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Day 1, 2:00am
Somewhere in
Central Nebraska
Seventy million years ago, when the vast North American inland sea
drained away, the landscape that appeared here was
the extensive, nearly flat seabed of the former ocean, with nary a hill
nor a dale rising above the flat horizon. So today the road has nothing
to climb, nothing to skirt. The interstate highway engineers must
simply have chosen a compass point and begun pouring concrete. Even
within the narrow corridor of highway reflectors reaching into the
black distance, I think I can see the curvature of the earth …
If you’ve seen one mile of highway in the
heartland, you’ve seen them all, and I don't want to have to look at
every one of them. Hence the long night drive. But I derive a certain
satisfaction
from making good headway across these immeasurable distances, in light
traffic and under the cover of darkness. Out here on the
black highway, sailing along under the stars, it’s just me and the
truckers. Even Lorie, my partner and faithful traveling companion, has
folded the back seat down into a bunk and now sleeps to the rhythm of
concrete expansion cracks passing beneath our wheels. So begins
our great Southwest adventure.
Leaving our home in southern Wisconsin about
3:00pm on a Friday afternoon, we have driven our 1983 Volkswagen
Vanagon Westfalia camper south into Illinois and then swung west onto
I-80, bound for Denver. By 5:30am Saturday morning, my growing fatigue
has developed a resistance to the repeated dosages of convenience store
coffee. Even the AM talk-radio crackpots fail to keep my interest, and
the sun of another day has begun to creep above the horizon
to appear in my rearview mirror. After 13 solid hours on the road,
it is time to rest. I swing into a truck stop, scuttle in between
the Peterbilts, turn off the engine, and join Lorie for a few
hours of peaceful slumber …
Day 2
Elm Creek, Nebraska
At 8:30am we are
awakened by the call of the open road, and by the sound of traffic
already on it. After taking on fuel, food, and coffee we resume our
journey. By mid-afternoon we arrive in the mile-high city of Denver.
Being the gateway to the Southwest for those of us who live in
the upper Midwest, we stay here only long enough to enjoy a walk on the
16th Street pedestrian mall, visit the lovely old Union Station, and
share a chicken wrap at a sidewalk bench.
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We
head south out of Denver, fighting evening rush-hour traffic on I-25,
and finally arrive in Castle Rock, CO, about 7:00pm.
Twenty-nine hours and 1033 miles after leaving home, we find a
place to pull off for the night, pop the top on the camper van, and
settle in for a luxurious full eight hours of sleep.
Day 3
Castle Rock, Colorado
We make little progress today. I suppose for every adventure there is
an equal and opposite misadventure, and our first comes today, just
west of Walsenburg, CO. Upon beginning our ascent over the
first range of the Rockies, the engine temperature gauge rises
dangerously and the warning light flashes. Pulling over to let it
simmer down
and replace some lost coolant, we resume our climb only to have the
same thing repeated. It seems our 20-year-old coolant-system cap can
no longer hold back the pressure against the thin mountain air, and
begins leaking anti-freeze.
We reluctantly but wisely retreat back down the
hill and by the time we pull into a Pueblo auto parts store and install
the four-dollar replacement, it is late afternoon. We decide to camp at
a nearby state park.
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