In anticipation of our trip to Nashville at the end of last December, I first bought Moon Tennessee by Margaret Littman, so I could read about the city. All I knew is I wanted to find Parnassus Books; I also figured country music would be involved, but other than that, I had no idea what the city had to offer.
As I started reading, I made a list of places to see and things to do:
Drop into the honky-tonks on Broadway.
Visit the Johnny Cash Museum.
Go to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, the Grand Ole Opry, and the Ryman Auditorium. Try to see a concert.
Stop in at the Bluebird Cafe to hear live music, or any other live music venue.
Go to Cheekwood Botanical Gardens and Museum of Art.
Go on the Nash Trash Tour with the Jugg Sisters.
See the Parthenon.
Buy some cowboy boots!
Later, I read about Nashville in a book about road trips called Wanderful: The Modern Bohemian’s Guide to Traveling in Style by Andi Eaton, where I found out about the Murals of 12 South and “gas-stations-turned modern-shop” such as White’s Mercantile and Imogene & Willie, as well as Reese Witherspoon’s Draper James boutique. We found that the Old Crow Medicine Show was playing at the Grand Old Opry, but tickets were sold out. We’d have to find some other music venues.
Watching an Anthony Bourdain episode about Nashville, we figured we should seek out Nashville Hot Chicken, chicken marinated in a water-based blend of seasoning, floured, fried, drenched in a cayenne pepper paste, and served on white bread with pickle chips. It sounded good but highly decadent and super spicy!
My novel of choice was Whistling Past the Graveyard by Susan Crandall. It turned out only a small part of the book was set in Nashville; most was set in Mississippi in the summer of 1963, when the civil rights movement was underway. I was caught right away by the southern twang and dialect of the narrator, 9-year-old Starla Claudelle:
“I shoved the Frosted Flakes in my mouth to keep all the words spinning around in my head from shootin’ out.”
“I leaned so I could see into the kitchen. I was so low, I saw mostly legs. Miss Cyrena’s knee was jumpin’ like a jackhammer. I knew how she felt, all jittered up inside and no place to put the aggravation. Happened to me a lot.”
Red-headed Starla is as feisty as they come. She runs away from home to escape her mean-spirited paternal grandmother, Mamie, and to reunite with her mother who left her years before to make it big as a country singer in Nashville. She has delusions that her family will be reunited and all will be well again. On the way she meets a kind-hearted but meek African-American woman, Eula, who has absconded with a white baby she found on some church steps. A lot of adventures and misadventures occur, many of which are related to racism and race issues in the deep south. Little Starla learns over the course of the story how horrible the situation is for African-Americans in the south, and her “red-hot” temper often flares in the face of it.
If I had taken more time to find other books, I might have also discovered:
The Childrenby David Halberstam (non-fiction: “an evocation of the early days of the civil rights movement”)
The most exciting thing I did was create a playlist for our 10-hour drive on Spotify: Highway to Nashville. My top five favorites from this playlist of 92 songs are:
“Hurt” by Johnny Cash
“No One Will Ever Love You” by Nashville Cast: Connie Britton, Charles Esten
“If I Didn’t Know Better” by Nashville Cast: Sam Palladio & Clare Bowen
“Highway Vagabond” by Miranda Lambert
“Wagon Wheel” by Old Crow Medicine Show
As I prepared this playlist, I started to get an inkling of why country music is so much fun!
Of course, I also prepared my journal and my intentions. I think I got a little too ambitious for this trip!
My journal and inspiring books
Nashville Intentions
With all my reading, journal-preparing, playlist-making and intention-setting, I was very excited about Nashville by the time we left home on Wednesday, December 27!
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“ANTICIPATION & PREPARATION” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-word (or less) post on your own blog about anticipation & preparation for a recently visited or a future particular destination (not journeys in general). If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, April 12 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Friday, April 13, I’ll include your links in that post. My next post will be about Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 🙂
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly and then bi-weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂 If you’d like to read more about the topic, see: journeys: anticipation & preparation.
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read posts from our wandering community. We only have one this time. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Pauline, of Living in Paradise…, writes about how she was inspired to see some fall colors, and quickly put a plan into action to visit Tenterfield with its “blazing red autumns with stunning tree lined roads.” If I were there I’d like to stow away!
While exploring Cape May, I sought out five iconic things that make this destination on the Jersey Shore unique.
Victorian homes
After a fire in 1878 ravished 30 blocks of this old seaside resort town, nearly 600 new Victorian homes sprang to life in Cape May. When there was a push in the mid-1900s to get rid of the old and bring in the new, the town protected its Victorian homes by listing the entire town as a National Historic Landmark in 1976. Now, these “painted ladies,” decked out in gingerbread trim, vibrant colors, gables, round or octagonal turrets, scalloped shingles and patterned masonry, often topped by steep multi-faceted or flat Mansard roofs, give the town its charm. Because they’re too expensive to keep as single family homes, many have been converted into Bed and Breakfast Inns, guesthouses or restaurants.
The Merry Widow, Cape May, NJ
Victorian homes, Cape May
Victorian home
Victorian home, Cape May
Mason Cottage
gingerbread trim
Beach food
A beach town is always a beach town, no matter the season. In these frigid mid-December days, the town was decked out in Christmas decorations, but that didn’t stop establishments from selling typical beach food: roasted nuts, candy, salt water taffy, burgers, hot dogs, ice cream, frozen custard, fudge, and peanut butter.
