Emily's Adventures Around America
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Friday, August 6, 2010
Colorado-ish and Arizona - riding the storm out to the end
From New Mexico I headed north to Colorado! On the way I saw so much wildlife! Everything from gazelles to caribou! In northern New Mexico it looks just like the scene I painted on the shed at home!
green rolling hills, bright blue skies, lonely barns with cows dotting the land, as well as WILD SUNFLOWERS EVERYWHERE!!! Absolutely beautiful!!!
Up in Colorado I saw a bit of the Rocky Mountains, they are truly majestic there really is no way to describe their beauty!!!
After driving into CO, plans changed and I needed to find another place to stay, so I headed back south toward the Grand Canyon where there was a possibility of finding a job.
After driving through mountains and desert through blazing sun and pouring rain I decided I needed to stop and sleep, so I find a place in Las Vegas, NM between two hotels under a tree and get situated for my first night Boondocking! All went well in the manner no one messed with me or my truck and I didn't get ticketed or towed! But I had crazy dreams all night about 'docking. I set my alarm for 5am so I could head out before anyone could see me getting out of the back of my truck. Which was also just in time to see the amazing desert sunrise!
Finally I made it to Flagstaff, AZ where last min I decided to go visit with friends Mark and Diana and they were so wonderful as to welcome me into their home at such short notice! I had such a great time with them, on the first day there we went to the Montezuma Well
"Montezuma's Well is a sinkhole, a collapsed underground limestone cavern filled with water. More than a million gallons of water a day flow continuously, providing a lush, verdant oasis in the midst of surrounding desert grassland." There were remnants from cliff dwellers who had lived there thousands of years ago.
as well as the channels for irrigation they created
There were also these incredible rainbow colored lizards running all over the place!
The next day we went out to Sedona (the place with the pretty huge red rocks!)
Magnificent!!!
My wonderful hosts!!!
It was monsoon season so the whole time I was in Arizona and half the time in New Mexico it was raining.
The next day we went to Jerome, AZ where Mark works in a gallery where he sells his art. OMG what a fabulous town!
an old mining town turned artist town. It reminds me of my apartment at home, old, colorful, and full of fun random things!
I am so thankful for their hospitality!
The next day I was on my way, after running out of money and not getting the job at the Grand Canyon I decided it was time to head home!
Along the way I stopped at a tourist stop along the highway
Haha I couldn't resist!!
Something else I did when I was in Arizona was go to Winslow, AZ and became the girl in the flatbed Ford slowing down to take a look at the people standing on a corner in Winslow, AZ who were looking at a painting on the wall of a girl in a flatbed Ford slowing down to look at them. HAHAHA
From there I headed to Amarillo, TX where I ended up staying at one of the parking rest stops. Not one of the regular ones where there are picnic areas, just a park, sleep, then get back on the road. I slept surprisingly well for having semis drive right by my window all night. In the morning I headed back over to the Cadillac Ranch and watched the sunrise
The next day I kept on the road making it from Amarillo, TX to southern Illinois! Along the way I stopped back in Oklahoma to say hi to Sherri. If you're ever driving from OK to Missouri do pay the 6 or 8 dollars to take the toll roads, all the stop and go traffic in the little towns in 110 degree weather is not fun! I think the long driving hours and the hot hot heat didn't help with trying to drive through St Louis but that was horrible! I even thought if I wait till 9ish to drive through all should be ok, right? Nope! Twisty-turny roads with tight curves in 45mph zone with packed traffic and semis going 80 with construction lights and reflectors disorienting! Woo! I vow to never drive through that city again! When I finally made it to the other side of town I set out to find a place to sleep (an hr or so away from the murder capital)
there was a rest stop up ahead about 15 more miles so I convinced myself to stay awake long enough to make it there. When I finally get there it's a closed weight station with the next stop being 45 miles away! Knowing that between the sleep deprivation and the shot nerves from St Louis there was no way I could make it to the next rest stop, I take the next exit and find a cute old 50's style motel (with the seafoam green bathroom tiles and all!) So I stop hoping they're still open (it was after 11pm at this point) I walk in and this sweet old Indian man comes out of the back more than happy to rent me a room for the night "The best room in the place!" Finally I get a shower and fall fast asleep in a big bed with no worries of wild animals or crazy truckers! Aaahh :)
I set my alarm for 5 so I could get back on the road but the snooze button let me half sleep till about 9! -much needed!-
When I finally hit the road I came across a pack of bikers, ended up they were Hells Angels! (I didn't know they still existed!)
