When I was young, my family moved from Indiana to southern Californian. We also took a trip back to Indiana every year at summer vacation.
Route 66 more that 2000 miles all the way.
In the 1950s there were still Indians on the side of the road in Arizona and Nevada. They had mud huts and sold Navajo blankets and baskets, and silver and …
When I was young, my family moved from Indiana to southern Californian. We also took a trip back to Indiana every year at summer vacation.
Route 66 more that 2000 miles all the way.
In the 1950s there were still Indians on the side of the road in Arizona and Nevada. They had mud huts and sold Navajo blankets and baskets, and silver and turquoise jewelry....
This was before air conditioned cars. and canvass water bottles on the radiators of the cars...The trip through the desert was brutal in summer. But simply an amazing adventure for me as a kid.
I was able to watch the southwest change year to year....then the Interstate Highway started, and our route shifted eventually from 66 to larger 4 lane highways --first state "turnpikes' and then the interstate highway...(a military project)
The last time I took the trip east from So Cal was March 2003 the same day that US 'Shock & Awe' rained down on Bagdad.
The desert was full bloom at the time and the trip was awesome.
I ended up in south Georgia...which really seemed like purgatory to me at the time. White Southerners are so fucking weird.
They are still fighting the Civil War there.
From Georgia to finally back home again in Indiana has been an amazing sci-fi story.
When I was young, my family moved from Indiana to southern Californian. We also took a trip back to Indiana every year at summer vacation.
Route 66 more that 2000 miles all the way.
In the 1950s there were still Indians on the side of the road in Arizona and Nevada. They had mud huts and sold Navajo blankets and baskets, and silver and turquoise jewelry....
This was before air conditioned cars. and canvass water bottles on the radiators of the cars...The trip through the desert was brutal in summer. But simply an amazing adventure for me as a kid.
I was able to watch the southwest change year to year....then the Interstate Highway started, and our route shifted eventually from 66 to larger 4 lane highways --first state "turnpikes' and then the interstate highway...(a military project)
The last time I took the trip east from So Cal was March 2003 the same day that US 'Shock & Awe' rained down on Bagdad.
The desert was full bloom at the time and the trip was awesome.
I ended up in south Georgia...which really seemed like purgatory to me at the time. White Southerners are so fucking weird.
They are still fighting the Civil War there.
From Georgia to finally back home again in Indiana has been an amazing sci-fi story.
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Wait until you R older and see more changes that drive u mad