RPI is stealing our daughter!

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Day 34: Home

We are home. Yes, the nest is empty.

We traveled 10,200 miles
Went to 26 states (some very briefly) and Canada
Completed 3/4 of a knee sock
O Curves workouts
Stayed at 13 different Hampton Inns
Found 177 Geocaches
Saw countless numbers of Roadside America oddities
Ate at 3 Diners, Drive ins and Dives
Received only 1 ticket
Spoke to police twice

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Day 33: Rapid City to St. George, UT

We started out the day going through Grand Junction, CO. It has a really cute downtown area. There are a zillion pieces of art scattered all over the downtown.














Just after crossing the border into Utah we stopped at a rest stop for a cache. I think this was the best one we have found on the whole trip. It was actually inside the rest stop info center. It was a really neat old box with a combo lock on it. In order to get the combo you had to answer questions from the info in the center. There was this really nice old lady working in there and she had fun showing us where the info we needed was.

We then stopped in Green River, UT to see the worlds largest watermelon and pick up a few caches.


We stopped and picked up a watermelon and a cantelope at a roadside stand. Some people we met at the stand has a son in SLO who is a geocacher!

They also had the best rocks so I picked up a few for our yard!



Filling up the car today was painful!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $3.00 a gallon, YUCK!

OK knit wits I have a sock update for you. The leg is done. I will start on the heel and gusset tomorrow. I should have something to show you on Tuesday.


This truck gave me a good laugh today.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Day 32: Rapid City to Rifle, CO

Oh Boy! We started out the day bright and early. The people next door must of had their hearing aids turned off since their alarm went off for 10 minutes, 3 different times. Its quite nice at 5am! I had a little chat with them and let them know what I thought of their alarm!
We had a long drive today. It took us 2 hours extra getting over the mountains because of road work. We have another long day of driving tomorrow.
The fun is coming to an end..................

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Day 31: Mt.Rushmore

We started out the day bright and sunny. We drove up to Mt. Rushmore. Once we got there we went on a Ranger led walk and watched a movie on the creation of Mt. Rushmore. It is really as magnificent as all the pictures you have seen. As we were leaving Ed turned to me and said, "did you notice that there were no kids here?" and I said did you notice that we were the youngest people here?














After Mt. Rushmore we decided to take a drive behind the mountain and what do you know but there were several geocaches! So we took several mini hikes. Then we did this loop drive to see the Crazy Horse Memorial which wasn't much of anything. Below is a picture of what it looks like and what it was suppose to look like if it had been finished.













Then onto Custer State Park and the Needles Hwy. Along the road we saw several granite needles and had tons of animal sightings. We saw bison, mountain goats, mountain sheep and deer.

I think we went through at least 8 granite tunnels today.

On the way back to our hotel all of a sudden the sky clouded up and it began to pour buckets of rain on us. We sure don't have storms like this in California.













Once we got back to the hotel it became even more vicious. The wind picked up there was lighting and thunder and the rain got worse. The parking lot of our hotel became a river. The TV started broadcasting this horrible sound. It was quite exciting. We were worried about driving through Colorado tomorrow with all the fires they have been having lately but I guess that problem was solved. (hopefully they got this storm too)

Total Geocaches this trip 147

Earthcaches 5

Day 30: 1 Month, Minneapolis to Rapid City, SD

A long day on the road today. I guess thats the price I have to pay for shopping all day. We took a small detour down to Iowa to grab a cache in that state. Then we stopped in Mitchell, SD to see the Corn Palace.
The original Corn Palace, called "The Corn Belt Exposition" was established in 1892. Early settlers displayed the fruits of their harvest on the building exterior in order to prove the fertility of South Dakota soil. The third and present building was completed for it first festival at the present location in 1921. The exterior decorations are completely stripped down and new murals are created each year. The theme is selected by the Corn Palace Festival Committee and murals are designed by a local artist.

