July 15
Ahh, leaving Stillwater I felt so much more rested than I
had during the whole first part of the trip.
There really is nothing like a good night’s sleep to calm your nerves
and soothe your aching back from crouching in a driving position for hours at a
time.
I went back over to the assisted living center to see my
grandmother and caught her after breakfast and before sewing (their schedules
are super tight)! It was nice to have a
chance to say goodbye. She gave me her
lucky quarter from Bingo which I treasure and will take with me on my
travels. The Smith women understand
Bingo, we have the skills.
I waved goodbye to Uncle Ted and Aunt Laura, they were so
wonderful to let me stop in and rest up, thank you both!
First stop was Tulsa, I was hoping to find a Bank of America
to deposit some cash I had found while cleaning out all of my stuff (don’t you
love it when that happens? Much better
than finding a dead mouse). I followed
my Google Map directions into downtown Tulsa when I realized this was a Bank of
America corporate building… so no parking and I was quickly caught in a
continuous loop around the building unsure how to get back on the highway.
[Side note: from this point on you will notice I continue to
get more and more lost. Yes, it would
make sense to have a GPS, and yes I could have downloaded city maps which would
have been helpful. No, I did not do
either of these things, because my mapping process had taken me across the
country safely so far, and stubbornly I continued to use my original
method. This turned out to be a mistake
and I am fully aware of that, lesson learned.]
I did have an opportunity to see some interesting buildings
(trying to make lemonade from lemons here) and finally made my way back to the
highway by sheer luck.
Next I entered Arkansas… and stayed there for quite some
time. To be frank, I am not a fan of
Arkansas. I have had multiple weird
experiences (and not weird in a good way) every single time I drive through
this state. I tried to appreciate the
beauty of the trees, the puffy clouds in the sky, the… the dead armadillo on
the side of the road. It just broke my
heart, I love those little guys. Next I
turned on the radio to listen to the local music station and heard the most
ridiculous conservative horse crap, apparently Obama single handedly allowed
Russia (and assisted Putin) in annexing Crimea.
Did you know that? I did not know
that. Whew, even talking about it now is
making my blood pressure rise.
Fueled by anger and caffeine I made a deal with myself to
not stop in Arkansas and spend one more dime of my money in this state, no
matter what. I got pretty far across the
state before seeing these enormous thunder clouds developing in the sky. They were literally pregnant with rain
water. And then… they released. It was like driving in a hurricane – complete
and utter anarchy.
I escaped the rain just as I passed into Tennessee and saw Memphis. Hooray!
Now I can finally get gas and go to the bathroom, sweet Jesus take the
wheel!
I drove through Memphis to Bartlett, TN where my next Airbnb
adventure awaited. This night I stayed
with a family and their eight year old daughter, four cats, 14 chickens, 2
rabbits, and full on suburban farm, just inches from the city limits of
Memphis.
Once I arrived I looked through
their thoughtfully prepared visitor booklet and found a local southern food restaurant
called Sweet Peas. Sounded like a good
meal to fill my weary soul (and stomach).
I drove over to the restaurant, parked, and walked in… honestly the
experience was one of a kind. I suppose
I was expecting a small little café, that’s what it looked like from the
outside. It was quite a bit bigger and
bustling, and to top it off there was an Elvis impersonator crooning from a
mini stage at the back of the restaurant.
EXCELLENT.
Fried catfish, fried okra, cornbread, sweet tea and purple
hull peas (similar to black eyed peas I found out) was my meal for the
evening. The server was quite possibly
the nicest server I have ever had. She
almost forced me to take home a free sweet tea and a free and generous helping
of their sweet potato casserole just because she wanted me to try it. Elvis continued to sing – Frank Sinatra,
George Jones, Dean Martin – so many greats I can’t even keep track. He was fantastic! And he would sashay over to some of the more
engaged ladies and swoop silk scarves over their necks while singing sweet
melodies to them. I was quite
entertained… and FULL. No more southern
cooking for this chickadee. [And no, I did not eat a fried hand or fried chicken foot, that was catfish.]
Once back at the Adams’ residence I had a great conversation
with Tom and Vanessa about their urban farm and what sort of places they wanted
to take it and expand it. They mentioned
the organic farming community was pretty nonexistent in Memphis, but they were
excited to be there developing it from the ground up. We swapped stories about companion planting
and some documentaries we had seen about organic farming. As we were talking, their newest cat (Jay
Catsby) would launch himself across the living room, take a flying leap in the
air and land, claws out, on the scratching post attached to the wall (mounted
about a foot from the floor). It was
like watching a pole vaulter.