Sweet House – Roasted Nuts & Candy
Fralinger’s Original Salt Water Taffy
Tommy’s
Burger Bistro
Peace Pie Ice Cream Sandwiches
Kohn Bros. Frozen Custard
Fudge Kitchen
Cape May Peanut Butter Co.
Beaches and wetland areas
At this icy cold and blustery time of year, the beaches and wetland areas weren’t the most inviting, but for a person seeking solitude, they made for quiet walks.
an empty stand – purpose unknown
walkway to the beach
fence shadows
beach near the sunken concrete S.S. Atlantus
pond at Stone Harbor
Wetlands Institute
Beach grasses
Any coastal area is full of beach grasses, and Cape May is no exception. At Cape May Point State Park, Stone Harbor and the Wetlands Institute, I found beach grasses aplenty, including wool grass and swamp rose mallow, swaying and dancing in the blustery air.
boardwalk through beach grasses at Cape May Point State Park
beach grasses at Cape May Point State Park
beach grasses at Stone Harbor
beach grasses at Cape May Point State Park
beach grasses & Mute Swans at Cape May Point State Park
swamp rose-mallow
beach plants at Stone Harbor
The Cape May Lighthouse
The Cape May Lighthouse is the third lighthouse that has occupied this spot since it was built in 1859 to help mariners navigate the waters off the southern tip of New Jersey.
Cape May Lighthouse
Cape May Lighthouse
Cape May Lighthouse
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“PHOTOGRAPHY” INVITATION:
The photography intention I set for myself BEFORE visiting Cape May was to find five iconic things (in my eyes!) about this town on the Jersey Shore. I limited myself to 30 pictures of 5 iconic things. I’m still posting more pictures than I’d like, but I used to post 80 or more pictures per post, so I’m working on it! My goal was to focus on pictures, so I kept my word count to 350 words.
I invite you to create a photography intention and then create a blog post for a place you have recently visited. Alternately, you can post a thematic post about a place, photos of whatever you discovered that set your heart afire. You can also do a thematic post of something you have found throughout all your travels: churches, doors, people reading, people hiking, mountains, whatever!
You probably have your own ideas about this, but in case you’d like some ideas, you can visit my page: photography inspiration.
I challenge you to post no more than 20-30 photos (fewer is better) and to write no more than 350-words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself. Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, April 18 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, April 19, I’ll include your links in that post.
My post will be about 5 iconic things in Nashville, Tennessee. 🙂
This will be an ongoing invitation, the first and third Thursday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
I took myself to Cape May in sub-zero temperatures and blustery winds in the dead of December, loading my Toyota Corolla with heavy sweaters, a down coat, gloves, a hat, boots and tennis shoes. I brought a desire to be alone and at peace, to escape from our son’s endless stream of challenges, and to simply wander haphazardly, pay attention and take photos.
Heading north on I-95, I played my Spotify playlist, On the Way to Cape May, putting me in a Jersey state of mind. I chuckled as the John Pizzarelli Trio serenaded me with a mishmash of how different singers would sing about New Jersey. 🎶 “Travelin’ down the turnpike, headin’ for the shore… Forty-seven shoe stores line route 22.” 🎶
In his Paul Simon version: 🎵 “gas stations we have scores… Some states have their rock stars, oh but Springsteen beats them all… Lots of dineries, oil refineries, our highways make you cough… The drinking spots and used car lots make the place just grand.” 🎵
🎼 “It’s another New Jersey sunrise,” Pizzarelli sang in a Beach Boys version of “Tequila Sunrise.” “Philly dogs like chili dogs they eat in Cherry Hill, woo-ee-ooo… There are no Jersey strangers, just friends we haven’t met.” {Instrumental} “Hey, let’s go to Jersey now, everybody’s learning how. Come on out to Jersey with me.” 🎼
He added the Lou Reed version to the tune of “Walk on the Wild Side:” 🎶 “Our famous parkway, it’s the dark way… you’d think for all those quarters, they’d turn the road lights on… And have no pity, Jersey City, once again we’ll shine…” 🎶
People certainly have a sense of humor about the Garden State! 🙂
Crossing over the towering verdigris-colored Delaware Memorial Bridge, I paid homage to veterans from both New Jersey and Delaware who died in the Korean War, the Vietnam War and the Persian Gulf War, to whom the twin suspension bridge is dedicated.
After crossing the Delaware River, I exited onto Route 40, where I stopped at a gas station and struggled to get my credit card to work in the gas pump. A lady in a monstrous SUV pulled up and rolled down her window. “You’re not allowed to pump your own gas in New Jersey. It’s great! We never have to get out of our car. I saw your Virginia plate and could see you were confused.” I was glad she informed me of this; I had no idea!
A white-bearded attendant lollygagged over to pump my gas. I asked him if they had a bathroom inside and he dismissively shook his head. I said aloud to myself, with the window open, “What? Crap! Why did I stop here?”
A burly African-American man poked his head out from the other side of the pump, where he was wiping the windshield of his huge burgundy pickup. “Mam, there’s a sign over there that says there’s a restroom around the corner, outside.” I frowned as I saw a porta-potty beside the building; I had no choice but to use it. A half mile further, a Wawa and a McDonald’s turned up, offering clean indoor facilities — too late for my needs.
Along Route 40, I passed a long lanky cowboy at Cowtown Rodeo. Mike told me later he remembered seeing that cowboy on a high school road trip in 1972.
Cowboy at Cowtown Rodeo
Across the street, John Wayne sat astride a horse in front of Cowtown Cowboy Outfitters, selling “the very best in Western wear since 1958.” Saddles, Western boots and hats, were flung over fence posts outdoors, enticing wanna-be cowboys to drop in.
