Thursday, March 26, 2015

The Day I Became a Father



21 Years ago...March 27, 1994

It felt as if I had waited my whole life to be a dad.  I have always enjoyed being around kids and even babies. When Uncle Bruce and Aunt Kathie adopted Brian in 1969 I was enchanted:  I said to Aunt Kathie, “Finally there is someone I can tell, ‘I knew you when you were a baby.’  Three years later they adopted Suzanne.  When two members of my church family, Wayne and Marilyn, adopted precious little Robbie, he and I became inseparable on Sundays and at youth group activities.  I loved carting him around.  Then two other dear church friends Bob and Betty McClimans adopted Celynd and she gave me my first real experience with childcare. In the summer of 1978 her parents were stuck without a babysitter for the summer and I had not yet found a summer job.  Suddenly I found myself--a college freshman--caring for a baby: feeding, diapering, bathing ….everything. And, I loved it. 

Loving all of those wonderful adopted kids always made me wonder whether God was preparing me to be an adoptive parent.  And in fact, it took me so long to get married, I was not sure if I was ever going to be any kind of a parent.  By that time I had doted on several nieces and nephews. Spending Amanda’s first year living near them in Nyack and seeing my precious little niece every day only deepened my desire for fatherhood. In 1992 I finally did get married, and then to my surprise--but delight--we found ourselves almost immediately pregnant. (So much for my paranoia about infertility.) But to our great sorrow, we lost that baby at about six weeks.  When our dear obstetrician--Dr. Miller--told us the news, he broke down and wept with us. Again, I wondered if I would ever realize my dream of fatherhood.  In the sad empty void after the miscarriage I got started on a PhD program. 

Then in February of 1994, we discovered that we were once again expecting a baby.  Sally and Chris were both expecting babies that spring and we went down to visit New Wilmington on Palm Sunday weekend.  We’d been to church that morning and I was in the kitchen helping Mom fix dinner when Olga appeared in the doorway with an ashen look on her face.  I knew something was terribly wrong.  “It’s happening again,’ she said.  We jumped into the car and hurried down to the emergency room at Jameson Hospital in New Castle. 

There we encountered an ER doctor whose command of the English language was somewhat lacking.  He explained “threatening miscarriage, perhaps an ultrasound will tell us if baby alive.” Olga lay on a gurney and I knelt beside it and we cried and prayed.  They had to summon in an ultrasound technician who had a long drive to the hospital.  That endless, agonizing wait at Jameson is seared into my memory forever.  When the technician finally arrived, still wearing his civilian clothes, he took us off to another wing.  As we passed through the lobby, I saw that my sweet mom had driven in after us, still in her Sunday clothes, the uneaten Sunday dinner still on the table.  She sat in the waiting room and gave me a brave and encouraging smile as we whisked past.  I knew she was praying for us.

The technician--who spoke English as his first language--was very kind and friendly.  He explained that an ultrasound at only about five weeks may not show anything at all as that was barely enough time for the heartbeat to begin.  I asked if he would tell us what he saw.  “That’s against policy,” he explained, “the doctor has to go over the results with you.” That seemed so unfair and illogical to me, the man in the ER was not our doctor and he barely spoke English, but I was too emotionally spent to try to argue against the policy.  He looked sympathetically at our tear-stained faces as he hooked up the equipment. 

Time seemed to freeze as he rolled the sensor around Olga’s stomach, searching for any sign of life…my hopes dwindled.  Then….”I SEE A HEARTBEAT!” he crowed!  Then immediately, “Don’t tell them I told you!” He guided our eyes to the screen and showed us a faint little flicker in the fuzzy pattern.  It mostly looked like a TV channel that was not coming in.  But once he put his finger on it, we could see the steady pattern that he meant. 

In that moment, I became a father.  In that moment, I first glimpsed Anthony Jay Nichols, who would arrive safely about 30 weeks later.  In that moment, I fell in love with that teeny-tiny pinprick of a heartbeat.  If anyone had tried to harm that microscopic beating heart, I could have torn him apart with my bare hands.  My 21-year (and counting) adventure as a father, the greatest in my life, began at Jameson Hospital on that terrible and glorious Palm Sunday afternoon. 


I know that people agonize deeply over the question of when life begins, but for me that question was answered that day.  That baby was as much my son on that day as he is on this day as a big strong junior in college.  

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Day One: Fillmore, NY--Bowling Green, OH

Mindy suggested I should blog our Western trip - so here goes! This is my first ever blog, so I have no idea what I am doing and I am hundreds of miles from Greg so this may be a disaster! I don't know how many nights we will have internet access, but we do tonight so here goes! The morning departure was covered with a flurry of facebook well wishes. Everyone said "Be careful and drive safely except for Thomas Rhett who wrote "Let Anthony drive!" which seems to fly in the face of the sentiments of everyone else! The best pre-trip comment came from Jan who said "Remember to back the family truckster out of the garage before you pack the suitcases on top Clark!" Aunt Chris who has been so encouraging about the trip called and texted regularly all day! We actually left on schedule at 11:00. (Everyone felt better about leaving since long-lost Simba arrived home on Thursday night after being missing for three weeks!) We covered about 350 miles today. Everything went smoothly except for a torrential rainstorm in New York - I had to pull over because it was raining too hard for the wipers to keep up. Fortunately it passed over quickly and by the time we got to Erie it was blue skies and sunny! I made some travel books for the kids to chart which states they've already been in and which they are adding on this trip. So the first hour or so passed with our getting them filled out and reminiscing about previous trips as they tried to fill out their booklets. I have them writing down when and why they visited each state the first time. So it was fun trying to recall all of those details.

Gasoline prices had dropped fifty cents a gallon by the time we got to Bowling Green! We stayed tonight with Nina Assimakopolis, a Houghton friend who is now teaching at Bowling Green. Anthony was best friends with her daughter Iliana when they were young. We had such a great time tonight! They have a beautiful home and Nina has become a vegetarian and had a fantastic Greek meal prepared for us. It was so much fun to see her again. Iliana and Isaac have grown up so much in the five years since they left Houghton. Tonight we had both an ice cream party and a campfire/smores party. In fact the kids and Nina are still outside telling ghost stories as I write this. The only downside to the day is that poor JonDavid got a migraine tonight, so he is already conked out and I wanted to stay close to him so I came upstairs and decided to figure out if I could set up a blog! So anyway, I don't want this to be so long that no one will read it, so I think that is enough for Day One. Tomorrow, if JD feels up to it, we will leave early and drive on over to Upland, IN to visit the Trudeaus and Aunt Barbara. I need to figure out if I can post pictures too.

Day Two: Bowling Green, OH - Upland, IN

Wow! I have five followers! I was afraid I would have this pathetic blog with no one even reading it. I remember when I first joined facebook and it said "Tim has no friends at Houghton College" on the sidebar....So anyway, the second day of our adventure has also gone beautifully - it began with JonDavid awakening me this morning at 6:30 am saying "I feel great now!" He looked over at the nice silver mixing bowl that Iliana had grabbed for me the night before when I told her that I needed something because JonDavid's migraines make him throw up. He surveyed it and said "Wow, this is my fanciest puking bowl yet!" My precious little boy - he cracks me up. Happily his migraines are becoming much fewer and further between. Nina and her kids had to leave early for a swim meet so we got up, packed up, made breakfast and a colorful thank you poster for them and then hit the road. It was another glorious day weather wise, and the drive over to Indiana was very pleasant, and not too far, only about 150 miles from Nina's to here. We got into the Trudeaus at about 1:45. (We've been visiting Skip and Jen Trudeau and their five kids for the past eight summers since Aunt Barbara had her stroke and landed in a nursing home near here, and the kids and I think of them as family, they are dear friends and great hosts.) Jen made omelettes for lunch that were great. You will notice that my accounts of my travels and adventures are very food-centric; my sister Mindy who requested this blog understands, this reflects our family worldview which essentially seeks to answer the time-honored question: "How was the food?" On that same note, I also need to report on a thoughtful bon voyage present from Uncle Bruce and Aunt Kathie who arrived on Saturday morning with a big shopping bag full of chips, candy bars, snacks, gum, cookies....a cornucopia of junkfood which has entranced all of us, particularly JonDavid! It has helped the miles to fly by as we discuss which bag of snacks to sample next! The other fun distraction in the car has been listening to the kids who have been watching movies and TV shows on DVD players. They are listening with headphones so the only parts I hear are when they all burst into laughter over funny lines. I love that happy sound--often Samantha repeats the funny line for them to laugh at a second time.

One aspect of this trip I have already recognized is that at every stop we are going to wish we had more time to enjoy our friends. We hated leaving Nina's house so quickly and I can already tell that we will want more time with the Trudeaus than we scheduled. But seeing as how we have to get back to New York before the snow flies (mid-August!) we will have to exercise some restraint. Another observation: I LOVE GPS - Mom got it for me for Christmas last year and it makes the trip indescribably easier. I just program in the address and let that amazing little gadget do the rest. It even knew where the Trudeaus live which is nearly as far off the beaten path as where we live. I keep thinking about how much my Dad would have loved one of these amazing devices.

