ATC

Abandon the Cube

Tag American road trip

Road Tripping USA

key_art_great_american_road_trip

I’ve had road trips in the USA on my mind recently. There is something supremely liberating about jumping in your car and facing an open road. Sometimes you know what’s ahead, most of the time you have a vague outline of what you’ll see (and end up seeing completely different things).

From the largest ball of twine to Wall Drug, to gem mining along the side of a highway, to battleground tours, Mystery Spots and monuments to American heroes– the roads in the US hold it all. At times, I feel like the open roads in America are the real libraries and museums of American history– the keepers of American pop culture, war histories and accurate indicators of the American economy.

I set off to build a page on ATC where I could house all the research on routes, hot spots and highlights for road tripping around the United States. In the end, I built a single page for this purpose, and will continue to expand the offerings across the US. Check out Best American Road Trips for the first two installments in what I hope will be an ongoing series of fun American road trips.

road-trip

The allure of the open road

Some of the routes I’d like to research and write itineraries for include:

  • The Biggest ______ in America! — A tour of all the strange highway attractions claiming world records
  • The Best Trans-continental Drives
  • Southwest USA with Cinema Guide — hey, I actually wrote this one!
  • Where the hell is Wall Drug, and other things to see in South Dakota –Why North Dakota is Jealous of their southern neighbor.
  • Mystery Spots Unraveled— a post that goes behind-the-scenes at highway mystery spots.
  • The South-to-North Pacific Coast Drive— done, and done!
  • The Best Festivals to Road Trip To in the USA — Mardi Gras to Stergis, and beyond.
  • East Coast Battlegrounds Trip— How to hit all the top Civil War spots along the Atlantic.
  • ATC Road Trip Routes — Hey, a trip we actually did already!

One of the things I love most about travel is the slow, ambulating way cars make their way across a terrain. They are stuck on a road (well, most of the time) and so the views are limited to the car’s track. But while this could be seen as a negative, in the US– the tracks were like the arteries that carried life Westward, to Manifest Destiny. When you hop on Route 66 you’re not just riving down some dusty road, you’re driving down history alley– towards the future (well technically, the past– they are the last to watch the sun set each day).

The-Mystery-Spot-Michigan-Edition

Just what is a Mystery Spot? When I know, you’ll know. Pinky promise.

Europeans are always shocked when the visit the US for the first time. You know it’s huge, and yet when you get there you realize how large the continent really is, and how little you’ll likely have time to see. Tourists are shocked that you can’t walk to anything, and that’s true. Without a car, you’re stuck! That’s why cars are such a big part of American culture. Whether you drive a $2,000 beater or a $200,000 sports car, you share the same road, going to the same places, and feel the same liberating wind in your hair. The road does that to people– it equalized them and makes them all capillaries, on their way to other places but just enjoying the ride.

Stay tuned and check back often, because Best American Road Trips is going to grow into an awesome collection of US escapes that anyone, with any ride, will love.

 

An American Road Trip, the Highlights

We recently did a massive road trip across the motherland of America. Here are the absolute highlights for over a month on the road.

  • Bear Baiting in Big Bay
  • Niagra Fall, in Canada
  • Mount Washington Resort, in New Hampshire
  • The Freedom Trail, in Boston
  • Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell, in Philadelphia
  • The Capital on a lazy Sunday, in DC
  • Carmen, in Winston-Salem, NC
  • The Ocean on Halloween, in Wilmington, NC
  • Drinking PBR during the day in Nashville, TN
  • Seeing Al Green, in Memphis
  • The flatlands of Oklahoma after seeing Oklahoma!
  • The world’s creepiest wasteland, outside of Las Vegas, New Mexico
  • Singing with Hippies, in Boulder, CO
  • Touring Vail by Moonlight
  • The Columbia River Highway, through OR
  • The beautiful rainforest drive on I-5N

Seeing Oklahoma! And being in Oklahoma

One of our last days in Beijing was spent seeing Oklahoma! A good friend of ours was playing the role of Jud Fry. He was a masterful actor/singer, and took the role to a new extreme (think: the Joker in the latest Batman series meets Syler from Heroes). We got a wonderful idea about the landscape and musical people of Oklahoma from the musical. So, when we found ourselves in Little Rock looking at a map and scratching our heads we decided to head to Tulsa to check out the panhandle state and see a few cowboys and cowgirls singing and line dancing together in the streets.

Funny story. Tulsa (at least the part we visited) looked almost nothing like the backdrops in the musical. Gone were the Western store fronts, the horses ties to hitching posts, the smoke houses and the creepy barns. In their place were Olive Gardens, A plethora of fast food options, and a sleazy nightclub called Blush whose pink flashing lights penetrated the windows of our hotel across the street. All is not well in Oklahoma, and it appears Jud Fry took over the place in a sinister scheme to modernize it and strip it of personality. Well done, musical villain!

Driving around Oklahoma one gets a sense of what it would be like to be on Mars. There is litter variation in geography and it becomes a battle of mind over reality. I imagine this is the exact feeling insane people have when locked in a padded, seamless room. On an more positive note, the world’s largest McDonald’s cuts over the highway in Oklahoma. I was worried about the structural integrity of the overpass with all the obese people waddling in and out of the restaurant. I hate to reference another movie, but Oklahoma isn’t far off from the characters in Wallie.

All of this being said, some of the most interesting, creative and intelligent people we know hail from Oklahoma. We didn’t meet them there. No, they were smart enough to get the hell out. But perhaps a barren geography and lack of entertainment means the people turn inwards and work on their own beauty and skill. Musicians, artists, thinkers and politicians are among the traits our Oklahoma friends have. Maybe there is something positive in the water.

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