Cowtown Rodeo
I passed barns, silos, flat farmland, a big truck shop with the truck cabs tilted forward as if yawning. A John Deere tractor shop gleamed with green and yellow tractors and farm equipment. RVs squatted for sale in a big lot.
I drove past the Boro of Elmer, brown derelict corn stalk stubs, Malaga, Porchtown, South Jersey Classic Cars, signs for Atlantic City, apple orchards and Bishop’s Produce Stand. Kountry Kitchen offered “Good Vittles,” but I had my heart set on lunch in Cape May. I whizzed past Pinelands Nature Reserve and a “SHEEP FARM” sign, and around a traffic circle in the township of Dennis, where, whirling like a dervish, I sang along with Desert Sessions, “I Wanna Make It Wit Chu,” and later, “Livin’ on a Prayer” with Bon Jovi.
🎶 Woah, we’re half way there Woah, livin’ on a prayer Take my hand, we’ll make it I swear Woah, livin’ on a prayer 🎶
The Pink Cottage
my 3rd floor room in The Pink Cottage
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“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-1,000 word (or less) post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, April 10 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, April 11, I’ll include your links in that post. My next post will be about my road trip to Nashville, Tennessee. If you’d like to see the original post about this invitation, check out: on the journey: taking ourselves from here to there.
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Robin, of Breezes at Dawn, wrote about her recent road trip from her Eastern Shore home to visit family in Ohio. They make a sad stop along the way, cross a Scary Bridge, and pass some quirky sights. She even manages to include great pictures from the car window.
Robin also wrote another post about taking herself along, another question I posed in the original post about Journey. I like how she talks about taking along her fears but, more importantly, her sense of wonder.
Carol, of The Eternal Traveler, wrote about the reasons for and the beginning of her three week road trip from Toowoomba, Queensland to Bairnsdale, Victoria: the lifelong friendship between her husband Glen and Kevin, the beer-themed birthday party at the destination, and the craft breweries and craft shops along the way.
Meg, of snippetsandsnaps, wrote about a road trip from her daughter’s home to her home in New South Wales, Australia, where she encounters “macropods courting death,” skyscapes with the clouds bowling above her, and some local characters, including a solitary man on a mission to prevent youth suicide. She includes haiku and wonderful photos as well.
Walk on Cape May beaches & through Cape May Point State Park
Visit Cape May lighthouse
Photograph the beautiful Victorian architecture
Check out the Christmas decorations
Visit the Emlen Physick Estate
Walk around the Stone Harbor Bird Sanctuary
Walk on the salt marsh trail and boardwalk at the Wetlands Institute
Drive to Wildwood
Eat lunch at Maui’s Dog House in Wildwood
I looked up pictures of some of these places and had fun adding some creative touches to my journal. Keeping a travel journal is something I plan to do without fail going forward (You can read more on my page on keeping a travel journal if you’d like some inspiration). I actually drew a picture of a Victorian house from an online picture, and I can’t even draw! It was fun to try; it looks a little lopsided, but oh well. An artist I’m not.
I found some pictures online and put them into my journal, but I guess I can’t show them to you as I would need permission from the photographer as long as the photos are recognizable. You can get a general idea from my photo. The flowers hopefully make the pictures less recognizable:
My Cape May Travel Journal
I normally read novels or memoirs about a place before I visit, but I didn’t have time. If I had, I might have read one or two of these books that take place in New Jersey.
Bad Haircut: Stories of the Seventies by Tom Perrotta
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz
Drown by Junot Díaz
The Lay of the Land (Frank Bascombe #3) by Richard Ford
Palisades Park by Alan Brennert
Paterson by William Carlos Williams
The Pine Barrens by John McPhee (non-fiction)
Because I want to improve my travel journaling, I made a list of intentions, so I could focus. As this is the first time I’ve ever done this, I kept my goals fairly simple. Here’s the list I put in my journal:
Cape May goals (now I call them intentions) 🙂
A number of years ago, I bought a bunch of vintage postcards of the 50 states. As they’ve been sitting around gathering dust, I decided to send the New Jersey one home to myself with some thoughts. Here’s the postcard. I’ll show what I wrote in a later post.
Finally, because I’d be in the car by myself for 4 1/2-5 hours, I made a playlist. It’s on Spotify: On the Way to Cape May; it includes 22 songs. My favorites are:
“Jersey Girl” by Tom Waits
“Atlantic City” by Bruce Springsteen
“Jersey Shore” by The Promise Ring
“Born to Run” by Bruce Springsteen
“Nothing But Time” by Jackson Browne
Whenever I go on a road trip, I simply must have a playlist. I love to belt out songs at high volume as I zoom down the highway, and I honestly don’t care if anyone sees or hears me. 🙂
The master plan for this trip was to pamper myself, read some good books, write, get some space from my son and his issues, and quite simply, have an adventure. 🙂
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“ANTICIPATION & PREPARATION” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-word (or less) post on your own blog about anticipation & preparation for a recently visited or a future particular destination (not journeys in general). If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, April 5 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Friday, April 6, I’ll include your links in that post. My next post will be about Nashville, Tennessee. 🙂
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly and then bi-weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂 If you’d like to read more about the topic, see: journeys: anticipation & preparation.
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read posts from our wandering community. We only have one this time. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Sue, of WordsVisual, wrote a reminiscence about the thrill of anticipation, back in the day when she traveled in a sports car, did Classic Car tours, and used maps to plan her route and the telephone to book her hotels.