I would say the highlight of day two was getting into Marion and seeing Aunt Barbara. I dropped the kids off to play with their Trudeau counterparts. They'll come with me tomorrow to see Aunt Barbara. When I saw Aunt Barb last at Christmastime, I was sure it would be the last time I would ever see her and it was terribly sad because she was so medicated and out of it, I think she only vaguely realized we were there. She was very non-responsive and I had to do all of the talking. She has cancer and I never even thought she'd live until this summer. And while her physical condition is still grave, she has bounced back mentally and was so much more her old self. She was thrilled to see me and wanted to talk, talk, talk. It was funny because her favorite activity when I visit is to haul me around the nursing home and introduce me to every single resident and employee always announcing that I'm a doctor. They always get an expectant look in their eyes as though I should be able to start handing out free samples of pharmaceutical products, and I have to mumble that I'm an academic doctor, not a medical one which immediately evaporates my star power! I always felt fairly awkward about it, but then when Aunt Barbara was so out of it on my last two visits...it made me sad. So today when she started it again, I gained a new appreciation for this ritual which is important for her. We had a great time sitting around and talking in her room tonight. She pumps me for stories about our pets and hangs on every word. After I told her the LONG story tonight about the adventures of Simba (being rescued from a window well at the College by JonDavid, impregnating our female cat AFTER being neutered, and returning fto us rom the dead this week) she exclaimed "I LOVED that story - I wish you had time to tell it to me again!" We also talked about Dad and how much she misses him, and some of my favorites, her reminiscing about her memories of their growing up. I love to hear her talk about that. It was really a delightful visit and now if I end up not seeing her again after this visit, I will feel so much better about it.

Two of the people she introduced me to today are a couple at the home. The wife has had some kind of an incapacitating health situation and seems fairly out of it both physically and mentally. But the husband is friendly, jolly, and healthy. He arrives every morning with their dog and spends the WHOLE day at the home with his wife. He takes all of his meals there with her and sits in the room while she naps (the dog jumps up on the bed and sleeps with her.) I was deeply touched by this portrait of true love. She doesn't seem to be conversant or even all that aware that he is with her, and having spent their whole life together, he is just doing what comes naturally and doing it joyfully as well. It was one of those life-affirming moments that I was happy I got to witness.

So now I'm back at the Trudeaus (Jen made Colorado Anazaki Beans and Rice with salsa, cheese, sour cream, and tortillas for dinner - yum! And the Libby (their eldest daughter) just made a big batch of chocolate chip cookies for our midnight snack. Anthony was in his glory because He and Maddie were shooting fireworks off their deck when I got home - they were competing with the next house down who would answer each volley with their own supply! So now the kids are eating cookies and watching one of the Pirates of the Caribbean movies, then they will all go out and sleep in the Trudeau's camper. I told Skip that if I end up without a job soon that we will all be moving into their camper permanently!

Tomorrow Skip and I are going out to lunch and then the kids will go with me to Marion to spend the afternoon with Aunt Barbara. Thanks so much for your interest in our travel adventures!

Day Three--A cornfield in Indiana

Not much new and exciting to report, but I thought I would at least check in briefly to let you know that we are alive and well and enjoying our visit with the Trudeaus and Aunt Barbara. We all went in to Marion this morning and spent some time with Aunt Barb, she was thrilled to see the kids and, like me, they very happy and surprised to see the change in her. She loved Anthony's curls and joked with the kids and, typical of her, gave them what little money she had squirrelled away to "pick out something for Christmas." See, I come from a long tradition of it never being too early to start thinking about Christmas! Then I brought the kids back to Upland and Skip, Jen and I went and got some Chinese food for lunch. In the afternoon I went back to Marion and did Aunt Barbara's shopping at Wal-Mart ("Don't forget the cheese curls!") and the kids went canoeing and played Dutch Blitz and Risk with the Trudeaus. I know I shouldn't be feeding Aunt Barbara's junk food habit, but I figure when you are in a Nursing Home and have cancer anyway, what's the worst thing that could happen? Why not go out happy? I also printed out pictures of the kids and pets at Wal-Mart and looked at them with her and she had me plaster them all over her wall. We really had a nice time together. Then at the end of the day, I went to McDonalds and got her a burger and fries - her favorite, and then met the kids and the Trudeaus at Fazoli's (JD's favorite) and now we are back here. Skip and Jen and I just went for a walk all around Taylor and came back to find the kids in the middle of a big poker tournament with JonDavid sitting behind a giant pile of pennies and looking thoroughly pleased with himself! Tomorrow we will go and see Aunt Barbara again in the morning and then blast off for our next stop: Chicago.

Day 4: Upland, IN -- Chicago, IL

Oh dear! Why didn't we make this trip much, much longer? It is too hard to only stay each place such a short time. We hated to say goodbye to the Trudeaus and I had to rout the kids out early this morning so that we could get in and see Aunt Barbara once more. Now that she is so much more "with it" again, it is very hard for her to let us go. She wanted one more round of hamburger and french fries before we left, but I couldn't wait until McDonalds switched over to their lunch menu at 11:00 and they are too snooty to make an exception, so we tried White Castle and they were as nice as could be about it. The clerk said "If you can wait a few minutes we'll make some up for you and that way they'll be hot and fresh!" So we said our good byes to Aunt Barb as she ate her White Castles (they were always my dad's favorite) Then we hit the road for Chicago. We stopped at Panera for lunch and then before we knew it we were looking at the Chicago skyline. It was exciting driving through all of the Chicago hub-bub. Mindy sent me a text this week, jokingly asking if we'd stopped at any rest stops where you had to pump the handle on the well to get water like we used to do traveling as kids. As I was driving today I was thinking about how modern and convenient so many aspects of travel have become. The GPS is such an amazing device and makes everything so much easier. We have an EZ Pass to pay our tolls so we don't even have to slow down. Parts of Chicago don't even have tollbooths; they somehow just dip into your checking account as you drive under some scanner - isn't that such a lovely combination of convenience and highway robbery? The restaurants and rest stops are so fancy and nice. It is such a different world than the one we traveled 40 years ago as kids. The car that my friends Dave and Les (whom we are visiting tonight) has a TV screen in the dashboard that gives you a wide angle view of where you are backing up so you can see if there are any children, bikes, cars, or skunks behind you! Speaking of Dave and Leslie, we arrived at their specatacular home in the Chicago suburbs about 3:00 this afternoon. Dave and Les were some of my dearest Arkansas friends but we haven't seen each other for probably 12 years and I don't even know how to begin to describe how much fun it was to be with them again tonight! And not just because of their beautiful home or that they took us out for incredible Chicago pizza...the biggest reason is the sheer joy of the comfort, laughter, and ease of a friendship that extends clear across the years of our lives. Being together tonight made us feel like we were in our 20s again and we happily regressed into all of the jokes and silliness of those good ol' days at JBU. The kids are in hog heaven because the LeVans have a high tech rec room and their son Tyler is such a nice host for them. None of us want to leave! But the road beckons and I must get to sleep - tomorrow we drive to the Twin Cities for the Foleys and our next adventure.

Day Five: Chicago, IL-- Minneapolis, MN

Aye-yi-yi! What a long driving day. I'm not entirely clear what took so long but we bid a sad farewell to Leslie at about 10:30 this morning (is that right? The time zones are confusing me) and a joyful hello to Dan at 10:30 tonight. The drive was only supposed to take eight hours, so I'm not quite sure where the other four hours went! We took a long cut to get here as a part of our quest to get to all the Western states, we took the route that took us over Iowa and up so that way we were Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, and Minnesota today! Somehow in the confusion of hitting three states at once in Dubuque, Iowa, we crossed the mighty Mississippi THREE times. (Fortunately, since it was Iowa and not New York, there was no toll for crossing the bridge - that little stunt at home would have cost me $24.00!) Then another wrinkle was finding a gas station that had 64 oz. drinks! So obviously I bought one and then had to stop at the bathroom 64 times. But even though it was a loooooonngg drive, it was a pleasant day and the kids continue to be troopers, even putting up with my picture-taking obsession! One of these nights I'm going to upload some of the pictures, but I always end up being too sleepy. Dan fixed pizza for us and Denise had made chocolate chip cookies (so between them they had my two favorite foods covered!) so we ate a bit and were amazed by the huge beautiful home and their huge beautiful cats...then the kids wandered off to bed and Dan and I have been talking and catching up for the past hour or so. But since we are both now 50 rather than 15 like we were when we used to stay up all night...now we are headed to bed since we have a big day tomorrow: "Harry Potter and the Deathly Mall of America!" Highlights of Day 5: Beautiful scenery in Eastern Illinois..."lupper" at a Mongolian Grill...talking/texting with Mindy as I drove...seeing my buddy Dan again....

Day Six: Capitalism at its finest + Cinnabons!

Ahhh, a day without driving! Probably most of you who are reading this know the Foleys, my second family, but all of them are the most gracious hosts and we've had such a great time together. We let the teenagers sleep in a bit this morning and I did the treadmill while Dan and JonDavid played Tiger Woods video golf together. We left for the Mall of America at about 11:00. The kids were duly blown away when we walked in. We were trying to formulate a plan of action and I said "So what do you guys want to do?" To which Samantha answered "Um...Cancel the rest of the trip and stay here?" Another funny incident was that Dan, Denise and I were all teasing Anthony this morning because the last time we were here--when Anthony was one year old and the Mall had just opened--we all ate lunch at the Rain Forest Cafe and little Anthony was terrified of the thunderstorms and all the noise and animatronic displays. Dan remembers Anthony trying to crawl into my shirt to hide! We were giving him a hard time about that, so when we got there and were approaching the Rain Forest Cafe Anthony exclaimed in a mock frightened voice "I'm starting to get scared already!!"

