Saturday, May 31, 2008

Road Trip Adventure: DAY 6, Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Locations Hit:
Calistoga, California
Napa Valley, California
Boont, California
Coastal Highway, California
Redwood Forest National Park, California

I’m not sure I could live in vineyard estate in the heart of Napa Valley for a long time. I think that at some point I would begin to get bored. However, being there for a night, or probably even a couple years, was absolutely incredible, and it was hard to leave. We slept in and spent the morning preparing monstrous omelets…a pure delicacy on road trips. We spent some time planning our next moves and eventually left our “humble” abode around 2:00P.M.

From there we continued driving up the beautiful coast of California eventually ending up on the coastal highway, Route 1, which overlooks the Pacific ocean nearly the entire time. When it isn’t it swings in and out of huge mountains that often line the coast in Northern California. At some point in here we ended up in a town called Boont…yes Boont, and enjoyed some of the finest ice cream I’ve had in awhile. The town looked like it had been extracted straight from a King of the Hill’esque scene where everyone knew everyone, hung out at the gas station, and talked with some sort of accent.

Around 9:00P.M. we arrived in the Redwoods National Forest and found a campground right on the beach. It was super dark so besides the fact that we could hear the ocean we hadn’t any idea of our surroundings and left those bridges to be crossed in the morning. We prepared a campfire feast of smokies (mini hot dogs) with onions and peppers, baked beans, and green beans. Everyone should eat over the fire at some point in their lives if not regularly. From someone that truly loves cooking, there is still few times more fulfilling that eating some prepared over a fire. Another great day ending under the stars with full stomachs.

Making the most of the ridiculous gas prices along the way. Anytime to stretch was a good time.
The sunset along the coastal highway on our way to the Redwood Forest.
Feasting. This is 2 packages of smokies, an onion, a green pepper, and after this picture we dumped a 20oz. can of baked beans on top of all of it. Then we demolished all of it.


Road Trip Adventure: DAY 5, Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

Locations Hit:
Lake Tahoe, Nevada
Napa Valley, California
Calistoga, California

“A man lives up in a tree. He picks an apple and an orange falls out of the tree. It hits a teeter-totter and shoots a rock into the tree. The man doesn’t know if he is in a tree or a space capsule.”

This was a joke a crazy man told us this morning while admiring the beauty of Lake Tahoe. He talked to us for about 15 minutes and ended in an oddly spiritual and hand clasping version of the Lord’s Prayer and a Hail Mary. He then gave us each a penny for good luck and was on his way. These types of people keep things interesting. God bless him.

We didn’t get to spend too much time in Lake Tahoe other than admire its massive appearance from shore. We determined it was more of a destination location and would probably be great to come back to some day with a little more money and a little more time.

Aside from this we had gotten some information that had made all of us a little anxious. Lisl’s aunt, who lives in Alaska, owned a vineyard estate in Calistoga in the heart of Napa Valley. We hit the roads through the California countryside and enjoyed every second of it. It was a beautiful day for driving and we got some fresh California strawberries to enjoy en route. It was a great trip that culminated in a huge mansion estate on a quaint vineyard…that we had all to ourselves.

Now let me explain that after a week of sleeping in cars and significant breaks in between showers, when an opportunity such as this presents itself it’s a bit hard to grasp. We decided to cope by hitting the nearest grocery store and spending $80 on fresh food and wine to prepare in the master kitchen (yes, there were multiple options). That night we spent preparing and cooking an absolute feast and enjoying the fruits of the local land (which just so happened to be alcohol). It was a grand night, concluding with a sunset over Napa valley. A shower would have been adequate, but somehow we’d ended up in the lap of luxury for the night, and we were taking full advantage.

Me, Lisl, & Dan on the beach of Lake Tahoe early in the morning.
Feasting at our temporary mansion in Napa .
Wandering around the estate in Napa. You can see the private vineyards on the hill.


Road Trip Adventure: DAY 4, Monday, May 26th, 2008

Locations Hit:
Moab, Utah
Salt Flats, Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah
Reno, Nevada
Lake Tahoe, Nevada

Waking up in a car is never fun; this morning was no exception. We had taken the pain though for a good cause and that was to see the arches and rocks of Moab, Utah in the morning light and in a nearly empty park. As soon as we arrived we knew our future deformed postures had been worth it. The park was indeed nearly empty and made our drive and hiking so much more enjoyable. We took our time making sure to take more pictures than necessary and taking the time to absorb the sheer beauty before us. It was a highlight of the trip so far and we would recommend it to anyone.

