Day 13 Route 66

Bennett Spring State Park’s local claim to fame is as a great fishing site.  This is what we saw as we left the park on this Saturday morning.  Those are waders hanging from the awning support.

  

Back in Lebanon, Missouri, we picked up one more box at the post office (a Scan Gauge) then we visited the new Route 66 museum in the new library.  This is a small but powerful museum. The first cafe photo is not a serving cafe but is one of the displays in the museum. The bridge picture is the Chain of Rocks Bridge we visited several days ago; notice the bend in the middle to counteract the force of the water flowing by.  I don’t know what the collection of salt and pepper shakers has to do with Route 66 but it is emblematic of the 1950s; my Mom had a collection that might have been this large if she displayed it all at once. We also ate lunch in their cafe; the picture of the piano tiled floor was taken there. 

        

There was a young family with their grandma eating in the cafe.  The daughter, about age 3, had apparently never had a hot dog before.  She had to be taught how to eat it.  She loved being able to put her own catsup on from the squeeze bottle.  Her older brother had new cowboy boots; he liked listening to the heels strike the floor as he walked.  I’m pleased to report they were well behaved children as we see so many who are not nowadays.

Next we stopped at the B&D Auto/Truck Plaza where we bought diesel and propane.  It’s nice to know we can keep running our furnace at night without worrying about running out of propane in the middle of the night.  I am looking forward to getting far enough south that we won’t need the furnace, though.

As we came into Conway we saw a sign that said, “Speed Limit 45”.  Right next to that was a sign that said, “Speed Limit 25 where not posted”.  How do we know where “not posted” starts?

Driving down County Road CC while watching the center lines wander all over the place made me wonder about the painter.  Was he new to the job?  Or drunk?

We passed several obviously new businesses using the name Route 66.  That irritated me. Then I realized Route 66 had always been a road advertising the businesses along it.  Why should that tradition not continue in the names of new ones?

We passed a horse motel. Lots of people travel with horses and they need a place to spend the night, too.  I got a chuckle out of the fact the barn had been painted to look like a strip motel.

In Strafford, Missouri, we stopped and shopped at Camping World.  We now have new carpet on our steps which I hope will help keep down the amount of dirt we track in.  We also have a second magazine rack to install to hold all those maps I picked up the other day.  But we didn’t get the electrical things Dave had on his list–out of stock or not available there.

Now we are camped across the highway from Camping World at Stafford RV Park.  It’s basically another parking lot but it is giving me a place to catch up on all these blogs. I guess I’d better post the URL for this new blog on the old blog so you can all read these, huh?

TTYL,

Linda

Day 12 Route 66

Today was a catch up day.  We had stopped at the post office in Lebanon, Missouri, yesterday and picked up three boxes of mail.  One of them was a box of forwarded mail and the other two contained our new Wilson Trucker’s Antenna and booster which are, we hope, going to help us stay connected to the world in places where the signal may not be so great.

So today we processed lots of mail and spent hours crawling around the RV figuring out where we could place the outside antenna, inside antenna, and booster box so as to get the best reception.  These all have to connect to one another by cables.  Figuring out where we can safely run those cables is challenging, to say the least.  We could hire someone to install all that but that’s not nearly as much fun.  Of course, we might not think it was so much fun if we ever actually finish this task.  For now, we are still thinking about the best way to do it.

We did install our new Instant Off Water Saver.

 

This thing is designed to let you leave the water turned on low but the water doesn’t flow until you push against the rod hanging from the faucet.  The idea for us is that I could quit getting the handle soapy when I turned the water back on after washing my hands and I could quit dripping water all over the sink when turning off the water or washing the soap off the handles.  It might work well for a sink where the faucet is located down in the sink but this one sprayed the whole counter.  I tried several times to make it work but got tired of cleaning up the messes I was making so we took it off again.  Oh, well, another “good” idea gone by the wayside.

The final task of the day was to set up and learn to use this new blog site.  How am I doing?

TTYL,

Linda

Day 11 Route 66

I think I mentioned before that we like Missouri State Parks.  They have no admission fees, usually have electrical hookups for $16-$20 dollars, and their campsites are often shaded by trees.  They also have a checkout time of 2 p.m.  Which for us is a mixed blessing since we have so much trouble getting on the road in the morning anyway without having permission to stay so long.  Still we are picking Missouri State Parks for most of our overnights even when we have to drive a ways off our route to get to them.  It’s so easy to get tired of RV parks where you park too close to your neighbors in what is essentially a parking lot.

This section of Route 66 is also the I-44 freeway frontage road.  It is very well maintained.  Part of that is probably because, according to the signs, it is also the “Incident By-Pass Route.”  Apparently, they have enough accidents on the freeway here to have a marked route for detouring around them.  That makes me glad we are over here to start with.

We are seeing fewer colorful leaves today so we must be headed in the right direction.  

Cuba, Missouri is a town that understand the importance of Route 66.  They have been restoring buildings and many other town buildings have Route 66 murals painted on them.

 

One of the funniest sights I saw was a man walking a dog.  The dog got just far enough ahead of the man to walk around a post wrapping his leash around it.  When the man tried to follow the dog to unwrap the leash, the dog followed the man.  They went around a couple of times before the the leash finally came unwrapped.