It was about another 7hour drive till I made it home, but my oh my it felt good to be home!!!
I had the absolute greatest time on my trip!!!
In total I got to see 16 different states and animals ranging from gazelles to camels to porcupines to caribou! Incredible!!
Thank you all so much for supporting me! And those who let me stay with them - you are the best ever!!!! <3 <3 <3 :)
...now to start planning next summer's trip to the north 1/2 of the states!!! ;)
green rolling hills, bright blue skies, lonely barns with cows dotting the land, as well as WILD SUNFLOWERS EVERYWHERE!!! Absolutely beautiful!!!
Up in Colorado I saw a bit of the Rocky Mountains, they are truly majestic there really is no way to describe their beauty!!!
After driving into CO, plans changed and I needed to find another place to stay, so I headed back south toward the Grand Canyon where there was a possibility of finding a job.
After driving through mountains and desert through blazing sun and pouring rain I decided I needed to stop and sleep, so I find a place in Las Vegas, NM between two hotels under a tree and get situated for my first night Boondocking! All went well in the manner no one messed with me or my truck and I didn't get ticketed or towed! But I had crazy dreams all night about 'docking. I set my alarm for 5am so I could head out before anyone could see me getting out of the back of my truck. Which was also just in time to see the amazing desert sunrise!
Finally I made it to Flagstaff, AZ where last min I decided to go visit with friends Mark and Diana and they were so wonderful as to welcome me into their home at such short notice! I had such a great time with them, on the first day there we went to the Montezuma Well
"Montezuma's Well is a sinkhole, a collapsed underground limestone cavern filled with water. More than a million gallons of water a day flow continuously, providing a lush, verdant oasis in the midst of surrounding desert grassland." There were remnants from cliff dwellers who had lived there thousands of years ago.
as well as the channels for irrigation they created
There were also these incredible rainbow colored lizards running all over the place!
The next day we went out to Sedona (the place with the pretty huge red rocks!)
Magnificent!!!
My wonderful hosts!!!
It was monsoon season so the whole time I was in Arizona and half the time in New Mexico it was raining.
The next day we went to Jerome, AZ where Mark works in a gallery where he sells his art. OMG what a fabulous town!
an old mining town turned artist town. It reminds me of my apartment at home, old, colorful, and full of fun random things!
I am so thankful for their hospitality!
The next day I was on my way, after running out of money and not getting the job at the Grand Canyon I decided it was time to head home!
Along the way I stopped at a tourist stop along the highway
Haha I couldn't resist!!
Something else I did when I was in Arizona was go to Winslow, AZ and became the girl in the flatbed Ford slowing down to take a look at the people standing on a corner in Winslow, AZ who were looking at a painting on the wall of a girl in a flatbed Ford slowing down to look at them. HAHAHA
From there I headed to Amarillo, TX where I ended up staying at one of the parking rest stops. Not one of the regular ones where there are picnic areas, just a park, sleep, then get back on the road. I slept surprisingly well for having semis drive right by my window all night. In the morning I headed back over to the Cadillac Ranch and watched the sunrise
The next day I kept on the road making it from Amarillo, TX to southern Illinois! Along the way I stopped back in Oklahoma to say hi to Sherri. If you're ever driving from OK to Missouri do pay the 6 or 8 dollars to take the toll roads, all the stop and go traffic in the little towns in 110 degree weather is not fun! I think the long driving hours and the hot hot heat didn't help with trying to drive through St Louis but that was horrible! I even thought if I wait till 9ish to drive through all should be ok, right? Nope! Twisty-turny roads with tight curves in 45mph zone with packed traffic and semis going 80 with construction lights and reflectors disorienting! Woo! I vow to never drive through that city again! When I finally made it to the other side of town I set out to find a place to sleep (an hr or so away from the murder capital)
there was a rest stop up ahead about 15 more miles so I convinced myself to stay awake long enough to make it there. When I finally get there it's a closed weight station with the next stop being 45 miles away! Knowing that between the sleep deprivation and the shot nerves from St Louis there was no way I could make it to the next rest stop, I take the next exit and find a cute old 50's style motel (with the seafoam green bathroom tiles and all!) So I stop hoping they're still open (it was after 11pm at this point) I walk in and this sweet old Indian man comes out of the back more than happy to rent me a room for the night "The best room in the place!" Finally I get a shower and fall fast asleep in a big bed with no worries of wild animals or crazy truckers! Aaahh :)
I set my alarm for 5 so I could get back on the road but the snooze button let me half sleep till about 9! -much needed!-
When I finally hit the road I came across a pack of bikers, ended up they were Hells Angels! (I didn't know they still existed!)
