Saturday, September 22, 2012

My Road Trip Adventure, Part I: California and Arizona

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If you look at a modern day map, Route 66 no longer exists. In the western states, it's been replaced by a thick red line labeled I-40, which turns into the I-44 and the I-55 the further north it goes. It's not until you look really close that you see the three grey offshoots that are still marked 66--all in California and Arizona. These last remaining pieces of America's most famous highway look quite a lot different than the Interstate-replaced route; while the 40 barrels straight on through, taking the fastest route from A to B, Route 66 meanders through the mountains and valleys, prairies and fields, connecting small towns to big cities, taking travelers through parts unknown. Route 66 wasn't worried about being the fastest highway--from the time it became an official highway in 1926, it just wanted Americans to see and experience their own country.

And eighty-six years later, that's just what I was going to do.

{this is a photo-and-word-heavy post, so click through if you don't mind!}


Part I covers Victorville, California to Seligman, Arizona.
And here's a little Jerry Lee Lewis to get you through a teensy bit of this long post!


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I packed my suitcase a few days before leaving because I was too darn excited to wait. I packed many unpractical things, as I often do, dreaming of the specific and dreamy scenarios I hoped to find myself in. You can see my Argus c-4 in the right corner of my suitcase, which is what I used for most of the following photos, though some are taken with a digital camera, and others with a cell phone!

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We took off from my Mema's house in the central valley, and headed for Victorville, which was the most logical place to pick up Route 66 without going too far out of our way. Technically, 66 'ends' in Santa Monica, at the ocean, and 'begins' in Chicago, Illinois. Most migrants during the Depression and otherwise used the road to head west, toward California, where they thought they would find a better life (they didn't). In the Post-war years, a majority of motorists were also heading west to see Hollywood and Disneyland, as well as the still-mysterious Southwest, so unfortunately my mom and I were heading in the opposite direction of history! But oh well.

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We picked up the original Route 66 outside of Ludlow, CA. The road wasn't in as bad a shape as either of us thought it might be. A few cars and motorcycles passed us heading west, and occasionally the I-40 came into view, weaving in and out of sight, but for the most part all was still. It rained a few times, though there was hardly any clouds in the sky, and the sun turned the raindrops into diamonds as they hit our windshield.

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As we whizzed past crumbling buildings and slow-moving trains, the road slowly deteriorated. Cracks and pots holes from years past became more common than smooth patches of road. Occasionally the entire road disappeared beneath wash outs, and we were driving through small rivers reflecting the sky like glass.

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Thunderstorms moved overhead and let loose, pummeling us with thick rain drops. Distant lightning strikes touched the earth. A rainbow appeared overhead, and the sky changed colors. We spent the night in a town called Needles, just a few miles from the Arizona border. Lightning continued to illuminate the sky, and the rain came down harder than ever. A family of French tourists stood beneath the lobby's awning, snapping photos of the orange sky and talking to each other excitedly.

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The next morning we woke to sticky, humid air. We were cautioned against driving the the next leg of the original highway, due to its penchant for wash outs and landslides, and its dangerous switchbacks. We decided to heed the warnings and take the I-40, missing out on Oatman, which is only accessible by that dangerous bit of Route 66. Oatman is named for Olive Oatman, a woman who was abducted by Yavapai Indians in the 1850s. From The Sound of Shaking Paper:

Olive's family was traveling alone through Arizona, when they were ambushed by a group of Yavapai Indians. The Yavapai murdered all of the family members except for Olive, age thirteen, her sister Mary, age seven, and Lorenzo, age fifteen, whom they clubbed and left for dead (but survived). The Yavapai Indians took Olive and her sister Mary into captivity. Mary died from starvation while the girls were still in Yavapai possession. Olive was later traded to a group of Mohave Indians, supposedly for two horses and some blankets. Olive lived a much happier life with the Mohave. She assimilated with them completely, becoming one of their group. The significance of the tattoo was to identify her as a Mohave in the afterlife, thus the tattoo indicates that she was accepted fully into the Mohave tribe.
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Olive Oatman
Olive was later released by the Mohave, and eventually settled in the area that is now known as Oatman. For those that saw my earlier post about Lily Bell from Hell on Wheels, there is another character on that show called Eva, who is partially based on Olive. I didn't know the history of Oatman before we decided to pass it up, so I was quite sad when I found out we had missed such an interesting place. However, I don't suppose it would have been worth getting washed off the road!

