Friday, December 26, 2008
LAX
to Bob and Joyce Hogan, for hosting us so kindly.
To Ryan Ross for trying to connect us across the country and wishing us a Merry Xmas. Baaa!
To Toyota for the 4Runner.
To Rachael and Mark for looking after Maude (who love Manu).
To Scott and Denise and Amelia for watering the garden (we hope).
To Amanda and Finn for coming with me.
To all the nice people in the Southwest of the US for letting us come and look at you, and your country.
Thursday, December 25, 2008
California
Ahem. Not Yuma, as you can see. Some of us wanted to go to Yuma to pay homage to the film "3.10 to Yuma", a noir cowboy flick of considerable grit. But Yuma today is suddenly waking up to become . . . another stretched out town of hotels and highways. Sigh. It was pleasantly warm and we learned it is particularly well liked by the Canadians, that polite nation. Enough reason for us to up sticks quickly and head on to San Diego, a mere 2 1/2 hours away.

A top Tucson tip
Tucson is another town profligate with its space, stretched and sparse alongside giant 4 lane roads. Like lots of other places we've been (Savanah, New Orleans and Mobile being exceptions) the city is designed for the car - and without one you simply cannot function. Sick of eating out we wanted to get food from a supermarket - but that is a 45 minute drive on the other side of town. Just imagine that - there are no supermarkets within 45 minutes of our locale - and we're only a mile or two from downtown.
So we should have known that attempting to walk to a restaurant last night was fraught. We searched in vain for a cross walk, and stood like little NZ lemmings on the side of the road, fruitlessly waiting for a chance to cross. In the end Finn and I dashed and Amanda stranded herself on an island in the middle. I think she's still there.
Anyway. We made it to a Mexican place called Las Cazuelitas. And behold - the food was seriously hot, delicious and, since no one spoke English, we assume authentic. Yay.
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Rules for travellers
- Prepare ahead. Reservations for the next night help prevent stupidly wandering around cities looking for places to stay - when you could be looking at the city.
- In a place like the US, rehearse your freeway entrances and exits out loud before you execute. At least until you have 1000 miles under your belt and zoom off and on with ease.
- Make sure everyone has something of their own to do. A navigator; a scenery spotter, a road sign reader etc. etc. Then everyone is engaged with the driving.
- When the argument erupts (oh, there will be arguments) go for it. Scream, shout and point the finger. After another hundred miles sheepishly change the subject, or pull off for an activity. It's good to clear the air.
- Do things. The journey can become an end in itself - so stop and look at the missile sites at White Sands, or examine some roadkill for a while. Then get back to the road.
High times in Tucson


Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Las Cruces and a milestone

Monday, December 22, 2008
Proof
Notrees
Once in Carlsbad - a rusted streak of a town, with empty shops and lots stretching out into the top end of the great Chihuahuan Desert - we made tracks to the Carlsbad Caverns. I don't know how I knew about them, but they have long held a spot in my must do list. And they didn't disappoint. Heroic, mythic, mouth-droppingly stunning. The caverns sit below an enormous, ancient reef. They were etched from the limestone when methane from oil deposits bubbled through calcium carbonated ground water to produce sulphuric acid(true!). And then they just kept on building and carving themselves out. We did the 2.5 mile walk, down to nearly 1000 feet. The park service have produced a wondrous experience. Here's a photo from the 20's:
Weather
Strange really, because only 420 odd miles down the road in Austin yesterday it got to 26! There have been appalling storms and snow in the North East and Mid West, so that polar air is obviously pushing into Texa. And today we're crossing out of Texas and into New Mexico where it really can get cold. Hope our icebreakers are up to it.
Sunday, December 21, 2008
In the permian basin
We spent the morning in Austin (motto "Keep Austin wierd") which is the state capitol of Texas. Last night we went down to 6th St, the equivalent of Courtenay place and had a very average meal at Iron Cactus. Actually, average meal number 6. Eating, outside of fine restaurants and Bob Hogan's cooking, has been unutterably, overwhelmingly dull. In fact there seems to be a greater number of chains and eating-out places than I've ever seen in the US before. Too fatty, too cheesy, too sugary and too much! Honestly, the standard of food in any cheap Thai place back home is a hundred times better than what we've had in most restaurants here. We crave lettuce and fruit. But enough scolding and fnger wagging.
In Austin we signed on to a segway tour - and had a blast. We saw the beautiful Capitol building from the inside. We learned about how getting right with God had fixed our guide's bi-polar disorder and incipient psychosis ("I had a demon possess me") and we learned where Lance Armstrong lives (did anyone know he'd hooked up with an Olsen twin?). A great way to see the city and the machines are - extraordinary.
Then the long drive from Austin to Odessa - home of 22% of America's proven oil reserves. Check it out on the map - we came off the I10 at Sheffield, and then up through Iraan (!!!) in the dark, and onto the 385 into Odessa. Tere is nothing there, save for oil rigs and deer. At times, as we drove past oil derricks in the night, we even smelt it. That was while watching out for deer (like the one who flashed across the road in our headlights. We stopped counting at 25 - and I thought they hunted around here).The trip through the beautiful hill country of West Texas was great. The road, as always was a marvel. When seen from a moving car the road becomes an entity in itself, the towns begin to seem, what, incidental? They are simply geographical markers for the road to have a reason to go here or there.
And then - as we left towns completely behind and slipped off the interstate, we were treated to a sunset of mythic scale. The sunset filled the car with a light that came from the moment of the big bang. And it went on for hours and hours and simply got more and more intense. These photos are a pale imitation.

