“When lonely days turn to lonely nights
You take a trip to the city lights
And take the long way home
Take the long way home”
You take a trip to the city lights
And take the long way home
Take the long way home”
--From the song “Long Way Home” by Supertramp,
1979
My 10-week odyssey in El Paso, TX, was coming
to an end and it was time to plan the trip home. I originally planned to cover
1,800 miles in three days, leaving on April 1 and arriving home the evening of
April 3. My plan was to go from El Paso to Oklahoma City the first day. Drive
from OKC to St. Louis the second day and home the third day.
However, a couple of weeks before I left, I
thought about visiting a friend from Stow who had moved to the Phoenix area the
previous year. Then, the week before my departure, I found out that my niece
Angela and her husband, who live in Washington state, were spending the week of
April 1 in Scottsdale, AZ, on her spring break from teaching fourth graders.
So, I used Google Maps to figure out how much
further my trip would be if I visited Scottsdale for a couple of days before
heading home. I figured it would add about 6 hours and 350-plus miles to the
trip home.
I left my casita in El Paso about 9:15AM on
April 1 and arrived in Scottsdale about 4PM. The scenery between the two cities
was mostly desert with some spectacular mountain views.
The mid-day traffic in Tucson was pretty heavy
and I-10 was very busy between there and Scottsdale. My friend Lenore lived 20
minutes away from my motel in Scottsdale and we agreed to have dinner at an
Olive Garden about two blocks from where I was staying. She is about 80 and a
retired school counselor. Both Pam and I know her from our church in Stow and I
had a delightful dinner with her.
After dinner, I arranged to meet my niece and
her husband, Kevin, for a beer at their condo which was about a five-minute
drive from my hotel. They had a dinner commitment earlier that evening with a
retired teacher who had been Angela’s mentor when she first started teaching in
suburban Seattle more than 20 years ago.
The next morning, I went back to her place and
we hung out by the pool, visited Old Town Scottsdale and then went back to the
condo for bratwurst on the grill. It was a good visit as I hadn’t seen her in
nearly a year since the memorial service for her dad who passed away in 2018.
I also decided to add another 25 minutes to my
trip home by visiting Winslow, AZ, the town made famous in the Eagles first big
hit “Take It Easy.”
The nearly three-hour drive from Scottsdale was
spectacular. It started with hilly desert with tons of Socorro cactus plants
lining both sides of the highway. Then, I drove up into the mountains and the
desert gave way to a heavy forest of mostly evergreen trees. There was still snow
lining the side of the road and I passed over the mountain with an elevation of
7,450 feet at the top. As I drove down the other side of the mountain, the
forest gave way to barren desert that was covered with sage brush.
Once I arrived in Winslow, I drove to the park
in the center of town that commemorates the song. There is a block long mural
depicting the scene from the song, a bronze statue of Glenn Frey leaning
against a lamp post and there is a flatbed Ford truck parked nearby.
On a beautiful, sunny morning I got a coffee at
the shop across the street and returned to take some pictures. I talked with a
guy from Seattle who was on vacation with his wife about some Eagles’ history.
During the 20-30 minutes I was there, I saw 15-20 other baby boomers visit the
park and take pictures. Then, it was time to hit the road east.
On
the way across northern Arizona, it was a mixture of desert and mountains. I
passed near the Petrified Forest and saw some interesting rock formations and
cliffs with alternating layers of pinks, tans and browns.
I
passed into New Mexico and through Albuquerque as the land began to get
progressively greener. There were plenty of cattle ranches and windmills as I
moved into Texas. No, I didn’t see any dead birds and I didn’t hear any
cancer-inducing noise from these giant white structures that our illustrious
president blamed on these windmills.
I
planned to spend my first night in Shamrock, TX, because it was about halfway
between Scottsdale and Nashville, my planned second night stop. As I passed
through Amarillo, I noticed I was driving towards some very dark clouds and I
saw some intense lightening.
After
about 12 hours on the road, it was getting dark and I didn’t look forward to
driving in drenching rain. The last half hour of the trip was difficult with
intense rain and some hail. I made it to the Shamrock exit safely and pulled
into the motel parking lot. After registering at the desk, I went back to my
car to get my luggage and had to navigate a small stream about three inches
deep that had formed in the parking lot.
Once
I got to my room, I removed my wet shoes and socks, heated two slices of
leftover pizza, drank two airline-size bottles of Tullamore Dew and went to
sleep.
The
next morning, I was on the road to Nashville by about 6:30AM. Crossing through
Oklahoma and Arkansas, the scenery became less spectacular, mostly gently
rolling farm and ranch land. Conway, AR, bills itself as “The City of Colleges”
with Central Arkansas University, Central Baptist College and Hendrix College
in the city. Conway is also the home of Toad Suck Park. So, go figure!
I
arrived in Nashville after another 13-hour drive and texted Henry, the son of
my wife’s cousin. Henry is planning to marry Jennifer in Nashville in
June and Pam and I plan to attend along with Brian. Pam had met Henry’s fiancé last
summer when she visited Nashville with her brother and niece, but I didn't make that trip.
They
came to my hotel and we went to a brew pub about five minutes from my hotel.
Jennifer works for HCA Corporation in Nashville and has a master’s degree from
the University of Kentucky, so we connected immediately. Go Big Blue! She’s the
same age as Henry, mid-30s, and it seems like they will be a good match. We had
a good conversation over draft beer and hamburgers.
After
two very early morning starts, I decided to sleep in and didn’t wake up until
almost 8:30AM. After a visit to the hotel breakfast bar, I showered and packed up
for the last leg of the trip. I had to endure a 20-minute traffic jam in
northern Nashville, another 15-minute jam in Cincinnati and a third traffic jam
for a wreck about 30 miles north of Columbus.
After
9 and a half hours, I pulled into my driveway at about 8:30PM. I had covered
2,154 miles in 35.5 hours in three days. After taking my essential luggage into
the house, I had a single Black Jack Daniels on the rocks and crashed.
The
journey was over!