Jul 19, 2008 - Squaking in the house

For this warm weather, I open up the house in the morning to let the cool night air in. I open windows and the door to the patio. This morning, the quiet of a Saturday morning at home was interrupted with chirping and tweeting and thumping from the living room. I ran out there to find one frightened and frantic bird flying around the living room with a cat in close pursuit.

There is a happy ending to this story. The bird flew behind the stereo speaker in the corner of the room and I grabbed the cat and got her out of the way. A dish towel thrown over the bird allowed me to pick it up and take it outside where it flew off into the trees.

Now, a few hours after the excitement, all of the cats in the house are still looking around the living room for the bird. They can smell it.

Jun 19, 2008 - Travel updates

Finally home and a real computer. It’s nice to be home in my own bed and with my own files. I haven’t moved my digital presence totally onto the network so my own files and desktop and organization are not portable. It feels comfortable to be home.

I've sorted through the pictures and the main groups are up. This is a long, catch-up entry with descriptions and pointers.

First is the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (pictures) which were, well, smoky. The haze is a natural phenomena and the park is full of hills, trees, camping, water falls and streams. A previous blog post was from Mingo Falls and later in the day we hiked in to see Laurel Falls (pictures). We hiked the mile to find a small falls filled with people. Some had obviously packed everything for a day of picnicking and splashing with the kids. A nice hike in the woods, though.

Just outside the park is Tuckaleechee Caverns (pictures). This is an old fashioned, family owned cavern roadside attraction. An easy walk through the well paved cavern with interesting rock formations.

For a little historical South, we stopped at The Hermitage (pictures). This is the farm Andrew Jackson retired to after service as the president of the United States. It's back in the time before secret service and security details. It's just a farm although, these days, they make a big deal about the slaves who lived there and made the farm work.

Keeping with the presidential theme, the next stop was the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site (pictures). Wikipedia has a concise description of the history of this monument. In our cynical age, it is hard to comprehend the adoration a log cabin received. Eventually, it was enshrined in a granet monument.

The next stop was to downtown St. Louis with a visit to the Arch. If you were following the news at that time, you would know that the central U.S. was surviving record floods and tornadoes. We weren't sure the arch park would be open but it was completely operational although some of the pictures do show the Mississippi overflowing it's banks onto the sidewalks. The trip up the Arch was bizarre. You get into these claustrophobia attack inducing little pods which then click and clunk as they take you to the top. Once at the top, you are in a small arched room with TINY windows to peer out over the city. It is clear that Disney was not consulted when they built it.

A lot of driving brought us to Jewel Cave National Monument (Wikipedia explains that a "national monument" is declared by the president without requiring the approval of Congress.) This gigantic system of caves now has an elevator for us softies to casually tour the underground. There are still people squeezing through the caves but we get to walk through the cool 56 degrees on concrete and aluminum walkways and enjoy the formations. It was hard taking pictures because the lights they used had widely different temperatures. That, and my little digital camera doesn't have a flash that goes more than a few feet. Some pictures did turn out.

Out of the ground and over to Yellowstone National Park (pictures). It was an amazingly beautiful day -- cool temperatures, bright sun, blue sky filled with white clouds. The park was showing itself off. Bison grazed (and clogged the roads) and the rush of melting snow filled the streams. Beautiful.

Well, how do you top Yellowstone? With a nuclear reactor, of course. Pictures. In the 1950's, a small reactor ("Experimental Breeder Reactor 1" or "EBR-1") in the middle of Idaho proved that nuclear reactors could create their own fuel ("breeding" plutonium) and generate electricity efficiently (output more than goes in). The DOE keeps the building open in the summer with tours by informed but otherwise very bored employees.

Up the road is an area of lava formations in the Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve. Pictures.

Jun 17, 2008 - Finally home

After 9476 miles, we are finally home. Whooo hooo!!! The bad news is the of bills and weeds to contend with. I will be uploading the rest of the pictures and videos and adding some more commentary the next few days.

Jun 12, 2008 - Past the storms

It looks like We have made it through the bad weather in the middle of the country. The stop at the arch in St Louis meant some extra driving around since the road along the river was closed. Flooding because of the high Mississippi River. there have been many flooded fields along the highway with rain still coming down.

We spent the night in Kansas City. The night was windy and the tornadoes occurred to the west of the city while we sleep peacefully in our beds. Thursday morning was cool (65: the coolest weather we've had since touching California) and the front had moved to the east leaving us to travel north behind all the bad weather.

The plan is to move quickly with long driving days so we can get home next week. We are getting tired of traveling around living out of suit cases. The boys also remembered things they would really like to do on the 16th (Monday) so we are looking at driving 11 hour days to make it home by then. It will be nice to sleep in our real beds after this trip.

I have a lot of picture processing to do when I get home. There are many panoramas to build from pictures and I have videos of some things that I thought would be better as video than still snaps.

We drove through Iowa today to get up to South Dakota. One the of main differences between here and the Southern states is the lack of billboards. Most of the south has zillions of billboards along the road. Even better, since the road service planted trees on both sides of the road, the billboards are on large green poles (large to withstand hurricanes) 50 to 100 feet in the air. What a visual mess.

Jun 11, 2008 - Abe birth place

Abe birth place Originally uploaded by MisterBlue There is a national park with a monument to the log cabin that Abe Lincoln was born in. Inside the building you see here is a log cabin. The laptop I was borrowing died so it will be a while before U get more pictures up.