It was about another 7hour drive till I made it home, but my oh my it felt good to be home!!!
I had the absolute greatest time on my trip!!!
In total I got to see 16 different states and animals ranging from gazelles to camels to porcupines to caribou! Incredible!!
Thank you all so much for supporting me! And those who let me stay with them - you are the best ever!!!! <3 <3 <3 :)
...now to start planning next summer's trip to the north 1/2 of the states!!! ;)
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
New Mexico
The drive from Oklahoma through Texas and down to New Mexico was a very strange trek. The scenery stayed the same most of the time, bright red dirt (the only white-ish shirt I own is now orange spotted haha), bristly sage brush and yuccas dotting the desert floor, and a bright blue sky that goes on forever! Through Texas though the scenery was broke up by factory farms. I had only read about them/saw photos in text books but seeing them in real life is an experience in itself! I'm still not sure how I feel about them, the cattle get plenty of room to move, they have food bins and water troffs everywhere so they're not dehydrating/starving, but all they do is stand in acres and acres of red dirt-sand in the hot sun. I saw a couple fighting over a little hill to stand on (playing king of the mountain?haha) But I felt like I was looking at a concentration camp. Like that would be what Auschwitz looked like from a distance (with similar end results).
Those lasted all through the Texas Panhandle (yeah I know it's not a panhandle but that's what they call it) right up to the TX - NM border. From there it was desert, desert, desert. After driving too long through the desert it really does do something to your head. The map would say there's a town ahead, then I would pass a house and it'd be back to desert. This was very unhandy when the gas gauge kept creeping lower and lower and I'd tell my truck, "There's a town on the map, we can make it to there.", and it'd be a house. Light reflecting off some distant semi looks like a town in the distance, when it drives past you, you start questioning yourself. When I came upon Roswell I didn't believe it at first, I thought it another mirage till exit signs came into view and I knew I finally made it!
I had contemplated camping in Roswell, it was still a few more hours drive to Traci's house, so I drove around town for a bit. What a mess of a town, there really isn't anything in Roswell, other than very rude people! So I got my gas and a 99cent hot dog and left! The rest of the drive wasn't as bad as before, I had to travel through the mountains so it gave me something new to look at! And Oh My Goodness the mountains were soooo cool! Temperature and scenery wise. Evergreens, rocky cliffs, resorts, Smokey Bear's home... so very different from the desert! When I got to the other side of the mountains the view over town was breathtaking! The world went on forever! I made it down the mountain and caught up with Traci and settled in! What a drive!
The next day Traci had to work so I went out exploring! I went over to White Sands National Monument, WOW it's incredible there!
That little black dot in the mid right of the photo is a person!
Some of the dunes are 30-60ft high!
The only way the plants can grow here is by tunneling all the way down through the sand into the desert soil below to find water. Some of the yuccas that looked 2ft tall on the dunes were really 32ft tall! Then when the winds move the dunes the yuccas being too top heavy fall over and die.
You might be asking, how is there white sand in the red desert? Well I'll tell you hahaha. The mountains you see in the far distance of some of the photos are full of gypsum that washes down from the mountains and fills the Tularosa Basin (the area between the San Andres and Sacramento mountain ranges) With no outlet to the sea, water flowing into the Tularosa Basin either sinks into the ground or pools up in low spots. One of the lowest points in the basin is a large playa called Lake Lucero. Occasionally, this dry lakebed fills with water. As the water evaporates, the dissolved gypsum is deposited on the surface. Even more gypsum deposition occurred during the last Ice Age when a larger lake, Lake Otero, covered much of the basin. The Alkali Flat area is the exposed bed of this Ice Age lake. In wet periods, water evaporating slowly on the playa floor causes gypsum to be deposited in a crystalline form called selenite. Along Lake Lucero's shore and in the Alkali Flat, beds of selenite crystals—some three feet long—cover the ground. The forces of nature— freezing and thawing, wetting and drying—eventually break down the crystals into sand-size particles light enough to be moved by the wind.
Really awesome!!!
Then the storms started rolling in so I went back home.
