Friday, June 28, 2013

Route66 California – WASABI EARS (FINAL POST)


STOP PRESS: Root69 - The Movie can be seen at: https://vimeo.com/album/2962309

24-26 June 2013: Days 41-43 of 43 – Williams, Kingman, Seligman, Oatman, Topock ARIZONA, Bagdad, Barstow, Santa Monica, West Hollywood CALIFORNIA. 
Route66: Days 12-13 of 13. 
Overnights Barstow, West Hollywood (Los Angeles) California. 
Period 956km, Route66-866km for 4,052km, Total 16,501km.  
ROOT69 FINAL LOG: 1 Country, 21 States, 96 Locations, 16,501km (10,253miles), 43 days, 42 nights, 28 runs (over 17 states added to 8 pre-existing to make 25 in all).
Route 66 before and after the Arizona / California border is the best of the whole trip. This is because it is classic road – plenty of 66 symbols on the bitumen, lined with scrub and cactus and surrounded by desert and distant flat top escarpments. It is also in one piece and uninterrupted: 160 miles (258km) from I40 Exit 139 (just after Ash Fork) to
Topock in Arizona and 123 miles (198km) from I40 Exit 115 (After Needles) to Barstow in California. My favourite bit is from Amboy to Bagdad in California since that is the bit that is this blog background!!! We also saw some terrific Route 66 kitsch today (Mon 24 June). Williams ARIZONA was the first place for kitsch and the first of many interviews with locals today. Williams is a one main road wild west type town but with gorgeous pine covered mountains the background. Life is slow here and we managed to interview three crusty characters. The key learning from one of them, who was a champion whip master, is that Kangaroo belly makes the best whips since it is tough, light and already very stretched so it does not split. Further along, Seligman was easily the best town for 66 kitsch featuring many motels, cafes, garages and even a

salon with car on top. Seligman was the sight of our second interview with a local basking guitarist – lovely bloke who explained why so many people travel Route 66 – “nostalgia” was the number one reason.
Between Seligman and Peach Springs are a whole lot of “Burma Shave Signs”, which are individual signs making up an message – originally these were used in the Route 66 heyday to advertise business in the next Route 66 town. They are an invention of Route 66. Nowadays the local councils use them to get motorists to slow down or not drink and drive etc. Kingman was another kitschy town but most of the businesses there were mothballed – very sad. The third interview was in a lonesome café outside Kingman and the key learning here were that Europeans have now overtaken American visitors on Route 66 – their reason for visiting is that Route 66 traverses the “real” America.


The highlight today was Oatman. It is a tiny, one street, all wood town and looks like something out of an American Western movie. What makes it unique is that the main street is full of mules, roaming around and brushing up against visitors for food (mainly carrots or apples). I had my first root beer float – very sweet but tasted delicious. The temperature was 105F (41C) so it was a much-needed drink!!! Oatman is also the most lively and busiest place of all the Route 66 towns we visited to date. It exists because of a nearby sand quarry. From Oatman to Topock at the Arizona / California border, the Route 66 scenery was terrific. Very flat, with distant flat top precipices and wispy clouds above.


