Really long story short: we survived Kansas. Our driving party that started in the Pacific Northwest took us through gorgeous forests, mountains, valleys, dunes, and more…and then it stopped…or at least the mountains, forests, valleys, and dunes stopped. The road kept going…through the seemingly endless Great Plains. All US road trips change when you hit the Great Plains, it doesn't matter which way you're headed across them. It gets boring. Sleepy. Sleepy with a lack of Starbucks. Never-ending. The woosh! of a semi-truck passing you on a stormy, flat, interstate. Speaking of the interstate, one thing that made our Great Plains driving days better was driving on highways instead. For a lot of people, this is a terrible idea. It takes longer, the speed limit's lower, small speed-trap towns are everywhere, and a giant combine will definitely be hogging the road. Wow, after writing that, it really does seem like a horrible idea. For us, the bad parts of driving on highways are about equal to the bad parts of driving on the interstate. One of the complaints is really a double-edged sword; slowing-down for small towns is a great way to keep yourself from getting bored & drowsy. There's strange country stuff to look at around every turn. You meet more people. Gas stations are unique. So we drove. We loved it. We arrived in one of my home states: Missouri (I claim 3 home states now: South Dakota, Missouri, and Washington state). We were taking a break from the road and visiting the Pops in the Ozarks. We spent some time exploring 3 locations in the area: Onondaga Cave State Park, Kayaking along the Ozark National Scenic Riverways, & Maramec Spring Park. Today, a quick visit to the cave! I used to hate caves, but since adventuring in the Pacific Northwest and blogging here on ETC, I've really enjoyed exploring anywhere with historical meaning. Since I've learned so much from trips in the Northwest, it's great to learn what was happening in the Midwest around the same time (the 1800s). Stories of this cave - how it came to be, early exploration, the abundance of caves in Missouri, what 19th century settlers used them for and extracted from them - it's all here. Tours are cheap, guides are super smart about the area, and a small museum has cool images from 1800s Onondaga, located in the visitor center. A pretty cool visit (cave joke).
~Paul, Amber, Dad ETC Onondaga Cave State Park
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Just when Kali-cat was getting comfy in the Mesa Verde Lodge we left for the Great Sand Dunes National Park & Preserve. Located in Colorado, a bit off the beaten path, there lives some massive American sand dunes. I've always wanted to visit this park but since we were with feline we couldn't really spend too much, or really any, time in the sandy backcountry. After stopping by the Visitor's center, we drove to a parking-lot nearby and set out onto the dunes. It was sandy. These dunes are crazy-big. Lots of sand-boarding surfer types. See the little specs of people in the picture above? Epic sand. So, about the Park being the almost greatest. It's just we're a little partial to the Bruneau Dunes in Idaho we recently visited (and declared most beautiful sand dunes in the USA). Did we declare a winner too early? Is Great Sand Dunes National Park the greatest after all? More careful examination of this park is definitely in our future…just not on this trip. I blame the cat (as usual). Off to the Ozarks! ~Paul, Amber, Kali ETC P.S. Take notes: essential Everyone's Travel Club camping materials pictured below.
Our last little trip in Mesa Verde National Park was to the highest point in the park, the Park Point fire lookout. Below is a picture of the actual fire lookout building at the top. When we were there their was someone working inside, doing whatever fire-lookout people do. The building was restored back in 2009 (link to restoration article). You can also hike from here, a 2.2 mile trail heads down from the viewpoint. Check here for a list of trails in the Park.
We had such a great visit to Mesa Verde National Park. Staying at the lodge within the park was a perfect fit for us. Although the guided cliff dwelling tours weren't really our style (crowded & wifey's afraid of heights), there was enough to explore without dangling over a 100 ft cliff:) The summer weather was mild, sunny by day, with thunderstorms at night. Thanks for traveling with us as we recap our epic US summer road trip! Next stop: Great Sand Dunes National Park & Preserve…! ~Paul, Amber ETC |
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