I loved that drive! Did you sleep somewhere along the way?
That car “installation” along the way is quirky yet fun and quite the surprise!
Peta
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Thanks, Peta! Me, a grandmother?! Wow, it’s hard to wrap my arms around that one, but the baby is sooooo adorable and sweet, and my son and wife are doing great. Very happy I was able to isolate so carefully and then drive safely to them when they needed an extra set of hands.
And the drive was heavenly. I am definitely an open space, open mind kind of gal. I remember driving across North Dakota a few summers ago and everyone saying how awful and boring it would be. I loved it! Just like the cornfields of Iowa, Illinois, and Nebraska. Or the bland flatness of Indiana or the gently rolling hills of Wisconsin and Michigan. All wonderfully serene.
I did make a stop. I had planned to push straight through for the 16 hours, but my son convinced me that staying in an empty, brand new hotel was going to be safer than driving all day and part of the night. I took my Lysol cleaner and my own rags in there and washed every hard surface there was! I slept and that was about it. No breakfast, no shower, just back in the car and back on the road, nice and rested. It worked out great.
The car art was very fun, a nice little diversion before I checked back into that clean, new hotel on the way home! As you know from my comment on your post, I also stopped 30 minutes from home and picked up a new puppy! No rest for the weary although you guys outdid me on that one for sure with Esco!
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You didn’t need to self isolate when you got there? It’s all a bit complicated now, isn’t it? Wishing you lots of cuddles, Lexie 🙂 🙂
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It IS complicated! A month before the baby was due, we thought I could not/should not go at all. As time passed, and our states progressed through various stages of openness, we became more comfortable with my being there; the question then was what I should do to prepare. In order to self-isolate there, I would have needed a long-term-stay hotel (inherently more germ-y than my own house from which we had barely ventured) or to stay only in one room of my son’s house (almost impossible). Instead, I essentially self-isolated at home, did not start the trip until they went to the hospital (so as not to jeopardize them pre-birth), carried everything I needed in the car, pumped gas with gloves and mask a few times, washed up like a crazy person afterward, and took that one risk of stopping in a brand new hotel where I saw no one but the check-in person. I didn’t even bring my stuff in from the car until I had cleaned every single surface with Lysol.
Once there, I had several days before I even saw the parents or baby, and by then, they’d been in and out of the hospital twice and figured I was the safest bet around! I’m hoping and believing all was fine, and we all felt my being there was critical, especially when the new mom had to be readmitted briefly after coming home. I think we need to go back to the olden days when extended families all lived together … not sure my kids would agree! Hope you are staying healthy and I’m glad to see you are still getting out for your walks!
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It just demonstrates the lengths we will go to for our kids, Lexie. It’s a heart warming story and I’m so glad you shared it with me. 🙂 🙂 Yes, walking and back out to restaurants now, with precautions. Little by little.
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Congratulations on the newest addition to the family. So glad you could make the journey. I love road trips. Such a sense of freedom. Thanks for taking me along.
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Thanks, Peggy! Your overland trips in Africa are like mine on steroids! I have driven in many countries, but doing what you have done there and elsewhere is a long-term goal of mine!
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Lex, every time I read one of your trip blogs, I remember the times I deposited you at a train station or airport as you started off on a new adventure: to camp in Greece, camp in the North Carolina mountains, study in Spain, and on.
I feel like I’m part of the same spirit that inspires, plans, executes and reports on your many ventures.
And for those memorable times when you beckoned to “come along with me, the best is yet to be”, ….it was! Love, Dad
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You instilled some wanderlust for sure, Dad! Especially car trips, but thank god there are not 6 of us and a dog in there these days! 🙂 Also glad we have been able to squeeze in some three-generation trips later in life … stay tuned as we may be able to get four generations out together some day!
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Looks like my dad put his comment in the wrong spot, Peggy – sorry!
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You LOVE your road trips, Lexie! We’ve been avoiding highways, because Mark finds them boring. So, to make every trip even longer, he chooses to drive on secondary roads. Then again, we never have a destination in mind, so are happy to take the time to meander through villages and such. Besides, we never drive faster than 55mph anyway. I often prefer highways as that allows me to do things on my iPad without getting car sick and actually have better reception as well.