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Eva from HoW
Once we exited the I-40 onto the next drivable patch of 66, we whizzed right past the Hackberry General Store without realizing it would be there. We slowed down on the empty road and went back. The parking lot was buzzing. Several motor homes were parked, their doors and windows open with children hanging out chatting to one another, eating snacks and sipping sodas.The unmistakable sounds of German wafted from the open windows of the car next to us.

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I hardly ever see old Pepsi cola machines! They're almost always Coca-cola
The General Store sold everything from prickly pear jam to leather biker vests. The ceilings were covered in rusted license plates and 66 memorabilia. A world map was hung on one wall, pins sticking out from where tourists had come from. Outside, run down old cars were lined up like grave stones, and a koi pond was nestled behind some reeds. There was an empty picnic table and a lonely old tree swing that I gave some attention to for a bit, but when the sky turned dark, we got back on the road.

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We drove through Peach Springs, a small town that boasts an entrance to the Grand Canyon Caverns. We pulled off the road to take a photo of a lonely looking dinosaur, only to get caught in a sudden downpour, which caused me to jostle the camera.

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By the time we reached Seligman, the skies were clear. Seligman is full of the kind of kitsch one expects to find on Route 66. Tin road signs and 50 year-old advertisements for soda pop, buildings painted in blue and white stars, promises of the best tasting burgers you’ve ever had. Supposedly, Seligman was the main inspiration for the town of Radiator Springs in Disney’s Cars. When we stopped in at Historic Seligman Sundries, the shopkeeper was happily telling a group of people about the "Hollywood people" that came to the town some years before.

