Category Archives: Roadgeek

Travel Mapping

Though I am no longer traveling 100% of the time, I still occasionally get paid to go places and I am continuing to notch off new locations.  Years ago, I began keeping maps of information on these travels.  Since 2018 just ended, it seems like a good time to present them.

us counties 2018

In 2018, I was in three new states and over 100 new counties thanks to trips to eastern Tennessee, Michigan and Oklahoma.  (The new states were Virginia, Ohio and Arkansas.) It’s interesting to pick out the longer distance road trips on this county-level map.  I-75 really sticks out in Georgia since their counties are so small.  There’s the preferred route between Wisconsin and Santa Fe through Kansas.  There’s the time I had to go from Utah to Portland, Oregon.  And our trip to Gulf Shores, Alabama, the week the war started in Iraq.  The string of counties in central Nebraska well off of I-80 was my trek to catch the total solar eclipse in the summer of 2017.

Keep in mind that I dug into my memories from as far back as age 10 to remember what routes we took on family vacations when I initially started this map.  Of course I was pretty much lead navigator by then already so I had an advantage.  My parents eschewed interstate highway travel for much of our Western vacations so I’ve seen a lot more of the Dakotas than your typical Midwestern kid whose family was in a rush to get to the mountains.

Since I’ve had a major road trip through Canada, I need a similar map for the land of hockey and Tim Hortons:

canada clinched

They don’t really have counties west of Lake Superior in Canada but this is close enough.  Here you can see my frequent fishing trips to Northwest Ontario as well as my 2016 drive from Anchorage to Madison.

I did sort of drop the ball on not writing about that Alaska Highway trip.  Maybe I’ll backfill someday as it was possibly a once-in-a-lifetime journey.  In fact, here’s a quick shot of Mt. Wrangell from a wide open straightaway on the Glenn Highway.img_2892.

 

Honest Abe

Pontiac has a lot going on in its downtown including a Route 66 museum, a bunch of mid-century inspired murals, a gorgeous courthouse, a car museum featuring Pontiacs (amazing, right?) and this life size statue of the state’s most important resident.

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The Vermillion River yielded one nice bass and a couple of panfish to boot.

Get your kicks…

It’s raining today and we’re getting some routine maintenance done on the van. The garage I’m at in Pontiac, IL has embraced its location on the historic route of US 66.

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The place is full of old school cars and stuff.
Nostalgia for a bygone era that probably wasn’t as great as everyone remembers. For example, all these cool old cars were spewing lead into the air while getting 8 mpg. And they were horrible death traps in a collision.
But they sure were classy, poison belching death machines. That’s completely absent in modern cars. Somebody slap some tail fins on a Honda or something! Ha, ha!

Illinois Dells

Who’d have thought?  Despite all the Illinois license plates in Wisconsin Dells, turns out they have a “Dells” of their own.  I only saw one water park, however.

http://mapper.acme.com/?ll=41.30824,-89.04247&z=14&t=T

Matthessian State Park in Oglesby; the Vermillion River cuts deep into sandstone bedrock on its way to joining the Illinois River just upstream from an impressive, valley-spanning bridge on I-39.  It is quite literally the only interesting terrain anywhere on I-39 in Illinois.  Dozens of miles of flat vistas of corn and soybeans flank this one imposing place making its contrast with its surroundings all the more outstanding.

I stocked up on cupcakes from a place in nearby North Utica and had a very agreeable dinner at an inconspicuous bar and grill in downtown Oglesby called M.J.’s.  Shabby on the outside, modern and welcoming on the inside.  A framed portrait of Brian Urlacher and Aaron Rodgers staring each other down during the 2011 NFC Championship game graces the back bar:

https://i0.wp.com/www.tddaily.com/static/uploads/2013/05/Aaron%2BRodgers%2BBrian%2BUrlacher%2B2011%2BNFC%2BChampionship%2BxIUEkRI7xDwl.jpg

(photo credit-http://www.tddaily.com/static/uploads/2013/05/Aaron+Rodgers+Brian+Urlacher+2011+NFC+Championship+xIUEkRI7xDwl.jpg)

No partisan rhetoric, just two outstanding athletes exchanging professional pleasantries between plays.  And I saw it mounted on the wall in a bar in the heart of Bear Country.  Now that’s some ‘love of the game’ type stuff right there.  It’s like symbolism and junk.

-reporting from Exit 54 in Oglesby, Illinois

The Quad

I’ve got a couple off days in this quartet of river towns straddling the Mississippi.  Spent much of today doing some fishing in the Rock River.   Lots of activity there!  Pelicans, cormorants, herons, hoards of little minnows that would nibble on your feet if you waded in.  I caught one drum, half a dozen wee catfish and this feisty little guy:Image

That’s a softshell turtle.  I was able to unhook it, but he got to keep my worm.  There were dozens of these things scooting around.

I was disappointed to see the local minor league baseball team is on the road this week.  It looks like a nice little stadium there in Davenport.  It’s a Midwest League team called the River Rats.  I may see about procuring some swag tomorrow.

My hotel room has a nice view of the cloverleaf interchange between I-74 and I-280 by the airport.  It’s one of only a handful of places where one needs to navigate a loop to follow the ‘mainline’ of an interstate highway.  (One of the other ones is the next interchange east!)

I expect to be in this area for the next several days so I have plenty of time to explore.