Most people go to Nashville for the music. That wasn’t my enticement, as I never cared much for country music. Frankly, I’ve always been a bit dismissive of it. I do enjoy the country/rock blend songs such as those by Old Crow Medicine Show and Alabama Shakes. And admittedly, I fell in love with Johnny Cash’s song, Hurt, a cover of an original song by Nine Inch Nails, back in 2007. For a period, I listened to it repeatedly, as I do when I fall in love with a song. I figured if I ever went to Nashville, I’d have to pay tribute to Johnny at his namesake museum.
The Johnny Cash Museum in Nashville
My roundabout call to Nashville came by way of books set in far-flung places, nowhere near the city of music. These stories told of: an opera singer and terrorists in an unnamed South American country; pharmaceutical company doctors journeying into the Amazon; two writers and their lifelong friendship; unwed mothers in a home in Kentucky; and a husband and wife taking a road trip in a Winnebago to the Badlands, South Dakota.
These tales are told by Ann Patchett, who moved to Nashville when she was six and lives there to this day. I read her books:Bel Canto in 2013, and, shortly after, This is the Story of a Happy Marriage, a book of essays about the writing life, her marriage, and her love of her dog, her grandmother and the nun who taught her reading and writing in elementary school. As an unpublished writer myself, I enjoyed reading of her struggles and successes with writing, and her admonishment that there’s no such thing as writer’s block, only procrastination! She holds strong convictions about writing, family, friends, books, and her independent bookstore,Parnassus Books, billed as “An Independent Bookstore for Independent People.” Someday, I simply had to visit her bookstore in Nashville (and maybe get to meet her!).
Inside Parnassus Books, Nashville, TN
Later, I read more of Patchett’s books, The Patron Saint of Liars in early 2014, State of Wonder in 2016, and Truth and Beauty , about her friendship with the late Lucy Grealy, in 2017. Though the novels don’t take place in Nashville, the two non-fiction books reveal her ties to and love of the city.
The thing that clinched the deal for me was watching Big Little Lies, with Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman, both of whom live in Nashville. Enthralled, I watched the entire series, actually set in Monterey, California, on a plane flight to Hungary. Nicole Kidman appeared on the CBS Sunday Morning show, talking about her life in Nashville with her husband, country singer Keith Urban. Later, I watched as both actresses made the rounds on the late night shows. That was it. I was hooked. I simply had to go to Nashville.
Talking my husband into taking off work for five days, two of which would be spent driving 10 hours through two states, Virginia and Tennessee, was no easy feat. Lucky for me, he eventually came around after getting caught up in my enthusiasm.
I’m always excited for a road trip. 🙂
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“THE CALL TO PLACE” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 500-word (or less) post on your own blog about what enticed you to choose a recently visited or a future particular destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. If your destination is a place you love and keep returning to, feel free to write about that. This time, you have two weeks! If you want to see the original post about the subject, you can check it out here: imaginings: the call to place.
Please include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, April 11 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, April 12, I’ll include your links in that post. If you’d like, you can use the hashtag #wanderessence.
My next post will be about Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
This will be an ongoing invitation, bi-weekly in April, and monthly (on the 4th Thursday of each month) after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
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the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Shiarrael, of Tales from the Romulan Neutral Zone, shares about her family road trip in Austria, and the clever banter between her and her teenage children. We can all relate. Be prepared to enjoy a few laughs. 🙂
Pam, of Roughwighting, writes about her experience with her mother on the Jersey Shore and why she is called to return year after year. I love her poignant and amusing experience.
Sue, of WordsVisual, writes a reminiscent post about her call to the coast in Sidmouth, Devon, South West England. She writes about her experience, accompanied by a poem and photo.
Jo, of Restless Jo, writes of her love affair with Tavira, Portugal, soon to become her permanent home. Having visited her there, I know firsthand of her enthusiasm for Tavira, but I love how she’s written so beautifully of her memories and of all the things that bring her joy about that place.
In Alain de Botton’s fabulous book, The Art of Travel, he writes: “we never simply ‘journey through an afternoon.’ We sit in a train. Lunch digests awkwardly within us. The seat cloth is grey. We look out the window at a field. We look back inside. A drum of anxieties revolves in our consciousness.”
Of course, we don’t want to bore our readers with every detail of our journey, but maybe there is something that stands out, some aspect of the journey that is worth remembering and, later, telling.
on American road trips (or road trips anywhere…)
In the U.S., we are used to driving everywhere. We embark on a road trip in adventurous spirit, determined to marvel over everything. What passes outside our window may be stunning, silly, ugly, industrial, tacky, or even frustrating (traffic usually). The roadside may be littered with farmland and silos, decrepit buildings, businesses gone by the wayside, people doing bizarre things, bucolic rolling hills dotted with cows or sheep, or billboards hollering outrageous slogans.
I took my first major road trip when I was about 10 years old. My whole family, with the exception of my baby brother, piled into our Ford station wagon. My parents drove us to Pagosa Springs, Colorado, where my mother was born and raised. I don’t have any pictures from that trip. I’m sure all we kids did was complain: “Are we there yet? I have to go to the bathroom!” I vaguely remember squirming, reading and getting carsick. I have no clue what I saw along the way.