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We got an ice cream cone at the Snow Cap Drive-In before heading toward the Grand Canyon...


~~~

Oh my, this post is a lot! Since I wrote a pretty substantial paper about 66, it's kinda hard not to talk about the history of some of the sites! I just find it fascinating, but I know it's quite a lot to take in, and if all my posts are like this, then I'll be posting about my road trip for months, haha. I'll try to break them up with posts about different things, just so this blog doesn't turn into Rachel's Annoying Travel Ramblings.


Sunday, August 26, 2012

The Trans-Continental Foot Race

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Oh gosh, I feel like there are so many things I want to make a post about, only I haven't had any darn time for it! I've been writing up a storm (well, that may be an overstatement) and I've been reading a lot of fascinating stories about Route 66 too. My absolute favorite story, one that I've been dying to share here, is of the Trans-Continential foot race (or the "Bunion Derby"), a scheme cooked up by the guys trying to promote use of the newly-formed highway. It was a coast-to-coast marathon that offered a $25,000 grand prize to the first competitor to run from California all the way to New York, if you can believe it, and took place in 1928. Over 200 men entered the competition, even though the price to participate (between the entrance fee & the money needed for a one-way ticket home from NY) was an incredible $125!

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At the starting line there were men wearing everything from work boots to moccasins, and a few that even went barefoot. Runners came from all over the world to participate; some where professionals, and others had no experience at all. Over the course of 84 consecutive days, the contestants found themselves running anywhere from 30 to 70 miles per day, through wind, rain, heat, and humidity. The race was poorly ran by a man named C.C. Pyle who only cared about making a profit, so the runners suffered for it: they were given awful food by a cook who was fired partway through, and they had to sleep in everything from tents to chicken coops. Everyday more men dropped out out the race; only 55 crossed the finish line.

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I suppose the most important person in this story is Mr. Andy Payne, an Oklahoma-born farm boy with Cherokee ancestry who won the race at 20 years-old. He wasn't a professional runner, but entered the race because he was broke and unemployed, and "thought he could do it."

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Andy Payne
At the finish line, Andy said he owed his success to cornbread. (Eat more cornbread, kids!) Once he collected his prize money (which was hard to do, since Pyle was hard-pressed to give it up), Andy went back to Oklahoma and married his sweetheart, Vivian--who was his old high school teacher, haha! (She was only one year older than him.)

I had so much fun reading about this fascinating and sometimes wacky event that I was actually a bit annoyed that I had never heard about it before! This is the kind of thing that could have spiced up a high school history lesson, just due to the sheer audacity of it. I also can't believe a film hasn't been made about it yet, which gives me an idea...

Oh, and I have to tell you about one more runner: "Wildfire" Thompson from Arkansas, who ran in red flannel underwear and wouldn't change out of it even though it made him look "more like a hobo than an athlete." During the last few laps he ran backwards for a while as a show for the crowd, and then he hung out for weeks after the race was over, just jogging around Madison Square Garden. When asked what he was doing, he said, "When all the misery's gone, you feel kind of lonesome and lost." Aw.

Read more about the race here & here & in Route 66: The Mother Road by Michael Wallis.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

gone, gone, gone

I've been away from home for nearly three weeks now, whizzing through the desert beauty of Arizona & New Mexico, the rolling plains of Oklahoma, and the musical landmarks of Tennessee, but at the moment I'm in Denver, recuperating with family for a week until I aim those headlights for home. I must say, as much as I adore traveling, there really is no better feeling than snuggling into one's own bed, and I am very much looking forward to that at the moment. That, and I can't wait to sift through all the lovely vintage items I've found in antiques shops along the way; from a beautiful lace-collared 1930s day dress to a 1950s phys. ed romper with the name Sue Hullet stitched on it--I can't wait to wear my new treasures out and about!

Until then, here's a few photos I snapped with my Argus c4 before it decided to stop working. I took these on the original Route 66 in AZ, shot before and after one of their many thunderstorms. PhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucket

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Romance movie night!

Since my Halloween movie night post got such a great response, I thought I'd compile another one full of romance films. With my work load getting higher and higher, I've often been unwinding late in the night with a movie, and recently I've been quite keen on those from the romance category. Unfortunately, I find that a lot of romance films can be pretty awful, but there are some really good ones out there, so I complied a huge list of all the romance films (or at least films that feature a compelling romance, even if it isn't the main focus) that I really love, and I've paired them together for five great nights--again with snack suggestions!

I tried to come up with a wide variety of films, some I like more for the comedy, some more for the romance; some that are mega-cheesy, some more serious, and some just plain ol' bizarre...

Strange Love: Secretary & Buffalo '66



"You adore me, you love me, you cherish me, Jesus Christ you can't live without me."