We walked around one floor of the mall to soak it all in, then rode some roller coasters in the Amusement Park in the center, then had lunch (at the Rainforest Cafe and Anthony was very brave and didn't cry once.) After lunch we went up to the fourth floor to watch Harry Potter, which was very good but very dark and sad. (JonDavid had crawled up onto my lap by the scary ending! ) We wandered around and enjoyed all of thes sights and smells and excitement. JonDavid went on a few more rides that made Dan and me DIZZY. By the time we stumbled off of the spinning roller coaster we were walking as though we were snockered! Tonight we came home and had pizza for a late dinner and Denise had made an old family chocolate cake recipe. Let's just say that at the rate I am eating on this trip I am going to have to stop soon and have new struts put on the van.

I've been calling this trip (and blog) "Westward Ho" but I'm thinking I need to rename it "I wish we had planned 2-3 more days here" as that is how we continue to feel at every stop! (Another possible name courtesy of Anthony and Samantha is "Texting Across America") Dan and Denise and Derek have been such great hosts and we've had such a lovely visit together. This trip (and Nina, Skip, Jen, Dave, Les, Dan, Denise...and I'm sure the others yet to come) continually remind me of what a treasure these friendships are across the miles and the times of my life. Even though I'm fifty and unemployed, this trip is reminding me that I am a very rich man. (Or as Dumbledore said in the movie today: "Being me has its advantages.") Thanks to all of you whether you are hosting us or taking the time to follow along on this blog for the gift of your friendship...

And now...on to Mt. Rushmore!

Day Seven: Minneapolis, MN -- Oacoma, SD

Best part of the trip: Hellos; Worst part of the trip: Goodbyes! We bid a fond farewell to the Foleys this morning and headed out for the Dakotas! We went a little out of the way to add North Dakota to our state list - it is a fairly obscure state to get to, and I figured it was now or never. Fortunately it was a beautiful driving day and it the big blue sky over both North and South Dakota was really striking. North Dakota is the only state thus far that did not have a welcome sign for us to take a photo, but fortunately we found a big Wapehton, North Dakota sign that worked. We had subs for lunch and then drove on into South Dakota. One interesting thing about the day is that for only the second time in my life I've driven across the fold in the map of the U.S. in the atlas! (The first time was driving from Arkansas to Dove Creek, CO with Skip in 1985) Another change which made the drive more interesting today--at Denise Foley's suggestion--was changing the GPS lady so that she has a British accent. It made the whole day seem so much more classy - particularly for all of the "recalculatings" It always sounded like Professor McGonagall reprimanding us! JonDavid looked in vain for a Jamaican option "Turn around Mon!" but that wasn't one of the choices.

Even though it was another long driving day, I found the new terrain and scenery so interesting that I really enjoyed it. As you drive along Rte. 90 in South Dakota, you see millions of signs for "Al's Oasis." At Ann's (Snowberger) suggestion we stayed here tonight and it really is a great "local color" kind of place. Plus it has a wonderful jacuzzi which is always so nice after a day of driving. We went over and had salad bar at the Oasis restaurant, the highlight for me being "Al's warm homemade apple pie and cinnamon ice cream." That alone is practically worth the 1800 mile drive out here! After dinner we talked about the first week and I asked the kids what their favorite part was thus far. Anthony picked the teenage crowd driving home from Giordano's without the grown-ups and singing along with Tyler's stereo; Samantha picked seeing an actual Mall Cop on a Segway at the Mall of America; JonDavid picked EVERYTHING about the Mall of America. Tim is far more indecisive! Finding Aunt Barbara in so much better spirits was certainly a treat. I think I have to cheat and pick one thing at each stop: 1) Going for a walk with Nina and JD and getting caught up on her life; 2) Sitting around the Trudeau table and laughing over old memories and stories; 3) Chicago pizza with the LeVans and looking for JBU friends on facebook; 4) Relaxing at the Foley's after a long mall day, watching the Rob Bell video, and eating Denise's purple cake.

We keep wishing we had been able to do this trip during the year that Sabrina was with us. We are hatching up a plan to try to get back out to the Mall of America whenever she is able to visit us again. She will think she is in heaven!

Tomorrow, Lord willing, I will finally see Mt. Rushmore! I've wanted to see it in person for as long as I can remember.... I still can't believe I'm actually writing this in South Dakota - what a surreal experience.

Day Eight: Oacoma, SD -- Sturgis SD

Another memorable day! After a fun stay at Al's Oasis we got a decent start this morning, plus we picked up an hour today by crossing into Mountain time (the time zone cuts through the middle of South Dakota which seems odd) We saw LOTS of SD today. Our first stop was at 1880 Town, a cute little tourist trap - we didn't pay to go into the village, but we did get a snack --they have six actual train cars converted to a really cute diner, and I got the caramel roll which was this heavenly sweet roll - wow! I feel like driving back for another one right now!! I couldn't help thinking how much my Dad would have loved it - he loved trains AND sweet rolls.

We had fun listening to the Vacation soundtrack that Bertha sent for this trip. JD has been singing "Holiday Road" all day since then. Next we got off of the main road and took the scenic loop through the Badlands which Rand-McNally rates as one of the most beautiful drives in America and indeed it was spectacular. The kids loved it and Anthony voted to skip Mt. Rushmore to just see more of the Badlands. He liked it even better after I decided to let him practice his driving on that scenic loop. It seemed like the perfect opportunity as there were few cars and the speed limit was 25 mph. I started getting nervous though when I noticed that at some places the curves were treacherous and the cliffs precipitous! But he actually did a really good job and everyone lived to tell the tale! It was nice to get a little break from all the driving. Interestingly it wasn't he who got pulled over by a cop today - it was I! The speed limit is so high out here (75 mph) that when I happened upon a 55 road I wasn't used to going so slowly. Happily the officer took pity on our travel adventure and said "Just consider this your warning for today." (And I didn't even have Denise Bakerink along who is always able to work her considerable charms on police officers!)

We even continued on the dirt road portion of the scenic loop which the kids loved as we got to see lots of prairie dogs, bison, deer and antelope on that route. The poor old van got a real work-out and the front end was COATED with grasshoppers when we got back onto pavement. It was a wild drive, but fun. When we emerged from the Badlands, we were in southern most part of South Dakota so we'd decided to pop over into Nebraska - another one the kids needed for their collection. Usually we go in long enough to really feel like we were there and to soak up a little of the local color. But the local color there was SCARY INDIAN RESERVATION. It didn't look particularly welcoming so we just drove in a little ways, took a picture, and came back.

Then we headed up to Mt. Rushmore - driving through Oglala, South Dakota! I wanted a picture for Olga, but there weren't any signs with the name on it. We got to Mt. Rushmore late afternoon and I was so happy to finally see it. It is really impressive. I kept wishing Mom was along, she has always wanted to see this. We hiked the Presidential Trail, took pictures, got ice cream, checked out the gift shop and had my National Parks passport stamped (a present from Greg - oh, and the other good news of the day was that the Badlands was having free day! That saved us $15!) The southern approach to Mt. Rushmore was UNBELIEVABLE--GPS lady led us on the "shortest" way in, but it was in fact the most treacherous. It made the mountain roads in Costa Rica look tame. About half way up we ran into a HERD of donkeys all over the road. Traffic was held up in both directions. The kids loved it and jumped out and started feeding them! One stuck his head right in the van with me! It was really funny. JD was howling with laughter, it was really cute. Fortunately we found a more civilized and normal northern access road to our motel tonight. We just got take-out from Pizza Hut and ate in our room at the Super 8...a cozy end to a fun-filled day.

A couple of quick observations....1) I'm my mother's son and so I can't help but always be looking at license plates and it has been so funny these past two states to have EVERY license plate be from one of the Dakotas - those are usually two of the rarest finds -- esp. North Dakota. It was such a strange feeling to see one everywhere you looked. Plus we are getting far enough west that people are starting to look at our car and ask incredulously "New York?!" So hopefully we are helping Western Families who are playing the license plate game! (Do people in North Dakota even bother to play the license plate game? Or is too hopeless? "Look everyone, it's NEBRASKA!!!") 2) Just a word of appreciation from a proud and grateful parent. The kiddos are being so cute and cooperative. They've been great travelers - virtually no fighting and very supportive of this crazy adventure. and 3) The carvings at Mt. Rushmore are such a testimony to human ingenuity but the incredible nature scenes all around it - the vistas, the rock formations, the mountains...are an even more impressive example of God's handiwork.

Tomorrow we will add my 45th and 46th states: Wyoming and Montana enroute to Bozeman to visit Ann Snowberger. So far, so good...

Day Nine: Sturgis, SD--Three Forks, Montana

WOW! I can't think of what else to say...We are having a Montanastic time! In a trip that has already been so filled with great experiences and dear friends - I keep thinking that one of these times there will have to be a dud, but it never happens! The whole experience has really been magical. We got up this morning and quickly added my 45th (Wyoming) and 46th (Montana) states. We've been writing the states we go to on the van windows along with our ambition of "27 states in 25 days" (I think the graffiti helped to get me out of the speeding ticket yesterday!) So this morning JonDavid was getting something out of the van at the hotel and an older couple was walking past carrying their cooler to their car. The husband pretended to hand off the cooler to his wife and exclaimed "Take this...I'm going with them!"