In the fall of 1979, less than a year after I graduated from the College of William and Mary, my first husband Bill and I embarked on a 2 1/2 month road trip around the U.S. We loaded ourselves, our clothes, a tent, a cooler and sleeping bags into a Chevy van with my husband’s two pugs, Max and Ulysses, and my mutt, Lilly, and drove around the country. We camped, we stayed in hotels, we slept in our van. We visited Bill’s father in New Hampshire, made our way to Acadia National Park in Maine, crossed the Canadian border into Ottawa, then returned to the U.S. via Michigan. After stopping in St. Louis to visit friends, we made the endless slog across the Kansas plains until we came to the Rocky Mountains, eventually making our way up to Yellowstone.
New Hampshire lakes 9/17/79Lilly in New Hampshire 9/17/79Acadia National Park 9/19/79camping in Maine 9/19/79Ottowa, Ontario 9/22/79Sleeping Bear National Dunes (Michigan) 9/23/79Sleeping Bear National Dunes (Michigan) 9/23/79St. Louis, Missouri 9/25/79Kansas Plains 10/2/79Colorado Rocky Mountains 10/3/79Lilly at Rocky Mountain National Park 10/4/79Rocky Mountain National Park 10/4/79Colorado National Monument 10/6/79me at Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area 10/7/79Grand Tetons 10/8/79Grand Tetons 10/8/79Old Faithful 10/9/79Bison at Yellowstone 10/9/79me at Fairy Falls, Yellowstone 10/9/79me at Imperial Geyser, Yellowstone 10/9/79Mammoth Hot Springs, 10/10/79Mammoth Hot Springs, 10/10/79Mammoth Hot Springs, 10/10/79Lower Yellowstone Falls 10/10/79Sour Lake 10/10/79
After leaving the Rockies, we drove north to Banff, one of my favorite places on earth.
Banff Crag, Canada 10/14/79Banff Crag, Canada 10/14/79me at the Columbia Icefield, Banff 10/14/79Big Horn Sheep on Mt. Norquay 10/15/79
By October 26, we were at the Oregon coast.
Oregon Coast 10/26/79
We arrived in Crater Lake, Oregon by October 28.
Crater Lake, Oregon 10/28/79
By October 29, we reached the California coast, then went inland to Yosemite, where it was so cold I remember waking up in the van to find the dogs’ water dishes frozen over. In Death Valley, we met the opposite extreme – sweltering temperatures.
Crescent City, CA 10/29/79El Capitan, Yosemite 10/30/79Half Dome, Yosemite 11/4/79Upper Yosemite Falls 11/4/79Pioneer wagon, Death Valley 11/7/79Scotty’s Castle, Death Valley 11/7/79Sand dunes, Death Valley 11/7/79Devil’s Golf Course, Death Valley 11/8/79
I don’t have a travel journal full of witticisms or vivid observations. I know we saw wild and crazy things, listened to plenty of Tom Waits and the Eagles, and told funny stories to each other. After all, Bill was a master of the long joke and I could spin hilarious yarns about my friends and our antics. It’s all lost now. I vaguely remember jotting a few notes someplace, but I have no evidence of it now; whatever I wrote has vanished. As I didn’t make much effort with my writing in those days, it was probably dull as mud.
All I have today is an album full of snapshots to remind me of that epic road trip. However, since someone ransacked our van in San Diego and stole our camera (because I stupidly left my passenger side window partway down when we parked in a neighborhood to take the dogs to the beach for 15 minutes), we don’t have any pictures from San Diego back across the U.S. to the East Coast. On that lost portion of our trip, we stopped at the Grand Canyon, Farmington, NM to visit my uncle, and New Orleans, Louisiana, with several other stops along the way.
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On a long road trip by car, if we ever want to get anywhere, we can’t stop at every whim to take pictures. Taking pictures out of a car window simply results in blurred impressions. In the last several years, when driving alone, I’ve held a journal in my lap and jotted notes without looking down – admittedly dangerous and not recommended. Recently, I bought a voice recorder to record my thoughts – a much safer option. 🙂
on planes, trains, buses & pilgrimages:
Of course, our journey isn’t always a road trip. Sometimes it’s a plane flight, or multiple connecting flights, a train or a bus ride, or a combination of all of these. Sometimes it’s a walk or a hike. However we travel, there is bound to be something illuminating in it.
Waiting at the bus station in South Korea 2010me with our driver in Jaipur, India March 2011Heathrow Airport June 2013En route from London to Barcelona June 2013
The journey to our destination can be excruciatingly boring, or it can be fascinating, if we observe the unusual and render it well. Anything that informs our journey, adds dimension and depth to our travel experience, can become a subject for a travel piece: an encounter with strangers, a movie watched, music on a playlist, a conversation, unexpected challenges.
on bringing ourselves along
We might also consider the following: How do we bring ourselves along? The truth is that no matter how far we travel, we still lug along our happy, sad, angry, adventurous, forgetful or stressed selves. It is impossible to excise our inner or physical selves from this world to which we’ve escaped. How does that self make itself known in this new place? Do we learn something from our best or worst selves?
I’m challenging myself to write about the journey itself in a more engaging way. I invite you to explore how we take ourselves from here to there.
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“Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows. Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is non-existent. And don’t bother concealing your thievery – celebrate it if you feel like it. In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you take things from – it’s where you take them to.”
