Badlands & Chico Again

How did I not know that our country is so beautiful? The badlands are incredible!!!! We’re making progress, but we’ve got hours and hours to go before we arrive home. My car-mates for this last leg of our journey are the best of buds,  cheap entertainment, and they happen to adore one another.  Makes the long hours fly by.

We’ve stopped at Chico again to soak away our worries and prepare for the second half of driving, driving, driving. Maggie accidentally took a tumble a couple days ago off the stairs of my grandmother’s schoolhouse. It was more traumatizing for me than her, but the scrape on her nose is a reminder of the scary moment. Boo.

Chico is full to the brim of families getting ready to celebrate the holiday weekend and we’re lucky enough to have a bed to sleep in tonight…..all three of us in one bed. Ha!! I’m pretty sure my mom and I won’t be taking up as much real estate as the little shrimp between us, but I secretly like the idea of us smooshed together, if just for one night.

After soaking for a few hours today we wandered the property: viewing the horses, avoiding the tumbleweeds and enjoying the lawn area as Maggie poked us with some broken sticks. My mom has taught Mags to smell flowers and now she insists on smelling anything that resembles a flower, which means we have to stop and smell the ‘roses’ frequently.

(On a total side note, the guy from Desperate Housewives is here too!!)

Midwest Style

When I was a kid and Spring Break, Winter Break or even Summer Break would arrive,  our family would most often be ready to book-it out of town the instant school got out. Often times the back seat of the family mini-van would be taken out and converted into some type of bed or area to lounge on for the longish car trip ahead.  With the car-top carrier over flowing with camping gear, stinky wet suits, surf/boogie boards and whatever else we thought we needed, I have no doubt that we looked like The Griswolds.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This most recent North Dakota trip has catapulted my family back to those days in a round-about way and it makes me acutely aware of how lucky I am to have a family that goes on vacations together. As much as I hated sharing a tent with my two stinky brothers all those years, I’m so grateful that we had parents that were willing to take us places and spend time with us. That is true today just as much as it was a couple decades ago.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Aside from the time that my dad made Phil and me walk through a lava field in Hawaii because we were fighting, I think I can say that my parents enjoyed seeing us grow up on those trips. This trip to North Dakota seems a bit like icing on the cake in terms of our nuclear family. We split off from the rest of the group the other day, taking more time to get to Devils Lake than the others.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We stopped for a couple hours in Old Jamestown and discovered that the fake cowboy town is actually a nice museum with a fantastic junk store.  After we got our token picture taken at the world’s largest buffalo, we splintered off from one another and wandered the one-horse town, happily discovering a fantastic collection of things that make us happy: Phil, a real working print shop, my dad, a junk store that he nearly got lost in the button collection, my mom, goats and ducks to share with Maggie, and Izak leather belts and wallets. I was none too pleased to snap photos and listen to the twang of cowboys singing old tunes.

It wasn’t posing in front of the world’s largest buffalo, or even discovering Old Jamestown that reminded me those car trips of my childhood where we’d all be jam packed into the car headed for somewhere other than home. It was the time that we spent hours later, after arriving to our hotel in Devils Lake, splashing around in the pool, playing with the huge beach balls….cracking up with every spike off of somebody’s head.

You see, we’re a quirky bunch. Full of humor, color and lots of zest. And we like each other. We love each other and choose to spend time together when we can. This, I believe, makes our family unique.

For the second evening in a row, we took over the hotel pool, had loud races from one end to the other and a splash-filled volleyball game. I felt like I was 12 again, trying to do the same thing as my older brother, bossing around my younger brother, and wondering if my parent’s hands were as pruned as my own.

We’re not crammed into the same car this trip, and we certainly aren’t sharing a tent. Maggie’s arrival has slowed the pace down significantly, and we’re all delighted to appease her. I think most of all we’re feeling grateful for this time that we have to spend together, because once reality shows up again we’re all going to hit the floor running and late night pool parties and large buffalo pictures just aren’t the same in the middle of  a work week.

Why Don’t We Live in Montana?

Ahhh….time flies when you’re on the road. We landed at the fabulousChico Hot Springs yesterday and tonight we’re holed up in a dive hotel just on on the border of Montana and North Dakota. The two places couldn’t be more different, but the best part about it is that when all 11 of us are together we have a great time. That much was apparent tonight when we discovered, after a long day of driving, that we’ve got no hot water and rusty water coming from the faucets.  At least we’ll be on the road again tomorrow again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The last few days have been oh so full of memories and beautiful, beautiful rolling green hills. More than once I’ve wondered why we don’t live in Montana and I’ve wished that Sydney and Barry were along for this wild ride. Aside from the mosquitos and creepy prairie dogs, I think I’ve fallen in love with this state. We wandered around Livingston, a small cowboy town near Chico, and it just felt like small town America through and through.

But the heart of this trip so far, aside from it being my grandparent’s 60th wedding celebration, was the time spent at Chico Hot Springs. Between soaking in the pools and eating an intimate dinner together, memories were made that I know will spur future trips back to the special waters, and we’ll bring more of our tribe to share in the goodness.

Rumor has it that as my grandpa gets closer to his place of birth, Devils Lake, he starts humming and singing tunes related to the tiny farm town or songs of his childhood. Our car, however, has been blasting Waylon Jennings, The Dixie Chicks, a bit of John Legend, and  everything else in between.  My mom, Chach and I have become very suave at distracting Maggie….not sure I want to jinx our luck, so I’ll stop there. We’ve been taking guesses about who will be the first person to be left behind, but with all the fuss-budgeting that happens, I don’t think it will actually happen. For the record, Izak has won by a landslide and we’ve still got him with us last time I checked.

Tomorrow we’ll cross over into North Dakota and I don’t expect the landscape to change the instant we make the transition, but the idea that I’m headed back to the place that my grandparents and dad spent so many years and summers growing up excites me immensely. I would say back to the motherland, but in this case I think it might be more appropriate to say fatherland. As the hours tick by and the scenery scrolls by outside my car window, I find myself thinking about how the desire to travel the world and explore lives inside me, but I always forget about the United States and the diversity it offers.

I suppose tonight as some of us fall asleep cold and shivering from freezing showers and others still dreaming of the warm waters of Chico, we can think of these little slices of American Life to take with us on the road because who knows where we’ll land tomorrow. All I know is that we’ll all be together laughing along the way….because there isn’t much else to do with this crew.

P.S. We’ve still got Izak. Phew. He just came to inform me that their water doesn’t work either.