Bagdad in California was another surprise – one motel and one café but actually operational! We did not have time to stop there but apparently the café serves great home cooked meals. Barstow is not much to speak of. It is a railroad and marines town with indigenous run casinos – we passed here on Day 2 on our way to Las Vegas. Our hotel here was spacious and overlooked the desert with a magnificent sunset. Once more we ate in room to get an early start tomorrow – the drive to Santa Monica Pier in Los Angeles, the final end point of the great Route 66.
The drive from Barstow to the Pier took ages. We knew we were in the LA area when we were greeted with a layer of brown smog as we turned onto the freeway at San Bernardino Valley. Route 66 is like Parramatta Road (Sydney) for 70 miles (113km) through the outskirt suburbs of LA. You pass through many suburbs ranging from the commission homes to the gated ones with manicured lawns. There are some 66 curios along the way including the second Wigwam Motel (Tepees for rooms) in Rialto. We stopped off at a classic 50s diner to have coffee
and Bubba “accidently” ordered a huge plate of chips, smothered with three melted cheeses and a ton of bacon – at 11am!!! We had to “help” him finish it off – Thelma and Louise were following us today so that we could all take our victory photo at the end of Route 66. Finally at 3pm on Tuesday 25 June, after 8 hrs of driving and stopping, we arrived at the intersection of Lincoln and Olympic Boulevards which is the actual historical end of Route 66 – there are no signs or plaques there to say so – this was in my Route 66 Historical Society maps that I used to navigate the whole trip. Later, for commercial reasons, the end of Route 66 was moved to where Santa Monica Boulevard ends at Ocean Avenue on Santa Monica Beach just metres away from the Pier. There is an official plaque there dedicated to
none other than Will Rogers who is the poet and author typically associated with the "romanticisation" of Route 66. We took our victory photos and film at that spot. We could not believe it. We had made it and without a single incident. Route 66 according to the Mustang Odometer had covered 2,518 miles (4,052km). The published length based on travelling all pre 1933 alignments is published at 2,451 miles (3,945km). We had travelled a mixture of alignments to get the longer result. Santa Monica beach put on a great show for our triumphant entry – blue sky, sun, shimmering clear blue water (you do not often see this) and a warm 32C. After dropping off the Thelma and Louise

Hyundai at the airport we all resumed our places in the Mustang and greeted our hotel in West Hollywood on Santa Monica Boulevard (the last bit of Route 66). At the hotel we popped a Moet et Chandon to officially celebrate our Route 66 conquest before dolling up to have our celebration dinner and last supper together and with special guest stars, Zachary and his girlfriend Farrah. Zach’s dad Mark is Bubba’s (Paris’s) brother.

I had first met Zach in 1987 when he was just 7 and now he stands 6ft 4inches tall!!! Zach works as a server at a restaurant called Koi, only 10min walk from our hotel – organised deliberately so we would not have to drive.
Koi is an up market modern Japanese American fusion restaurant frequented by Bruce Willis and Leonardo Di Caprio. Zach has often served Bruce Willis and they go by first name basis. Zach and Farrah were our guests that night and we had a ball. Zach did all the food ordering, I did all the wine ordering and the rest of us shared heaps of highlights of our trip. Zach has been working at Koi for 6 years and has known Farrah for 7 years, having met in college. Farrah was born in England of an English mum and Iranian dad. Zach was headed for a majors baseball career but got injured.
The food was very unique – sushi, sashimi, wagyu done with thinly sliced veggies and covered in tantalising sauces. The Californian Fume Blanc matched it well and we lost count of how many bottles we drank. So much so that I put Wasabi in my ears to compare its sound proofing qualities to blu-tac. May I say that the sound disappeared but my ears burned like buggery – I could still not hear properly the whole next day. This evening would go down as the “Wasabi Night” but the food, company and conversation easily outdid it. Our final day, Wednesday 26 June 2013 was spent checking out Hollywood and Beverley Hills in Los Angeles. We all hopped on a double-decker, open-top, "hop-on, hop-off" bus (an Ozzie invention, by the way...) which drove around 15 stops in 2hrs.
It was a cracker of a day – cloudless blue sky and 30C. We hoped off the bus to walk the full length of Hollywood Boulevard. It has been cleaned up and not as seedy as I remember. There is a huge new shopping complex next to Grumman’s Chinese Theatre from where you can see the Hollywood sign. The place was packed. At around 1:30pm, Bubba farewelled Thelma and Louise and I drove him to the Amtrak station next to Bob Hope Airport at Burbank so he could catch his 3:30pm train back to San Francisco. It was a sad moment leaving Bubba alone at the station.
Bubba Gump had become almost a brand – great company – great conversation and many memorable interviews. My final run was down Santa Monica Boulevard (Route 66) passed Beverley Hills – all of a sudden the heartland American bungalows and Fords were now replaced by Spanish Mansions and Mercs. It was a great run and I did not realise it, but West Hollywood is actually the gay area of LA. Even the pedestrian crossings are a painted rainbow! Not that there is anything wrong with that! On our last day, California just approved gay marriage and the place was packed with revellers so we had to try and find a place to eat on the way to the airport.
We were lucky. Our final meal was a magnificent gourmet hamburger and big piece of apple pie in an old 60s style diner that we came across by fluke. Red booths, old photos, neon out front and started by a Greek! The second sad moment today was handing back the Mustang – my home for the last 43 days. The final odometer reading was a grand total drive of 16,501km (10,253 miles), exactly 1,000km more than we estimated. We also visited 21 states, 2 more than originally planned. We visited a grand total of 96 locations (cities, towns, national parks, monuments or other places of interest). Root69 brought my total USA states run in to 25 - half of the USA!!!
THE ROOT69 BEST & WORST:

1) My favourite weird hotel experience was in Walsenburg COLORADO because of the very strange owners and having to sit outside wrapped in a blanket in the middle of the night to post my blog under a moonlit sky and several dogs howling. 
2) My nicest hotel was in Millersburg OHIO because of the olde worlde charm and large size of room. 
3) My worst hotel was in Branson MISSOURI because we had to move rooms because of bad plumbing and the front door did not lock in the second room with mould on the ceilings. 
4) My best meal was the 8 rare lamb cutlets at the Italian restaurant on Frenchmans Road in Chicago ILINOIS. 
5) My worst meal was the gravy infested pull apart pork with 10kg of raw carrots in Hurricane UTAH. 
6) The highlight for me was visiting the actual untouched Apollo Control Room in Houston. My trek from the top of the southern rim of the Grand Canyon to the Colorado River at the bottom and back again was a VERY VERY close second. 
7) The most amount of laughing we did was shooting the last photo in this blog!!!
My parting thoughts after such a grand road trip is: if you want to see the “real” America, you must hit the road. The USA might as well be a continent and the states, countries... given the diversity of food, accent, attitudes and culture across them all. America has a definite culture of its own and an identity that is pronounced and proud. Nationalism is at an all-time high. Finally, Route 66 is a great way to see the real America and experience the one word that best describes this classic roadside experience: “nostalgic”…"Houston, this is Root69 signing off"…


Monday, June 24, 2013

Route66 Arizona – RIM TO RIVER TO RIM



21-23 June 2013: Days 38-40 of 43 – Petrified Forest National Park, Holbrook, Winslow, Meteor Crater, Walnut Canyon National Monument, Flagstaff, Grand Canyon National Park South Rim ARIZONA (State 21). 
Route66: Days 9-11 of 13. 
Overnights in Flagstaff ARIZONA. 
Period 996km, Route66: 307km for 3,187km, Total 15,545km. 
For me the highlight of the trip up to this blog was my 6hr trek from the top of the Grand Canyon South RIM to the Colorado RIVER and back again to the top of the south RIM – more on this later! Friday 21 June was convoy day – Thelma and Louise followed Bubba Gump in a two car convoy along Route 66 out of New Mexico and half-way across Arizona to Flagstaff. Most of the original Route 66 over this section is buried under the I40 freeway so we only got to see it at the beginning and in each old town. Arizona is mainly desert, canyons and

escarpments but it looks spectacular. It is a flat sea of yellow green scrub and bright blue skies with wispy high clouds – fabulous photo scenery. We drove 28 miles through the “Petrified Forest National Park” just over the border from New Mexico in Arizona and once again offered a very unique landscape of colour formation and features. “Tepees” and petrified wood dominate this landscape. Tepees are sudden slope, volcano like mountains with coloured layers of sediment, deposited by river systems some 200 million years ago. The layers of blue, purple and grey are caused by iron, carbon and manganese. A huge forest also covered this area, died and fell into the river systems to be covered by silt so that instead of decaying, the tree's cellulose tissue crystallised and was

