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!

Today we drove through  more of the Alabama country side.  We are currently camped in an overflow area at a county park near the TN border and it is slightly raining, a huge improvement from the earlier storm.  During said storm, we found a few new leaks in the Rover we hadn’t noticed before (it was pouring). The leaks were the top of my door and into my clothes locker. See a theme here?  Darrin has some work to do before the next storm😉.

Where we are set-up is a very busy boat ramp/fishing area and we are quite the novelty.  It is fun to watch the guys in trunks crane their necks to get a better view of our rig.  None of them stop, they just drive slightly off the road to look.  Quite entertaining.

Our rig tonight. You can see a bit of the lake in the background. What you can’t see are the guys down by the dock staring up at us or the trucks going by slowly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A few of observations from our time on the road so far:

1.  The old corner store at every crossroad is long gone.  The buildings are slowly falling in or being reclaimed by the vegetation. We went through quite a few rural areas where the store that was probably the busy hub of every road crossing has long been deserted. The derelict buildings reminded me of the book Fried Green Tomatoes.  These were probably replaced by the new main street which are newly deserted for the Walmart like stores, which are now being challenged by Amazon like stores.  What’s next?

2.   Every state is clear cut happy.  In Florida, they were clearing to build everywhere and in Georgia and Alabama they seem to be clear cutting for no visible reason.  Whole hillsides have been cut down to nothing.  Very depressing.

3. Alabama has beautiful license plates.

4. There are still people who will go out of their way to help you. Tonight a guy from the RV next store went driving around the park to find the guy in charge so we could get a spot and get set-up inbetween rain storms.

Tomorrow we hope to be in TN and sit for a few days…so I can dry my clothes out.  😊

We aren’t in…

Large farms, red soil, no palm trees….we aren’t in Florida any more!

Hello Georgia!

Still freak’n hot! This northern gal is a puddle of goo.😓

Passed huge farms growing, I don’t know what since everything was just being planted or was barely up, all with beautiful red soil, huge cattle farms and some very fenced in, very well protected properties with very large intimidating metal driveway gates (not sure what was going on behind them, we kept waiting for the blind girl from The Village to come climbing over). Oh and a few big farms that still call themselves plantations.

Huge farms with red soil.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tonight we are camping in an Alabama state park, on a lake in which us northerners were the only ones swimming (it was too chilly for the southerners. It was 88 degrees out!).  A very nice place. The best part is our 1962 Land Rover found a contemporary.  They had a nice chat about the good ole days😂.

Our camp hosts and the Land Rover’s new friend.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Happy trails😁