Another stop we made today was in Wall, SD to see Wall Drug. Ed had this exact picture taken in 1976 when his family traveled across the USA in a motor home. We will have to get the original picture from his parents to compare them.




I thought I would post the story behind Wall Drug for all of you. It is quite an inspiring story.


It was December 1931. Dorothy and I had just bought the only drugstore in a town called Wall on the edge of the South Dakota Badlands. We'd been open a few days, and business had been bad.
I stood shivering on the wooden sidewalk. In this little prairie town there were only 326 people, 326 poor people. Most of them were farmers who'd been wiped out either by the Depression or drought. Christmas was coming, but there was no snow, no sparkling lights — just viciously cold air. Out on the prairie the cold wind whipped up dust devils. I could see a Tin Lizzie chugging along the two-laner. Suitcases were strapped to the running boards. Someone's going home for the holidays, I thought to myself. I wished they would stop, just for a cup of coffee, but they didn't. Here on Main Street, no one was out.
When I went back inside, I turned off the light off over the soda fountain and joined Dorothy and our four-year-old son Billy in our "apartment", a room we'd made by stretching a blanket across the back of the store.
I had graduated pharmacy school in 1929, and after two years of working for other druggists, I knew that Dorothy and I had to find our own store. My father had just died, and he'd left me a $3,000 legacy. I'd work with that.
We were living in Canova, South Dakota, when we began our search, covering Nebraska and South Dakota in our Model T. As we searched, we were sure of two things: we wanted to be in a small town, and we wanted the town to have a Catholic church. In Canova, the nearest parish was 20 miles away. We wanted to be able to go to mass every day.
In Wall, where the drugstore was for sale, we found both a small town and a Catholic church. And when we talked to the priest, the doctor and the banker, they all told us that Wall was a good place with good people and that they wanted us to come live there.
Dorothy and I were excited about Wall, but when we got back home and told our families about the plan, we found them skeptical.
"That town is in the middle of nowhere," a cousin said, "and furthermore, everybody there is flat broke busted."
My father-in-law was understanding, but even he said, "You know, Wall is just about as Godforsaken as you can get."
But Dorothy and I couldn't give up on Wall, so our families agreed that we should all pray about the decision. Led by two of Dorothy's aunts, who were Dominican nuns, we asked God's guidance.
In the end everyone felt that it was God's will for us to go to Wall. But now that Dorothy and I were all alone here, we wondered if we'd heard God right.
The first few months went by and business didn't improve. "I don't mind being poor, " Dorothy said to me. "But I wonder if we can use our talents to their fullest here in Wall."
When Dorothy spoke of talents, my heart sank. My wife had a teaching degree and had taught literature in a Sioux Falls high school. Was I being fair, making her work in this prairie drugstore?
But the next minute Dorothy said, "We shouldn't get down, Ted. I'm sure we can use our abilities fully here. We can make this place work!"
Dorothy's optimism lifted me. I said to her, "Five years, Dorothy, that's what I think we should give to this store. Five good years, and if it doesn't work by then, well, then we'll. .."
"Don't worry about then," said Dorothy. "We'll make it go. And just think, Ted, pretty soon that monument at Mount Rushmore will be done, and then there will be an endless stream of people going by. I'm sure they'll visit us!"
We weren't starving, it's true, and we'd begun to make good friends in Wall. Our pastor, Father John Connolly, had become a tower of strength, helping us keep our faith strong. And we had worked hard to serve our neighbors well. Filling prescriptions for a sick child or an ailing farmer made me feel that I was doing something good. I also studied some veterinary medicine on my own so that I could help out farmers when their stock were ill.
