I woke up to find it was 3:30 A.M. in Amarillo Texas. That was a first for my trip so far and I realized it was because I didn't take copious amounts of Advil PM to fall asleep like the other nights. You need a guaranteed sleep when you are on the road over 8 hours alone...don't judge me. As usual, I got my continental breakfast and ate in silence with the other travelers at the hotel....then back on the road.
This was a little bit of a different start as my first destination was only a few miles away. It is called Cadillac Ranch. Basically it is an artsy hippie era site with Cadillacs buried in the ground. The original site was actually a little closer to town but they moved it in 1997 further out. All of the pictures are on facebook plus one I threw in at the bottom here. It was pretty wild, I had a vague idea of where it was reading on the internet and randomly I looked to my left as I'm driving and there they are. I had to pull off onto old Rt. 66 (no one uses it anymore but it runs next to Rt. 40 almost the whole ride) and drive back to see it. Well worth the trip, I'll let the pictures explain themselves have a look.
Back on the road again with no stopping point this time except for a 15 min lunch. I try to do most of the driving in the morning, that's when I am most awake (weird I know). I didn't want to mention this before because of the fear of jinxing it....but my car is making a funny buzzing noise since Springfield and I can't figure out what it is. This becomes a big deal when you are staring at 600 miles of 99% desert in front of you. A belt snaps and suddenly I'm dealing with Uncle Jimbo's garage in the middle of bubble fuck. No worries though I have a great sound systems that seems to fix the engine noise when I turn it up really loud. Nothing I can do about it...just keep going.
Anyways, the scenery just seems to keep getting better, not many old farms to look at but a ton of valleys and mountains. These aren't our typical mountains from PA though they are the ones you see in any Western movie. It's exactly like that. There is nothing but open space out there it just goes for miles in either direction. I don't know how people lived out there before the modern age, I can't even figure out how they do it now. I saw more wind farms which is good...and I did see what looked like a meat plant with tons of cows. That's the only one I saw the whole way though, most cattle and horses just graze in the open plains it's pretty cool.
I had my only close call so far when I was 100 miles outside of Flagstaff. A guy was driving a big "Budget Moving Truck" and was doing 70 in the left lane. The speed limits out here are 75 so everyone usually does 80. It sounds like a good thing but it does wear on you, you have to be very aware because everything happens so fast with the speeds. Anyway of coarse the car in front of me goes around the Budget truck in the right lane after we patiently waited for 5 mins for him to get over. I followed right behind and you can guess what happened next. The guy just merged right back into the right lane as I was next to him. It's weird I could picture it happening as I approached him. Luckily I floored it and drove onto the side strip before he killed me. Now I know you aren't supposed to pass in the right lane, but there at tons of signs out here saying slower traffic must stay in the right lane it's a law....so fuck him.
But I am alive to tell about it and only 450 miles from the Pacific coast. Flagstaff is an awesome town, it reminds me more of a skiing town then something in the desert, there are green trees here and snow on the mountains. Great place to live I'm sure. Soon I will be leaving though...on my way to the coast...gnarly bro. Godspeed.