I realized something while I was driving today, that really has to be of the Lord...I have not gotten sleepy ONCE while driving on this trip. I think it is about 50% people praying for me and 50% the spectacular scenery that makes it too stimulating to get sleepy! Here are just a couple of examples of the interesting things out the window: A sign near Mt. Rushmore that said "Buffalo are NOT friendly - do NOT leave your car, do NOT approach them" That is just the sort of sign we don't see often in Western New York! Also, today we continued to travel Rte. 90 - that major interstate that traverses the nation--But I noticed in Wyoming that several of the exit ramps were actually dirt roads!

I thought I was amazed at the natural beauty of Wyoming until we got to Montana. Every prejudicial thought I've ever had about Montana was wrong! (Steve Lebien, if you are reading this, I apologize for making fun of your home state!) I spent the day with my mouth hanging open at the splendor of this place. We saw the snow-covered Rocky mountains, bluffs, buttes, Bozeman pass: just one incredible vista after another. It took forever to get to Ann's because I kept jumping out of the car to take pictures!

Finally about dinner time we got off at the exit and dear Ann was waiting in her pick-up truck to guide us back the 12 mile dirt road to their ranch! Words fail me to describe how enchanting it is...as well as their hospitality! Every nook and cranny of this place is picturesque, from the log home with the stone fireplace and the great wooden table and rough hewn decor, to the beautiful barn which actually smells like sweet hay instead of animal crap! and which has the upstairs all decorated with white Christmas lights for their barn dances, to the grassy prairie lands surrounded by mountains, to the massive starry sky uninterrupted by any artificial lights the whole place is just incredible.

And the hospitality matches the scenery! The kids are already enchanted as Ann let each of them drive the truck through the pasturelands tonight while we were hunting for a rattlesnake she'd seen today and wanted to kill, tan, and send with us as a souvenir! (And even when JonDavid's driving sent Uncle Ray toppling backwards out of the back of the truck, everyone still kept their sense of humor!) Tonight we had a great late night dinner (10pm!) around their big table - spinach ravioli, strawberries, fresh salad and bread and strawberry rhubarb pie for dessert! Yum, I'm stuffed!

Tomorrow we are going tubing on the river, going back out to try to find the elusive rattlesnake, having a cook-out and I'm not sure what else - I think seeing some of the local sights and then on Tuesday we are going to Yellowstone. Thank God for facebook - Ann and I reconnected just in time to include them on our trip itinerary. On Wednesday we head out for Glacier National Park, that is if we haven't decided to have all of our belongings shipped out to stay on living here in Montana!

Day 10: A Montana Summer Night's Dream

What a grand day - not only were we NOT driving, we were treated to lots of Montana beauty and Judberger hospitality (Ann Snowberger + husband Ivan Judson). Ann's daughter Hannah made delicious pancakes for breakfast; we let the teenagers sleep in as long as they wanted; we went our for another drive/walk/rock collecting/snake hunt; then came back and loaded up the trucks, equipment, and snacks for a day of rafting on the river right by their house. (By the way, Ann's divinely inspired philosophy of river snacks is frozen candy bars! Could she be anymore in tune with God's will?!) They have a big inflatable party raft which nicely accommodated all nine of us and we spent a couple of lazy hours floating down the Madison River, laughing, talking, splashing and enjoying the scenery before returning to where they had parked the vehicle with the cooler of frozen treats. What a perfect day! After that I went back out with Hannah to take some pictures right up the road at Buffalo Jump State Park while Ann fixed another wonderful dinner. Now everyone is settled in for the night: JD and Isaiah asleep out in the tent. Samantha, Ann, and Hannah in the girls room, and then Anthony and I are living like sultans with Ann and Ivan giving up their big comfortable bed for us, in which I'm lying even as I type, so if one of these sentences doesn't end soon, you'll know what happened. You know, way back when I emailed the friends and relations on whom we are inflicting ourselves on this trip, Ann came up with a counter suggestion that we pick up Nina's and Skip's families, the Foleys and the LeVans and head out to Montana for two weeks all together out here. I've realized a couple of interesting things 1) she was probably only partly kidding! They are such consumate hosts and 2) that she was right - we probably should have done that! Brought the whole gang out here for a 2 week Montana holiday! I'm just thoroughly enjoying both the place and the people! Oh man, I am very sleepy....I posted a few pictures on facebook tonight if you'd like to get a glimpse of some of the things I've been writing about. Tomorrow we head to Yellowstone with the Judbergers and then on Wednesday we strike out on our own again for Glacier National Park, then on from there to Spokane - to visit with all of the Erbs and to pick up Olga at the airport ZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz...................

Day Eleven: Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming

My heart is very full tonight as I do a quick entry...It is after midnight and I have to get to sleep soon as we are having an early morning blast-off for Glacier. We only have one over night planned there so we realized tonight that logistically we have to arrive in time tomorrow to try to do all our touring tomorrow and not Thursday. Sadly, we are only able to tap the surface of all of the incredible places we are visiting. Even more sadly, we have to bid adieu to the Judbergers and "Uncle Ray" tomorrow. We have had the greatest time with them and it doesn't seem fair that Uncle Ray is staying two more weeks and we have to leave! Ann tried to talk me into staying one more day but we 1) already have a pre-paid motel reservation up at Glacier tomorrow and 2) want to have enough time to visit with all of the Erbs in Spokane. (Plus I told Ann that one more day isn't really what I want; what I really want is to buy land adjacent to their's and build a log cabin and be like the Ricardos and the Mertzes. Ann immediately launched into her best Lucy impersonation, implying that Olga and I have to be the older, fatter, dumpier Ethel and Fred!! The nerve!) We have just had so much fun together and I am so thankful that we were able to reconnect like this. Ann warned me as we were saying goodnight tonight that we can't wait another thirty years to see each other again or we'll be in our eighties! Ugh!

So anyway, today: We got up on the early end for Ann and Ivan's amazing Apple Crumble French Toast, which by far was the best French toast ever. (Oh wait, are we supposed to still be calling it Freedom toast?!) Then we blasted off for Yellowstone. We caravaned down in their two vehicles--it was so sweet of them to do all the driving so I have had a glorious respite from driving the past two days so I feel rested and ready for tomorrow. We stopped for lunch in West Yellowstone - a quaint little gateway village to the park. The drive up showed even more spectacular Montana scenery than I have seen yet. If I had made us stop every time I wanted to take a picture, we still wouldn't have gotten there! While we were in West Yellowstone we found two more state license plates (Alaska and Mississippi) plus two more province license plates (Saskatchewan and British Columbia) I know, I know: I am developing an obsessive compulsive disorder over license plates! Thanks Mom!

We pulled into the park and within the first half hour we were treated to an amazing view of two bald eagles in their ginormous nest right by the road - one of them buzzed right over our heads! Next we encountered several young elks napping near the road, and then two sets of mother buffalo and their babies. The kids (and grown-ups) were mesmerized. Then we toured the smouldering, gurgling and steaming mudpots, places where the underground volcano is heating and boiling mud and water - there is a wooden walkway around the whole area and it was fascinating. Then we drove on over and got good seats for Old Faithful and ice cream to eat while we waited for the eruption. As it was spraying, I ran around the circle to get a better angle for a picture and I heard someone saying "Dr. Nichols?!"... I turned around and there were two Houghton students: Dan Brubaker and Jon (maybe Brooks? I'm not positive about his last name) They are both soccer players and they are driving across country back to Houghton. We were flabbergasted that we would end up at Old Faithful at the same day and the same time! AND that we found each other among the hundreds of people there. You truly seem to be able to find a Houghton person no matter where you go!

After Old Faithful we went to poke around the beautiful lodge and gift shop nearby and then headed out. There was a giant traffic jam on the way out of Yellowstone which turned out to be buffalo-related. There was a small herd ambling along the road snarling traffic in both directions! But we got some really cool pictures as we passed them! They were so close we could have reached out the car windows and touched them. We got back to West Yellowstone and stopped for dinner at a GREAT restaurant where I had the best veggie burger ever! It was done up as a reuben with swiss cheese, sauerkraut, thousand island, and grilled onions on marbled pumpernickel bread. It was delicious. I road home with Ivan and really enjoyed getting to know him better - what a great guy and we discovered that we are quite similiar ideologically. And now WAY before I am ready, Ann and I had to sit down and look at the atlas tonight to plan our next leg of the trip tomorrow. I can hardly stand to leave already. We've decided that we have to come back sometime and bring Olga.

Tomorrow we drive on up to Glacier National Park just for one night and then on over for our Erbfest - visiting my cousins and uncle and aunt in Spokane, I leave with a richly renewed friendship with Ann, two new friendships with Ivan and Ray (an old family friend of theirs who made this visit even more fun!) and with a new love affair with state of Montana - who knew this much grandeur could be packed into one state?

OK, now I really have to get to sleep....Thanks again for your continued interest...