Secretary: A young woman, recently released from a mental hospital, gets a job as a secretary to a demanding lawyer, where their employer-employee relationship turns into a sexual, sadomasochistic one. Maybe not one to watch with your mom, but I swear, this film is actually quite sweet in moments, but always strange--and personally, I'll take a strange love story over a run-of-the-mill predictable one anyday.

Buffalo '66: Billy Brown, fresh from a five-year stint in jail, heads home to Buffalo, N.Y., to visit his family. Eager to impress his parents, Billy kidnaps Layla and makes her pose as his wife. I love this film to pieces. It’s so funny and sweet and heartbreaking and human. It is absolutely one of my favorites ever.

What to eat: One scoop of creamed potatoes. A slice of butter. Four peas. And as much ice cream as you'd like to eat.

Wino Forever: Heathers & Reality Bites



"Our love is God. Now let's go get a slushie."

Heathers: A girl who half-heartedly tries to be part of the "in crowd" of her school meets a rebel who teaches her a more devious way to play social politics. CLASSIC. That is all.

Reality Bites: Generation X Graduates face life after college with a filmmaker looking for work and love in Houston. My sister made me watch this film more times than I can count when we were growing up, and I wasn't sold on it at first, but it snuck up on me at some point and now I love it. And Hey, That's My Bike is the best band name ever.

What to Eat: Junk food! Go to a convenience store and get all the junk you desire. Potato chips, candy bars, soda pop, slushies--get that weird looking hot dog that's been in the heater all day if you want it--no one's judging you!

I Like a Bit o' Violence Too: True Romance Grosse Point Blank


"They all have husbands and wives and children and houses and dogs, and, you know, they've all made themselves a part of something and they can talk about what they do. What am I gonna say? "I killed the president of Paraguay with a fork. How've you been?"

True Romance: An unlikely fairy tale about a loner and the hooker who falls in love with him. When he accidentally grabs her boss's suitcase of coke instead of her clothes, it starts a chain reaction that makes their cross country road trip a little more exciting than they bargained for. Tarantino does romance. 'Nuff said.

Grosse Point Blank: Martin Blank is a professional assassin. He is sent on a mission to a small Detroit suburb, Grosse Pointe, and, by coincidence, his ten-year high school reunion party is taking place there at the same time. Funny, sweet, light viewing. Also, John Cusack looks fab in a black suit and Ray Bans.

What to Eat: Honor the King just like Clarence does and make yourselves a couple of peanut butter and banana sandwiches, and then drink way too much cheap wine just like you would if you had to be at your 10 year high school reunion.

Romance Away from Home: Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights & Only You



"He was eccentric, and not in a good way!"

Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights: Follows the blossoming love affair of young couple Katey and Javier against the backdrop of the Cuban Revolution in 1958. I think this film got pretty bad reviews, but who cares--I adore it! I never really liked the original (~ fully prepared to be shouted at in the comments~), but this one appeals to my interests because the 1950s clothing is gorgeous, and so is Diego Luna. Also, if you watch it without thinking its related to the original (which it pretty much isn't), then you'll enjoy it more.

Only You: At eleven years-old, Faith asks a Ouiji Board who she will marry, and it answers "DAMON BRADLEY." Fifteen years later, on the cusp of marriage, she journeys to Italy in hope of finding him. I picked this one up because it's written and directed by Norman Jewison, who also made Moonstruck, another favorite. Marisa Tomeii is great and Robert Downey Jr. is a bit snarky and a bit sweet--just how we like him.

What to Eat: Bite-sized Cuban sandwiches and fresh fruits and bright-colored cocktails to bring Havana to your home. For dessert, Italian goodies (tiramisu, biscotti, cannoli, amaretti cookies) and coffee.

Historical Tales or, I Love Crying: OneginQuills



"If you but knew the flames that burn in me which I attempt to beat down with my reason."

Onegin: In the opulent St. Petersburg of the Empire period, Eugene Onegin is a jaded but dashing aristocrat. Soon, Tatiana, a passionate and virtuous girl, falls hopelessly under the spell of the aloof newcomer and professes her love for him. I generally find Liv Tyler to be a bit of a bore, but I thought she was quite sweet in this, and I enjoyed the fact that I couldn't guess where the film was going to end up. And Ralph Fiennes's sideburns are magnificent.

Quills: In a Napoleonic era insane asylum, an inmate, the irrepressible Marquis De Sade, fights a battle of wills against a tyrannically prudish doctor. I remember crying buckets--buckets--the first time I watched this. Of course, it was really late at night, and I was in a crying mood (because that's definitely a thing), and I was home alone, but still. Sad, sad, sad.

What to Eat: Unsalted popcorn that will very soon become salted. With your tears.

Happy viewing!

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Red Flannel Day in Cedar Springs, 1949

Welcome to Cedar Springs, Michigan, where they love their flannel so much they have a day dedicated to it! The town earned the association after a particularly horrid winter in 1936, which saw most of the US under snow and suffering from freezing temperatures, and a writer for the New York Sun declared the much-needed red flannels 'obsolete' when he was unable to locate any; however, he was proven wrong when Cedar Springs wrote a reply in their paper saying they had plenty to go around. Orders started pouring in from all over the US, and after several years of providing the country with their flannels, Cedar Springs decided to declare themselves "The Red Flannel Town." The first flannel festival was held in 1939, and continues to this day. The pictures below are from the festival held in 1949.

Look at the lovely collar on this girl's pajamas!


And from here things get a little bit unusual, a bit little Lynchian...
History of Red Flannel Day here; photos from the Life archive.

I don't know about you, but I want me some red flannels now!