So, I read your comment on Peta and Ben’s blog and hoped to get a glimpse of your new adventure here and special stop on the way back home… Next post??
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I do indeed love being behind the wheel of a car! I find highways boring also, but in Texas, even the secondary roads and farm-to-market roads can have speed limits up to 75, which in some cases is ridiculous and I’d never do it. But on those long straightaways I had out there in the Panhandle with barely any other traffic, I found I had a bit of a lead foot! This time, I did not feel a ton of pressure to arrive at a certain time, and that in itself added so much to the relaxed nature of the drive. I can see how nice your meandering must be!
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Such beautiful evocative writing Lexi. I felt as if I was there in the silence with you. I’ve never done a road trip alone in such vast emptiness, tho travelled with others across the Australian desert many years ago. I think now I’d much more appreciate the unreachable silence. Congratulations on the newest little star in your galaxy!
Alison
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Thanks, Alison! I do think being a little older, wiser, and less prone to talking (or even feeling like listening!) makes a solo car trip more enjoyable later in life. It also helped to be traveling toward that new, precious little star! 🙂
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Congrats Lexi! The best present at the end of a long drive for sure! X
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Oh, yeah, the little cutie arriving into the world while I was on the road was a spark for sure! I did have a few excited phone calls in there briefly!
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Oh, thank you for the update and sharing with us your magnificent trip, Lexi. Congratulations on the new member of your pack! 🙂 What joy! A 32-hour trip and so often! I’ll think of my seven hours between my Ljubljana and Tuscany as a piece of cake now. In June I’ll be able to go to Slovenia, I do hope. These caddies I’ve seen in photos and would love to see for myself as well. Seeing them through you is the next best thing. I wish you all good luck and much love. ❤
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Your drive is still a good long one! I read that Slovenia is really opening back up and pretty much declaring the crisis over. I hope that is true and that you can get home next month. I had seen the Cadillac “art” in many photos also, and it was just weird enough that I had to see it for myself! 🙂
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wow so open and empty. what a great trip. and a great way to be with your thoughts. although I usually need some music to keep me going!
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I do like music in the car also, but for some reason, I have lately not seemed to care about any outside noise or entertainment. I did turn the radio on from time to time, but it always turned to static eventually and instead of seeking other stations, I usually just snapped it off! The driving in those open spaces is so easy; I felt spoiled when I occasionally hit a major freeway and had to really focus hard.
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I love to run, and never used to be able to do it without music to keep my pace. For the last couple of years though, I have been much more interested in paying attention to the natural sounds of my surroundings.
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Most of the time I still need my music to run long distances! But I totally get what you mean; I did a super long event in the mountains and found it more inspiring to not listen to something beyond nature in my ears for a while.
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How in the heck did you do this drive in silence? I would have been asleep in an hour!! I have never been to the Cadillac ranch – glad you were able to hit some Texas hot-spots along the way. I do like a good country town – I usually am in search of a Dairy Queen – #1 road trip food out there. Yay to the sweet baby – precious little thing!!
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PS – love taking photos of old cars 🙂
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Thinking about stuff actually keeps me more awake than music does! I did occasionally turn on the radio, but I just didn’t feel like using my phone or iPod or any other device; I just wanted to cruise and take in the scenery.
DQ! One of my faves, too, but now that you mention it, I didn’t see any that I recall. I did see lots of small-town donut shops, but I was being well-behaved and not stopping for food on this trip. That sweet baby girl was such a prize at the end, and I found myself thinking about her on and off the whole way back home! (Old cars are so photogenic – I had a field day in Cuba! Some good ones out in the country, too; I remember a number of winners in Marfa, where I’m sure they are supposed to be semi-ironic! Haha)
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Lexie, as Greatgrandmother to our new granddaughter , I share your joy!
But naturally, as your mother, I worry about those long solo trips back and forth to Colorado to see her; however, I do envy you the lone peaceful drives it brings. Love Mom
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You’ve seen my driving prowess first-hand, mother dear! In fact, my last 1000-miler was taking you guys home mid-Covid crisis! I relish the trips. Pretty cool to be a GGma – hope I get to be like you someday!