The next day Traci got off work so she and I went to the Air Force Base where she worked (haha leave work and end up back at work) It was pretty neat! It's its own world there!
Then we went touring a pistachio farm! I had never tried a pistachio before, omg yum!!
Field of Pistachios
Fresh from the tree-bush!
The next day she and I went up in the mountains to the casino (since neither of us have ever been to one) then to see the old train trellis in Cloud Croft.
View from the casino!
The casino was a lot of fun! I can see how easy it would be to get in trouble there! The best I did was won $100, then thinking I could make more than that on a dollar 5card machine I went down to $52. Haha $100's about the best you can do on one of those machines, but I still went home with a profit so it's all good! :)
We then drove to Cloud Croft, such a pretty drive! The mountains are beautiful!! We then hiked down a twisty turny up and down hill trail back to the train trellis.
When we were just a hundred feet or so from the end of the trail it starts pouring! So we wait, and wait, and I ask the sky to stop so I can get a few photos, so it stops and I run out from under the trees, grab a few shots, then it starts pouring again! I thank the sky and we head back. It was really neat there though, I can't imagine being on a train going over that! (A lot of the trains couldn't imagine it either since many jumped the tracks!) The hike back was nice, eventually the rain stopped and the sun came out, but the thunder was picking up so we headed to the car before it started storming storming!
View of the mountains from the mountains
The next day (Saturday) she and I went to Las Cruces to go shopping and see the sites over there. Super adorable town just past Las Cruces (can't remember the name) but it's exactly what you'd imagine when you think of NM. Little shops built to look old in the Adobe style with chili peppers hanging everywhere! From there we
headed towards the Rio Grande, but on the way saw something very interesting...
A GIANT ROADRUNNER!!!
It was really neat, he was made out of recycled shoes/odds and ends!
We then made it to the Rio Grande!
With all the rain lately the river was flowing pretty strong!!
From there we headed back to Alamogordo, but on the way we stopped at the Organ Mountains!
What a sight!!!
Then from the mountains looking toward the desert
It just goes on forever and ever!
It's amazing the amount of color in the desert!
I've had a great time here and Traci makes amazing food!!! But it's time to move along, Rocky Mountains here I come!!
then stopped to take photos of the Organ Mountains
Those lasted all through the Texas Panhandle (yeah I know it's not a panhandle but that's what they call it) right up to the TX - NM border. From there it was desert, desert, desert. After driving too long through the desert it really does do something to your head. The map would say there's a town ahead, then I would pass a house and it'd be back to desert. This was very unhandy when the gas gauge kept creeping lower and lower and I'd tell my truck, "There's a town on the map, we can make it to there.", and it'd be a house. Light reflecting off some distant semi looks like a town in the distance, when it drives past you, you start questioning yourself. When I came upon Roswell I didn't believe it at first, I thought it another mirage till exit signs came into view and I knew I finally made it!
I had contemplated camping in Roswell, it was still a few more hours drive to Traci's house, so I drove around town for a bit. What a mess of a town, there really isn't anything in Roswell, other than very rude people! So I got my gas and a 99cent hot dog and left! The rest of the drive wasn't as bad as before, I had to travel through the mountains so it gave me something new to look at! And Oh My Goodness the mountains were soooo cool! Temperature and scenery wise. Evergreens, rocky cliffs, resorts, Smokey Bear's home... so very different from the desert! When I got to the other side of the mountains the view over town was breathtaking! The world went on forever! I made it down the mountain and caught up with Traci and settled in! What a drive!
The next day Traci had to work so I went out exploring! I went over to White Sands National Monument, WOW it's incredible there!
That little black dot in the mid right of the photo is a person!
Some of the dunes are 30-60ft high!
The only way the plants can grow here is by tunneling all the way down through the sand into the desert soil below to find water. Some of the yuccas that looked 2ft tall on the dunes were really 32ft tall! Then when the winds move the dunes the yuccas being too top heavy fall over and die.