But all of this didn't seem to be enough. I still spent too many hours looking out the store window for customers who never showed up. I felt I was wasting too much of my life watching people pass by. Maybe, as Dorothy's father had said, Wall was Godforsaken.
By the time the summer of 1936 came around, our business hadn't grown much at all. Our five-year trial would be up in December. What would we do then? Along with nine-year-old Billy, Dorothy and I now had a one-month-old daughter, Mary Elizabeth. What hardships was I putting them in store for?
One hot Sunday in July, though, a great change swept us up. It started quietly, in the deadening heat of an early afternoon, when Dorothy said to me, "You don't need me here, Ted. I'm going to put Billy and the baby down for a nap and maybe take one myself."
I minded the empty store. I swatted flies with a rolled-up newspaper. I stood in the door, and no matter where I looked, there was no shade, because the sun was so high and fierce.
An hour later Dorothy came back.
"Too hot to sleep?" I asked.
"No, it wasn't the heat that kept me awake," Dorothy said. "It was all the cars going by on Route 16A. The jalopies just about shook the house to pieces."
"That's too bad," I said.
"No, because you know what, Ted? I think I finally saw how we can get all those travelers to come to our store."
"And how's that?" I asked.
"Well, now what is it that those travelers really want after driving across that hot prairie? They're thirsty. They want water. Ice cold water! Now we've got plenty of ice and water. Why don't we put up signs on the highway telling people to come here for free ice water? Listen, I even made up a few lines for the sign:
"Get a soda . . . Get a root beer . . . turn next corner . . . Just as near . . . To Highway 16 & 14. . . Free Ice Water. . . Wall Drug."
It wasn't Wordsworth, but I was willing to give it a try. During the next few days a high school boy and I put together some signs. We modeled them after the old Burma Shave highway signs. Each phrase of Dorothy's little poem went on a 12 by 36 inch board. We'd space the boards out so the people could read them as they drove.
The next weekend the boy and I went out to the highway and put up our signs for free ice water. I must admit that I felt somewhat silly doing it, but by the time I got back to the store, people had already begun showing up for their ice water. Dorothy was running all around to keep up. I pitched in alongside her.
"Five glasses of ice water, please," a father called out.
"May I have a glass for Grandma?" a boy asked. "She's in the car."
We ran through our supply of cracked ice. I began chiseling more off the block.
"Say, good sir," one traveler said in a Scottish brogue, "we're going all the way to Yellowstone Park. Would you mind filling this jug with your water?"
"Hey this free ice water is a great idea," said a salesman, sidling up onto a stool. "How about selling me an ice cream cone?"
For hours we poured gallons of ice water, made ice cream cones and gave highway directions. When the travelers started on their way again, refreshed and ready for new adventures, they gave us hearty thanks.
When the day was done, Dorothy and I were pooped. We sat in front of the store, watching the sun set, feeling a cool breeze come in off the prairie. In the summer twilight, Wall looked radiant. It looked like a good place to call home.
"Well, Ted, " Dorothy said to me, "I guess the ice water signs worked."
They surely did work, and we've never really been lonely for customers since then. The next summer we had to hire eight girls to help us, and now that the store is in the the good hands of my son Bill, Wall Drug draws up to twenty thousand people on a good summer day.
Free Ice Water. It brought us Husteads a long way and it taught me my greatest lesson, and that's that there's absolutely no place on God's earth that's Godforsaken. No matter where you live, you can succeed, because wherever you are, you can reach out to other people with something that they need!