We enjoyed an impromptu lunch at one of the vista points and once again hit the road for Lake Tahoe around 12:30P.M. Now this leg of the trip was expected to take 8 hours, and we were even crossing a time zone, which would have shaved an hour off. Around 12:30A.M. we realized somewhere our calculations had been wrong. It was a long drive with the climax being a drive through the salt flats (which I can say was still fairly anti-climactic). We attempted to taste the salt directly from the flats but aren’t so sure if it was salt or just mud. This pretty much sums up the rest of the 12-hour journey. Oh yeah, we did hit the slots at a rest stop just to test our luck in Nevada. It was a hard earned $0.25 down the drain and I think I’m going to give up gambling for good. We finally got into Tahoe with intentions to camp and found a campground around 1:30A.M, set-up camp, and hit the sack right away. It was a long, but necessary, day of driving.

Lisl, Me, & Dan in front of the most famous of the arches in Arches National Park in Moab, Utah.
If we ever started a band, this is the photo that would undoubtedly be on the inside cover and on every magazine.
The balanced rock perched next to me.

Road Trip Adventure: DAY 3, Saturday, May 25th, 2008

Locations Hit:
Snow Mass, Colorado
Carbondale, Colorado
Moab, Utah

Sleeping in a bed and having a shower supplied by Megan and her more than hospitable parents may have been more satisfying than graduating with an undergraduate degree from college. The morning started around 9:30A.M. with a cup of coffee and a half hour of staring at our atlas with Megan’s dad plotting our next move. We had anticipated heading to Yosemite but the roads were closed with ice and snow. We settled on Moab, Utah to see the rock arches and then onto Lake Tahoe, Nevada.

After our impromptu planning session we met up with our newfound friends from the night before for breakfast as a phenomenal diner in Carbondale, the next town over. Nothing, and I mean nothing, can replace the satisfaction from a hearty diner breakfast. Everyone chatted of his or her plans to raft, mountain bike, or hike for the day and we began questioning if we were really living in the right place. Megan had planned a hike for us, which was desperately necessary to exercise our bodies after so much time in the car. The following morning, Memorial Day, her and a few of her friends were hiking the Sopris Mountain, hoping to summit before noon and ski down one of its broad faces. We were going to do the first portion of this hike to locate the snowline with her for the following morning. Hiking in the Rockies had seemed more of a pipe dream thus far, and after having just a small hint of the experience I’m still questioning whether such sheer beauty is possible.

After the hike we bid farewells with our wonderful host, old friend, and new friend and headed on the 4-hour drive to Moab in search of the infamous stone arches that grace the Utah license plate. Again, it was a beautiful drive filled with mountains of a completely different sort than found in Colorado. They are a deep red color and have formed from thousands of years of natural erosion.

The story of this leg of the trip wouldn’t be complete without some of the hilarity often found on journeys through the mid-west. En route to Moab we finally got off of Super 70 (Route 70, which we’d been traveling on thus far in the trip) to take a scenic route. These roads were the kind you see in movies or in stereotypical road trip pictures with a car on a long, straight, desert road appearing to lead no-where. After about 30 minutes we saw a sign for the town of Cisco. We couldn’t imagine what town would possibly be in the middle of this baron desert land of which seeing a passing car was a surprise. As we approached we quickly found out. Cisco had one general store with an American flag sticking straight up out of it. Around this general store was essentially a junkyard. Random cars and vehicles that had obviously been destroyed in accidents; old rundown buildings; rusty scrap metal; the town of Cisco had everything that could be deemed worthless in the world in one vast field. It was the type of place you could disappear and no one would ever be able to find out about it. On this we took the obligatory pictures of weird Mid-West passing through attractions and got the heck out.

We wound around a river into the park with plans of camping for the night. As the sun began to fall we anxiously entered nearly a dozen national park campgrounds. As the sun continued to fall deeper we more anxiously left nearly a dozen national park campgrounds finding them all to be full with Memorial Day weekend vacationers in search of the same natural wonders. The decision was to either move forward and leave the arches left unseen, or do the unthinkable.