– Jim Jarmusch
In Vladimir Nabokov‘s book Lolita, at the beginning of part two, Humbert Humbert and Lolita take a road trip across the U.S.A. Nabokov captures a small part of their journey perfectly in this passage:
Now and then, in the vastness of those plains, huge trees would advance toward us to cluster self-consciously by the roadside, and provide a bit of humanitarian shade above a picnic table, with sun flecks, flattened paper cups, samaras and discarded ice-cream sticks littering the brown ground. A great user of roadside facilities, my unfastidious Lo would be charmed by toilet signs — Guys-Gals, John-Jane, Jack-Jill and even Buck’s-Doe’s; while lost in an artist’s dream, I would stare at the honest brightness of the gasoline paraphernalia against the splendid green of oaks, or at a distant hill scrambling out — scarred but still untamed — from the wilderness of agriculture that was trying to swallow it. (p. 153, 50th anniversary edition, Lolita, June 1997)
Inspired by Nabokov, I wrote about a road trip we took one winter to Philadelphia.
As we drive north on a freeway hemmed in by concrete barriers, the Toyota RAV’s wipers swish the drizzle to and fro on the windshield, a squeaky metronome. Vehicles from Maryland, Virginia, and The Garden State whiz past, their tires flinging dirt-infused mist on our windshield. A Warehouse for Lease! slumps on the fringes and black spiny trees blur along the roadside. U2 sings “Mysterious Ways” and highway vagabond Miranda Lambert wants to “go somewhere where nobody knows.” I’ve snagged my left thumbnail and as usual, I don’t have any nail clippers in my purse. The annoying snag persists. A yellow sign forbids U-turns and when we cross the bridge, a ghostly mist rises off the Susquehanna River. Barns, silos, and bristly sepia fields scroll past and an aqua “Town of Perryville” water tower mutters a greeting. On the industrial corridor near “Port of Wilm,” metal utility towers spread their triple-triangle arms and factories belch smoke, gasping their last breath. Blue-green porta-potties stand in formation along the tracks and containers lie like coffins on idle trains. The derelict train station’s windows are broken. Citywide Limousine squats beside a lot of Ryder trucks and an empty pedestrian bridge covered in chain-link looms over us as we sputter underneath.
Finally, “Pennsylvania: State of Independence,” welcomes us while Hidden Figures of NASA stand in all their mathematical genius on an electronic billboard. Run-down brick row houses hug the highway behind a thin veil of chain-links. CSX rail cars hunker along the highway, dead in their tracks. Another billboard promises “The Wounded Warrior Project helps me heal the wounds you can’t see.” At Philadelphia Energy Solutions, giant cylindrical tanks squat on the land and, next door, bundles of paper haphazardly occupy a recycling plant. A pink “Risqué Video” sign entices those so-inclined. We skid into the Philly outskirts, land of the free and home of the tired.
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“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-1,000 word (or less) post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, April 3 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, April 4, I’ll include your links in that post. My first post will be about my road trip to Cape May, New Jersey.
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
Part of the thrill of travel is in the anticipation. As soon as the idea takes root in imagination, our curiosity blossoms. We want to immerse ourselves as soon as possible in the journey. Our date of travel may be far off, but we’re anxious to begin our journey, even if only in our minds.
Perhaps we read novels, memoirs or travel essays set in our destination. We might read about history, architecture or food. I’ve always loved to read fiction, so tying travel and fiction together seems like a perfect wine-food pairing. You can find inspiration on my two pages (works in process): books |u.s.a.| and books |international a-z|.
Maybe we love photography, so we thumb through books by famous photographers such as Ansel Adams, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Dorothea Lange, or others; we might look through travel magazines like National Geographic Traveler or Afar for inspiration. We may explore photography exhibits at museums.
Hyeres, France (1932) – Henri Cartier-Bresson at the Barnes Foundation
We might be interested in painting or drawing, and so peruse art by Monet, Georgia O’Keeffe, Paul Gauguin and others, in art books or museums.
The Powdered Woman by Adolfo Best Maugard at the Philadelphia Museum of Art
We might watch movies, TV series, documentaries or travel shows set in the locale we’re visiting. These may draw us in, inspiring us to see a culture in a new light.
Maybe we study a language before traveling to a new culture. Either we take college courses, or a course in adult education, or do self-study courses. Maybe we simply pick up a few phrases or we delve deep to study the complexities of language.
If we’re taking a road trip, we might make a playlist of music that either mentions our destination, or evokes feelings about it. Music can immerse us as we journey to the place, and keep washing over us once we arrive. We can create a playlist for other trips too, filled with music endemic to that place, like Fado in Portugal or Spanish guitar in Spain.
Legends Corner, Nashville, Tennessee
Maybe part of our ritual is to prepare a journal we’ll keep when we embark on our journey. We might create a bullet journal, or draw pictures of our destination, or glue in inspirational artwork, or paste some photos of the place. Possibly, we create a collage, or make a list of creative intentions for our wanderings: how shall we push ourselves to create something new from our wanderings?
We might pick up nature guides that we’ll use to identify plants or birds native to a particular region.
yellow-billed stork in Lake Langano, Ethiopia
Abyssinian Ground Hornbills in Lake Langano, Ethiopia
birds in Lake Langano, Ethiopia
Possibly we join a group to help us prepare, such as a Meetup Travel Group or an A-Z Book Club that reads books from all over the world; a hiking or rock-climbing group to help us get in shape; or a fellowship like American Pilgrims on the Camino, to learn from others who have done the pilgrimage and want to share their experiences with the uninitiated.
~ how do we prepare for our journey? ~
We probably buy a couple of guidebooks. We look online for travel guides and blogs. We search for images in magazines or online.
We pin down our dates. Possibly they’re hazy at first; we only know the time of year we’d like to go. Maybe the first thing we do is book our flights. Or we might book our first couple of hotels or Airbnb apartments. Maybe we build our trip around a cultural or natural event, such as Oktoberfest or fall colors or cherry blossom season. Once our money is invested, our journey becomes reality.