You might be asking, how is there white sand in the red desert? Well I'll tell you hahaha. The mountains you see in the far distance of some of the photos are full of gypsum that washes down from the mountains and fills the Tularosa Basin (the area between the San Andres and Sacramento mountain ranges) With no outlet to the sea, water flowing into the Tularosa Basin either sinks into the ground or pools up in low spots. One of the lowest points in the basin is a large playa called Lake Lucero. Occasionally, this dry lakebed fills with water. As the water evaporates, the dissolved gypsum is deposited on the surface. Even more gypsum deposition occurred during the last Ice Age when a larger lake, Lake Otero, covered much of the basin. The Alkali Flat area is the exposed bed of this Ice Age lake. In wet periods, water evaporating slowly on the playa floor causes gypsum to be deposited in a crystalline form called selenite. Along Lake Lucero's shore and in the Alkali Flat, beds of selenite crystals—some three feet long—cover the ground. The forces of nature— freezing and thawing, wetting and drying—eventually break down the crystals into sand-size particles light enough to be moved by the wind.
Really awesome!!!
Then the storms started rolling in so I went back home.
The next day Traci got off work so she and I went to the Air Force Base where she worked (haha leave work and end up back at work) It was pretty neat! It's its own world there!
Then we went touring a pistachio farm! I had never tried a pistachio before, omg yum!!
Field of Pistachios
Fresh from the tree-bush!
The next day she and I went up in the mountains to the casino (since neither of us have ever been to one) then to see the old train trellis in Cloud Croft.
View from the casino!
The casino was a lot of fun! I can see how easy it would be to get in trouble there! The best I did was won $100, then thinking I could make more than that on a dollar 5card machine I went down to $52. Haha $100's about the best you can do on one of those machines, but I still went home with a profit so it's all good! :)
We then drove to Cloud Croft, such a pretty drive! The mountains are beautiful!! We then hiked down a twisty turny up and down hill trail back to the train trellis.
When we were just a hundred feet or so from the end of the trail it starts pouring! So we wait, and wait, and I ask the sky to stop so I can get a few photos, so it stops and I run out from under the trees, grab a few shots, then it starts pouring again! I thank the sky and we head back. It was really neat there though, I can't imagine being on a train going over that! (A lot of the trains couldn't imagine it either since many jumped the tracks!) The hike back was nice, eventually the rain stopped and the sun came out, but the thunder was picking up so we headed to the car before it started storming storming!
View of the mountains from the mountains
The next day (Saturday) she and I went to Las Cruces to go shopping and see the sites over there. Super adorable town just past Las Cruces (can't remember the name) but it's exactly what you'd imagine when you think of NM. Little shops built to look old in the Adobe style with chili peppers hanging everywhere! From there we
headed towards the Rio Grande, but on the way saw something very interesting...
A GIANT ROADRUNNER!!!
It was really neat, he was made out of recycled shoes/odds and ends!
We then made it to the Rio Grande!
With all the rain lately the river was flowing pretty strong!!
From there we headed back to Alamogordo, but on the way we stopped at the Organ Mountains!
What a sight!!!
Then from the mountains looking toward the desert
It just goes on forever and ever!
It's amazing the amount of color in the desert!
I've had a great time here and Traci makes amazing food!!! But it's time to move along, Rocky Mountains here I come!!
then stopped to take photos of the Organ Mountains
Sunday, July 25, 2010
OK lahoma
On the way to Oklahoma while driving through TX I saw a pack of camels haha better yet, a field full of camels!!! Coolest thing ever!
Oklahoma countryside.
I finally reached Oklahoma in time to go to the rodeo with Sherri where she was one of the time keepers and her roomie and friends were riding in it! It was a ranch rodeo where everything they do is what they actually do on the ranch. Yeah, there are still real cowboys (that kinda blew my mind!)
They even had events for kids, here the kids were put on sheep and had to try to stay on the longest.
It was something else, but it was a lot of fun!
There were tons of wind turbines around the countryside as well. For being such a huge oil area I thought that was kinda surprising.
But the scenery was absolutely beautiful!
On the day before I left we went to Sherri's boss's house for a cookout where I got to try calf fries for the first time. What are calf fries you ask, well, they're also known as rocky mountain oysters. Yep. haha But deep fried and covered in breading and not thinking about what they are, they're pretty good. They taste like dark meat chicken just a little more squishy.
I also went to the national route 66 museum in Elk City. It was really interesting to see how we've changed in the way we travel, but we ended up killing our mother road (rt 66).
Oklahoma is such a nice place, everyone knows everyone, everyone looks out for everyone!
On the way out I stopped in Amarillo, TX at the Cadillac Ranch.
And left my mark. :)
It's really a neat thing to see, a row of Cadillacs planted in the dirt and painted by everyone who visits.
From there I headed to New Mexico!
Oklahoma countryside.