Yes…at this point we decided to find a parking lot, suck it up in the name of some natural rock formations, and check into Hotel Jetta once again. We were all set up in the parking lot of a Holiday Inn, only to discover it was next to a leach field. Now this wasn’t a word I’d previously known, but probably could’ve guessed based on the ferocious scent protruding from the ditch next to the hotel parking lot. For those of you that don’t know a leach field is where the septic tanks run into. Once again dumbfounded in the ridiculousness of the situation, and in a mixture of laughter and self-contempt, we moved to another parking lot across the street and a safe shot away from any uncanny smells.

The impromptu drying rack that has developed in the back of the Hotel Jetta.
Me, Megan, Lisl, and Dan hiking part of Sopris Mountain in Colorado.

Cisco

One of the many beautiful views on the drive into Moab.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Road Trip Adventure: DAY 2, Saturday, May 24th, 2008

Locations Hit:
Denver, Colorado
Aspen, Colorado

There aren’t many good things that come out of sleeping in a car, let alone one parked at a rather suspect rest stop in central Kansas. The one that shines though is that no matter when you go to sleep (in our case around 1:00A.M.) you are bound not to sleep in or sleep well. This allows for a very early start, and in our case it came around 5:15A.M.

A little shaken from the excitement of the prior day and a little soar from the less than Five Star luxury that is the Jetta hotel, we still had Denver on the mind and only about three hours to go. It was great to see mountains as we pulled into Denver bright and early around 8:30A.M. Lisl had been to the city before and we had some hot spots picked out so we set off on a day of walking in the beautiful Colorado sun.

Denver was not at all what I’d envisioned – a ski city nestled in between several snow peaked Rockies, bustling with ski bums, stellar pubs, and outdoor shops. The city was actually not very bustling at all which was surprising for a beautiful Memorial weekend Saturday and considering the Mets were in town to play the Rockies. It was calm and quiet. Lisl and Dan are both architecture students so we set off to examine the buildings.

The Denver Museum of Art is a staple building of the United States and was truly incredible, respectable by even a business student as myself. Boasting a student discount rate of $17 to enter however we had planned on simply observing from the outside. Dan somehow managed to befriend a kind older woman who worked there, telling her we were architecture students passing through and she walked us right through. It was a great museum and I’m glad we had the opportunity to see the work inside as well as the art of the exterior design.

We then continued meandering the city and ate lunch and tested some fine crafted micro-brews at the Wynkoop pub, apparently a local favorite. Utterly stuffed and satisfied from the first good meal since leaving home we set off for the R.E.I. camping store which is housed in a gigantic restored warehouse. For those with an outdoor sense it was also a great place to see, surrounded by enthusiasts stocking and restocking and trading stories in between adventures.

Around 5:00P.M. we hit the road, off to Snow Mass, Colorado, 4 hours west of Denver. This drive turned out to be one of the most phenomenal I’d ever taken, as it winded up and down the mountains and across gushing rivers. We were scheduled to meet Megan, another friend of Dan and Lisl’s from study abroad at her friend’s house, nearby in Aspen, as they were having a dinner party. A dinner party seemed like a great idea to us seeing as how we hadn’t now changed clothes, showered, or gotten solid sleep in about 2 days. Simply put, we weren’t quite looking our freshest.

Reassurance was quickly established as we walked in and were welcomed by Megan and about 10 of her friends eating burgers and drinking local micro-brews. They were truly one of the nicest groups of strangers I have ever found myself in the midst of and felt as if I was with a group of friends at college. They asked about our road trip and we asked about how they’d ended up in Aspen and Snow Mass. They filled us with good food and beer and we had a great night exchanging stories. As cliché as it may sound, this type of situation epitomizes the saying it’s not where you are but who your with. Well not only were we in one of the most beautiful locations in the United States, but we’d met a group of people that would make the best of any situation.

Dan, Lisl, and I at the Denver Art Museum.

