tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:/posts Travels with Sally Oct 2018 2019-01-03T14:13:33Z tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1326894 2018-09-28T19:03:00Z 2019-01-03T14:13:33Z I hit the road.

This was the general plan. I didn't entirely stick to it, but I did make it coast to coast and back. ]]>
tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1327637 2018-10-01T04:20:30Z 2018-11-21T06:34:03Z Now I hit the road for real
CA's high desert, and finally Route 66.
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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1327642 2018-10-01T04:49:38Z 2018-11-21T06:35:12Z Here's the route from home to Laughlin NV

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1327643 2018-10-01T04:56:06Z 2018-10-02T22:16:17Z Sally needed a breather. I needed a choco shake.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1327649 2018-10-01T05:34:23Z 2018-11-22T00:02:00Z More scenes from 66

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328083 2018-10-02T05:52:29Z 2018-11-05T07:56:32Z Sights and sounds on 66

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328089 2018-10-02T06:19:25Z 2018-11-23T07:16:38Z Peach Springs, AZ

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328363 2018-10-03T04:25:33Z 2018-11-03T15:58:04Z Sometimes route 66 just ENDS.. but you can find bargains.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328369 2018-10-03T05:14:50Z 2018-11-22T01:01:34Z Williams to Meteor Crater


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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328370 2018-10-03T05:25:56Z 2018-10-03T05:37:17Z Holbrook to Amarillo, and first stop: Petrified logs in the Petrified Forest (near Holbrook AZ)


The bigger picture.
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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328376 2018-10-03T05:43:07Z 2018-10-03T13:21:33Z New friend in the Painted Desert


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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328383 2018-10-03T05:52:25Z 2018-11-23T06:01:15Z Petroglyph National Monument in Albuquerque

See and hear the storm.



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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328385 2018-10-03T05:57:31Z 2018-10-03T13:21:11Z Storming in Albuquerque


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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1328720 2018-10-04T04:32:15Z 2018-11-22T08:38:17Z In the TX panhandle and into OK

If you go east from Amarillo, north of the I-40, toward the Oklahoma line you'll go through--not by, as happens if you go on the 40--towns with names like Panhandle (appropriately enough), White Deer, Pampa, Mobeetie, Brisco, Allison. Here are some pictures of White Deer (pop. ~1,000)

and Pampa (pop. 18,000). If there are more pictures of Pampa, that's because there's more there there. And that's probably because it's the county seat.

The Texas panhandle has its contradictions. Along with the cowboy/John Deere/religious iconography, there are signs for ending world hunger and a highway memorializing Woody Guthrie.

The panhandle seems to go on forever, every way you look. But eventually it ends, and shortly after crossing the OK line, you spill on to the Washita Battlefield National Historic site, which is worth a stop and look.


Today's map.   More on Ft. Smith, Arkansas tomorrow. Seems like a cool little town. Great barbeque and a visitor's center that used to be a "Social Club." I was told to go check it out.




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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1329296 2018-10-05T15:24:43Z 2018-10-08T01:14:16Z Ft. Smith AR

I don't think I was really aware of Ft. Smith... although I'm pretty sure I'd heard of it. A cool little town. Big mural wall art, great bbq, an info center that had a mild wild west history, scenic view along the Arkansas River (the only time I'd heard of it was when I was in Colorado), some quirky things. Worth a visit.




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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1330436 2018-10-09T03:34:24Z 2018-10-10T03:55:21Z Ft. Smith to Bentonville thru AR Ozarks

I had heard and read that the Crystal Bridges art museum in Bentonville, AR, was fantastic, so it was one of my destinations. But it's right on the edge of the Ozarks, so that became a destination as well.  First the Arkansas Ozarks. Then Missouri Ozarks after Crystal Bridges.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1330443 2018-10-09T04:20:47Z 2018-10-17T05:15:18Z Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art

And fantastic it was, from the complex of buildings, designed by Moshe Safdie (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moshe_Safdie), to the collection of American art, displayed chronologically but also conceptually, with the most surprising commentary next to the paintings, photos, installations, and sculptures I think I've ever seen in a museum.