In South Dakota the speed limit in 75 and they have great roads. But, literally NOTHING to see. SERIOUSLY, just brown grass! (and lots of billboards) All they sing about on the radio is how great rain is because it makes the corn grow and the corn makes whiskey which makes all the girls frisky, REALLY!

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Day 29: the Great Mall of America

Well an interesting start to the day finding out that once again ED was in trouble with the law on our trip. This is a switch, its usually me.

I have a tip for all of you ladies: I was in a hurry to get ready this morning. I have a full day ahead of me. As I was getting dressed I noticed I was pretty wrinkly. I did not want to pull out the ironing board so I thought, would a hot hair dryer get out any of the wrinkles? It worked! So next time you are in a hurry just pull out the hairdryer!

We spent 6 hours at the mall! It is 4 stories with an amusement park in the middle of it. I met ladies that had come here just for this mall and had already been there for several days. I did it in one! Did you know that there is no sales tax on clothing here? We were exhausted and then came back to the hotel for a nap. After that we went to IKEA. That was an experience. Then downtown to eat dinner at the Old Spaghetti Factory. That's the second one I have gotten to eat at on this trip.

Oh, we also drove to the University of Minnesota to look at the course that Jeremy will be running on in two weeks. Its pretty flat.
Good thing tomorrow is a travel day!

Geocaching almost got me (Ed, not Tammy) in jail

This morning I (Ed) started the day as I usually do with a few caches before Tammy wakes up. The first was a magnetic micro on a Utility box which I found. The second was at a MetroLink station full of muggles on their way to work. As I was leaving the station not finding the cache, a police car pulled up and asked me what I was doing (this is the third time over the years I have been questioned by the police geocaching). He told me the station security guard had seen me snooping and called me in. As I was explaining geocaching to him, a second police cruiser pulled up and said that a utility worker had called me in for looking at the utility box at the first cache. So some more explanation was in order.

So the lesson is, when in Minneapolis be careful. The local citizanry take homeland security very seriously.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Day 28: Cows, Cornfields & Soybeans

I have decided that over half of the US is either cows, cornfields or soy beans.

This morning my crazy husband got up at 6am and drove to Michigan. He of course was looking for a cache so we could color in our geo map with another state. After 7 attempts and 2 hours he came home defeated. I guess Michigan wants us to come back another time. (Jimmy we just might get to meet your soul mate yet) One good thing about this little excursion is that he came back with Krispy Kreme donuts for me!

Have I mentioned how much I HATE toll roads! Today alone:
Indiana $3.10 + $1.50
Illinois $3.00 + .80 + .80 +.80 + 1.60 + 1.00
Total= $12.80
Onto Wisconsin, thank heavens!

As we were traveling through Wisconsin in the middle of cows, cornfields and soy beans I decide to give my dad a call.I was telling him that there was nothing here! As I hung up with him, cars started to come toward us in the opposite direction with their lights on. I said to Ed, "isn't this a sign that there is bad weather ahead?" The traffic got slower and slower until they were crawling at about 30 miles an hour. We could not figure out what all these people in the middle of nowhere were doing. Well, a Roadside America attraction that we were planning on stopping to see, the Muir Space Station in Wisconsin Dell, was just up ahead so we got off. WE ARE FROM CA HOW ARE WE SUPPOSE TO KNOW THAT THIS IS THE HOT SPOT TO VACATION IN THE AREA!" Oh my, a child's dream come true and every parents nightmare! If you are familiar with a hotel by the name of The Great Wolf Lodge (google it) multiply that by at least 50 different competing hotels. We have never seen so many garish signs for hotels, restaurants and attractions in our lives. This place could compete with Vegas. (Yes Teresa you could gamble there) By the way all those people were on their way home from the Labor day holiday.

Dad, we found the perfect car for you today!
After driving through this place, a mirage I think, we never did find the Mir Space Station. (What were we thinking? the Mir Space Station in the middle of Wisconsin!) I guess we were just desperate to see anything but corn fields, cows and soy beans. We got back on the road to Minnesota. (4 more hours)(ugh)
Tomorrow I get to shop my heart out at the Great Mall of America!

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Day 27: Geese Chasing

This morning we decided to grab a cache just over the border into Ohio. The darn GPS took us on a wild goose chase. Our brains knew it was at the rest stop but the GPS had us getting off later and then wandering down country roads to the backside of the rest stop. Of course it was all fenced off. Oh well on to the next cache. On our way back to the fwy we filled up the car with $2.53 gas and saw our first ALIVE wildlife sighting. Four deer darted across the road in front of us. (Pretty pitiful.) We tried very hard in Vermont to find a moose but it just never happened. The second wild goose chase of the day was our detour into the Ohio Amish country. DOES ANYONE WHAT DAY IT IS TODAY? SUNDAY. When will we learn that everyone except CA shuts down on Sundays! (especially the Amish) We did get to see several buggies with the whole family in them on their way home from church.

