Here we are in the middle of what most of us think of as Summer
since we are halfway between school letting out and school starting back up. Of
course in reality, we are not even one full month into summer yet! Either way,
summer is when most of us travel places other than to visit family--since the
kids are out of school, the weather is not likely to cause travel problems, and
amusement parks and such are all open.
A classic road trip stop. |
When I was a kid back in the seventies, my dad would get a
serious case of the wanderlust every summer and load us all in the car to head
out and see something we had not before seen. We did not have a lot of money so
we did these trips the tightwad way. The trunk of the car was stocked with a
cooler, various groceries, a camp stove, and a few cooking utensils. Breakfast
was either cereal or eggs cooked right in the motel rooms (!). I always thought
this was great because we got those multipacks of little cereal boxes that you
could cut down the side and convert into a bowl. For some reason, the cereal
right out of the box tasted so much better! Lunch was a sandwich made and eaten
in a roadside park, rest stop, or parking lot. For supper, we either had more
sandwiches or we may have a meal at a restaurant if we could find something
suitable (cheap).
Notice above, I said “motel,” not hotel, resort, inn, or bed
and breakfast. By definition, a motel is a place of lodging where the rooms
open to the outside and you can park your car right by your room. The word is
actually a hybrid of “motor” and “hotel,” and came about after World War II
when the grandest thing was to load the family in the car and go on an
adventure. If you look along some of the old pre-interstate thoroughfares, you
will find lots of old motels and motor courts. Back in the seventies, they were
getting a little run down which is why they were usually very inexpensive.
There were many nights when my brother and I slept in sleeping bags on the
floor of these motels so we would not have to pay for extra beds. The thought
gives me the willies now, but we turned out just fine.
Great local food--fish tacos in San Francisco |
One advantage (or disadvantage, depending on your outlook)
of traveling on the cheap as we did is that
you become much more intimately
acquainted with the places you visit in a way you would never experience with
more packaged experiences such as resorts, chain hotels, and chain restaurants.
We visited grocery stores and local diners all over the country—two places that
reveal much about local cultures and lifestyles. I credit these summer
adventures as being a major part of my education and giving me a lifetime of
fuel to feed an overactive mind.A couple of signs you won't see in Texas! |