Saturday, December 20, 2008
Politeness, sentimentality, nationalism and religion
I was musing and bopping gaily to the christian songs that spaced out the christmas songs and wondered if there was a link between all these things in the American cultural programme.
Americans are way more polite than the people of any other nation whose hospitality we have sampled. Perhaps the golden rule is imprinted so deeply that when combined with faith and hope eternal it overflows into gushy sentiment and a non-ironic worldview (I nearly said naive). Americans love to celebrate - God, the USA, love, holidays - and they do it unselfconsciously and publicly.
It's catchy though. Have a nice day, y'all.
Austin
A bientot New Orleans!
To be honest, I dreaded this drive - 856kms from New Orleans to Austin in the middle of Texas, which as we all know, is BIG. But travelling at speeds up to 130kph and on good roads, we ate it up. Getting around Houston was a pain, but the whole thing only took us 8hrs 30mins. Tonight we meet up with native Austinians Brandy and Richard who have promised us the best Tex-Mex in the southwest.
Here's the view from the hotel window:
Friday, December 19, 2008
A belated map
http://maps.google.co.nz/maps?f=d&saddr=Jacksonville+fla&daddr=savannah+ga+to:GA-89%2FUS-441+to:tallahassee+fla+to:new+orleans,+louisiana,+United+States+to:austin+tx+to:fort+stockton+tx+to:carlsbad+nm+to:lordsburg+nm+to:phoenix+az+to:yuma+az+to:los+angeles+ca&hl=en&geocode=%3B%3BFWY32QEdrN0R-w%3B%3B%3B%3B%3B%3B%3B%3B%3B&mra=ls&via=2&sll=32.10119,-99.84375&sspn=18.41572,39.375&ie=UTF8&ll=30.334954,-81.650391&spn=9.399356,19.6875&z=6
New Orleans II
So a good night's sleep and we're ready to explore. We turn away from the other touristas in the Quarter and climb onto the St Charles streetcar ($1.25) to the Lafayette cemetery. A slow meander shows that early life here was really tough - the crypts, all above ground, record the short lives of most and the endless deaths of infants and babies.
Then we strolled in the shade (close to 23C today - but it snowed here last week!) to the groovy Magazine Street. Rachael, Bev and Karen - here's the target for y'all next year.
As can be expected we forced Finn to endure hours of looking at the antebellum homes up in the Garden District. There are some stunning large mansions; sometimes they look a little grandiose - 1 story bungalows with big pillars.
New Orleans has a great feel. It's very hip and knowing. It doesn't take itself seriously. The city seems to be coming back, and we will too.Thursday, December 18, 2008
The Crescent City

Mobile postscript
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Mobile
Travelling
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Savannah
My one request for the trip was a visit to Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. So today we wandered the planned, treed and oh-so-picture perfect squares of Savannah, Georgia. We signed on to a walking tour with born and bred Southerner Cecil. Cecil is unashamedly parochial and has spent his life studying the glories of the South, in particular Savannah. Our fellow walking tourist, Kurt from Chicago, was constantly referred to as 'that Yankee'. Cecil is also legally blind, so we had to help him down curbs and across the street. Kind of the blind leading the blind when it came to remembering which way to look crossing the road.
Savannah is more English in feel than American (unsurprising since they founded it).
But the road called and we drove the 300 miles from Savannah to Tallahassee after lunch (at a nice wee spot called 1790).
We also deepened our relationship with the satnav. Apart insisting we 'turn left and then turn right' in the middle of a straight highway, she conjured up two hotels that a) were in the middle of Tallahassee's drug dealing neighbourhood, and b) didn't exist. Suggestions for names for such an incompetent yet bossy bitch can be posted here.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Off to Savannah
Yesterday Bob and Joyce loaned us their car and we cruised Amelia Island, getting a great sense of the coastline here - which, along with everything else is simply vast. Acres of beautiful salt marsh and some stunning beaches. Most of the building actually resembles Kiwi baches - although there are the inevitable enclaves for the McMansion set and more.Sunday, December 14, 2008
Amelia Island

Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Waiting to go
No one has considered what to pack - Florida is temperate but how cold does it get in Arizona or New Mexico in winter? Does is snow that far south?
Someone said we should book motels - but how can we when the trip requires us to wander all over the map. In any case, the town of Why, Arizona (pop 113) may not even have one.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Data

People want to know stuff about the trip. Like "Will you go to Dealey Plaza?" Can we get back to you on that when we're closer?
The Plan
As luck would have it, work takes Dave to Florida, to stay with Bob and Joyce Hogan (http://www.hoganassessment.com/) on Amelia Island Fla., and thanks to the miracle of Air NZ Airpoints dollars Finn and Amanda are coming as well.
After Dave is done with work we'll hire a big-ass US truck and travel from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast along US I-10, passing through Georgia, Alabama, Missisippi, Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California.
Finn has promised not to say 'Yo niggas, who voted for Obama'. And no, Finn, we won't purchase a handgun for the trip.
So this blog will record our thoughts and sights as we do the transcontinental.
Wish us luck.