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What a journey to greet your very first grandbaby, Lex. Congratulations. Driving long distances is fantastic for allowing one’s thoughts to roam. I can so identify with that. Especially when the landscape is so flat and expansive. It is like a 1000 mile meditation of sorts. Beautiful.
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Thanks! I bet I would love a nice, long, monochromatic drive in the UAE; have you done any long road trips there? My car trips on my own really are meditative, and that’s why I don’t fuss if no one wants to go along!
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Congrats again on the Grandbaby.
I don’t know if I’ve ever done as a massive drive in a short period as a driver, and it’s been many a year since I’ve driven such wide-open country. (Normally I fly now.) I’m not sure I’d share your fondness for it. But who knows?
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Most people do not share my fondness for hours in a car on a straight, flat road! For me, it’s the ultimate in relaxation, especially when I’m alone. My dream is to drive across all of Canada some day, a trip I imagine will have some spots just like this one. Meanwhile, I’ll probably log a bunch of miles this summer while we are all avoiding air travel more than usual, plus we just got a new puppy, and they are always easier to deal with in a car! Have a good weekend, Dave!
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Beautiful. I can feel the serenity of the roads just by reading your words. And congratulations on your new grandchild. 🙂
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Thank you for both of those nice comments!
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Congratulations on your new babe! I’m so glad you went. I missed the birthday of a 93 year old aunt who lives in Kansas City, and once missed, those events never can be reclaimed. Despite the need for precautions, you have the memories now, as do your daughter and son-in-law. The human ties that bind can be more important than an obsessive concern for that ghastly oxymoron called ‘social distance,’ and as soon as my aunt’s assisted living place is willing to let me in, or let her out, I’ll be on the road to KC.
As it is, your description of your trip is wonderful. It’s a reminder of how much I love to drive, how much I love long drives, and how constrained I’ve been feeling. Honestly? I think our imaginations expand in those open spaces, and your imaginative, expansive writing is proof of that.
I’ve been able to roam a bit during the past weeks, but roaming a little farther and a little longer is the goal. I’m not one to take advantage of those 80 mph possibilities, but those are the limits that beckon. Windows down, volume up! sez me.
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I’m so glad I went, too! Even a month earlier, we were all questioning whether it would be possible, but after a very strict quarantine for us here and my son and wife there, we all decided it was going to be OK to try. My daughter-in-law had had a very rough go for the last 4.5 months, and then she was re-hospitalized after coming home post-birth, so it really was great that I could be there to help. Even without that drama, it would have been just plain sad for all of us to miss those special moments together. He is my first baby, and this is his, and our time together was very emotional and fulfilling.
And the drive itself was soooo awesome! Even better than the last time. I love the smells out there – sunbaked earth, hay, even manure. I love the expansiveness of the land and sky and, as you note, of the imagination. I don’t tend to be a speeder, but out there, there was nothing to slow me down on the stretches between towns, and I set the cruise control just over the limit and settled in.
I hope you can get out to roam farther very soon! We had barely used the car at all since we took a country drive in late March; in spite of my being largely OK with staying in, I was ready to roll by the time I set off!
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Ah! Son and daughter-in-law! I confused the relationships, but no matter; the love’s the same in either case.
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Lexie what wonderful news that your grandbaby has arrived and that you were able to see her! Congratulations on entering what we term as the best chapter in our lives.
I am amazed that you can make the drive with no music. I often drive through the Canadian prairies to see my Mom and it is satellite radio that keeps me from going into coma. I enjoyed your photos very much. I’m a hard no for the billboard offerings like you. The Cadillac Ranch is something I would love to see and am grateful for the virtual visit with you.
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Thanks for all your wonderful comments, Sue! I suspect grandparenthood will agree with me very much also! Just wish we were closer to them …
I always used to play music the whole drive. Now, I don’t know – it’s like I just don’t need anything to keep occupied and, in fact, music or other listening just distracts me from thinking. I’m weird!
I laughed at your reaction to the guns and steak and other “attractions” out there, and I’m glad you enjoyed the Cadillacs. I thought they were fun!
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OMG! Cadillac Ranch is a real thing! It’s not just a Nitty Gritty Dirt Band song! It’s more awesome than I could have imagined. 🙂
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I am thrilled that someone loves those Cadillacs in the field! I was so eager to see them, and I thought they were wonderfully quirky.