Road Trip Adventure: DAY 1, Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Locations Hit:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
St. Louis, Missouri
Columbus, Missouri
Kansas City, Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
Russell, Kansas
Random rest stop – location unknown, Kansas

The trip began long before this day; preparing, packing, emailing, video chatting across the country, pulling out the contacts books. It was a hard trip to pack for because although we knew our schedule was bound to be changing on the fly, we knew for sure we’d be covering a lot of climates, terrain, and adventures. From shorts and flip-flops to parkas and ski hats we had to think of it all. Beyond that, although we had contacts to crash with in a lot of destinations, we were anticipating camping in at least a few spots and definitely in Alaska for some sidebar trips. Oh yeah, did I mention that all three of us were cramming into a 2006 VW Jetta for the adventure?

So at 4:00A.M. the morning of Friday, May 23rd, and also a mere 12 hours after graduating from Temple University, one of my longtime best friends, Dan, and I were up and making our final packing preparations. We hiked our packs up to the train station at Philadelphia City hall and the trip officially began. We had a 7:25A.M. flight to meet Lisl, our third companion.

Lisl had just graduated from Washington University in St. Louis and had studied abroad in Copenhagen with Dan last fall. She had told Dan she was looking to do a road trip back to her home in Anchorage, Alaska after graduating and needed a few car-mates. Dan recruited me and the journey was born. We arrived in St. Louis around 9:00A.M, local time, and met her. The Jetta was filled with Lisl’s college supplies and after adding our packs and gear we were to the brim. But hey…we’re young; we’re flexible, right?

Lisl showed us the infamous St. Louis Arch, a.k.a. “The Gateway to The West”. Naturally, in about as cliché of a fashion as possible, we officially started the journey here, spending way to long taking corny photos walking through the arch, and therefore “into the west”. Yeah, you can make fun of us for that…we’re still making fun of ourselves.

We hit the road early with ambitious plans to push completely through Kansas (nothing personal to anyone from Kansas) and arrive into Denver, Colorado late that night. We started strong and drove through a lot of places and towns. We took a slight detour to visit Blake, a friend of Dan and Lisl’s from study abroad, in Lawrence, Kansas, home of Kansas University of which he was a student. He gave us a nice tour of Main Street and told us about the city. It was a pleasant surprise and had a really good vibe. We dined on a feast of homemade ice-cream (dinner…sorry mom) and hit the road again. We were on the road and around 8:30P.M. stopped for a routine gas refill. As things often are on great adventures, it turned out to be everything but routine.

Upon walking into the gas station in Russell, Kansas, we saw probably around 10 people crowded around the cashier’s desk. Now I wouldn’t expect there to be too many hot spots or things going on around 8:30P.M. in central Kansas, but this seemed a little suspicious. I slid behind the crowd and peaked into the center of attention, which happened to be a laptop showing the Weather Channel radar for the town. Now one of the last things I heard from multiple family members right before leaving, besides “Don’t get eaten by a bear” was to “Watch out for the tornados”. But honestly, who heeds a warning as such seriously. Not many people, at least from the east coast, ever truly envision themselves getting caught in a tornado. This seemed to be the theme of the social event at the Fossil Station convenience store on this evening though.

Masked with relatively calm faces and demeanor, it must have been obvious we weren’t locals. Almost immediately we started getting questions – Where did you come from? Where are you going? What did you see? Outside of the new Radiohead album we’d been listening to and the dark night sky we didn’t have too many answers for them. We came to find out that Kansas was littered with what the TV later referred to as “Super Severe Weather”. The very next town down Route 70, about 30 minutes down the road, had just been bulldozed by a serious tornado. Had we not stopped for gas in Russell we would have driven right into it. This storm was going northeast though and then behind it was one covering the entire height of the state and dropping baseball sized hail.

Still relatively calm in such a surreal situation, the three of us stood in the gas station with the locals of nearby towns seeking refuge and tried to decide how to proceed. At this point, a frantic woman came into the gas station and announced to everyone the following, “I just drove through two tornados. I swerved around three overturned semis. I barely made it out. Do you sell alcohol here?” This was perhaps our first warning to the severity of what laid ahead. At this point we did what any warm-blooded college student would do – bought a couple beers and decided to wait for some weather updates.

After sitting in the parking lot for about two hours discussing the half-humorous situation of where we were and what we’d narrowly avoided, it began to rain and we got in the car. At this point we were introduced to Cliff. Cliff was a radio broadcaster. Cliff chased storms. If the movie Twister hasn’t entered your head at any point thus far, it should now, because this is exactly what Cliff did. Providing comfort to many and sheer information to others, Cliff chased these tornado’s in a van and provided constant vocal communication over the radio. He became our best friend.