Cherry blossom season in Japan
Once the trip dates are finalized, we can start plotting our itinerary, maybe in a journal or a Word document or an Excel sheet. We make note of the places we want to see, recommended restaurants and entertainment venues. We try to figure out how much we can see in each day. Maybe we like to take it slowly, seeing a few sights and then lingering in cafes or bars, or lounging on a beach. Or maybe we try to see as much as possible. Will we walk everywhere, or take public transportation, tuk-tuks or carriage rides?
Maybe we buy a map and start plotting our journey. If we’re taking a road trip, we might use Google Maps to determine driving distances between places. If we’re using public transportation, we can find transport information on blogs, or travel websites, or again, on Google Maps.
If we are walking on some kind of pilgrimage, or planning a strenuous activity, we might need to prepare ourselves physically, by going to the gym, walking, hiking, climbing, skiing, swimming, surfing or bicycling. We might need to practice carrying a backpack.
Most likely, we need to get our equipment in order: make sure we have the right camera and lenses, that we have an art journal and art supplies, or a voice recorder. Possibly we want to make sure we have a back up battery for our phone if we’ll use it as our camera.
Finally, we have to pack. If we’re doing a pilgrimage, such as the Camino de Santiago, we need to pack all the essentials, but keep our backpack as light as possible. If we’re going on a romantic holiday, we might want to have cute clothes. Maybe we leave room in our suitcases to buy local clothing. Possibly, if we want to seamlessly meld into a place, we’ll bring along clothing that’s commonly worn in that locale. If we’re interested in fashion, we might pack cute outfits that we can wear against scenic backdrops, as many photographers do on Instagram.
OR. Maybe we don’t prepare at all. Maybe we are spontaneous souls who throw ourselves out into the world. We go with the flow, wide open to surprise.
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“ANTICIPATION & PREPARATION” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-word (or less) post on your own blog about anticipation & preparation for a recently visited or a future particular destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, March 29 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Friday, March 30, I’ll include your links in that post. My first post will be about Cape May, New Jersey. 🙂
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly and then bi-weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
Cape May. August 1994. I lounge on a blue-and-yellow striped beach chair, a dusting of grit stuck to my sunscreen-slathered legs, my feet burrowed into sand. Immersed in a book, I bask in the sun, getting up periodically to dip into the water. My husband digs a hole in the beach with his bare hands. Into that hollow, my 1- and 3-year-old sons toddle, brandishing toy shovels, digging and piling sand into yellow construction equipment: a cement mixer, a bulldozer, a dump truck. I’m amused by their concentrated industriousness.
When not on the beach, we climb the lighthouse and marvel over the beach and town sprawled beneath us. We cook dinners in. I am happy yet overwhelmed by motherhood. I fiercely love my children, but in the process of loving them, I’ve lost all sense of myself.
Driving through the beach town in our blue Chevy van, chock-full of car seats and beach paraphernalia, I glimpse colorful Victorian houses blur past the window. The charming town, with its promise of candlelit dinners in Victorian inns, will have to wait for another time.
Cape May lighthouse
Cape May, New Jersey
Cape May Point
Hotel at Cape may
Cape May Point
My 3-year-old son
Cape May-Lewes Ferry
My 1 1/2-year-old son
I tell my husband I’d love to come back one day without our children: to stroll on the beaches and through marshland, wander aimlessly through town, pop into shops, stay in a cozy bed-and-breakfast.
December 2017. Twenty-three years later. I need an escape. My youngest son, 25 and living under our roof, has become a force to be reckoned with. After an upsetting altercation, I decide it is time to take care of myself. After all, memory beckons: those Victorian houses, windswept beaches, billowing sea grasses, marshes and shore birds, seafood and ice cream. Oh yes, and, north of Cape May is that crazy amusement park, Wildwood, which might flash its bawdy vintage signs despite being closed in winter. Inspired by John’s Instagram, which features vintage American icons in Arizona, I’m interested in rediscovering Americana. My getaway won’t be to Arizona, but to the Jersey shore; only a 4 1/2-hour drive, it’s close enough for a two-night escape. There will be no romantic dinners this time because I’m going alone. It’s time to pamper myself.
On this southernmost point of New Jersey shore jutting into the Delaware Bay and the Atlantic, I can meander on a deserted wind-swept beach, lingering in memories of my little boys when they were untarnished by the world — so innocent, so industrious.
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“THE CALL TO PLACE” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 500-word (or less) post on your own blog about what enticed you to choose a recently visited or a future destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. If your destination is a place you love and keep returning to, feel free to write about that. If you want to see the original post about the subject, you can check it out here: imaginings: the call to place.
Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, March 28 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, March 29, I’ll include your links in that post. My next post will be about Nashville, Tennessee.
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly through March, bi-weekly in April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
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the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Jo, of Restless Jo, writes of her enthusiasm for her recent trip to Jerez de la Frontera, in Andalucía, Spain. I love her words: “I’m sure I must have gypsy blood somewhere in the ancestry. The rhythmic stamp of that foot and the proud arch of the neck has me on the edge of my seat, breathing suspended, totally in the moment. Who wouldn’t travel for this?” Read more about her excitement over the Festival of Flamenco and the dancing horses at the Royal Andalusian School of Equestrian Art. I don’t know about you, but I’m ready to go. 🙂
Jude, of Travel Words, shares her call to move to West Penwith during a visit in 2015. Her dream has come true, and she now lives there. Her words are captivating: “I am enchanted by the landscape where the sea and the sky become one, a land littered with history, where the past is always present.” And she goes on, with delightful descriptions and photos. Can I visit one of these days, Jude?