Day Twelve: Three Forks, Montana -- Glacier National Park

Wow, I truly hated to leave Ann's place...something about Montana has started to get under my skin, which is even more surprising since most of you know that I am NOT an outdoorsman! My Dad used to say that his idea of "roughing it" was when room service was late, and I come from the same stock! But for some reason I have felt so drawn to the wild western ranching life that Ann and Ivan have chosen. They need to stop being so hospitable for fear I will be back with my moving van! So anyway, it was hard to go, but the road continues to beckon. Today's mission was Glacier National Park. (We tried to talk the Judbergers into coming to Glacier with us, but they had to get back to work today.) I had no earthly idea what I was doing or where I was going, nor for that matter if our good old van would make it over the Rocky Mountains. Thank the Lord it did, and also thank Martha Manikas Foster! Seconds before I was leaving the house 12 days ago I remembered that I wanted to print out an email she had sent me with National Park advice, so I did and put it on my clipboard--still not getting it read. So finally today, stopped in some road construction, I pulled it out and read it. If not for her advice I'm sure I would have missed one of the most amazing experiences of my life. The whole drive up was beautiful but it kept becoming more intensely so as we neared Glacier. The only thing I knew about this park is that whenever you ask people--who know what they are doing with the National Parks--where you should go, they all say the same thing: Glacier. So I added it to the agenda and thanks to Martha's advice, we headed up to Logan's Pass which follows along this unbelievably steep mountainous, treacherous, winding road which led my fear of heights to kick into overdrive. But at the same time it was so exhilaratingly beautiful. I just don't know how to describe it. Mindy googled some pictures of Glacier today, if you haven't seen it, you should try that too. Along the way we saw glaciers and mountain goats and snow tunnels and breathtaking views. Interestingly as the scenery became more and more spectacular, the kids, on their own, stopped watching movies and checking their cell phones for service. They got into it as much as I did, which was even more amazing because somehow we never got around to eating and when we finally reached the Visitor's Center at Logan's Peak and there was NO FOOD for sale, they didn't even complain! For one thing you literally feel as though you are sitting on the top of the world there. This architectural wonder straddles the continental divide and has a view which I believe must be unparalleled anywhere. If you EVER have the chance to visit Glacier - TAKE IT! Admittedly, it is incredibly far from everywhere, but it is well worth the drive. We've already determined that somehow someday we are going to come back and spend a whole week here: exploring, camping, rafting, biking, swimming, climbing etc. Even after a long, long day of driving and sightseeing, we stopped back the little beach where we had first stopped on the way in. It has crystal clear water like nothing we'd ever seen before and we even tasted it and it is clear and cold, way better than tap water. This time the kids put on their swimming suits and played in the water - by this time it is 8:00 and we had never really had lunch OR dinner, so you can see how much they were enjoying themselves! We dubbed it Nichols Beach since we'd had it all to ourselves both on our first and second visits. If you check facebook I have added a few more pictures from Montana. What a place! Finally about 9:00 we drove back to Whitefish which is a charming little tourist area and checked into our motel and the kids swam while I went right next door and got Chinese take-out. It has been a grand day. Tomorrow we are going to sleep in and head over to Erbville! (My uncle, aunt, and cousins in Spokane.) Tomorrow is also the half-way point on the trip (days-wise, not miles!) Good night sweet friends...

Day 13: Whitefish, MT--Spokane, WA

Today at noon the trip was half over...which makes me feel a little melancholy to be coming down the other side of the hill. On the other hand, we aren't up to half way on mileage yet! We had the luxury of a slower start this morning: sleeping in and then playing on the very cool water slide at the hotel (and we had the pool and jacuzzis all to ourselves) We finally got under way at about 11:30 and headed back down to Rte. 90 to drive to Spokane. We stopped near Polson, MT at a cherry stand (according to Ann this is Hutterite territory and they are famous for their cherry orchards - the cherries were delicious!) And then we continued to the Idaho border. Even though Idaho is a new state for me (#47) I felt sad to be leaving Montana which I have come to love over the past four days. However, the spectacular drive from Outlook Pass, MT to Fourth of July Pass, Idaho took my mind off of it...still more unbelievable vistas and beauty. We stopped to eat in Couer d'Alene Idaho--another very scenic area--and drove down by the Lake to have lunch. We found a lovely little cafe and the owner is a vegetarian! So we had a great lunch there - but the true highlight came in leaving Couer d'Alene and driving back to Rte. 90 when I, at long last...SAW A CAR WITH A HAWAII LICENSE PLATE! Wheee!! The kids thought I was going to crash because I yelled so loudly when I saw it! (I know, I know, I'm a license plate nerd: but at least I'm a self-actualized one.) So now we've seen all the states except for pesky little Rhode Island and Delaware, which I think we will still see when we get back East. (We've also spotted license plates from seven of the Canadian provinces.) After that we were very shortly arriving at my Uncle and Aunt's home in Spokane, where we were treated to another unexpected event - My mom had flown out here and surprised us! So it was really nice to be able to fill her in on our travel adventures. My cousins Dan and Steve also live in Spokane and I've already seen them tonight. We are going to see the sights of Spokane tomorrow with Dan's family and then see Steve's family on Saturday. Uncle Dick and Aunt Kay are gracious hosts and have a nice big home for all of us to stay. Olga flies here on Saturday night and then we will leave for Oregon on Sunday morning.

I had an interesting experience tonight in the driveway. I decided that since we are going to see Olga soon that I should do something about the van which had become piled high with the detritus of the trip, or to be more descriptive: it looks like someone tossed a hand grenade into it. So I started trying to clean up and throw out and even though it was a giant quagmire, it provided a happy reminder of what a great two weeks it has been! Amongst all of the dirty clothes, big gulp cups, smashed cookies and wet swimming suits I found a treasure trail of a lot of happy memories: maps and guides to the various states and parks, rocks JD and I collected at Ann's ranch, Advantax tchotckes and propoganda, (Dave LeVan's company), the last chocolate chip cookie that Denise Foley packed for us (rats! I can't believe there had been one more buried all this time!), "Surviving a bear attack" brochure from the National Parks, Mall of America postcards we meant to send to Sabrina, and squashed cherries from this morning. Some people (like Olga!) would just think it was a disgusting disaster...but to me it was like the happy clutter on Christmas morning after the packages are opened - one of life's glorious messes! (I was however happy to be sure that we hadn't brought any rattlesnakes or other varmints with us from Ann's ranch...)

Day 14: Spokane, Washington

After two weeks on the road, I have a new appreciation for simple pleasures such as a day without driving! Not that the driving has been bad, to the contrary I've enjoyed it, and yet it was very relaxing to just hang around Spokane today and to be squired around by my cousin Dan. When we were growing up the Erbs were our closest cousins in age, geographically, and relationally. We remember always getting to be so completely rambunctious and silly when visiting each other that we would occasionally be "punished" by having to sit down on opposite sides of the room separating Erbs from Nichols, I suppose to give the adult's ears and nerves a rest. And even 40 years later, we still have an awful lot of fun together. In 1978 the Erbs moved from Michigan out to Spokane, so our times together have been fewer and more precious since then. I visited them once here in 1987 when my cousins Dan and Steve got married six days apart, but this has been my only other visit out here. So today Dan gave the kids, Mom, and me a blue ribbon tour of Spokane which is just a great American city. We went downtown today and rode the historic merry-go-round, rode gondola cars over the waterfall, toured the spectacular Davenport Hotel, had lunch at the Pita Pit (which is a GREAT place to eat!) and then saw the incredible city parks of Spokane--a whole series of ornate flower gardens: conservatory, rose garden, Japanese garden, fountains, perennials,wild flowers, etc. It was a gorgeous day and Spokane's park system look like the Garden of Eden! (Just a side note: we haven't seen a rain drop since we left New York, which leads me to ponder: "Why the heck do I live in NY again?!") We stopped for ice cream on the way home, the kids have had a lot of fun with Dan and Kathy's SIX kids. We came back to Uncle Dick and Aunt Kay's for enchiladas for dinner. Uncle Dick raises raspberries and picks 3-5 pounds of them per day! So we've been eating them by the handful, they are wonderful. It was a great day, and best of all, Dan and I never had to separated even once today! We've gotten to be so mature! Tomorrow we are going to see my other cousin, Steve and his four kids and the rumor is that he is grilling salmon for dinner at his place and that Aunt Kay is making pies - yum to both! Olga arrives at the Spokane airport late tomorrow night and then we depart for Oregon on Sunday morning.

Days 15, 16, 17: Spokane, WA--Pacific City, OR--Eureka, CA

Well, for anyone who is following my blog closely (all three of you!) Don't worry, I didn't drive off the end of the earth, join a weird Pacific Northwest New Age Cult, or land in the hospital from over-eating. (Although I think I came close on a couple of those) The trip has continued to chug along wonderfully, praise the Lord, knock on wood, etc.! I didn't write on Saturday as we stayed at my cousin Steve's house until late that night, then had to quickly deposit the kids back at Aunt Kay's house and she and I left for the airport to get Olga. We got home LATE and had to leave EARLY, so I didn't blog that night. Then last night we stayed at a beach cabin with no internet. So even though it is late tonight too, I'm going to try to give a quick summary of the past three days to get caught up.

