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I have always enjoyed long
road trips across the country, perhaps because they have
all the elements of a Homeric adventure. After completing
basic training for the Army, I was ready for assignment to
my permanent duty station. I was directed to travel from
Norfolk, Virginia to Monterrey, California, so I flew home
to Wisconsin and prepared to drive the rest of the way. My
1964 Dodge Polara had been purchased for $125 during my
last year in high school, and I naively anticipated the
adventure of driving nearly 2,500 miles across the
continent. As I crossed the Minnesota border early on the
first morning out, it occurred to me that I had just
driven the farthest distance of my entire life. This was
also to be my first time completely alone, and I savored
the thought of the next week spent on the open road.
I picked up the small state
highway to Northfield, reportedly the scene of Jesse
James’ last, abortive raid, and then left the winding,
picturesque Minnesota country roads behind in favor of
I-35 South. The Slant-6 engine rattled along, and the
speedometer needle floated near 55. I wanted to avoid
placing too great a burden on the 23-year old car, which
had compiled an indeterminate number of miles during its
lifetime. It was the month of March, and as I rolled south
through Minnesota and into Iowa, the snow banks shrank and
the gray, lowering clouds threatened rain rather than
snow. Finally turning west at Des Moines onto I-80, the
stiff north wind buffeted the Dodge sideways, and a
motorcycle passed, canted nearly 30 degrees into the wind
to maintain equilibrium. It felt like a point of no
return, and my only course was west toward on unknown
shore. All across the brown, late Winter, windblown
prairie I gripped the wide, heavy plastic steering wheel,
fighting the wind and an out-of-balance front wheel that
set up a harmonic shaking throughout the car. I anxiously
scrutinized the instrument cluster until reaching Lincoln,
Nebraska, where I decided to stop for the day after
successfully entering yet another state for the first time
in my life. Due to my lack of firsthand knowledge of the
country’s geography, I imagined that as I approached
central Nebraska, I would soon descend into a vast desert.
This thought prompted me to stop in Kearney to have the
increasingly maddening vibration repaired, and after
having the wheel balanced, I was off again. Nebraska
seemed like such a long state, and I had taken to peering
at my instrument cluster again, worriedly watching the
alternator needle as it leaned slightly over to
"discharge". Tapwater from the motel near the
outskirts of Cheyenne seemed to rejuvenate the battery.
It felt as though I rolled
endlessly across the plains of Nebraska, and had plenty of
time to marvel at the early pioneers who encountered the
vast expanses of rolling grasslands for weeks on end.
Wyoming was different from anything that I had ever seen,
and I was excited to cross even the low, rugged hills that
represent the beginning of the Rocky Mountains in this
area. The low hills were soon gone, and I was on a scrub
desert. Gradually, through the thickening gloom, I
discerned a more prominent range of the Rockies, and felt
a thrill to have reached tangible evidence that I was
actually Out West! Black, snow-filled clouds released
flurries of stinging white crystals until it became
difficult to see. I crept through the deepening gloom, now
at only 40 mph, peering just beyond the dim circle of
light cast by my weakened headlights. Nervous glances at
the worrisome alternator gauge revealed no information,
and I crept on until the glowing oasis of the Little
America truck stop came in view. I opened the driver’s
door into a biting gale of wet, swirling snow that turned
the bright parking lot lamps of the gas station into hazy
sundogs. A glance at my headlights revealed that two
inches of frozen snow had accumulated over the lenses,
diffusing the bulbs’ rays into a feeble orange glow. The
work of ten minutes chipping ice with a screwdriver was
sufficient to restore them to their former brilliance, and
reduce my hands to numbness. After a late dinner of hot
roast beef and mashed potatoes, smothered in thick, rich
gravy, I was prepared to resume driving, my spirits buoyed
by a good meal and the restoration of my headlights. The
dashboard instrument lights fluoresced a soft green
through hollow push button controls, as I followed the
dual beam headlights through the slackening storm. I
stopped in Bridger for the night, and was struck by the
sharp cold and clear, prairie quiet in which the calls of
coyotes drifted across the darkness.
The next day, at last I
encountered the long-expected desert, with the descent
into Utah and the Great Salt Lake basin. What an amazing
site from this ribbon of blacktop, where salt and white
mud stretch off into the distance, an apparent sea of
white in which the hazy images of distant mountain peaks
floated and bobbed. Whirling storms of salt danced across
the road, and I noted the custom of passersby to spell
their initials with cobbles tossed in the salt mud. I
hoped that the end of this day would see me in California
at last, and toward the late afternoon, I passed Reno,
dominated by the brightly colored Circus-Circus. Although
exhausted, I sensed that I was close to the day’s goal
as the grade of the road increased and jagged shoulders of
rock encroached on the interstate. Past the last of the
garishly flashing State Line casinos, a gorgeous,
knife-edged valley came into view, with steep slopes
nearly obscured by snow-covered, majestic pines. The
interstate clung to the side of the valley, and the narrow
lanes allowed only momentary lapses in concentration to
enjoy the postcard view of the opposite slope.
The narrow lanes, sharp
curves, and momentary night-blindness from the continuous
glare of oncoming headlights began to tax my tired nerves.
I pulled off the interstate at Truckee, which seemed as
exciting as a Swiss playground in a Roger Moore-era James
Bond movie due to the heavy fall of snow and abundance of
ski rack-equipped vehicles. I found a motel, and rented a
cabin, falling asleep satisfied that I had at least
reached California. The following morning, the bottom half
of the front fender succumbed to two thousand miles of
vibration, as it collapsed in a crumble of rust and
Bond-o. I proceeded west on I-80, over the summit of the
Sierras, and began the gradual descent though snow-covered
firs and past large warning signs apparently written in
trucker language, advising them to "better let ‘er
drift". The snow disappeared, as did the firs, to be
replaced by lush fields and humid warmth of the fertile
valley. I had successfully crossed the Great Plains, salt
desert, and Nevada wasteland, and my object was finally in
reach.
After spending the night in
Monterrey, I headed for Fort Ord where I would report for
duty. This epic journey across the Sierras represented a
significant step away from my small home-town, which to me
was nothing but a dead end where I could expect only to
become an obscure loser. But here was a chance for a new
beginning, following the same route as others who came
west to improve their fortunes. As I passed beneath the
arched sign that boldly proclaimed "Fort Ord, 7th
Infantry Division (Light)", I sensed the freedom that
I had enjoyed on the open road slip away. However, the
self- direction and sense of adventure that I had
experienced while crossing the continent would reassert
themselves in time.
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