I started my travels this summer on July 4, flying to Quito, Ecuador, for the Galapagos cruise with Hurtigruten. On the way back to the US I stopped in Bogota and Cartagena in Colombia. On the way back from Bogota to JFK in New York City, I caught COVID. That cancelled my planned travel to the Canadian Maritimes with Caravan Tour. Instead of just hanging out in NYC until our family vacation in Maine in late August, I asked my girlfriend, Doris, to come to NYC in mid-August.
We decided to take a Flix Bus to Boston, stayed for 4 nights, then rented a car to drive to Montreal, then drive to Portland, Maine, to meet the rest of the family. It was Doris' first trip to the Northeast. We enjoyed walking around Boston and Montreal and ate a lot of lobsters in Maine. We walked the Freedom Trail in Boston and enjoyed the Jean Talon Farmers' Market in Montreal.
We came back to Phoenix on September 4, stayed 2 days, and was ready for a road trip to North Dakota (ND). Why go to ND? I am attending a 45-year reunion of the Mechanical Engineering Class of 1977 at the University of North Dakota (UND). Instead of flying to Grand Forks, ND, Doris wanted to take a road trip. I thought that was a good idea and planned on a month-long trip. After ND we could go through the mid-west and take a big circle back to Phoenix.
Our first stop was at my condominium in Flagstaff, AZ. We haven't been there for a while so we want to bring a few things up there and spend the night. The next morning we headed for Santa Fe, New Mexico. It's about a five-hour drive, first going east on I40 towards Albuquerque, then to Santa Fe.
The Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi |
Palace of the Governors, where Native Americans would sell their crafts |
After spending 1 night at the Best Western in Santa Fe, we headed north towards Denver. According to the map it's a 6-hour drive. However, we were told about the very busy rush-hour traffic around Denver. Fortunately, the GPS took us around Denver, on a toll-road towards the airport. We spent the night at a DoubleTree Inn in Thornwood, just north of Denver.
Our next destination is Mount Rushmore. Driving north of Denver we passed through the State of Wyoming. Most people associate Wyoming with Yellowstone National Park but the eastern part of Wyoming is mostly farmland. It's beautiful rolling pasture. Wyoming is the least populated state in the Union and you can see why. We saw very few cars and when we stopped at a small town for lunch, there was hardly anyone at all.
A small town in Wyoming |
L-R: Presidents Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Lincoln |
It was an ambitious plan. After 2 days of driving, we started to get tired of the driving. Driving about 6 hours a day gets tiring after a while, even if the scenery is beautiful. Rapid City gave us a chance to recharge ourselves. We took a leisure drive to the Badlands National Park the next day. We also stopped to checked out Wall Drug Store, a popular tourist trap.
Badlands in South Dakota |
Not a Drug Store. All kinds of Souvenirs and Trinkets are sold here |
Leaving South Dakota we took a slight detour to visit Devils Tower Monument in northeastern Wyoming. It was featured in the movie "Close Encounter of the Third Kind."
After Devils Tower we drove north through beautiful farmlands of eastern Montana and then meeting I94 at a small town called Wibaux. A quick rest stop and we head towards Medora, ND. This area is made famous by President Theodore Roosevelt, where a National Park is named after him. He spent his younger years ranching here before he became president. He came to have an appreciation for nature and wildlife and when he became president, he started the National Parks System. As it was getting dark we did not drive into the park. We did, however, went into the park on the way home from Grand Forks. Instead we had dinner at a popular local restaurant.
It was almost 9pm when we drove into Bismarck. A quick night's rest and the next morning we started heading towards Grand Forks. I94 cuts through almost the middle of North Dakota. It was a beautiful drive through rolling farmlands. At one point along the highway we stopped to talk to someone we thought is a farmer. Indeed he is a farmer but he was working part-time for the Department of Transportation mowing grass on the side of the highway. We asked him what they grow here. He said soy beans, sun flower, wheat, etc.
We thought the GPS would take us to Fargo, then head north on I29 to Grand Forks. Instead it took us on some two-lane farm roads. We stopped a few times to see what they grow because we couldn't see from the car. They were mostly soybeans and sun flowers.
Soy Beans |
Sunflowers. Hands are to show how big they are |
It was an interesting experience driving through the breadbasket of America. This is where America's most productive lands are. It's acres after acres of farmlands. Later we'd have an opportunity to visit one of the farms, courtesy of one of my classmates.
We finally drove into Grand Forks, a very different place then when I was studying here 45 years ago. I could not recognize the town at all. There are several new shopping centers and the university itself has transformed. We checked into the Best Western Hotel, which happened to be next to a Japanese restaurant called Sakura. Almost fifty years ago when I came to Grand Forks, you could not even buy tofu or bean sprouts in town.
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