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First of all, a big congratulations Lexie! That’s great news.
In this crazy, busy (usually), noisy world where we’re so bombarded with stimuli I think silence has become foreign to many of us. I love your quiet, contemplative ride and the images you captured along the way. A 72 oz steak…I can’t even imagine! And, isn’t Cadillac Ranch just about the least expected scene along this lonely stretch of road!? That is so cool. I like how you showed both the distant and near views.
All the best to you and the newest addition to your family!
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Thanks, Caroline! The whole Covid crisis, as well as my drive, has reinforced the value of silence and not needing as much stimuli as I thought necessary before. I’m one of those busy beaver types, and now I am learning that I can be just as happy getting less done each day (and hearing much less each day)! The steak! … who could possibly eat that?! I did get a kick out of it, though!
I am so not the grandmotherly norm, but I am SO thrilled to have this little baby that is the first child of my first child. Hard to even fathom, but I am embracing the love!
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After sailing, nothing beats an extended road trip… especially solo (although don’t tell the Captain I said that, I enjoy riding shotgun with him too :-). I drove much of this trip with my pup Nelson in 2007 (we actually overnighted at the Motel Oprey adjacent the Big Texan in Amarillo – it was a bit scary at the time but makes me chuckle looking back).I find these landscapes to be anything but depressing. And to take this trip now, after two months sequestered, and for such a joyous occasion would have been liberating and lovely indeed. Your words capture the bliss so beautifully they make me seriously nostalgic and somewhat weepy here at the docks. It looks like you had the entire world all to yourself. Can’t wait to see you do it again and to see you back in the company of your adorable little light.
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Ahhh, I love that you make reference to the “little light” that is our sweet granddaughter! She is indeed a real spark in our lives. I also LOVE that you were in Amarillo with Nelson! We will pass through yet again with our new pup, Tashi, in just a few short weeks from now. (No guarantees we will stay at the Motel Oprey!) The trip was heavenly in every way – knowing halfway through that I was a new Gigi and being in no great rush except to get there in time to let the kids’ dogs outside and ready the house for the new parents and baby three days hence. I so love my solitude and I can totally understand your being verklempt at my lonesome bliss! 🙂
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Congratulations on becoming a grandparent, Lexi! It must be great.
I can sort of relate to the feeling of doing such a trip. Two Christmases ago I did something of that kind, driving from west of Milan to Hungary and back. The way out, as I left Italy at 4AM, was pure bliss. The way back, not so much. Basically 3 lanes of traffic from west of Venice all the way to the airport. But it was great nonetheless.
I’d like one day to do some driving in Kazakhstan, go from Astana to Almaty or the other way round: it looks not that differently from Texas, just emptier.
Fabrizio
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Hey, Fabrizio! I had you marked as exactly the type that would love these long, lonely drives! In fact, I’ve been jealous of a few road trips you’ve had in Central Asia already. I can’t remember where exactly, but as you note, the landscape looked quite similar to the scenery in West Texas and the Panhandle.
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Yup, it does indeed look like Kazakhstan. Minus the camels but with ZZ top and weird restaurants on top… loved it!
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Oh, yeah, some good weirdness going on out there!
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Congratulations on your first grandchild, Lex! It’s a great feeling, isn’t it? And I thoroughly enjoyed your description and photos of your road trip. Very entertaining – I’ve read about Cadillac Ranch– thanks for the photos. Enjoy your newest addition. 💕
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It’s the most wonderful feeling! I was excited to be a grandmother even though the word itself brings up images of very old ladies – haha. Glad you enjoyed the drive vicariously, including that quirky “ranch!”
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Congratulations! You’ll make a wonderful (and inspiring) grandma! 🙂 I loved your pictures and the thoughts that were in your mind during your road trip. It must have been bittersweet to just head out and see your bundle of joy after being cooped up for so long! I’m trying to focus on happy news these days. And thanks for brightening my day (it’s quite gloomy here.)!
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I can’t wait to get that little girl out on a hike! 🙂
I’m glad my drive and the chronicling of it could brighten your day. I’m sorry it’s so gloomy there. Having spent many years in more northern climes, I know how hard it is to have spring be cold or rainy or just not nice! Hope you are about to move into the good stuff soon!