Sue, of WordsVisual, shares her sense of place through two haiku in this piece from 2015. She attempted to climb Cadair Idris, a Welsh summit, but the weather didn’t allow for it. On that climb the black rock was “glowering” and “unfathomable.” On the other climb, it seemed it might be a success, but alas, it wasn’t to be: the last of the sunlight was “taunting.” I like to hope that she will get there one day, if not in physical reality, at least in her imagination.
Sometimes, our destination is handed to us. We’re offered a job in a new city, or even overseas; we’re invited to attend a wedding or want to pay our respects at a funeral; maybe we simply want to visit family or friends. Our family may have a vacation home that keeps calling us back. Maybe we’re on a honeymoon or an anniversary celebration and will settle only for a romantic destination. We might have a coupon or some financial enticement to visit a place.
Al Hamra, Oman – my job took me to Oman in 2011-2013
Maybe we have chosen a random place jointly with another traveler, meeting in some middle ground, or at some mutually agreed upon and convenient destination.
My friend Jayne from California met me in Jaisalmer, India after I left Korea – 2011
Perhaps we’ve dreamt of a place. Possibly, we’ve seen a painting that inspires curiosity and entices us, or we’ve heard exotic music, the notes of which linger in our minds, a soundtrack that won’t stop. Maybe we’ve seen a foreign movie, and after we leave the theater, the music and language follow us around, whispering in our ear; a vision of the place lingers. Maybe a novel, a memoir or a travel essay has ignited our imagination. Perchance, we’ve been inspired by blogs or Instagram pictures.
Santorini, Greece 2012
Quite possibly, we’ve developed a taste for a foreign cuisine, and we find ourselves inexplicably dining at ethnic restaurants, wishing we could savor more of that culture’s flavors. We might be on a quest to explore regional wineries, or the culinary or craft beer scene in a place.
Homemade lamb meatballs and green peppers at Meteora Restaurant in Kalambaka, Greece 2012
Maybe we choose our journey due to constraints of time or money, to a place within driving distance, or in the next town. We might have visited a place earlier in our lives and only had time to skim the surface, so we want to return and delve deeper. We hope to find more meaning out of our journey this time around, given that we’re wiser, more observant and comfortable in our own skin.
Perhaps we’ve suffered some hardship or grief in our lives, or we’re seeking answers to metaphorical questions about life, so we’re called to make a pilgrimage, long or short. Maybe we’re simply trying to escape the hum-drum existence of our lives, and want to visit a place as far removed from “home” as possible.
Cape May, New Jersey December, 2017
Perhaps we have come into some money and want to go someplace new, and, seeking spontaneity, we spin the globe and go wherever our finger lands. Maybe a place has always held an inexplicable mystique. We know we’re drawn to go, and the call can’t be denied.
spinning the globe
We might seek out beaches or mountains or chaotic cities or exotic cultures. Possibly, we yearn for adventures and physical activity out in nature: hiking, swimming, boating, bicycling, motorcycling, hot-air ballooning or mountain climbing.
Hot-air ballooning in Cappadocia, Turkey 2010
Maybe we’re on a spiritual quest, called to visit churches, mosques, synagogues or temples. We might yearn for a focused retreat: yoga, creative inspiration, self-esteem building, writing, photography or cooking. Perhaps we’re writing a book or a story and want to explore a place thoroughly to create a realistic setting. We might want to go on an artistic or literary quest: to explore Monet’s art or Hemingway’s haunts.
mosque in Muscat, Oman
church in Crete, Greece
church in Lisbon, Portugal
Temple in Kunming, China
Temple in Bagan, Myanmar
Church in Iceland
Temple in Nara, Japan
Possibly, we love a certain kind of music, like bluegrass or country, and we want to seek out its origins or explore a unique music scene. Maybe we’re determined to visit every National Park or every UNESCO World Heritage Site. We may want to settle in a place for a time and live like a local. Perhaps we want to explore the history of a culture. Maybe we’re on a scavenger hunt of sorts: to find quirky off-the-beaten-path places, or unusual art or cultural festivals, or the iconic features of a place. Maybe we’re called to do 10k runs or walks, marathons or Ironman competitions in far-flung places.
Maybe we’ve taken up vision boarding and, led by our inner compass, we’ve put together a vision of a place never considered before. Maybe serendipity has led us to a place. Maybe we are list makers, and we’re checking off the next thing on our “bucket list.”
What I want to know is – how were you called to a particular place?
“THE CALL TO PLACE” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 500-word (or less) post on your own blog about what enticed you to choose a recently visited or a future destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments below. If your destination is a place you love and keep returning to, feel free to write about that too. Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, March 21 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, March 22, I’ll include your links in that post. My first post will be about Cape May, New Jersey. 🙂
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly through March, bi-weekly in April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
My path less traveled. Rediscovering self after surviving the abuse that almost sunk me. Goal of strengthening and thriving on my adult legs. 👣🙏🏻 #recovery #forgiveness
This blog is for those who wish to be creative, authors, people in the healing professions, business people, freelancers, journalists, poets, and teachers. You will learn about how to write well, and about getting published. Both beginning and experienced writers will profit from this blog and gain new creative perspectives. Become inspired from global writers, and find healing through the written word.
Explore, discover and experience the world through Meery's Eye. Off the beat budget traveler. Explore places, cultural and heritage. Sustainable trotter.
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