In St James, Missouri, we stopped at a visitor center.  When you travel the 2-lane highways instead of the Interstates, you don’t get a visitor center every time you cross a state border.  This small town visitor center was an excellent place to stop.  They had current highway maps for most of the states we will be passing through.  What a bonus!

Also, in St James we saw a place that had three former tour buses for sale.  So, If any of your are looking to buy a bus to convert to an RV, here’s a place you might want to visit.

We stopped at a Subway for lunch and this vehicle pulled in.  The owner thanked me for wanting to take pictures of it.  Who wouldn’t?!

 

Then we drove though an area known as Devil’s Elbow.  It included a two lane road with a one lane bridge.  And a pullout with this fantastic view.

Lebanon, Missouri, is another place that appreciates its Route 66 history.  

    

We bought groceries at Winks Market and ate supper at the Bell Restaurant but we didn’t stay at the Munger Moss Motel.  They are open for business and are popular with Route 66 travelers but we went on to Bennet Springs State Park for another pleasant stay at a Missouri state park.

TTYL,

Linda

Day 10 Route 66

Leaving St Louis we tried to follow the Route 66 signs and my homemade maps.  We finally gave up and opened the turn by turn book I bought back in Chicago.  When we stated this journey I didn’t think we wanted to do it turn by turn.  I was wrong.  It’s actually easier to follow that route which automatically brings you to most of the things we want to see.  Plus, Dave has discovered that, for him, following the actual route is what it is all about.

Dave and I are not particularly interested in exploring caves.  Been there; done that; I can’t really do it anymore, anyway.  Yet we found ourselves turning at the road to Meramec Caverns.  I guess all that advertising on barns and billboards does work.  We didn’t tour the cave, though.  We just had lunch in their restaurant and shopped in their gift shop.  

For lunch I had a country fried steak sandwich.  I love country fried steak partly because I love gravy which I don’t eat often anymore so it is a real treat when I do.  However this was a steak on a bun–no gravy.  It was so tasty I didn’t even mind it not having gravy.

In the gift shop I bought a toothpick holder.  I have a gap in my teeth that nearly always manages to trap something at the end of a meal.  I frequently need to use a toothpick to get it out.  With this holder, I can store some toothpicks in my pocket without getting stabbed.  A very handy thing for me.

Driving along we passed other “typical” tourist sites.  A reptile museum with a trading post then a yard full of lawn ornaments for sale, for example.  I remember reading once about a woman who collected those lawn ornaments for years.  As a widow, she started selling them from her own yard to supplement her income.  Interesting retirement program.  Today she’d probably be selling them on eBay.

As we drove the hills of this part of Missouri, Dave commented, “Missouri sure has a lot of ups and downs.”  I’m glad our days are mostly ups.

TTYL,

Linda

Day 9 Route 66

First stop today was Route 66 State Park.  The park used to be a town but when the floodwaters rose ten feet up the walls of the buildings the town was abandoned.  It now has lots of cool Route 66 stuff in its visitor center which itself was once the Bridgehead Inn.  The Inn was above flood level so it was not damaged.  The park is lovely but has no camping.  No one wants to get flooded out again.

  

Next we went to Ted Drewes Frozen Custard stand to have a snack that would tide us over for awhile. The stand is an old-fashioned one where you walk up to the window along the sidewalk and talk to the clerk through a screen window.  When your order is ready, they open the screen and pass you the food.  When I was growing up in Decatur, Illinois, there was a frozen custard stand like that (only not nearly as big as this one) that would occasionally have lemon custard.  Dad would take us there for a treat.  So I was hoping to get lemon custard today.  No such luck; I had to settle for one that came as close to German Chocolate Cake as a custard can come.  Then we went into the RV to eat it since the custard stand has no dining area and it was starting to rain.  When we drove by here a couple of days earlier the sun was out, the place was mobbed, and the park benches that line the sidewalk were full.  I’m glad we came back at a quieter time.

After our snack we went to visit our friends Bob & Prue.  We wanted to see what Bob had done with his Pseudo Soo model railroad when he moved it from Minneapolis to St Louis.  It was fun catching up with the news of shared friends even though not all the news has been good.  And it was fun seeing the railroad in it’s new home.  It was somewhat disconcerting, though, to see familiar industries now located in different model towns than where they used to be.  I would still enjoy working the paper mill job and Dave would like to work the yard.  Ignoring the fact that I can no longer stand still long enough to operate, we could probably do that if we could stay a week.  Friends from Minneapolis and elsewhere are coming to operate here next weekend.  But, the leaves are changing color here now so we must keep moving.

 

While moving from place to place in St Louis we found ourselves on I-270.  This is the only freeway we’ve ever seen that has variable speed limits.  Their speed limit signs are light boxes that they can set to read whatever speed they want you to drive today.  I wonder if that works?

Then we went to Spencer’s Grill for lunch.  Except, we turned the wrong way on Kirkwood.  Fortunately, lots of people apparently do that because they had specially designated U-turn lanes.  So went turned the right way to go to Spencer’s.  Except, we were too late. It turned out to be a place that only serves breakfast and lunch and they had closed for the day about an hour before we got there.  

So, we went to I-HOP.  Two of them actually since the first one was closed.  But Dave had waffles on his mind so we kept driving until we got to the second one.  At least, they were both on our route.

By now it was rather late in the day to head on down the road so we went back to Edmund Babler Memorial State Park for another good night’s rest.  I really like Missouri State Parks.

TTYL,

Linda