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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1339793 2018-10-10T04:50:00Z 2018-11-03T23:52:44Z Lake of the Ozarks (MO)

Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, is where the Netflix show takes place, but it was not filmed there. (Winter's Bone was set AND shot in the Missouri Ozarks, but neither setting or filming was at the lake.) What I saw was a bit, but not a whole lot, like what's on the TV show. Maybe bc the show was shot in Georgia? Didn't look much like anything I saw there either. I wasn't in either place long enough to really say. But I am pretty sure no pink houses have appeared on the show.

From there, on to Memphis, winding my way through forests, mountains, and streams.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1330683 2018-10-10T04:58:28Z 2018-11-03T20:26:18Z Missouri Ozarks to Memphis thru Mark Twain National Forest Sights and sounds of the Missouri Ozarks.


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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1331045 2018-10-10T05:00:00Z 2018-10-14T00:29:38Z Memphis to Chattanooga via Whiteville (no lie), Bolivar, Pulaski (Trail of Tears memorial), & Lynchburg (home of Jack Daniels)

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1331055 2018-10-10T06:00:00Z 2018-10-14T02:06:15Z Chattanooga to Johnson City, TN thru Great Smoky Mountains

Highlight here was the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Lots of other cool sites too, including the abandoned Burra Burra copper mine in Ducktown (yes, it's called Ducktown).

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1331429 2018-10-11T03:20:00Z 2018-11-03T16:22:08Z Johnson City to Lewisburg, WV thru Cherokee National Forest

See here for more on Cherokee National Forest https://rootsrated.com/stories/demystifying-the-cherokee-national-forest-a-beginner-s-guide


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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1331043 2018-10-11T03:22:02Z 2018-10-11T17:39:08Z Great Indian (and I don't mean as in Cherokee) food in Lewisburg, WV

Tastebuds in Lewisburg, WVa.  Who'd a thunk it. And a 5-min walk from the motel where I happened to land. If I lived anywhere near here, I'd come back. See the menu second page for what I had. It was great. See/listen to the video and listen to the audio file for the restaurant's sound track. Owners super nice people. It was raining, but I walked, since I hate getting in the car after a day of driving. Mr. Owner gave me a ride back. They're making a go with this restaurant in a pretty unlikely place. I hope it does well.


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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1331432 2018-10-14T15:57:41Z 2018-10-17T05:05:14Z Monongahela Forest in WVa.... Almost heaven country roads

I understand now what John Denver was singing about. Add in Smooth Ambler distillery, and you get closer to heaven, even in the rain.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1333475 2018-10-18T04:39:22Z 2018-12-14T08:02:43Z Harpers Ferry, WV, and Shenandoah National Park, VA

Aside from knowing about John Brown's tragically failed attempt to end slavery in 1859, I didn't realize how important Harpers Ferry was in US economic development and in the Civil War itself. The historic old town is one big museum, and surrounding scenery is great, especially at the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers. But the history is what is most compelling. 

Then about an hour south is Shenandoah National Park. Skyline Drive runs north to south, the entire length of the park. It's 100+ miles of jaw-dropping, eye-popping, not-to-be-believed scenery, with turn-outs every mile or two that permit gazing at the spectacular scenery. You can stop at each one, but then you'll never get anywhere, which wouldn't be so bad except that it gets pretty cold at night.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1334486 2018-10-21T03:06:15Z 2018-12-14T08:05:58Z Charlottesville to So Carolina coast, by way of Appomatox