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Congrats on the new family member there Gran! If there ever was a good reason to break quarantine and hit the road, this was it. I’m impressed with the prep and process, and am sure that it will be good practice. I have a feeling that roadtrips will play large in everyone’s future. ~James
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I spent many an hour plotting my escape and thinking through the logistics of keeping myself as pristine as possible while en route. I’m happy to say that it seems to have worked, and it was manageable and not nearly as stressful as I anticipated. I really couldn’t bear to miss this huge milestone event for both myself and my son – so happy I went!
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Congratulations on your grandchild, Lex! It’s nice to read this kind of happy news amid these crazy times we’re all living at the moment. I love driving and looking at those empty roads made me think of some of the road trips I did in the past — although the roads in Java are a lot more crowded that the photos you posted here. I’m really intrigued by the Cadillac Ranch because of all places I wouldn’t expect to see such art installation in a place like that. But then I can imagine how it piques people’s interest, and to some it might be an introduction to the world of art. I hope you and your family stay healthy!
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Thanks, Bama! After months at home doing so little, it was great to have this huge spark of joy in our lives! The drive was a wonderful bonus; it started as the means to an end and ended up being part of the fun.
I agree about the location of Cadillac Ranch; it seems very random, but back in the ’70s, the group of architects and artists (called Ant Farm) who conceived of it found a patron near Amarillo whose land it was built on. Although it’s on private property, its location right off a highway and an unlocked gate allow people to visit because the Ant Farm artists encouraged public interaction with the art, including graffiti and other spray-painting. The local millionaire patron funded some other unusual public art there as well!
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How serenely my mind went along on this road trip with you…watching the green landscape flow by…enjoying the monotony of the drive…congratulations on your first grandchild. Wishing you well.
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Thank you, Atreyee! This was my first (and only) real outing since we began isolating in our house in March, and it was so freeing! Perhaps the long spell at home made the drive even more appealing than usual. The colorful cars in the vast colorless field were almost a metaphor for the excitement of the trip (and of course the birth of a grandchild!) amid the vast colorless lockdown.
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What lovely news, congratulations! ❤ I love road trips in Europe but I am not a fan of driving in Finland at all, as I feel the landscapes are boring. Our family has often driven to Lapland for a week of skiing and have to admit to just being the passenger as driving on the ice and snow freak me out. Documenting a road trip it like this would make the trip more interesting for sure. Although the photos would be pitch black if I did it for our winter drive, LOL! The landscapes you encountered are so different from what we see here, I really enjoyed following along. xx
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I’m sure I would find those boring Finnish landscapes quite interesting! 🙂 For me, the driving is so easy in flat and/or low-color landscapes, so I can relax a little more and think while I’m driving.
I want to go to Lapland so badly, but now that you mention all that ice and snow, I might change my tune. I am such a control freak about driving that I would actually prefer to drive in dangerous conditions because I trust myself more than anyone else, but I know that ice and darkness would be a recipe for high stress! Glad I could bring you a little novelty from afar! Happy summer to you!
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Lex, a very belated congratulations on the birth of your grandchild and becoming a (youngish) grandmother!! Having grown up accustomed to small spaces and densely packed cities where driving tends to be a big hassle, any kind of road trip sounds good to me. Reading your description of the wide open plains of Texas reminded me of time time my North American cousins told me about what it was like to drive across the Canadian prairies – the terrain was so flat they could even see the city of Regina while they were still three hours away!
Now that international travel seems off the cards at least till the end of the year, I’d better get talking to Bama about planning a long drive into the mountains of Java. Being cooped up isn’t so bad but I do long to be out in nature again.
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Thanks for acknowledging that I am not a doddering old grandma! 🙂
You mention your cousins driving across the Canadian prairies … that is one of my travel dreams! In fact, it’s even bigger; I’d like to start out on the east coast of Canada and drive the whole way across the country. We were saving that trip for our retirement years, but it’s starting to look even better right about now!
I would love to read a post about you and Bama driving into the mountains of Java! I hope you guys are both able to get out into nature sometime soon. Like you, I am not suffering much in lockdown, but it was still so nice to get that open-road feeling as a little break. We are hoping to head back again in a few weeks if work schedules on both ends allow.
