Thoughts from the road...

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It's been a busy week as @mrsbozz and I have been on the road making our way across part of the US and back. In fact, when you actually read this post we will probably still be a day or two away from home. It's been an amazing journey and I have learned a couple new things in that time. I wanted to share some of them here with you in this post.

Consider it advice if you want. If not, think of it as the random ramblings of a mad man. I will leave that up to you.

As I get older the less I enjoy driving

This one actually has a variety of reasons. I've covered some of them in the past, but I have some new reasons now too. First of all, people are nuts! They are so distracted and in a hurry to get to their destination (myself included) that safety seems to go out the window. It's just a stressful experience to drive anymore. While I used to enjoy it, often feels like I am seconds or inches away from a major accident and that scares the crap out of me.

Second, I just can't hang like I used to. I often made the ten hour drive down to my sisters on the boarder of Illinois and Missouri with little issue. These days, I max out at about seven or eight hours and then I am spent.

Finally, I just miss to much. As you will see in some of my future posts, @mrsbozz had to take the majority of the photos I share because I had to focus on driving. In fact, all the photos in this post can be attributed to her. This has become more of an issue since I started blogging on HIVE. I look forward to the day we all have self driving cars so I can just sit back and enjoy the view and let the car do all the work.

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Nebraska, Iowa, and Kansas get a bad rap

I've gotta be honest, people often call these states "fly over states" and don't give them the credit they are due. I expected a vast emptiness before I started my drive, the truth is, Nebraska, Iowa, and even Kansas as you get closer to Topeka have rolling hills and large stretches of green space that literally take your breath away.

It totally blew my mind to be honest. I'm not saying I would want to do it all the time, but I have found it a lot more enjoyable than I actually thought I would.

Colorado doesn't get interesting until the middle

Piggybacking off the last point. Colorado was a lot different than I expected as well. I rode on a bus out to Colorado a long time ago, but we had drivers driving through the night and we also had friends to chat and play games with, so I don't remember a ton of the ride.

I was really shocked to find that the first two hours driving in Colorado are downright boring. Even more boring and depressing than I expected Kanas to be. It's funny because you probably expect to see mountains right away, but instead you get a whole bunch of flat brown nothingness. I took two routes through Colorado and so far I have to say that I-70 from Denver to the Kansas state line is just miserable!

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It's never a bad idea to rent a car

Sure, I have a car and it might not make sense to be spending large sums of money to rent a car when I already own one. After driving through the rocky mountains, I'm actually glad we didn't bring one of our own vehicles. I'll cover this more in a future post, but I am pretty sure our rental car is going to need new brakes when they get it back from us. I had those puppies burning hot and squealing like a stuck pig coming down from Rocky Mountain National Park.

It's also kind of fun to be able to drive it like you stole it. I'm a lot harder on this vehicle than I would be on our personal cars. It's nice not having to worry about the extra maintenance that is going to be required to this machine after clocking over 2000 miles on it.

Sure, there are a few drawbacks, but overall, I stand by my decision to rent a car for this trip.

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There's never enough time.

We were in Denver for just about eight days which might seem like a long time, but it wasn't even close to enough time. Some of that time was spent on the softball fields watching my niece play, but even without that time, we could have been running non stop and still wouldn't have been able to seen everything.

I'm not really sure how you fix this one, it's just something I noticed and I wanted to put down here. Especially when you are visiting a large city or a national park, there are just way too many things to do. I'd guess that if you tried to do them all, you would either be miserable or collapse from exhaustion.

I know it isn't feasible for everyone, but sometimes it just makes more sense to plan multiple trips to the same area instead of trying to fit it all into a single trip.

This trip to Colorado was absolutely amazing and my wife and I agreed we would definitely come back again. I'm not sure I would drive next time even though I am not really a fan of flying. I'm really looking forward sharing my travels with you in some future posts. I hope you find it as exciting as I did.


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All pictures/screenshots taken by myself or @mrsbozz unless otherwise sourced



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33 comments
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You received an upvote of 100% from Precious the Silver Mermaid!