Saturday: was a nice relaxing day to hang around Uncle Dick and Aunt Kay's house and rest up for the next leg of the trip. I took the Urban Assault Minivan to Wal-Mart for fresh oil for the second half of the trip and stopped for an unhelpful visit to Verizon (Thanks for nothing!) because Anthony's phone fell in one of Spokane's most beautiful fountains. Aunt Kay fixed veggies burgers for lunch and then in the afternoon we worked on laundry, packing, postcard writing and the kids helped Uncle Dick pick berries and played "Go to the head of the class" with Grandma. (Anthony won, even defeating Grandma in her favorite game which she has been playing for 70 years!) Then we got ready and headed over to Steve and Ruth's house. What a GREAT place they have. A 100+ year old farmhouse which they are gradually restoring and which sits up in the hills overlooking Spokane. Even nicer than Steve's house are his wife and kids. We had so much fun with them. We enjoyed both Steve and Dan's families so much, it sure makes us wish we lived closer. Steve grilled wild salmon that he'd caught and we ate outside. It was a wonderful meal! (baked potatoes and sour cream, Grandma B. salad, rolls, jello salad, green beans, and chocolate and coconut creme pies from Aunt Kay) And also some incredible tartar sauce which is a delicacy from some Spokane restaurant. We sat around talking and visiting and touring Steve's place until late. His wife Ruth is so funny and we had a great time together. Steve has a trampoline buried in his yard so that it is flush with ground level. Isn't that clever?! No risk of falling off! So the kids played on that with their second cousins. All this time Olga was making her way from Buffalo to Washington DC to Denver to Washington State. She got in about 11pm safe and sound.

Sunday: We got up EARLY yesterday morning and Uncle Dick and Aunt Kay and Mom got up and fixed us breakfast and got us on our way. We were attempting to drive from Spokane to the Oregon coast with stops to visit two friends along the way. Along the way (at the Erbs suggestion) we stopped at the incredible Multnomah Falls - unbelievable and beautiful! While there JD found us a SECOND Hawaii license plate! Another interesting experience on the way there was a gas station stop which felt like a step back in time - first of all had a display of CASSETTES for sale! Has anyone bought a recorded cassette in the past twenty years?!) and then in the cooler they had ice cold Coca-Cola in BOTTLES! And also made with actual sugar, not high fructose corn syrup! What a treat. Our first visit was with Lee and Sara Hall near Portland. With no offense intended to any of my other RDs who might see this...Sara was one of my all-time favorite RDs during all of my residence life years and it was so wonderful to see where she and Lee have made their new home. They visited us in New York last fall and their beautiful little Elaina has grown up so much and charmed us all with her smiles and she also let me hold her for a long time! Sara and I used to have our weekly meetings over ice cream when she was at Houghton, and so she thoughtfully had the fixings for blizzards! The kids (and I!) were thrilled. Also, Sara didn't even know this, but the kids had proposed that everytime the car rolled over another 1000 mile mark that I owed them ice cream, so don't you know that it rolled over 4000 almost exactly at Sara's house. We had an all-too brief visit with them and then headed on over to Newberg to see another of my favorite RDs - Laura Goodfellow and her Goodhusband, Scotty. I've always enjoyed the two of them so much (Scotty interned with me in Career Services) This time we also got to spend time with the Rathkeys, Laura's parents, in their beautiful home. They had vegetarian pizza for us and four kinds of local Tillamook ice cream -- of which I tried three of them! As if dinner wasn't enough, they also loaned us their charming beach cabin over on the Oregon coast, so after dinner, we said good bye and headed into the setting sun. We got over to "Pacific City" and by the time we found the cabin and got settled in, it was already dark. But the kids and I were so excited to have finally made it the WHOLE way west, that they couldn't wait till morning to go stick their feet into the ocean. So they talked me into a late night beach romp! It was DARK and freezing COLD so Olga stayed home, but even though I felt like I was walking barefoot through the snow, I enjoyed watching the kids romp and play so much that it was worth a late July case of frostbite!

Today (Monday) This morning Anthony slept in and Olga and I took the younger two over to the beach. Olga is engrossed in Harry Potter so she sat on a piece of drift log and read and I walked up the beach with JD and Samantha. It was BEAUTIFUL and we practically had the whole place to ourselves. A WIDE white beach and so pristine and quiet. Each of them found an intact sand dollar! After they got soaked and sandy again, we headed home to pack up and get on the road. We took the slow, scenic route right down the Oregon coast highway - I don't even know how to begin to describe how beautiful it was. I hope I don't embarrass any of my conservative readers, but my friend Juan, the writing professor who moved to Oregon back in the 80s wrote to me in Arkansas that Oregon was so beautiful that it gave her "visual orgasms." Perhaps that says it best! I'd been feeling bad that Olga had missed out on so much great scenery, but today sure helped to make up for it. We made painfully slow progress because we kept talking to jump out, take pictures, exclaim, and ooh and ahh! The kids wanted to go down to the beach so we made a mid morning stop at what I thought was an access road to the beach but turned out to be a collapse in the highway and so we practically had to jump off a cliff to get down there! But it was worth the treacherous descent because once again we had it entirely to ourselves AND the kids each found a starfish.

We finally had to FORCE ourselves to quit stopping so that we could get to California in time to see the giant redwoods before it got too late. Rte. 101 which we had been following ever since Pacific City took us right through the Redwood National Forest and what an awesome experience! I don't think I have it in me to upload pictures tonight as we have an early morning LONG drive tomorrow (we need to get clear to southern California to our next reservation and for Samantha to visit her friend Katie. But maybe tomorrow night I'll be able to. Both tonight and tomorrow night we are staying at Red Lion Inns where my cousin Dan works. He looked at my itinerary and recognized that his chain has inns at two of our stops and so he got us a great rate to stay at a hotel which on a scale of four stars has four more stars than the Sleep Cheap reservations I had made. Thanks Danny!!! We never got around to stopping for a meal today so tonight when we got into Eureka we went over and plowed through a Sizzler like a herd of locusts! The Azzaritos introduced me to Sizzler many years ago and then I often went to one with Dan and Sally when we lived in Nyack. Then we came back to this beautiful hotel and the boys and I sat in the outdoor jacuzzi for awhile. Very nice end to long day of sightseeing.

Well, I am probably leaving some things out, if I think of more I will add them tomorrow. It is a weird feeling because for first two weeks of this trip the electronic compass on our car only said WEST. Now we have finally started SOUTH. Tomorrow night we will be at the furthest point away from Fillmore and we will then begin our return East, which once again gives me mixed feelings. I hate to think of the trip being over - I have enjoyed it all so much.

Yikes, I did all the driving again today and I am exhausted. I think I will close for tonight before I drop into a coma! I'm not even going to proofread this, so sorry for any errors!

Day 18: Eureka, CA--Bakersfield, CA

Today was all about blazing a trail across California as quickly as possible. As much as we would have loved to have stopped and seen lots of sights and friends along the way (Allen, Dorie, Shelley, Lois, Marylynn...) the demands of our trip schedule, hotel reservations, and getting Olga back to work kept us on track. We need to make it to Arkansas by this weekend! And today was about getting Samantha down to Bakersfield to see her best friend Katie who moved from Fillmore to California this year. So even though we would have loved to have stopped to drive the van through a Giant Redwood, cross the Golden Gate Bridge, see Yosemite, and forge onto Los Angeles...sigh...next time I guess...we had to put on the blinders and drive hard today. There were several consolations to the process though! 1) Right after leaving this morning we ran into road construction and had to get off the main highway and drive along the "Avenue of the Giants" and drive through another amazing forest of the majestic redwoods. Olga and I are mesmerized by them! 2) As I mentioned yesterday, my cousin lined up two GREAT hotels for us last night and tonight and by driving intensely today to give Samantha maximum time with Katie, we got into this beautiful hotel early enough to enjoy the wonderful pool and to eat dinner at the California Pizza Kitchen (Tostada Pizza and Greek Pizza - both great!) And lastly 3) When we got into the hotel at about 6pm it was 110 degrees! By the time we went out to dinner it had cooled off to a balmy 101! So it was a great day to be by the pool and to let the hotel pay the a/c bill!

Today after 650 spectacular miles we bid goodbye to scenic Rte. 101 but not before enjoying the incredible sites of the Redwood Coast. What a drive! It was a little dull to be back on freeway driving after hugging the cliffs the past two days. Olga and I LOVED today's scenery, but Anthony announces "Today was kind of boring." That is teenager-ese for "I didn't see Molly all day." To the contrary, I thought today was grand; it concluded with one of my sweetest pleasures in life - when we got back to the hotel late after dinner, the boys and I went out and sat in the jacuzzi. The breeze had finally turned cool. There's hardly anything I enjoy more than that.

Tomorrow we will hang around and enjoy this beautiful hotel again until Samantha gets back around noon, and then we are going to start driving East to Las Vegas. I figured up today that right now we are the furthest from Fillmore that we will be, according to Google we are 2550 miles from home. Tomorrow we head East and begin to get closer to New York again. We will stop by Las Vegas tomorrow evening, just to say we've been there and then drive on down to Grand Canyon where we will spend the day on Thursday. I've uploaded some more pictures onto facebook if you'd like to check them out.

