The Unflatness

Many year ago, my brother and I drove across country. He had just finished at the Air Force Academy in Colorado and needed to quickly relocate with his car to an east coast post and I had a few days off before starting my summer job. We jumped on the highway in his little 2 seat sports car and made a quick job of it, stopping briefly at a few sights. I could now brag that I had ‘driven cross country, right?

Boy was I wrong.

Traveling on the highway did not give me a true sense of the areas I had traveled across. I did not see the subtle changes every area had to offer.
Traveling slowly on the backroads in the Rover with the windows open (our version of ac) has given me a whole new appreciation for the land we have crossed. It is definitely not flat, although if you look across the horizon at times it certainly seemed so. And the tornado warnings made it seem like we were quite exposed.

The trip from Florida to South Dakota has included rolling hills, sharp winding gorges, rollercoasters (see previous post) and long slow ups and ups and ups with very few actual flat areas.

The countryside has included corn fields, soybean fields, other fields growing I know not what, large open spaces fenced for cattle, and large expanses of horse country. We constantly remark on how the landscape can change in 150 miles (our chosen daily limit in our putt, putt vehicle).

While at times the trip has been challenging, the heat, the long days, the many miles, learning to live on the road (that is a whole other post or two!) I feel very lucky to have travelled the backroads and had the chance to experience all that we have, so far.

Did we see it all? No way. We could spend months or even years in each area and still have much to learn. I at least feel that I have a flavor of the many landscapes and what they have to offer and a new appreciation for their unflatness. Perhaps on our return trip in a few years, we will see or experience even more or find a state that really is flat!

261st Avenue! Not another road or a building in sight!

Valentine City Park, NE

The small towns in northern Nebraska, as we understand it, have town parks that allow travelers and transient farm workers a place to stay. They are often just a few sites, most with drinking water, some with power and bathrooms, others with pit toilets.

We checked a few out on our way across Nebraska and found a really nice one in Valentine. It was clean, had flush toilets and even a nice brook. All for a donation.

The people were friendly, and their dogs of course. We even met the town cop as he did his rounds.

While we stayed here there were 5 tenters, an RV, a teardrop trailer, a traveling motorcyle group in another 8 tents, and a girl scout troop on a road trip (1 of the leaders thought Darrin looked like a young Kenny Rogers – he has been singing The Gambler ever since).

A great way to spend a few very, and I mean 100 degrees very, hot days.

We also saw the coolest vehicle, besides our Rover, in Nebraska.

A Volkswagen kit made into a trike. Very cool!

On to the mountains of South Dakota , and fingers crossed, some cooler weather.

Heat wave 2.0 – this time it’s personal

Well, we thought we had evaded the dreaded heat wave…but alas, it is not to be. I’m beginning to think we are bringing it with us. Every place we go, with the exception of the few cool days with the woodstove, we find out they are having a heat wave.

A melted northern girl trying to cool down.

Happily, we have found a small city park where we can camp cheaply near a nice cool stream. So, we are hanging here for a few days before we continue north into SD and hopefully, some cooler weather and a bison or two.

Happy Memorial Day.
A big thank you to all the Veterans for their service.

The friendliest place on earth, so far…

In today’s world, it is sometimes easy to loose faith in ones fellow man, woman, child, etc. And to be honest, I was starting to wonder if our idea of traveling so we could meet all kinds of different people was only a pipe dream. At campgrounds, we have met a few nice people, but the majority of people have been very stand-off’ish. We have been stared at, had our picture taken by people doing ‘drive-bys’ and sometimes totally ignored (Darrin, the optimist says they must not want to intrude).

Then we stumbled into, completely on a fluke, a small state park in northern Nebraska. We were making a quick exit, well as quick as our little Rover can go, from predicted storms in Iowa, tornadoes are not on our “must experience list”.

We looked at weather forecasts and the area we had thought to go in northern Iowa was under flood alerts, so Darrin suggested Nebraska, not a state we had intended to enter. I pulled out our 20 year old atlas and there in the very northwest corner was Ponca State Park.

We checked their weather forecast and it looked much better, so we packed our stuff and headed out. What a great decision!

We met the nicest people! Our campground host, the park staff and our fellow campers were all amazingly friendly and helpful.

Bob road his bike by every day to visit. We also met his wife Marlene who told great stories.
Sherl and John, our campgound neighbors, shared their fire and stories with us. Thanks!
They also shared their dog, Sophie. Hi Sophie!
Steve an Kris shared their company and great knowledge of the area. Steve even went out of his way to find us a NE map. Thanks! And Cookie, their dog.
And the best for last. The person who made Ponca SP a really welcoming place, Tony, our camp host. He helped us find a site, drove us around the campground and even took us downtown to the grocery store! Thanks Tony! We really enjoyed sharing a meal and Oreos with you. Hi to Asta…give her a scratch for us.

These are just a few of the many people we met during our 5 day stay. Many other people stopped by to visit. We enjoyed meeting each and everyone.

Happy trails everyone!

Winter in Nebraska

Remember how we said we wanted to get north out of the heat? Nebraska decided to help us out. 50s during the day and 40s at night, with a little rain, okay it poured, thrown in for good measure.  No, this isn’t normal Nebraska weather…they ordered it just for us!

To show we are true northerners, and know just what to do in chilly weather, we fired-up the woodstove!

Only a northerner would travel with a wood stove attachment!
Darrin tending the fire.
And me slaving over the hot stove preparing dinner. Check out my pretty purple curtains!

Those of you who grew up camping in state parks, know what we mean when we say we did the “Sunday wood clean-up after all the weekenders left”, so the heat from the woodstove was 100% free.