Please remember to contribute great content to the #SilverGoldStackers tag to create another Precious Gem.

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Hi
Nice to meet you
You post is amazing

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Thank you! Good to meet you too!

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I'm looking forward to your Worldmappin reports ;)

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Hopefully as much as I am looking forward to writing them!

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All good points!

As to the driving... students who visit America usually have three big complaints, and one shocking thing, about driving in the US. 1) "No one uses their turn signal to change lanes" 2) "Everyone tailgates you even when driving the speed limit" 3) "Everyone drives at least 5-10 over the speed limit". Their shocking thing, which might amuse you, is that everyone stops for a firetruck/police car/ambulance. This is shocking because they aren't taught to do that in Japan. Instead whenever you see an emergency car in Japan, they will take to the speaker system attached to their car and start telling the other cars "please move, we have an emergency, please move. Thank you for listening".

I used to enjoy driving in the US, but after being in Japan awhile every time I visit home I get completely stressed out while driving and feel like I have to watch everyone because I don't trust any of them.

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That is pretty funny. I try to make it a point of using my blinker because I know a lot of people don't. 5 to 10 over isn't even the thing anymore, now it's 15 to 20 over. I usually try to go 7 to 8 over and people still blow my doors off.

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We make the trip across Ontario every summer on our way from Montreal to Lake Superior. It’s a 10 hour drive. Ontario is beautiful. No mountains but thousands of Lakes, rivers, streams, rocky outcrops and Boreal Forests. I feel like I have Jet lag when I get there. It’s exhausting ….. maybe road trips are meant for 20 somethings ??? …. But I also don’t like flying. Maybe the trick is to break it into smaller 3-4 hour driving days ? But hotels are so expensive.

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We split this up into 6 to 8 hour days and made sure to stop every two to three hours. That seemed to help quite a bit. I've been wanting to get up to Lake Simcoe with my friend sometime to do some fishing, but I haven't made it there yet. Lake Superior is just amazing, both on the US and the Canada side. I did the circle tour with my parents when I was a kid one summer.

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(Edited)

With you completely on the disliking driving. I guess it is good I am not allowed to drive anymore, at least right now, due to medical issues. You were able to visit states I have never been to. We have friends in Kansas we would love to see. As for the rental car, we do the same thing for long trips now. It saves wear and tear on our cars, plus ours are getting up there in the miles. Hope you are having a grea time.

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Kansas was a welcome surprise for me. I was kind of dreading it, but we had a lot of fun. Topeka was a pretty cool town to drive around too.

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I really don't enjoy long drives anymore either, I avoid them as much as possible! I understand that feeling all too well. The plains states aren't my favorites to drive through, but they are better than a lot of Texas! And you're right about east Colorado being kind of ugly until you hit Denver. I have always rented cars for long trips like that, it's a very smart move. Adding all the extra milage to your vehicles doesn't make any sense to me.

I'm glad you had a nice time there, I love the Colorado mountains. It's a beautiful place. Do you find a "special" bottle to bring home with you?

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Two special bottles actually! :) The Rockies literally take your breath away for sure! We should get home tomorrow and we are already over 3000 miles. I'm glad it's not my car!

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You guys have some crazy distances to cover. I hope it wasn't too bad for you. I'm quite happy not to drive these days and more up for train trips. After our one to Austria we are looking at doing Scotland by train.

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We have one more leg of our trip before we get home and we crossed 3000 miles today.

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I enjoy driving except at night if I don’t know where I’m going.

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I actually like night more because there are fewer idiots on the road. Just more deer!

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I find myself liking driving more as I age. I also find my self taking the roads less traveled to enjoy the journey vs. just the destination.

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I want to like it, but people are just idiots anymore. When I am traveling 7 over and not in the passing lane and people still blow by me, that's just wrong. It's shocking there aren't even more accidents than we already have.

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Very amazing photos. It makes my hiking toe itching.
!BBH

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Thank you! We did our fair share of hiking for sure!

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