We are
going on a family adventure during the summer of 2013. My wife thinks I am crazy for a number of
reasons, but I am convinced that this is the perfect time for an epic
journey.
I am between
jobs so there is a window of opportunity available for me to do this with my
family that is unlikely to present itself again. With kids aged 13, 8, and 6 I have the perfect chance to give them (i.e.,
“impose upon them”) a memorable life experience.
I have many
memories of the trips my family took when I was a kid. These were mostly in California and Mexico (the
northern part of Baja California). We
would go camping along the coast in Southern California, in the eastern Sierras,
or for a few summers, at Lake Comanche, east of Lodi in the foothills of the
western Sierras. We covered most of the
state over my childhood – from the Anza Borrego desert in the south to Mount
Shasta in the north.
I remember
trips to Yosemite as a kid where children chased bears through the campgrounds in the Valley and there were fire fall shows in the evening when embers were pushed over the
cliffs from Glacier Point into the valley below.
According to Wikipedia, these fire falls ended in 1968. Since they left an impression on me, I am hopeful this trip will leave an impression on the younger kids. For some some interesting memories from people who witnessed these events (click this link).
Another trip that left an indelible impression on my young mind was a 1971 trip to my father’s family reunion in southeastern Idaho, which included ventures into Yellowstone and through Utah and the National Parks there as well. Yellowstone had the ultimate cool things – boiling mud, spewing geysers of hot water, dangerous wild animals on the loose, clear and beautiful pools, rafting trip down the Snake River, bison, elk, bears, etc. The beauty of Zion and Bryce Canyon National Parks, fishing in the Beaver Mountains of Utah, swimming in the Great Salt Lake all left impressions.
Another trip that left an indelible impression on my young mind was a 1971 trip to my father’s family reunion in southeastern Idaho, which included ventures into Yellowstone and through Utah and the National Parks there as well. Yellowstone had the ultimate cool things – boiling mud, spewing geysers of hot water, dangerous wild animals on the loose, clear and beautiful pools, rafting trip down the Snake River, bison, elk, bears, etc. The beauty of Zion and Bryce Canyon National Parks, fishing in the Beaver Mountains of Utah, swimming in the Great Salt Lake all left impressions.
I have
traveled across the country a number of times.
The first was when I was twelve and was with my mother’s sister and her
husband, who after having finished graduate school at Yale, were moving west to
Northern California.
The second time was
in 1983, after having graduated from college and having driven from my parents’
home in Southern California to Washington, D.C. where I had taken a job with
the Federal Reserve. During that trip,
in January, my brother and I took a very southern route through Arizona, El
Paso, Jackson, MS; Birmingham, AL; Lynchburg, TN; the Blue Mountains of Virginia,
etc. This was in a 1971 Volkswagen
beetle. I remember having to lean out
the window somewhere near El Paso and scraping the ice off the window with a
credit card every time a truck would pass us as the flat window provided a
perfect catch for snow melt that would freeze immediately upon hitting the
glass in the cold weather.
The third
trip was again from Southern California to Hanover, NH in 1986 where I was
attending my second year of graduate school.
I don’t remember much about that trip other than a quick breeze through
Yellowstone and exiting the east side of the park and coming down into Cody, WY
and an archway of elk antlers. It must
have been during this trip that I got imbedded with the first impression of
“Wall Drug” the ubiquitous signs in what seems like every ¼ mile for 1000 miles
in the mid west.
The fourth
trip was coming back from grad school to California in the early summer of
1987. This trip was more of a simple get
from point A to point B trip, but I had in mind to see a few of the more
notable landmarks, including Mount Rushmore.
Unfortunately the thing I remember most is the thing I failed to see –
after careful planning and a scenic drive through the Badlands, I pulled into
the Mt. Rushmore National Park parking lot in a thick fog. I waited a couple of hours, toured the
Visitors’ Center, saw the film (as I remember it, narrated by Tom Brokaw), and
waited for the fog to lift. It never did
and I, pressed for time, moved on without having actually ever laid eyes on the
actual mountain.
The fifth
trip was in 2007. Prior to June 2007, we
were living in Manhattan. Given the
birth of our third child, we realized that it no longer made economical sense,
nor practical sense to have three kids in the City. So we had decided to move out to the suburbs
to Rye in Westchester County. Both my
wife’s and my families are from the West Coast and she generally spends a fair
amount of time in California with the kids visiting family during the
summer. We also realized that we needed
another car when we moved to the suburbs.
With the expense of renting a car for the month or so she would be
spending on the West Coast, and with the expense of our apartment in New York
for one more month, we decided to move out of our apartment one month early, buy
a car out west and, after seeing family in California and Reno, drive it back
across country along the old Route 66.
The kids were too young for that trip to have left much of an
impression, but Twiggy and I enjoyed it very much. However, some of the memorable sights of my
previous journeys seemed tarnished this time around – particularly St. Louis
where, after having toured the Gateway Arch and the Museum of Westward Expansion in its basement, we were
struggling for safe and interesting places to explore with young kids.
Signs in Barstow, CA |
The better parts of the family at the Cadillac Ranch outside Amarillo, TX in 2007 |
The point is that I don't remember most of the trips I took, even those I took as an adult. But I do remember parts of all of them, even those I took as a kid. I hope the trip will leave snapshots in my children's minds just as I have snapshots in mine of the trips I took both as a child and as an adult.
My children live in an environment where many families that do travel tend to stay east of the Mississippi unless they are going to a large city on the West Coast or high-end skiing in the Rockies. (Europe sure, but anything in the middle of the North American continent is just “fly over country”). I want to leave them with the realization that real cowboys do exist and our nation is more than East and West Coast cities. My girls scream at the sight of a bug, yet ask to go fishing. I am more than willing – in fact, I am anxious -- to get them to bait a hook with a live worm and to gut a fish after reeling it in. I want to broaden their experiences beyond that which they can get living a quite normal and broad life in the area in which we live. I want to leave the impressions on their brain of the natural beauty of America that my family left on mine.
Thus, given
the window I have available with my employment situation and my kids’ ages, I
decided that this summer would be the perfect opportunity for an epic road
trip. I also want to see Mt. Rushmore
with my own eyes.
This trip
is likely to have a binary outcome. We
will either be a close-knit family upon our return or we will be fighting like
cats and dogs. We will be traveling in
a minivan and staying in reasonably priced hotels/motels. There will be times when we each have plenty
of space and there will be times when it will be cramped. There will be short driving days with lots to
see and there will be long driving days with the primary goal of covering
distance in the car.
The reason
I decided to create this blog is many fold.
First, I wanted to chronicle our adventures. Second, I want a reason for the kids to
contribute and to think about what they see and what they like and what made an
impression on them. The electronics
available to kids these days (DVD video in the car, iTouch and Nintendo DS
games) provide them with entertainment during the inevitable long boring
stretches of drive and keep them from squabbling too much which is good for everybody in the car. But they also provide a distraction from
interesting things that might catch their eyes otherwise. So I would like to have them contribute on a
basis on which they are capable. This
will also allow family and friends to keep up with our adventure. It is likely to be part Family Vacation, part Modern Family….and hopefully not too much War of the Roses.
No comments:
Post a Comment