July 16
Next morning I got lost (again, this will continue to
happen) on my way out to the highway because I was entranced by all the crape
myrtles that lined the highways. We used
to have a thriving deep pink one outside the first house we lived in, in Dallas. Crape myrtles are like my double rainbow.
I visited one of probably seventeen Starbucks I found along
the way (free Wifi and working air conditioning) in order to map where I was
and find my way to the highway. I am a
strong supporter of everything local, but after going on this trip I have to
admit that it is really nice to always step in a Starbucks and know exactly
what you’re getting. Thank you Starbucks…
for being my friend.
Today was quite different, staying in one state the whole
time, hadn’t done that since my half day in Washington. Let me tell you, Tennessee is
loooooonnnnnnnng. I stayed on I-40 the
whole way, battling traffic, longing for simpler times driving in Nebraska when
no one was around except an occasional rogue tractor.
Outside Nashville I decided to take a sporadic detour (isn’t
that what road trips are all about) and see the Freshwater Pearl Museum outside
of Nashville. No, I didn’t get lost, but
it was quite a ways off the highway and not much to look at. I didn’t realize what a big deal these
freshwater pearls were out here. And I
was quite horrified by all the porcelain dolls in the gift store and along with
lots of dead animals stuffed and staring vacant at me while I admired some
pearl earrings. I also found some
advertisements for a woman selling boat portraits… I’ve heard of having portraits
done of your pets, but never your boat – that was new.
Back on the road I was getting very tired and thankfully
passed Knoxville without incident. I was
heading to my final Airbnb location in Chuckey, TN and I got lost, like really
lost this time. I stopped to grab a few
pieces of fruit and an avocado for dinner (best road food you can get). And then I drove right past 351 and found 321
(assuming it was the right road) and rode up and down… up and down… up and down
the street. I finally pulled over and
signaled defeat. Jane, the Airbnb
contact, gave me helpful directions to the house starting with, “honey… you are
on the wrong road!”
Once I arrived I was swept up by Jane and Glenn and plopped
down in a rocking chair on their back porch admiring a beautiful view of the
Appalachian Mountains. Jane is a raw
vegan chef and she and Glenn moved out there from Long Island once they retired. She has a pretty successful business going,
appeared twice on their local news doing cooking segments and is writing her
second cookbook. She made me a delicious
and fresh dinner of tomatoes from their garden, avocado, white onion, salt and
pepper, and homemade zucchini bread (made from a dehydrator instead of being
cooked). It was heavenly.
I also made friends with their bird, Petunia, who was pretty
lively. Jane snapped a few pictures of
me and bird. While I smiled for the
camera, Petunia was hopping and bopping to a pretty steady beat on my arm,
smiling away. I was charmed by the bird
but was a little apprehensive she would bite my face off (which she didn’t). She was a very nice bird, so there was no
need for alarm, but there’s something about birds smiling at you that freaks me
out. As my friend Erin says when she
hears a bird, “that’s the sound you hear right before you die.”
The three of us (well four if you count the bird) stayed up
for a few hours talking about life and what brought us to our current
paths. It was such an interesting
conversation. I am now convinced I need
to return to New Orleans one more time for Southern Decadence (a GAY Mardi Gras,
how did I not know about this???). As we
spoke, Jane kept bringing out more and more treats for me to try including a
bunch of delicious and flavored vinegars from this store in Johnson City,
TN.
I finally called it a night and went to bed. In the morning Jane had already prepared a
healthy and delicious apple, date, walnut, and cinnamon concoction in a to-go
container for me and Glenn printed out two sets of directions I could take with
me to Wilmington. Nicest people ever, I
do hope our paths cross again.
I took a few pictures of their garden before I left, apparently the watermelons were all volunteers!
July 17
My final day!!!!
Today I was going to reach Wilmington and join my Mom and brother and
meet my new niece Zelda (a cat). I just
had to get there. Okay, so here was the quandary. I had pdfed and emailed myself two sets of
directions. Jane and Glenn had printed
out two sets of directions and my interactive map that is NOT reliable gave me
three more alternative directions to Wilmington. All seven of these routes were
different. SEVEN DIFFERENT ROUTES. What fresh hell is this?
I chose to take a route that Glenn had printed out, seemed
the easiest, taking me through Asheville and Colombia before hitting
Wilmington. But first I drove to Johnson
City and picked up two of those bottles of vinegar for my mom and my Aunt
Ainslie whose birthday was this week.