Day 19: Bakersfield, CA--Williams, AZ

Naughty, bawdy, gaudy Las Vegas was on the docket for today, but not until after a relaxing morning of sleeping in for once! While we waited for Samantha to get back we had breakfast at the hotel and then I went swimming with the boys. (Anthony and I perfected our version of the--politically incorrect and banned in Ontario--sport of dwarf-tossing, by seeing how far we could chuck JonDavid into the air in the pool. Gimli: "No one tosses a dwarf!") After we checked out, Olga decided we had to do laundry, so we found a handy laundromat and she worked on clean clothes while JD and I went to a grocery store to replenish the depleted snack bin. We got some good snackage! So, ugh, it took forever to get started from California, and when we finally did, I realized that the clerk back at the grocery who had been so kind and helpful and signed me up for a shoppers club card which saved me $15 on my bill, had been so interested in hearing about our trip, that she forgot to give me the $40 cash back I had put on my debit card. We were an hour on our way by then and it was too late to turn back, so I gave Olga the receipt and she called the store. Well, the clerk remembered 1) our conversation and 2) that she had indeed forgotten to give me my cash back and so they credited back to my debit card! We thought that was remarkable, and such a relief!

Before we leave California I have to mention one other favorite memory of our long drive across that great expanse of state: the sound of JD in the back seat doing his Arnold Schwarzenegger impression! I had no idea that he even knew who the famed governor is, let alone knew how to mimic his Austrian accent!

It was another blistering hot day although happily we have been shielded from it by hotel and car air-conditioning. I glanced up at the thermometer this evening in the high desert in California before we crossed into Nevada and it was 115 degrees! By the time we got into the hotel in Arizona tonight it had cooled off to 80! Can you even believe the temperature dropping by 35 degrees and still being almost the hottest day of the summer back in New York?! (On the topic of weather - and I am probably jinxing myself by mentioning it, we have had rain ONCE since leaving New York three weeks ago...and we didn't even see that, it happened overnight in Chicago and we slept through it, and that storm was only because God was punishing Dave LeVan whose heart is black and full of sin. Just kidding--an old joke of Leslie's and mine from JBU)

So anyway, we crossed into Nevada, which is my 48th state--leaving only the two that are impossibly expensive to get to--and made our way to Las Vegas. It is basically on the way to the Grand Canyon anyway, so we had decided it would be interesting to see, and indeed it was. We found ourselves driving right down the strip. We parked and walked down to see the sights (quite a few of which are better left unseen!) But we got to see the amazing water fountain show at the Bellagio Hotel (where Oceans 11 was filmed) and walked through the lobby, then we went to a Chinese buffet for dinner and then headed out of town, stopping briefly at the Hoover Dam as we headed south to our hotel near the Grand Canyon. I probably wouldn't have made a special trip just to see Vegas, but since we were in the neighborhood anyway, it was definitely worth the detour. We will stay here in Williams both tonight and tomorrow night so that we can spend the full day tomorrow seeing the sights. If you didn't see them yet, I posted a few more pictures, mostly of Oregon, on facebook.

Day 20 -- The Grand Canyon!

Get your kicks on Rte. 66! I’ll talk about the Grand Canyon in a minute, but first of all let me mention a great serendipitous event about our stay here. We ended up in Williams, AZ because I found a cheap motel here, and at the time I made a mental note that I liked the fact that it was on Rte. 66. We got in SO LATE from Las Vegas last night--Shut up Darren, I wasn’t gambling!...and I did not come home with a Vegas wife!--that we didn’t see the little town. But today we discovered this great little old fashioned Rte. 66 town with diners and souvenir shops and quaint motels – it really looks straight out of the 1950s, even with some classic cars and pick up trucks downtown. I love it!

So anyway, meanwhile, back at the Grand Canyon. After sleeping in a bit and having breakfast at the hotel, we made the drive up to the Grand Canyon. Some things like this that you’ve heard so much about—and actually we thought that Old Faithful somewhat fell into this category—end up seeming a little anti-climactic in real life; The Grand Canyon is quite the opposite: even bigger and better than you could have pictured. Even with all the pictures and movies I’ve seen which depict it, nothing really prepares you for its magnitude and grandeur. Once again words fail me to describe it. I realize of course that most people except me have already seen it, so maybe I don’t have to. Even though we scheduled a whole day here, we still didn’t end up with enough time to hike down to the canyon floor. Apparently you really need two days and reservations made a year in advance to get a cabin down below. (Oh sure, like I could really be that organized!) But really just walking all along the south rim was immensely satisfying for us. I think my camera would have exploded if I’d gone further! And by the time we got up to the Grand View Village for ice cream and watched the condors soaring overhead we all felt 1) sufficiently grand-canyoned for one day and 2) like we want to come back and stay longer, which is only about the 900th time we’ve said that on this trip!

So we rode the free air-conditioned shuttle (is this a great country or what?) back to our car and then drove back into Williams. We went downtown and had a great dinner at a restaurant down there. They had wonderful vegetarian sandwiches, homemade potato salad and 46 kinds of pie! (After an anguished decision making process I picked coconut crème – wish you had been there Min! It was big enough for both of us; not that that stopped me.) I thought I had died and gone to heaven. After dinner JD and I walked all over the quaint little town and enjoyed ourselves so much! And tonight Anthony’s cellphone even had a miraculous healing – so all in all it has been a great day. Tomorrow: On to the Four Corners which will be states 20, 21, and 22 on this trip. We’ll stay the night in Albuquerque and then on to Arkansas!! (By the way: Still no one from Delaware or Rhode Island here – do people from those states never travel anywhere?!)

Day 21: Williams, AZ--The Four Corners--Albuquerque, NM

Presumably this won't be too long tonight as 1) it was mostly a driving day and 2) JD is waiting for me to join him in the Ramada pool since no one else is up for a swim tonight! I'm sweating poolside because of my facebook addiction and working on my "blob" as my mother calls it. Charming! Two other quick comments on our Rte. 66 stayover. I forgot to mention to charming aspects. One is that the old Grand Canyon RR stops there and it really made me want to go for a train trip. The other is that while JD and I were doing the town there was a "Ghost Tour" showcasing all of the places in town that are rumored to be haunted! Today at the Four Corners we saw a spectacularly restored Corvette, I think it was an original '53 and it made me wish I could steal it and up Rte. 66!

So anyway, today....I got up before everyone else and went down and enjoyed the hot tub all to myself. After breakfast we hit the road for the Four Corners. The drive up there was surprisingly beautiful and remote! We saw Monument Valley and lots of interesting sights. It is the sort of road that you want to have a full tank of gas for as when you ask the GPS for fuel it says things like "69.8 miles BACK." But happily we made it there and then back to Shiprock, NM to gas up. Shiprock is named for this mysterious looking rock that looks like something out of movie set, a cross between a ship and a castle, that juts up all by itself on the New Mexico landscape. The whole drive today was another stunning example of the natural beauty of this country. Wow.... Oh, and by the way, the Four Corners was fun - Jan will be happy to know that as she has always suspected, my butt can be in four states at once (only today I had a good excuse) The Four Corners is actually in Navajo territory, and you have to pay $3 each to get in. It must be time to go home because we had to raid all of the compartments in the van and the kids suitcases to come up with $15 in cash! But we felt it was the least we could do to help the Navajo Nation!

We stopped at subway for dinner--very unimaginative, I know!--and then got into Albuquerque at about 9:00. This always makes me think of two things 1) I never know for sure how to spell it and 2) the home of Ethel Mae Potter (An I Love Lucy reference that my sister will get!) For JonDavid it has more modern connotations, he was watching eagerly out the windows for glimpses of the cast of High School Musical!

Oh wow, I just took a break to play in the pool with the boys and then got in the jacuzzi and this hotel wins the best jacuzzi on the trip award. It has really strong jets! So I think I will log off and go over and pickle myself in it until closing time. Tomorrow - on to that little piece of heaven on earth: Arkansas!

Days 22, 23, and 24: Albuquerque, NM--Siloam Springs, AR--Indianapolis, IN

We had so much fun and so many friends to squeeze into a TOO SHORT visit to Arkansas that I didn’t even have time to update my blog, so I’ll try to summarize the past three days. 750 miles was how far we drove on Saturday – our longest travel day of the entire trip. We got up and packed, had breakfast, and were on the road by 6:30 that morning. The only reason Anthony didn’t kill us is because he was in a comatose state until about 11:30. But Olga and I were both very anxious to get to Elaine’s as soon as possible, so we drove long and hard all day with Chinese Fire Drill like stops for gas, snacks, meals, and restroom. (Is it politically incorrect to still talk about Chinese Fire Drills? If anyone is reading my blog in China please let me know) Once we left New Mexico the trip got to be considerably less scenic. Let’s just say that the constant picture-taking urge I’ve been experiencing for the past two weeks mysteriously subsided in the Texas panhandle. That makes me think of how patient dear Ann was with my Montana fixation! Once when we were caravanning somewhere she pulled over without my even asking and said “I knew you’d want a picture here!” (Ann, that’s what you get for living in Montana instead of Texas.) But speaking of favorite scenery, it is hard to beat the beautiful sight of driving across the Oklahoma border into Siloam Springs. Not because it is particularly breathtaking, but because both Olga and I have such a strong attachment to the place, even 20 years hence. Oh, and here is an amazing coincidence: We arrived there on Day 22 of the trip which was August 1, 2009. If I am remembering correctly, I believe I moved to JBU on August 1, 1984 – so Elaine and I were celebrating our 25th anniversary and didn’t even realize it until that night.