I finally reached Oklahoma in time to go to the rodeo with Sherri where she was one of the time keepers and her roomie and friends were riding in it! It was a ranch rodeo where everything they do is what they actually do on the ranch. Yeah, there are still real cowboys (that kinda blew my mind!)
They even had events for kids, here the kids were put on sheep and had to try to stay on the longest.
It was something else, but it was a lot of fun!
There were tons of wind turbines around the countryside as well. For being such a huge oil area I thought that was kinda surprising.
But the scenery was absolutely beautiful!
On the day before I left we went to Sherri's boss's house for a cookout where I got to try calf fries for the first time. What are calf fries you ask, well, they're also known as rocky mountain oysters. Yep. haha But deep fried and covered in breading and not thinking about what they are, they're pretty good. They taste like dark meat chicken just a little more squishy.
I also went to the national route 66 museum in Elk City. It was really interesting to see how we've changed in the way we travel, but we ended up killing our mother road (rt 66).
Oklahoma is such a nice place, everyone knows everyone, everyone looks out for everyone!
On the way out I stopped in Amarillo, TX at the Cadillac Ranch.
And left my mark. :)
It's really a neat thing to see, a row of Cadillacs planted in the dirt and painted by everyone who visits.
From there I headed to New Mexico!
Monday, July 19, 2010
Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma
I left Mississippi and headed south down to Baton Rouge Louisiana. On the way down a big truck flung a rock into my windshield so now I have a pretty star right under my frame of vision, but I must have positive thoughts that it won't spread so I can get it fixed when I get home! I made it down to Mike's place pretty early (about 1) then we went over to his friend's where we hung out for a bit, got some daiquiris and found the cutest kitten ever! It was a dark calico with a bright orange stripe that looked like a mohawk so we named it Punky Rooster! Unfortunately the neighbor claimed the kitten so she had to stay there. Something really cool about Louisiana is they have stores where you buy daiquiris in big styrofoam cups to go! It's the strangest thing! haha.
Then we went to the state capital (Louisiana's is the largest in the country!)
and went to the top where you can see forever!
The grounds at the capital were very pretty too,
flowers,
palm trees,
spanish moss,
big trees, and
weird cypress knees(?)
Outside of his apartment was this pretty flower!
Natalie (Mike's roomate's girlfriend) and I went to the Louisiana Art and Science museum, there was a real mummy on display which was awesome! It's amazing how well preserved he was! Then we saw the battleship in the Mississippi and ate at Frosttop (a really awesome rootbeer place). It was a lot of fun down there, but I had to move forward!
Next stop was down in New Orleans! Fun fact, there's 15 miles of bridge to get to New Orleans! When I got there it wasn't quite what I had pictured in my mind, still really neat, but in my mind I pictured Burbon Street to be more on a hill where you could see water, sort of like what I imagine France and Italy to look like haha. The architecture was absolutely amazing though! I got there on a weekday morning about 9am and it was already packed! So I didn't end up stopping there. I did, however, stop by one of the old cemeteries downtown. That was so awesome! All the graves/tombs were above ground (the ground is too wet that the caskets would rise right up if buried)
From there I headed up north towards Tyler, TX where I reserved a campsite. On the way there I realized I hadn't ate yet and I needed gas so I stopped at a truck stop that was dressed up to look all old timey with a casino and trading post restaurant. So I stop, get gas, and go inside to eat. I walk inside and the room gets dead quiet, yep a place where the regulars go and I'm a Yankee haha. I take a seat under a deer holding a musket rifle and order my food. A couple of truckers from a table over start talking to me, so we talk and laugh and whatnot for a bit till it was time to leave. Upon leaving they wanted to check out my paintings, so we go to the truck and I get out my paintings and to my amazement/surprise they buy most all of them! :) Angels on the road!
I finally made it to my campsite, set up, and walked around. There I found a great big terrifying snake skeleton
and a beautiful view!