The woman who rung up my order looked and talked exactly like Dolly Parton
in Steel Magnolias, except she had normal sized boobs.
Once on the road I realized I had made a grave error. When Glenn had printed out the directions, he
had requested directions from Chuckey to Asheville to Colombia to Wilmington,
not Chuckey to Wilmington. Because of
this, the directions weren’t straight shots through the cities, instead they
had me get off in the cities, welcomed me into the city, and then proceeded to
tell me to get on new highways that were nowhere in sight. So I got completely lost in downtown Asheville
in the middle of some big event that had me sitting in standstill traffic
wondering where in tarnation I was. I
stopped at a car repair shop and got some reluctant directions from a man
chewing straw and wearing overalls (I couldn’t even make this stuff up).
Back on the road my back and shoulder had gone from hurting
to aching to full on shooting pain up and down my body. It was the weirdest pain, icy hot spasms that
were giving me a headache and an earache.
I decided to pull over and have lunch just to get out of the car and
immediately felt better. Had lunch in
Greenville where I took advantage of the “Southern Pour” and headed back to the
highway bracing myself for Colombia… where I got lost, again, and this time in
a very bad neighborhood.
I stopped at a
hotel and rang the buzzer, looking around me at the bars on the front desk and
the stray cats in the parking lot. No
one answered so I walked back to my car when I heard someone shout, “HEY… HEY
YOU… HEY!!!!!” I turn around and see
this huge man lumbering towards me with a microphone in his ear. He turned out to be so friendly, giving me
really good directions to the highway.
You just never know!
Just about the time I got on the highway, I got lost, again,
and this time I have no idea how it happened.
I was so tired that I somehow left the highway and got lost, how does
that happen? And then it started
raining, really hard. So what did I do? Honestly, I almost lost my cool, it was like
the speeding ticket all over again. But
I was SO CLOSE, so close to completing this leg of the journey. So I found a Starbucks and I kid you not, the
rain stopped and the skies cleared and a sunbeam shown down in the parking
lot. That seriously happened. I mapped my way and got back on that stupid
highway and didn’t stop until I reached Wilmington.
So that was the road trip – Washington, Idaho, Montana,
Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, North Carolina,
and South Carolina – almost 4,000 miles.
I almost started crying when I reached Wilmington I was so happy to be
there. And the best part - Family
Reunion! My brother Will is living in
the historic district of Wilmington and my Mom’s new house is about four blocks
away. Wilmington is such a cute town,
filled with trees draped with Spanish moss and more crape myrtles (yay!).
We spent the next three days packing, doing errands,
catching up, and more packing. I went to
bed every night exhausted, but loving being with family and in a familiar
setting. Although I’d never been to
Wilmington (except for a quick visit when I was 8 years old), anywhere you’re
with your family feels familiar and therefore safe and happy.
And I LOVED getting to know Zelda, the new cat in our family. I love to sing to her, “Zelda-cat Zelda-cat,
oooooh Zelda Zelda Zelda, Zelda-cat! POP, ba-doo-doo-doo” [to the tune of
Lollipop]. She is scared of me, except
when she has no other option and needs to be petted.
I decided to get my hair colored pink because I’ve really
never done that before and this is a trip of firsts! I also got an amazing massage that really
worked out those shoulder and back pains.
That was an absolute must.
I’m looking forward to getting back to Wilmington once my
Europe leg is over, I’ll be spending six weeks there alternating between
houses, working on planning New Zealand, and exploring the town.
July 21
My Mom and I got up early and drove to Washington DC, to
Bethesda, MD where my Aunt Ainslie and Uncle Dave live. Ran into some rain, but it wasn’t too
bad.
We had dinner with my cousin Amanda, her husband Mike and
their cute 2 year old daughter Cara who I got to meet for the first time. She is definitely a water baby, kept wanting
to get in the pool! Had a wonderful meal
of swordfish steaks and fresh fruits and veggies and a decadent six-cheese
macaroni and cheese – perfect summer meal.
Tomorrow I head to Leesburg to hook up with Anjali and then
the next day… ICELAND!





This is awesome living vicariously thru you.
ReplyDeleteSafe travels my dear daughter.
This was such a great read! I need to see your pink hair!
ReplyDeleteOkay dude, you can't drop the part about getting pink hair without posting a photo!! Are you nuts? PHOTO!!!
ReplyDeleteLove hearing about your adventures :)