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Love your blog 🙌🏻
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Thank you! 🙂
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My pleasure, followed you 🙌🏻
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I am a little late to this wonderful celebration but a big congratulations on the new grandchild. I hope she has your artistic eye and adventurous spirit!
Love the wide open spaces and interesting buildings from your road trip. In what would be a tedious drive for many, you found a little slice of Americana. I so admire your solo driving. I seem to get sleepy after 4-5 hours behind the wheel. John and I are talking about an August road trip in place of a backcountry Alaska adventure that we expect will be cancelled. Sigh… I may find out how long I can stay awake behind the wheel after all.
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Thank you! We just completed plans to head back out there next week … this time with a 4-month-old puppy in tow … may not be quite so relaxing!
I’m sorry to hear about your Alaska trip cancelation – so many disappointments for us travelers this year. I do hope you have a fun road trip, though; I swear if you think of the drive as part of the fun, it will be!
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Congratulations! Lovely to see the car art.
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Thank you! The car art was pretty unique! Believe it or not, I just passed by it again yesterday, this time with impatient husband and new puppy in tow, so I’m glad I stopped when I did!
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The images really complement this post, I don’t think the landscape looks depressing at all, it looks peaceful.
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Thank you, and I totally agree with you! I love that peaceful drive.
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Family is always a great reason to make the trip and make the trip worth it. What an exciting time for you and I hope you enjoy it all. Your drive there sounded splendid, and you wrote about it with such vigour – a warm, quiet, peaceful summer road trip where all the troubles melt away. Like your quintessential fun American road trip every summer 😀 Very nice of you to take some snaps while you were on the road and driving. Gorgeous landscapes and the roads look like the go on and on. With no radio to listen to it must be very desolate but hopefully there is reception for phone calls (maybe wifi too if you wanted?).
To be feeling parched in a few minute outside right in the sun, that must be really hot over there now.
Enjoy the rest of summer, Lexi 🙂
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Thanks for reading, Mabel! It was a very peaceful drive, and I’ve since done it again! In fact, in another month, I will set out for the drive west one more time this summer. Yes, it is brutally hot in Texas in the summer; most of the time, it doesn’t bother me, but occasionally it becomes unbearable. Lucky for me, my destination in Colorado is much more refreshing – hot by day but with cooler mornings and nights. Stay well – I know your city is struggling with COVID just as mine is.
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Ooo, you can see mountains and Rocky Mountains in Colarado. I hope to visit that scenic destination at some point – and I heard it’s not too crowded of a place. Yes, COVID is bad over here but things will get better. You stay well too and take care, Lex.
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Congratulations on the birth of your first grandchild. Boy or girl? Glad this trip gave you some space – it is literally a breath of fresh air. So much nothing but it is gorgeous. Not sure how I feel about the installation, it seems imposing but in a fun way. Anyway, hoping this trip refreshed you. I am not a fan of long drives but this one looks like it was worth it for you.
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Thanks for reading! You said it well; the trip indeed gave me some space. After months in isolation and little in the way of outside stimulation, the trip opened up more than just my view. It was almost like I hadn’t been taking full breaths for a while, and the journey expanded all my senses.
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Isn’t it interesting how we are not fully conscious of how claustrophobic we have become until we find space? I am glad you were able to breathe and may you find pockets of space throughout the varying phases of lockdown.
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Reading this post was like revisiting my own travels to my hometown in the north while my mom was still alive. I recalled the long hours alone in a quiet car – no radio signal – just my own thoughts and an open road ahead of me. I treasured that time … and yes, I miss it too.
Maybe that’s why hiking is such a good choice for us – moving meditation 🙂
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I like your connection of alone-time in the car to hiking! Although one is sedentary and the other is active, I totally agree that both lead to deep thoughts as one moves through time and space, whether it be on wheels or on foot!
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Long road trips are wonderful, especially if there is nature all around. Loved reading your post. This is wonderful writing. Thank you so much.
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Since this trip, I’ve driven the route there and back three more times if you can believe it! Friends and family wonder if I am nuts, but the pandemic gives me an excuse to do what I truly love: get behind the wheel of a car and just drive, drive, drive. As you say, having almost nothing but nature out the windows helps a great deal. Thanks for reading and commenting!
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