We started off with a quick drive through the JBU campus; Olga has not been back to Arkansas since 1997 and so many things have changed since then, we took a quick peek as we headed out to Sbanottos and then the next day Elaine and Stephen took us for a more deluxe campus tour. We were so happy to get to Pete and Elaine’s both because we miss them so much and because we’d been on the road so long! Her mom, who lives next door, was out of town and offered her beautiful house for us to use and that was so nice. Pete fixed us the most delicious dinner that night: Eggplant parmesan over pasta. Wow, all five of us ate like a tribe of starving banshees! Then after dinner we went out and sat on their porch and talked and laughed reminisced over sweet iced tea until late that night. Oh the sweet treasure of old friends – this whole trip has been such a precious reminder of that.

On Saturday Pete made pancakes for breakfast and I had told Anthony and Samantha that for once, they could sleep as long as they wanted that morning! So they took full advantage of it and got up about five minutes before noon! So Elaine and Stephen (her son who was two when I met her and is now 27!) took us on a town and campus tour. Siloam Springs has doubled in population since I left and there are so many nice changes. The whole area is really booming, largely because of Wal-Mart. JBU has put up so many nice new buildings and renovated old ones. (And torn down my beloved California Dorm, Grrrrrr!) We can hardly recognize the place! We drove by the Azzarito's old house which made me sad and I sure wished they could have been there too. We also stopped by to visit briefly with one of Olga’s favorite professors. Then we headed home because, true to form, Elaine had invited over everyone she could think of from Siloam Springs who still remembers us! She and Pete put on a big spread and a mob of people showed up! It was so much fun! It felt like we’d never been away. Even Lynette Harper, a good friend of both of ours drove over from Tulsa with her new husband and baby )and some heavenly chocolate chip cookies!) Amy and Steve Onnen, Amy’s parents: Wil and Donna Gardner, Ruth Abbey, Molly Orcutt Torres and her family, Pete and Laurie Eldridge and family, Jeff and Lorena Anglin and family, the Sbanotto boys: Michael and Stephen who are both all grown up now. It was like a Gaither Homecoming Video without the singing! (and with fewer beehive hairdos) Oh, we all enjoyed ourselves so much! And it sure made Olga and me miss Arkansas more than ever. And wow, you should have seen all the food!

When the party finally wound down about 9pm we sat down once again with Pete and Elaine--fat and happy, but sad that our brief visit was already over. We got up this morning and got ourselves pulled together and Elaine buzzed home from work about 9am to say goodbye to us. Now we are driving across Missouri en route to Indianapolis where we will stop for the night with Jim White’s Mother’s Apple Pie. (And yes, I just talked to Jim and he DID make an apple pie! If you’ve ever had my apple pie that I’ve made over the past 26 years, I got the recipe from Jim’s mom) Once again it will be a too brief visit with Jim and sadly no time to see the rest of our Indiana friends as we have to make it all the way home tomorrow for Olga to work on Wednesday and for Anthony to go to basketball practice. (Although I think that his undying commitment to Fillmore athletics centers much more on one of the cheerleaders than to summer BB workouts.)

I think I’ll write one last chapter for this on Tuesday night once we are all the way home.

The Final Day: Indianapolis, IN -- Fillmore, NY

We spent last night in Indianapolis with my old LeTourneau/Western PA buddy Jim White (of Apple Pie fame) Jim is such a great guy and went out of his way to accommodate us - he had Apple Pie and Chocolate chip cookies ready when we got there (I was in hog heaven obviously!) Sadly we got in too late to visit as much as we'd have liked to, but still we had a really nice time. Then this morning Jim left for work, early and we left for New York, late...just in time to drive into another huge thunderstorm! We left in a thunderstorm 25 days ago, and then never saw another drop of rain until today! Sigh....back to the rainy Great Lakes region. So we drove hard to try to 1) get ahead of the storm and 2) get Anthony home in time to go to Molly's soccer game. The trip back was uneventful other than some impressive lightning and hail. We finally pulled into our driveway a little before 9pm, tired, satisfied, glad to get out of the van, and happy to see the pets. Even as happy as I am to be back, I'd gladly climb back into the van if it meant that we could have more time with every friend along the trip.

Tonight I uploaded some more trip pictures onto facebook and the kids, who until about four days ago were on Pacific time are having trouble winding down and getting to sleep, so they are still upstairs talking and planning a slumber party! Perhaps the sweetest part of the day was Anthony thanking me tonight for the trip and saying "It did turn out to be a good idea after all Dad." That really meant a lot as I know he was missing Molly a lot on the whole trip but he still enjoyed the experience, which was what I was hoping for. I was asking them tonight about their favorite aspects of the trip and while they all had particular favorites a few themes emerged: they all mentioned Glacier National Park as being the best sight, playing with their Spokane cousins, the Mall of America, deep-dish pizza & Tyler LeVan, Pete Sbanotto's eggplant parmesan, and they all loved Oregon. But the longer we talked, the more apparent it became that they'd really enjoyed all the different segments of the trip, if not the long car rides in between! I'm so, so grateful for this experience of a lifetime and thought I would conclude with a few last thank yous and reflections: Think of it as my Oscar acceptance speech!

Thanks to GOD - we prayed for safety and we had it in abundance!
Thanks to our old van - Eight years old, 145,000 miles, and not a speck of trouble on the whole trip, even driving over the Rocky Mountains and through the 115 degree desert!
Accomodations courtesy: The Ninakapolis, The Trudeau Hacienda, the White Trash of Charles IL: the LeVans, the Fabulous Foley Farm, the Judberger Ranch, the ERBoretum of Spokane, the Goodfellow-Goodcabin, the Sbanotto -Mussino Casino, and the White Inn of Indianapolis.
Trip made possible in part by grant from the Gail-Nichols-Peoples Foundation

Trip by the Numbers:
Miles on the van: 8191
States visited: 27
Number of new states for me: 5 bringing my total to 48!
Number of new states for the kids: 16 for Anthony - bringing his total to 43! 17 for Samantha and JonDavid
License Plates spotted: 48 - We still have not found Delaware or Rhode Island - TWO cars from Hawaii made it, but no one from Delaware or Rhode Island can even make it to Ohio?! Obviously I'm still bitter! I'm extending the deadline until the end of August!)
Calories Consumed/"Hey guys! Look at that!"/Vacation-Griswold Family References: Too Many to Count!

Even though I goaded the kids into picking favorites, I really loved every moment of the trip so much, that I don't know that I can narrow it down to any specific favorite. I did have these thoughts:

Things I’ll miss most about the trip:
Renewing old friendships
The Open Road
Having the kids always within five feet
Hotel Jacuzzis
Stopping for 64 oz. Diet Cokes

Things I won’t miss about the trip:
Stopping at every rest stop in America because of my addiction to 64 oz diet cokes
The smell from the back of the van (“Anthony?! Was that you?! No! It was JonDavid! No! I wasn’t me…”)
Goodbyes

Things I want to be sure and include on our next Western Trip: (I'm going to open this up for suggestions on facebook)
1) Bring Sabrina along!
2) Stay LONGER everywhere we went this time: Especially MN, Chicago, MT, OR, and AR!)
3) Add Yosemite and Sedona
4) Spend a full week in Glacier!
5) Always stay at Red Lion Inns!
6) Spend a full week in California visiting friends
7) Get a classic car and cruise Old Rte. 66

But if I did have to pick a broad category for my favorite experiences on the trip it would be this - watching all of these dear friends throughout all the chapters of my life interacting with my kids and being so sweet to them - whether it was watching them so comfortable and at home at the Trudeaus, or listening to Leslie LeVan laughing with them, or Dan Foley treating them to the rides and aquarium at MOA, or Ann Snowberger instructing them on the finer points of marriage, rafting, and rattlesnake hunting, or Sara Hall fixing blizzards for them on a hot afternoon, or perhaps my favorite: Pete Sbanotto hosting a Texas Hold'Em tournament for them while Elaine toured Olga and me around town! It has all been such a great reminder about what wonderful friends I have and how much I love all of them.

Now somehow I have to come back down to earth and resume my regularly scheduled program which this year isn't particularly one of my favorite episodes: "In Which Tim turns 50, loses his job, finds his first issue of the AARP magazine in the mailbox when he gets home from the trip, and has to go on a big fat diet to make up for a month of unbridled eating!"

Years ago Mindy sent me a greeting card that said "I've woven the memories of our times together into a patchwork quilt and when life gets hard or lonely or cold, I wrap up in that quilt to keep warm." That is what this trip has provided for me - a wonderful quilt of new memories with old friends. Thank you all...See you on facebook....

Tim's New Adventure

  1. I have had a number of friends, whose opinions I value (Lynette Cortez, Sue Azzarito, Jud McConnell, Kathie Brenneman, Mindy Wendell, among others) who have been encouraging me (to put it mildly) to start blogging.  And since I have a lot of time on my hands these days (more on that later) I decided to give it a go.  It will come as no surprise to any of us that the particular blogging challenge to me will be brevity.  I never seem to say or write anything briefly.  But heaven knows that none of us have much time for reading anymore.  I believe that is why texting and tweeting have taken hold so firmly and so quickly: they accurately reflect the minimal commitment levels/attention spans of our lives these days. Am I sounding enough like an old fart yet? The other issue that I need to name upfront is that I lack the technical expertise to undertake blogging! I spent all afternoon just trying (unsuccessfully) to get my blog designed the way I want it to.  So tomorrow's to do list includes making Greg Bish help me get it laid out properly.  So with this rather inauspicious beginning, I am going to get started and see where this goes.  Feel free to offer feedback and suggestions.  Until such a time as I become massively rich and famous, I will respond!