Tuesday, September 25

Vancouver, 9.24.07


Well, we've made it to Vancouver. It's amazing here, with 10,000 foot peaks jutting out of the oceans and coves and bays. Really reminds of New Zealand, actually.

So we hung out in towns in Montana for a few days: Livingston, where we found a fantastic In-n-Out burger stand with cheap veggie burgers and Wilkinson's Montana ice cream (graham cracker and huckleberry for me, a coffee shake for the hubbie), as well as a belgian-style microbrewery. Stuck around there for 2 nights, recovering from the threat of bears in an overpriced Econo Lodge* and catching up on our eating. A beautiful white horse seemed to have been abandoned in a dirt corral just next door to the hotel for our entire Livingston stay. I fed it carrots, and called the humane society when we left to see if someone could check in on its well-being. Next, we stopped in Bozeman, where we hoped to meet up with an old college acquaintance and dear friend of Claire's, but just couldn't work it out. After just one night there, which almost didn't happen because of the meager and expensive camper accomodations of the town, we had visited the town's huge local brewery, sampled all of its pastries, found that the dance school had moved well outside of the center of town, spent a number of hours using its amazing library and free internet, and successfully slept in the van streetside in the rain without having to pay anyone a cent. The next day, we tried to stay longer to make it to the evening when Nikki and Adam were free, but the road was calling. We made it as far as the Montana-Idaho border at Lolo Springs, where we were able to soak our dirty bones in some hot hot water and exercise in a pretty frigid outdoor pool in the middle of the mountains. Jesse powered on all the following day and night to the Washington-Canada border. We stayed at a national parks campground in our tent, on a very temperate evening while the wind blew harshly through the trees, sounding everything like rain, but it never was.

The campsite at the border:
Now, about this Washington-Canada border: I knew it was apple season, and didn't anticipate how excited I would get once the apple trees began showing themselves through the Okanagan valley in Washington. Deep red apples were dotting trees everywhere along the roadside, like cherries, but 5 times the size. Farmstand followed farmstand, and the orchards were harvesting apples into huge boxes, some piled 10 high, 20 wide, on the sides of the road. We stopped at a stand that allowed me to pick both a green and a red one from some trees behind its shed, with only a little bullying from my end, and J and I wolfed them down as we crossed the Canada border. I had to put the remnants into a cooler past the border, as the guard said a simple garbage can would not do. Past the border, the apple trees continued as we entered Osoyoos, and further into British Columbian wine and farm country. Here's what I have to say about all that:

First, do you all know that the U.S. dollar is now worth less than the Canadian dollar? Last time I was here, it was about $1.50 to each $1 canadian, but now it's about 92 U.S. cents to $1 canadian. Pretty ugly. Things were also kind of expensive outside of Vancouver, so we had to watch it a bit. Although the area of British Columbia that we traveled through is wine country, the wines were really nothing to speak of, except for a certain berry winery, which we discovered after visiting a few other wineries, a hot springs town, and a herbal farm. (We passed the cheese farms, because how much can we really commit to eating more cheese on the road?) The woman at said berry winery told us that they harvest all their berries from the wild, and that berries grow wild everywhere along the roadside. We had a great extended conversation while she got us drunk on samples, and now we have an option to work with them next spring and summer, if we are in the area again. Also, at this very same winery, Sugi got terribly attacked by another dog, the ward of the woman in the testing room. She survived with some minor flesh wounds, but it was a pretty vicious attack to her neck, and I got a little bit up trying to wrench that stupid dog off of her. Funny enough, she seemed rather roused emotionally by the attack, though she did take a couple days to get back to her old self, recovering from the excitement of it all. We spent that night in an amazing spot up North Vancouver, on the water, a cove, where the beach was littered with HUGE petrified trees, and the campground was full of very loud people. We had a huge hike the day after, where I found some of the berries along the trails, blackberry-types, and they were TASTY. And today, we are doing the rounds of Vancouver, eating very well and staying at a decent little motor hotel right downtown. Vancouver is pretty awesome, but I'm sure we'll have more to say in the upcoming posts.

*Note: all the hotels seem overpriced these days. When did the median nightly price go up to $100? ??

Thursday, September 20

Pool Days, 9.19.07

We've been finding swimming pools wherever we go: at campgrounds, at hotels, motels, hot springs pools, YMCAs. The pools act for me as a sort of elixir, a reset button, taking us on to the next set of days and nights spent out in the world. I've taken to doing ballet exercises in the pool, and Jesse seems also to have found his way to some sort of anachronistic aerobic exercises in the pool. I think the water is serving as salvation from hours spent sitting in the car.

Tonight, we are at Lolo Hot Springs, on the border of Montana and Idaho, where we are camping right across the road from the pools. It's cold outside, but the indoor springs pool, a sort of wooden room with vaulted roof, was lovely and hot. Jesse saw that the springs had a 30% nitrous oxide content, and we're good and dizzy after a long soak. WiFi seems to be everywhere, so tuning in before we head deep into further woods through Washington and Canada. Look for us again around Vancouver, around Sunday. Oh, I am looking forward to Vancouver!

Tuesday, September 18

Expressing our Feeling

A belated yet toothy shout --to all those who opened their hearts and homes to these n'er -do-wells in the great Middle-west
Here's to you! Jacqui, Sandy, Tracy, Kara, Claire, Sam and Andy, Jim and Betty, Amie and Spencer, and Meg. LOVE!!!!!!!!!!