The site didn't feel right tho, I was all alone (only person in this section) and it was right next to swampy water with alligators around, not to mention there were 2 chupacabres found not far from there just a few days prior. Yes, I believe in chupacabres, big foot (I saw one on Brenn Rd), and aliens! haha. But yeah the site had a bad vibe, so I found another one up on the hill where there were people around so I felt a little better. I set up my tent (if nothing else, to serve as a decoy) and boiled some water for supper then sat down and started writing. Well, I ate, cleaned up and kept writing even tho it was getting dark out, I had my citronella candle and my lantern turned to nightlight, then I start hearing something in the bushes. I ignore it, I mean I'm in a forest, of course there will be critters in the woods! Then I hear something with nails on cement, the only cement around is under the picnic table that I'm sitting on, then I hear a strange noise and feel something trying to bite my leg! I jump up on the table faster than I've ever moved before, I hear it trying to climb up on the table till I turn the light on full brightness and it runs off into the woods. I never did see what it was, maybe a baby chupacabre, maybe an alligator, maybe a raccoon, but whatever it was left a strange little concave mark on my leg! After that I immediately went to bed in back of the truck and stayed there till it was bright as day out! When I woke up I took a shower (they have really nice camp showers there) and made some coffee, then I looked out in the woods and saw two woodpeckers on the same tree! Not the little woodpeckers, these were the Woody the Woodpecker types and had to be nearly 2 foot tall!
That was really neat to see so close to my site! I then headed out toward Oklahoma, another 6hr drive ahead!
Then we went to the state capital (Louisiana's is the largest in the country!)
and went to the top where you can see forever!
The grounds at the capital were very pretty too,
flowers,
palm trees,
spanish moss,
big trees, and
weird cypress knees(?)
Outside of his apartment was this pretty flower!
Natalie (Mike's roomate's girlfriend) and I went to the Louisiana Art and Science museum, there was a real mummy on display which was awesome! It's amazing how well preserved he was! Then we saw the battleship in the Mississippi and ate at Frosttop (a really awesome rootbeer place). It was a lot of fun down there, but I had to move forward!
Next stop was down in New Orleans! Fun fact, there's 15 miles of bridge to get to New Orleans! When I got there it wasn't quite what I had pictured in my mind, still really neat, but in my mind I pictured Burbon Street to be more on a hill where you could see water, sort of like what I imagine France and Italy to look like haha. The architecture was absolutely amazing though! I got there on a weekday morning about 9am and it was already packed! So I didn't end up stopping there. I did, however, stop by one of the old cemeteries downtown. That was so awesome! All the graves/tombs were above ground (the ground is too wet that the caskets would rise right up if buried)
From there I headed up north towards Tyler, TX where I reserved a campsite. On the way there I realized I hadn't ate yet and I needed gas so I stopped at a truck stop that was dressed up to look all old timey with a casino and trading post restaurant. So I stop, get gas, and go inside to eat. I walk inside and the room gets dead quiet, yep a place where the regulars go and I'm a Yankee haha. I take a seat under a deer holding a musket rifle and order my food. A couple of truckers from a table over start talking to me, so we talk and laugh and whatnot for a bit till it was time to leave. Upon leaving they wanted to check out my paintings, so we go to the truck and I get out my paintings and to my amazement/surprise they buy most all of them! :) Angels on the road!
I finally made it to my campsite, set up, and walked around. There I found a great big terrifying snake skeleton
and a beautiful view!
The site didn't feel right tho, I was all alone (only person in this section) and it was right next to swampy water with alligators around, not to mention there were 2 chupacabres found not far from there just a few days prior. Yes, I believe in chupacabres, big foot (I saw one on Brenn Rd), and aliens! haha. But yeah the site had a bad vibe, so I found another one up on the hill where there were people around so I felt a little better. I set up my tent (if nothing else, to serve as a decoy) and boiled some water for supper then sat down and started writing. Well, I ate, cleaned up and kept writing even tho it was getting dark out, I had my citronella candle and my lantern turned to nightlight, then I start hearing something in the bushes. I ignore it, I mean I'm in a forest, of course there will be critters in the woods! Then I hear something with nails on cement, the only cement around is under the picnic table that I'm sitting on, then I hear a strange noise and feel something trying to bite my leg! I jump up on the table faster than I've ever moved before, I hear it trying to climb up on the table till I turn the light on full brightness and it runs off into the woods. I never did see what it was, maybe a baby chupacabre, maybe an alligator, maybe a raccoon, but whatever it was left a strange little concave mark on my leg! After that I immediately went to bed in back of the truck and stayed there till it was bright as day out! When I woke up I took a shower (they have really nice camp showers there) and made some coffee, then I looked out in the woods and saw two woodpeckers on the same tree! Not the little woodpeckers, these were the Woody the Woodpecker types and had to be nearly 2 foot tall!
That was really neat to see so close to my site! I then headed out toward Oklahoma, another 6hr drive ahead!
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