The Virginia countryside is famously beautiful. But I didn't expect to be as moved by Appomattox as I was. The enormity of the Civil War, its dramatic ending (at least in the popular imagination), and what it signaled the end OF--a brutal war and an even more brutal system of human slavery. Then at the entrance/exit to the park (it's a "National Historical Park") there is a single US flag fluttering... and but for fortune, there could have a been two flags or just the Confederate flag fluttering. This could have happened; it was not foreordained that the Union would win and the country would then begin the long, tortuous, and yet unfinished struggle to erase the US's original sin. The tenuousness of the outcome was driven home by the confederate cemetery, just a few hundred yards down the highway, courtesy of the Daughters of the Confederacy, in honor of their fallen heroes.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1334502 2018-10-21T15:08:31Z 2018-10-24T12:44:07Z Gullah/Geechee to Atlanta

Gullah/Geechee, the community of slave descendents and the language, culture, and traditions they've supposedly been preserving, was disappointing.  For starters, the "Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition" is, apparently, nowhere. I found it on the web (https://gullahgeecheenation.com/gullahgeechee-sea-island-coalition/), assuming this was a (if not THE center of action), and followed the directions on the GPS. Nothing there there. There was some nice scenery, some modest homes, and some gated communities.  That's it.

Next I went to the The Gullah Museum of Hilton Head Island; check out the website, then compare with my picture. There's a little building. But it's locked up. It looks like it needs some caring for; and unless there is a wormhole that transports you somewhere else, what could  be inside that warrants $20 (and $5 for children)?

The one thing I saw where there was actually something there was the Mitchelville Preservation Project. Mitchelville, founded in 1862 shortly after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed, was the first self-governing settlement for freed slaves. You can actually learn something here. And the scenery is also very striking.


Then across South Carolina and on to Atlanta.






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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1339617 2018-11-03T06:38:59Z 2018-11-03T16:30:17Z Atlanta to Meridian, MS, via Montomery (SPLC) and Selma, AL

It was striking to be in Georgia in October 2018, on the eve of possibly a historic election. Stacey Abrams already made history as the first black woman nominated for governor by a major political party. Now she might become the first black woman governor of a US state and the first Democrat elected Georgia governor in two decades. My Atlanta friends were hopeful but skeptical. An article in the LA Times today (Nov 2) called the race a dead heat.

It was in this context that I visited two iconic places in Alabama that are associated with the struggle for civil rights in the US--the Southern Poverty Law Center's Civil Rights Memorial Center in Montgomery and the Edmund Pettus bridge, site of Bloody Sunday in 1965 in Selma.



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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1339619 2018-11-03T07:17:38Z 2018-11-04T15:32:58Z Meridian to Natchez (mostly Natchez)

Meridian to Natchez took me clear across nearly the breadth of Mississippi... through Chunky, Forest, Mize, Monticello, and other towns. Staying off the interstate has its rewards.

Natchez is a study in contrasts that should surprise no one a little familiar with Southern history--from the elegance and charm of the antebellum houses to ramshackle structures nearby to the depravity of the slave trade and those who fought to defend it and those who celebrated the defenders.

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tag:travelswithsally.posthaven.com,2013:Post/1339624 2018-11-03T07:52:53Z 2018-11-04T15:35:13Z Across the Mississippi River into Louisiana and Texas

From Natchez, across the Mighty Mississipp into Louisiana, then on to Texas.

The big surprise here was Catahoula National Wildlife Refuge, less than an hour across the Louisiana state border, unless you stop and eat a Moonpie after crossing the bridge (as did I). Catahoula, once you get deep into the park, is another world. You have to take a gravel road and loop around a small lake. Some of the visuals are stunning, like liquid emerald swamps, moss-dripping trees, and shy herons and gaters that wouldn't pose for a good picture. Also a charming but very well camouflaged little frog that I only saw bc it jumped when (I think) I nearly stepped on it. And I believe the most perfect flower I've ever seen. And lots of thick forest.

See the frog? Start the video, and it will disappear, reappear when the camera zooms in, then again disappear when the camera zooms out. Natural selection in action. ]]>