Through Indiana and into South Bend. My sister Teresa is thrilled! She and her husband Matt are huge Notre Dame fans. Of course after we had dinner we went and walked around the Notre Dame campus. It is a pretty campus. We went to see the Grotto, Basilica, touch down Jesus and the stadium.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Day 26: Driving, Driving, Driving

We left Vermont this morning to start heading back to Sloville, CA. As we were approaching Troy I sent a text to Lauren, "good bye". Another one "hugs and kisses" and another one "goodbye. Finally later in the afternoon when we crossed into PA we sent Jeremy and Lauren messages that we were in PA. She responded! I guess she figured it was safe to answer since we were far away from her and couldn't just pop in. We made a dinner stop in Clearview, PA at Denny's Beer Barrell Pub. They are world famous, and in the Guiness World book for their 123 pound burger which only costs $399.99. Believe it or not but someone ordered one while we were there! It was for a group of guys that were coming from the Penn State game.


After diner we went on to Clarion, PA. (there were no rooms available in the vacinity because of the game)

Friday, September 3, 2010

Day 25: To Bristol and Beyond

WOW we started out really late today. decided to take it easy since we have a week of driving coming up. We drove to Bristol to see the Lords Prayer Rock. Its a Roadside America feature and a geocache! One of the old stories about this rock is, in the early days of the town when the loggers would haul their logs into town they had to climb a steep hill and would cuss and swear at their teams of horses to get them to get a good head of speed to make the climb. As the story goes, a Christian man who was well to do decided to have the prayer carved into the rock to help remind the drivers to keep their tongues in check. Then we went into New Haven to see The grave of Timothy Clark Smith in the Evergreen Cemetery which has a window on it. Timothy was afraid of being buried alive, so he had a special grave built for him when he passed away in 1893. A cement tube leads down to Mr. Smith's face. On top of is a 14x14 inch square piece of glass so he could see up above ground if he was mistaken to be dead. A bell was placed in his hand so he could ring it and hope someone would hear it and let him out. We couldnt see anything down there. Guess what this is also a RA and geocache!
Knit Wits I have a new group project! i found this really cute book in a shop today in New Haven, VT.
Geocaches today, 19.

Tomorrow we leave to start driving back home. Guess what? We are going right through troy again.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Day 24: Rock of ages

Today was a rock day. We went to the quarry, Rock of Ages in Barre Vermont. They are one of the largest quarriers and manufacturers of granite in North America. The granite mined here is a blue grey color which makes it perfect for monuments, industrial and architectural use.

Then we worked on an earth cache. It was pretty time consuming. We had to go to 4 different quarries. Boy we sure know alot about granite now.



After the cache we went to Hope cemetery. They are local here and only accept headstones made from granite from Barre. We did a little shopping there.





















These were my two favorites. Of course a mausoleum or chapel would be nice.

Once the shopping was complete we drove to Woodstock.We had lunch there and poked in out of the shops. Then home it was. It is still very hot today. They are on day three of record temps. But we have a hurricane headed for us! They expect it to hit land Friday sometime. By the time it gets here it will only be torrential rain. But then the arctic air will be able to return to the area. Then the changing of the colors will begin here, just in time for us to leave.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Day 23: Extreme Sports Day

Wow what a day! We started out the day with the luge. We went flying down icy mountains with our hair blowing in the wind. Then in the afternoon we rode class 6 rapids down the Mad River in inner tubes.

OK, we really drove to Stowe. Its one of the biggest ski resorts on the eastern side of the country. We rode on their alpine slide down the ski slope. (Twice) It’s a kick in the pants. It’s a sled with wheels that goes down a half pipe track all the way down the beginner ski slope.