Cliff was about 45 minutes south of Russell, where we’d been stranded for about 3 hours at this point, and it didn’t sound like the tornado’s were any longer in our area. We were pretty confident and antsy at this point so decided to make the jump and keep pushing west to Colorado. We were back on Route 70 for about half an hour, watching the lightening in the distance behind us when the true disaster of what we’d narrowly missed became apparent. We passed the three overturned semis the woman saw plus two more. You could smell the gasoline like she said. Although there didn’t appear to be any major injuries in any of them, it was a pretty awakening sight, seeing a fraction of the things locals deal with regularly. As if things hadn’t been insane enough to this point, the most unexpected of things came to cap off the day.

We saw the police lights from a distance and slowed as we approached. We could see a car about 10 feet off the side of the road, but a policeman flagging us onward. Phew, I guess everything was ok…time to just keep going. Then we saw it. A cow in the middle of the road. A huge cow. A dead cow. It was lying there stiff, with what was later realized to be…well, you can envision the picture. Yes, Twister was in full effect by this point. Low and behold, 10 minutes further down the road…more police, more smashed cars, and three more dead cows. The only thing we could imagine was the tornado had torn down a fence and the poor cows had wandered up to the highway. At this point it was 1:00A.M. and we opted that Denver would be better untouched for the night and we chose the Jetta as our sleeping quarters for a few hours.

This was the first day. It was 22 hours of absolute madness, randomness, and good-times. It set the bar for the rest of the trip pretty high.

A video of an overturned semi we passed after the tornadoes went through.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Sud America

Christmas break 2007-2008 of my senior year in college I decided to empty the bank account and head down to South America for a month. I went down with my roomate who group up in Montevideo, Uruguay. We hit:

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Ciudad Del Este, Paraguay
Colonia, Uruguay
Foz do Iguqcu, Brazil/Argentina
Guarda do Embau & Florianopolis, Brazil
Montevideo, Uruguay
Panama City, Panama
Porto Alegre, Brazil
Punta del Este, Uruguay
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

This is a movie from the 30 day adventure. .

European Travels

A movie of pictures from the traveling I did while studying abroad in Lyon, France in the fall of 2006.

Amsterdamn, Holland
Annecy, France
Barcelona, Spain
Dublin, Ireland
Grenoble & Chartreuse, France
London, England
Lucerne/Interlachen/Geneva/Bern, Switzerland
Lyon, France
Macon & Beaujolais region, France
Munich, Germany
Paris, France
Perouges, France
Prague, Czech Republic
Rome, Italy

Monday, May 5, 2008

STA Travel World Intern Application Video

My application video for the STA World Traveler Internship 2008.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

makeAmove

makeAmove is a travel blog about ...well whatever happens to be on my mind as I'm traveling to new cities, trying new things, and meeting unique people. It is a written commentary of a kid taking the steps necessary to advance his perception of the world that surrounds him. Rather than dreaming of the things around, I makeAmove to interpret them through experiences.

I'm not much of a writer, but the majority of the things I enjoy most in life are things I feel should be shared. I spend most of my money and resources on finding ways to travel to places I've never been before. Fortunately I've gotten to do a pretty fair amount of traveling already in my life.I've traveled all over Europe and just a few months ago went on an adventure to South America. Eventually I'll back up and cover the major spots I hit in each of those continents, but for now I've got a new focus.

May 22nd I graduate from Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. That 4 year experience could merit an entire blog in itself, but isn't the one I'm talking about. On May 23rd, the morning after walking, I will be taking off with one of my best friends and a friend of his to travel the open road of the United States. Here's how the agenda is looking so far:


Fly Philly to St. Louis, Missouri

Kansas City, Kansas

Denver & Colorado Springs, Colorado

Salt Lake City, Utah

San Francisco & Berklee, California

Coastal Highway, California
Eugene, Oregon

Portland, Oregon

Seattle, Washington
Vancouver, BC, Canada

Fairbanks, Alaska (TBD time permitting)

Anchorage, Alaska

Fly Anchorage to Philly


This is where the blog will begin, and hopefully later this summer I'll fill in my past adventures. Thus commences makeAmove.


ciao