What I Learned on the Road

From our new Teen Librarian, Meg!

A year ago, I was stuck in Sallisaw, Oklahoma living in the parking lot of a mechanic’s shop with a blown transmission.  That’s pretty close to the end of the story I’m going to tell you though, Reader, so let me rewind a bit.  

A nomadic life in a tiny house (some kind of camper, RV, or converted van / bus) bouncing around between National Parks, wild places, eccentric towns, and interesting cities is just about the most glorious adventure I can think of.  It was, and continues to be, a dream of mine. So, last year, I bought an ‘86 Toyota Camper and I tried it for 2 months. I left Cape Cod in mid-January and took a southern-ish route to the West Coast (through Tennessee, Arkansas, Northern Texas, Arizona and New Mexico).  I visited lots of great towns, and several National and State Parks along the way (including Zion, Bryce Canyon, Arches National Park and Joshua Tree). When I got to the San Diego area, I took a hard right and headed North on beautiful, coast-hugging Route 1. I went all the way to Seattle and then I turned around and went back down more or less the way I had come.  When I was back in Southern California, I began the journey home, but as I previously mentioned, only got as far as Oklahoma.  

It sounds really romantic – the cross-country trip.  Just me and my dog, who (of course) rides shotgun. And, in some ways, it was.  I drove through the Redwoods in Northern California, I saw a psychic in Sedona, Arizona.  I went to the Chihuly Garden and Glass Museum in Seattle, Washington. I rescued a puppy. I did some real backcountry camping on Federal land a few times.  I was absolutely alone in the desert and it was wonderful. (Of course, the camper got stuck in some deep sand once or twice, but I’ve been stuck in snow many times growing up in the North East and it’s almost the same thing, so I was able to get myself out of those particular sand traps.)  

The idyllic perception many people have of life on the road is constantly reinforced by the ubiquitous, carefully staged Instagram photos flooding the Internet.  It seems so beautifully simple – just an incredible road to another ideal camping spot after another. These photos are a lie, however, and they drive me crazy. (I’m sure you can imagine the types of photos I mean:  Posed next to a spotless vintage VW bus, there will be a beautiful young woman with clean, perfectly styled hair and makeup. Next to her, there’s a huge potted cactus with white string lights on it and blankets and pillows strewn on the ground around a delightful-looking picnic.  There’s probably also a steer skull hanging on the side of the van, because of course there is. First of all, where did you plug in your hair dryer? That 6-foot cactus fits in your VW van huh? And all those clean, oversized floor pillows too? Amazing. The truth is, there is no way that person actually lives in that van, and I’m sure if the photographer panned right, we’d see the props department and make-up team that put this little tableau together.)  

In fact, the camper life/ van life is much more trying than those staged photos on Instagram would lead you to believe.  A lot of it is hard, and not at all glamorous. I broke down – more than once, I got lost, I cried – more than once, a semi-truck backed into me and put a hole in the back of the camper at 2AM while I was sleeping at a truck stop.  I went a long time between showers and usually used truck stop showers or national/ state park showers. My heat didn’t work, and many nights, especially in the beginning, it was so cold water would freeze solid inside the camper.    

Of course, I’m not at all sorry I did it.  I learned a lot – about Toyota engines, about myself, and about truck stop showers (which, in case you are curious, are WAY nicer than you’d think, and really not creepy at all.)  I know exactly what it feels like when I am about to blow a tire, and I know how to change it once I do. I can check and change the oil, transmission fluid, coolant, and power steering fluid.  I know what it sounds like when the starter isn’t working and how to find it behind the engine and bang it with a wrench (that’s seriously what you do) to get it to function again.  

In any case, back in Sallisaw, nearing the end of my adventure, I was coming to terms with the fact that the incredibly rare transmission I needed was going to take time to find, and even more time to ship and even more time to install.  So, after two weeks of living in the parking lot, I took my (now 2) dogs, rented a van for way too much money, packed as much as I could in it, and got myself home.  