replaced by silica giving it that petrified look. You can still see the rings and bark but the silicas are multi-colour so there are cross-sections that look like marble or polished gemstone. We visited two main areas (Crystal Forest and Giant Logs) containing thousands of specimens from small pebbles to 
giant trunks. We also visited the Puerco Pueblo, remnants of a 100 dwelling village that housed 200 Pueblans from 1250 to 1380. An interesting feature was a type of sun-dial formed from a natural split in a huge bolder that casts sunlight onto another rock with a marking on it indicating the summer and winter solstice when the light hits that mark. Today was the summer solstice and we actually saw the sun light descending towards the Pueblan marking – they used this to work out when to plough and sow their crops. We then visited “Newspaper Rock”, a huge bolder with hundreds of
Pueblan petroglyphs on telling many stories rather like a newspaper. In the town of Holbrook ARIZONA we visited the “Wigwam Motel” which comprises huge concrete “tepees” as hotel rooms complete with bed and bathroom inside. We also had coffee in a typical Route 66 Café Diner across the road. Holbrook was another example of a town on Route 66 that was once thriving and now stands as a reminder of a glorious past. Sadly, most businesses, especially motels are gathering weeds… Winslow 30 miles (48km) further along Route 66 is an example of a tow that is still functioning. 
This is mainly due to the BNSF Railway and the famous “La Posada Hotel”, a restored hacienda with elaborate interior of tiles, glass and tin chandeliers, Navajo rugs, pop artwork and plenty of wood. The hotel attracts many US visitors. Add the small park where the Eagles performed “Take It Easy” and you have a formula of preservation for the town. The hotel and streets had many people, certainly more than the other “kitsch” Route 66 towns we had already visited. From here it was off to the giant “Meteor Crater”, 35 miles south-west of Flagstaff. This is a crater, 4,000ft (1,219m) across and 550ft (168m) deep formed by a
150 foot (46m) wide iron-nickel meteorite slamming into the earth, 50,000 years ago at a speed of 26,000 miles per hour (41,850 Km/h or 18 km per second). The energy dispersed at such high speed was the equivalent of 20 million tons of TNT and throwing up 175 million tons of material at speeds of 500 miles/hour (805 Km/h). The crater was formed in only 10 seconds but it took many years for “the dust to settle”. The crater was originally 700ft (213m) at formation but has since filled with material due to weather. It was discovered in 1871. Our last stop before
Flagstaff was the “Walnut Canyon National Monument” which is a rocky granite canyon covered in pines and containing many cliff dwellings belonging to the “people without water” or Sinagua Indigenous peoples that lived here more than 800 years ago. Many dwellings are in good nic and you can walk inside them. These guys must have been extremely fit given the severe slopes. These guys were hunters and gatherers as opposed to farmers due to the geography. It is only now, after seeing so many different tribes, dwellings and geographical areas that we realised the diversity of the many indigenous peoples of North America (USA).
 