Pics from the first National Park


Yellowstoned


Wow!
What a place. No, not the Urbana Cornfest with Parliament headlining(the above wildlife).
Yellowstone National Park! We saw bisons, martens, bald and golden eagles, coyotes, fox, deer, elk, a moose, a bear, and a cougar. Two men were attacked by grizzlys in a week (they shared a room at the hospital!), which provided the purrfect distraction. The weather was just about perfect, too. Sixties and sunny to thirties at night. Bets, Sugi and I camped for a solid week in Wyoming. Every day was a deliciously slow learning curve on packing, sleeping in the outdoors, etc.

Wednesday, September 12

Buffalo Again, 9.11.07

Today, we are still in Buffalo, Wyoming, at the same campground. It's not that this is such a spectacular place, but this campground called Deer Park is ship-shape clean, has a pool and hot tub, not a lot of inhabitants, and a sink for washing dishes, which is pretty nice, and i know we're both pretty tired of driving. So we stayed another day. Funny enough, there are huge turkeys running wild around the grounds, aggressively competing with the deer also roaming about. We don't understand how so many tasty birds can be allowed to run free, but that's just how it is around here. We visited an old, old hotel and bar and restaurant that also is a western museum place, after trying to sell a couple pairs of antiquey shoes I've been carrying around at some antique stores in town. Long story short, the hotel owner was interested in the shoes and took them for the hotel museum in exchange for a few rounds for J and me at the bar. So now if you ever visit the Occidental Hotel in Buffalo, Wyoming, look for some little red and brown shoes donated by Beth and Jesse Williams.

As I am the designated cook of this little adventure, getting to know how to cook on the fly in the outdoors better and better. It's kinda fun, at least for now. No other fanfare to report for this lovely September 11 date. Tomorrow, we decide whether to fight the possible storms in Yellowstone or head another direction. It's not as easy to drive out of the weather in the mountains, alas.

Tuesday, September 11

Checking in from Checked Out

PPics will be coming soon!

Not much yet to say , as I've been fitting the bill of 'male, driver of nearly all the miles, etc. Bets and I were fortunate to have overstayed the Arctic air, and rain in our first motel room on Sunday. Spent the night in Wall (Drug!), South Dakotah staying out of the not quite freezing rain. The air is clean. Off to Wyoming!

-Jesse

Monday, 9.10.2007

Beth: After more than 2 weeks of visiting in the midwest, we finally drove away from our families and friends on Friday morning, fueled by a hearty breakfast made by Jesse's big sister, Tracy. We found a great campground that night in the northwestern reaches of Missouri, in a place called Big Lake, close to the Louis and Clark trail. Jesse made it all the way to the Badlands of South Dakota by Saturday night (he has driven all but 200 miles of this trip thus far, and i think we both like it that way), where we camped right inside the park and woke to moon-like scraggy peaks surrounding us, followed by a great hike through chalky white and red lands. I'm starting to be grateful that we're taking this trip through the U.S., because it reminds me of how much beauty and resource we are surrounded by, and how much I could love my country, if only I could agree with my countrymen. Jesse is committed to the blue highways (the back roads), and I am looking forward to the adventures of the coming weeks, as well as shaking off this feeling that i should be getting back to work sometime soon.
Here are some of my notes.

Notes on Missouri:
  • Very small pickup trucks for sale. I mean tiny, with a little flatbed that goes up at an angle, like a toy. I want one. Mariah would, too.
  • One can see just where a rainstorm might end in these flat lands, and drive that way to get out of it. It's nice to be able to modify a driving route based on trying to get out of a storm. I think it's like that in Illinois, as well.
  • We got a little dog (pup) tent for Sugi, who tries and tries to get into our big tent whenever we're camping, from the time we leave our car. Thankfully she likes it, and we liked that it stopped her pacing and panting. Now we can all enjoy the outdoors in our own special ways.
  • Mosquitos and mosquitos, but they don't bite as bad as in Ohio and Illinois. Carcasses all over the inside ceiling of the van after one night of battles.
  • Crossed the Missouri river several times. How did that happen? I'm supposed to be the navigator, but I don't always do so well.
  • Tales of okie noodling (look for the informative documentary at your local library!), as well as huge japanese carp jumping from Big Lake, knocking water skiers from their sport. We heard some heavy splashing at dusk and dawn - maybe it's not just a myth.
  • Our first official night camping in the van. We should have chosen the tent because the mosquitos forced us to keep the windows closed and we about suffocated.
Notes, Nebraska:
  • Government corn.
  • Cranes flying like a silver school of fish overhead, while birds of prey tried to tear one from the group. We stopped to watch.
  • Nebraska is like a little Idaho, with the rolling hills and green everywhere. Beautiful - I never knew.
South Dakota:
  • Feels like we're in the clouds - they are so close we could touch them. as within the clouds, it has become very cold all of a sudden.
  • Badlands and indian territory. Tons of poverty in this moonscape.
  • I failed to capture any of the beauty of this state on film. Alas.

Monday, September 10

THIS IS OUR TRAVEL BLOG

This blog of Jesse's echos so many of our sentiments, in why we are leaving the U.S., in the issues that have had impact on us over the years, in the inspirations that have and do buoy us on our way. Thus, we will henceforth log our travel updates in this place, to share with all our friends and families. Feel free to read into the archives for some of our history, over which Jesse has diligently kept vigil for the past few years.