It felt like defeat.  It felt like everyone who said I’d never make it across the country in an ‘86 Breaking-Bad-looking camper (and that I was stupid to try) was right.  When I got home, a lot of people told me to cut my losses and leave it there. But, I think I also learned that our dreams are our own. And they don’t have to make sense to anyone else.  

So, a couple months later, when the camper was fixed, I flew back to Oklahoma, picked it up, and finally drove it back to Cape Cod.   

It’s running great now and I’ve just finished gutting a large portion of the interior to update and improve the style and functionality of the furniture.  I love this project of a camper, and I’m glad that I made the (admittedly financially irresponsible) decision to rescue it from Oklahoma, because this is my dream, and it doesn’t have to make sense to anyone else.



 

View Post

Books to Inspire Travel on The Point with Mindy Todd

This weeks book show on WCAI was pre-recorded, and if you listened in the morning (during the pledge drive) you would have heard a shortened version of the show, but the evening version will be the full show. You can also, as always, listen online! Our topic was books having to do with travel. Because the show was not live, we also could not take any of your calls or read any of your e-mails. However, if you have a favorite travel book that you would like to add to our list, just send us a comment via this post.

We were delighted that Kellie Porter, a librarian at the Woods Hole Library, joined us for the very first time! We definitely hope she returns for another show in the near future. Looking forward to our August show, we’ll be talking books about pirates with author Peter Abrahams. Every month the book show is broadcast on the last Wednesday of the month, and if you happen to have missed a show, you can listen to them all online at the WCAI web page.

Kellie’s Picks

Time Out in Palestine by Glynnis Fawkes

The Ultimate Interplanetary Travel Guide by Jim Bell

My Paris Kitchen by David Lebovitz

The Odyssey of Homer translated by Emily Wilson

Around the World in 50 Ways by Lonely Planet Kids

The Solo Travel Handbook by Lonely Planet

The Airport Book by Lisa Brown

Leave Me Alone! by Vera Brosgol

The Art of Travel by Alain de Botton

Old Ways by Robert Macfarlane

Jill’s Picks

The Novel Cure: from abandonment to zestlessness: 751 books to
cure what ails you by Ella Berthoud and Susan Elderkin. “The Ten
Best Novels to Read on a Train” page 67. “The Ten Best Novels to
Read in a Hammock” page 375.

Atlas Obscura by Joshua Foer, Dylan Thuras & Ella Morton. Interested in the Atlas Obscura web page? Here is the link!

Unfathomable City: a New Orleans Atlas by Rebecca Solnit and
Rebecca Snedeker. You might also be interested in Nonstop Metropolis: a New York City Atlas and  Infinite City: a San Francisco Atlas.

The Old Ways: a journey on foot by Robert Macfarlane

Foreign Affairs by Alison Lurie

Le Road Trip: a traveler’s journal of love and France by Vivian Swift

Gardens of Awe and Folly: a traveler’s journal on the meaning of life
and gardening by Vivian Swift

Explorers’ Sketchbooks: the art of discovery & adventure by Huw Lewis-Jones & Kari Herbert with a foreword by Robert MacFarlane

The Best Women’s Travel Writing, Volume 11, published in 2017, edited by Lavinia
Spalding

Travel Books to Share with Children

The Penny Whistle Traveling With Kids Book by Meredith Brokaw
and Annie Gilbar, illustrated by Jill Weber

Storybook Travels: from Eloise’s New York to Harry Potter’s London,
visits to 30 of the best-loved landmarks in children’s literature by
Colleen Dunn Bates and Susan LaTempa

All Aboard: a traveling alphabet by Bill Mayer

No time for this, but GRANTA: the magazine of new writing did a great travel issue. It is the “Journeys” issue number 138, Winter 2017. It includes many meditations on the question “Is Travel Writing Dead?” and Falmouth Public Library subscribes so you can request this issue via CLAMS!