The Grand Canyon truly lives up to its name – “Grand”. Even though it is the fifth largest canyon in the world (taking into account, depth, length, width and volume) it is regarded as the most impressive to look at and photograph and for this reason is registered in the “seven natural wonders of the world”. I agree. The first glimpse we caught of the Grand Canyon through the trees as we arrived there at 10am on Sat 22 June, we gasped. It took us 2hrs to get there via the scenic route from our hotel in Flagstaff on Sat 22 June and 1.5hrs to return via the freeway. We visited the “Southern Rim”. The Northern Rim is 356km away by
road but only 14km as the crow flies and very visible from the south. The Grand Canyon is 277 miles (446 km) long, up to 18 miles (29 km) wide and attains a depth of over a mile (6,000 feet or 1,800 metres). The southern rim is at an average elevation of 7,000ft (2,100m). The set up at Grand Canyon is exactly like Zion National Park. You park your car in one of 8 car parks and catch free shuttles to all the major viewing points along the southern rim. The best and most popular is the 9-stop Hermits Rest “red” route. You simply get on and get off the 65 person shuttles passing every 8min. We went nuts with dag dancing
and golly-gosh photos. They took ages because Bubba would take ages to walk to the edge of the cliffs because of his fear of heights. Add the time to switch from sun glasses to reading glasses, retakes for glare and a number of other excuses under the sun and I could have made my movie in that time. At least we got to enjoy every part of the glorious canyon which I will not describe here but let the blog photos do all the talking. It was not too crowded and there were accents from all over the world. The Colorado River was visible from a number of specific points. It flows from the Rockies
to the Gulf of California, 2,250km away. It is responsible for carving out the Grand Canyon some 17 million years ago. Several indigenous tribes have lived here for thousands of years (exact timing not agreed) and the Spanish were the first whites to visit here in 1540. Whilst we were here, temperature reached 85F (29C) and dropped to 49F (9C) at night – typical desert weather. I ran 12.5km at 7,000ft (2,100m) along the entire Hermits Rest red route and it was easily the most scenic run  have ever done. Bubba Gump then visited the red routes “Hopi Point” to watch the sun set and solstice moon rise over the canyon along with 200 others at
7:47pm. What a site. One of those “world experiences” and what they say about the canyon walls changing colours as the sun sets is true – much like Uluru but on steroids because of the sheer number of spurs and cliffs and escarpments. The temperature also dropped very quickly after the sun set and the moon light was so strong it created a shadow behind you! As a matter of fact, Flagstaff, where we stayed, is officially part of an elite group of cities around the world described as “Dark Sky Cities” making them the best places for Astronomy Observatories and as a result, the Planet Pluto was discovered from Flagstaff in 1930. 
The town was only founded in 1912! Our drive to Flagstaff that night (22 June) was our first night time drive in the Mustang – I almost drove off the road since there were spots on the highway with no line markings – you should have heard Bubba scream – it was louder than Dr Smith from Lost in Space!!! My highlight day on Sunday 23 June began at 5:30am! I crept out of bed and drove by myself, 1.5hrs back to the canyon and by 8am I was prancing at almost jogging speed down the “Bright Angel Trailhead”, a trek of epic proportion starting at 7,000ft (2,100m) above sea level at the top of the south rim and descending down to the raging green Colorado River down at 2,400ft (732m) exactly 12.4km away through one million steps and twists and turns BUT scenery and silence to die for!!! I made the descent in 2hrs 15min with an extra 60min on top for photo, film, water and pee stops. I left the rim at 8am and along the way I kept seeing signs warning NOT to walk from the rim to the river in one day due to risk of exhaustion. I arrived at the river at 11:15am – it was a site for sore legs! I stripped down and went for a swim in what I figured was 12C water. As I swam, I gulped down many mouthfuls of clean, sparkling fresh water – it was like I was swimming in a river of Evian!!! The Colorado River is fast and furious. It is surrounded by the huge cliffs of the northern and southern rims making it seem like it is hidden from all civilisation.

The journey back was one of the greatest physical challenges of my life – a rise of 4,600ft (1,402m or nearly 5 Centrepoint Towers!!!) up over 12.4km – an average incline of 20 degrees – this is what a boy from Bondi will do for a swim!!! I made it in 2hrs 45min with another 30min for photo stops. As I walked onto the rim at 2:30pm all I could do was think of a cold beer. It took me a total 6hrs to do the whole trek: Rim to River to Rim - the brochures said 9-12hrs and NOT to do it in one day but over two. What a nut. It took me another 15min to film my victorious arrival due to the large number of tourists congregated around the start/end of this epic trek.
I was surprised by the number of people that walked up to me to ask me Those après-Angel beers were probably amongst the best of my life – it could have been Fosters but boy – did it go down in an instant! By the time I arrived back to the hotel to greet Bubba I was dreaming of Chardonnay and chicken! I was not as sore as I expected but it was great to soak in a tub and reflect on a day that will go down in my “great memories hall of fame”…
 
STOP PRESS: During our 3 night stay in Flagstaff ARIZONA, 1.5hrs from the Grand Canyon, we decided to eat natural in our rooms – there was a terrific huge deli-supermarket called “Bashers” across the road that did delicious BBQ chicken, sliced meats, smoked salmon, unprocessed real mature cheeses, fresh salads/fruits and of course plenty of wine. The only thing they did not have and I did not see it in any Walmarts was canned lentils – none! Why?