This afternoon it was still warm here, so we decided to float down the Mad River in inner tubes. A lazy 2 ½ hour ride. A company here drives you up the river and then picks you up at the end.

That’s all I got for you today.

Geocaches today, 3

Day 22: Record Highs

Well wouldn't you know it? Vermont was expecting RECORD highs today. (The record being 88) We started out the day at 83 degrees and the high ended up being 95 degrees, with humidity! We decided to take a nice cool car ride to Burlington. Burlington is a hub for Vermont. They have 5 malls, several colleges and sits right on Lake Champlain. It’s a pretty big city. We came upon a street sign today that we have never seen before. I wonder why we don’t have these in CA.

We stopped briefly at the pier to see the plaque for the Lake Champlain Monster. Yes, they have a monster out there!

Then in a field just outside of downtown we came across the world's tallest filing cabinet. Who comes up with this stuff?

Ok Knit Wits, I was just complaining yesterday to Sharon that I had not seen any great knitting stores. Now I have seen two shops in the last two days. The one today is named Kaleidoscope Yarns and is in Essex Junction, VT. I picked up a treat for each of you!
CURVES Ladies you are getting into the action today! I came upon Curves in Waterbury, Vermont. You won't believe this but, during the day they are Curves and at night they transform into a Thai restaurant. There you go Marilyn, a second business for you.

Geocaches today, 17

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Day 21: A taste of Vermont

We ate ourselves through Vermont today. First we started at Ben & Jerry's. We took the tour and then got a scoop of ice cream, well I got two.
Then on to the Cold Hollow Cider mill where we sampled their cider and had a cider donut.
After that we stopped at Lake Champlain Chocolates to sample their wares. Then the Cabot creamery where they make the best cheese ever.
The highlight of the day was the Brag Family sugar house. We learned all about how maple syrup is made and then tasted the four different grades. You wouldn’t think that there was a difference, but there is. I think I would like a maple tree in our backyard. Now you all didn’t think that all we did was eat all day did you? There was a lot of Geocaching (15) in there as well. In fact because of caching we went to two different covered bridges that we wouldn't have ever known about. Any one interested yet?
At the capital in Montpelier we came across this delightful yarn shop. I purchased some beautiful plum variegated yarn to make the scarf pattern that I bought in Amish country.
I just had to include this picture today: "You know your getting old when", You have to wear reading glasses over your sunglasses.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Day 20: Vermont

Today started out very slow. I slept until 10:00! Who knows what Ed was up too. We went and looked around the town here. We found this restaurant called the Green Cup (a health food joint) right on the stream. We ordered lunch (a salad of weeds and cheese) and went to sit by the water to eat. The local kids were all there swimming in the swimming hole. The younger boys were jumping off the rocks into the water. A little later a group of older boys came by. The rocks were not "cool" enough for them. They started climbing up inside of the covered bridge and then jumping out from the eves. Next was a group of girls and they just stood at the rocks for about a half an hour before one of them finally took the plunge. (With the onlooker's encouragement) I wish my kids had a swimming hole to go to when they were growing up.

So as you can see we had a very lazy day today. Tomorrow it's off to BEN AND JERRY'S.

Day 19 Vermont, here we come

We started out the day doing all the bridges and tolls in reverse order. Then lo and behold we got a call from our daughter! She needs us! YIPPIE. Her fan vibrated off the desk and broke. (I planned that good, right?) We got to see her on our way from Canada to Vermont.
Our day other than that went sort of like this, Ed driving, me knitting, Ed driving, me sleeping, Ed driving, me sleeping. I had to catch up from all the Canadian activity. We stopped at this really cute roadside deli called the Big Moose Deli about 25 miles outside of Troy in a town called Hoosick for dinner.


We finally arrived at our timeshare in Vermont around 8pm. It is a whole house to ourselves! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, sauna and a garage. It's in the mountains in the middle of Vermont. A very pretty location.