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About caroltracycarr

Writer, Musician, Grandmother, Retired Attorney

Tomorrow We Hit the Road

What exactly does “hitting the road” mean? In our case, it means about 8,500 pounds of vehicle rolling out of our driveway, filled with a closetful of about twenty mini “suitcases” comprised of Eagle Creek packing cubes, a refrigerator full of all the food we couldn’t finish off in this past month when we quit buying any food other than the necessities of milk, orange juice, and eggs, and tanks full of propane, water and diesel fuel. I hate to think of how much all of those weigh. It means carrying a good dozen or so electronics, many of which will lose much of their functionality as soon as we get to the wide open spaces and lose cellular signals, but that doesn’t stop us from bringing them along. Or the myriad cords that, if we tied them all together, would probably encircle the vehicle.

It means a “good” day on the road is one when we accomplish at least 300 miles; a “hard” day is when we need to make 400 or more. For Roger, it means keeping all the GPSes in sync with each other (and hopefully us with them), and for Carol, it means taking the majority of photos from an open window of a moving vehicle. It means searching for a level campsite every night, and finding a small-town grocery that’s big enough to carry what you want, but small enough so it doesn’t eat up a good half hour to negotiate through the store.

Winding Road

And it’s watching the horizon for the mountains that never seem to come soon enough as you’re traveling West and that disappear too quickly as you’re heading East. There’s a huge great plain in the middle of the country that, for me, is one of the best, most relaxing, parts of the trip. As that long, seemingly endless ribbon of road unfolds in front of you, it’s like a story waiting to be discovered, and then told in a blog like this one.

Seven Springs in Summer

SevenSprings - Aerial View

Returning to Seven Springs Resort was like greeting an old friend. In the winter of 1970, I’d skied there and taken plenty of tumbles on the bunny slopes. My best recollections are that it was a small ski resort with great slopes and a fantastic indoor swimming pool. We were newly married, and by all the economic indicators, we were officially “poor,” so any resort felt like luxury to me. Then, in the spring of 1995 I’d visited there with my father, our last trip together before he died. I was awed by how much it had grown. In the interim the resort had grown a collection of chalet villages and now offered an assortment of restaurants. A family owned resort for a good fifty years, it had ensured its longevity by selling out to a corporation that knew best how to manage thousands of guests.

This was my first visit to Seven Springs in the summer, and it didn’t disappoint. They accommodated without too much eye-blinking our family group of 33, half of which are between 1 and 13. Hiking, water-chuting, swimming and eating were all well-addressed right on campus. None in our party tried out the zipline, but it sure looked like fun. Idelwild Park in nearby Ligonier kept the entire range of kidlets occupied and happy for most of Saturday. The Soak Zone nearly pulled me in despite my lack of a bathing suit; the wave pool there is something I definitely want to try next time. Instead, the old folks headed off to the historic part of Ligonier where we had a very healthy and delicious lunch at an old Victorian home. Who’d have imagined we’d discover a new variation on a grilled cheese sandwich? (Spicy grilled vegetables tucked inside cheddar cheese made all the difference.) Afterwards we explored Main Street shops to work up an appetite for an ice cream cone at the Ligonier Creamery. The gem of the afternoon was discovering Celtic Culture, a store filled with Irish goods, (the only other one I’ve seen outside of Ireland was in Cambridge, Massachusetts), where I spoke with shopkeeper Andrew Carr. By the time we finished talking, we were convinced we were related.

Visiting Seven Springs was like discovering an old friend who’s gotten better as he’s gotten older. I was pleased that our younger generation embraced the concept of a central location where getting their growing families together was no more than a 5-6 hour driving burden for anyone. Perhaps this will be our recreation center for the future, perhaps we’ll find a better place yet. But I’m quite certain that we’ll all return again sometime, hopefully together.

What do Andrew Mellon and the Pittsburgh Pirates have in common?

Andrew MellonPittsburgh Pirates

              Seven Springs!

For those of you interested in the history of places you visit, see http://www.westpennmiataclub.com/mmm10/docs/history7.html to discover the connection.

My own memories of Seven Springs date to the early 70’s, and they’re limited to the ski lodge and the slopes covered with snow. Later in 1995, I returned during a visit with my father, and we stopped in to see the new lodge. In between those years, the resort grew steadily and has changed hands a couple of times. But it was born out of the love of a man and a woman for the Laurel Highlands country that you’ll learn about in the link above.

Seven Springs is also known for its innovations: in the 60’s one of the owners’ sons invented and patented the Millennium Snowmaking Gun that is used throughout the world. More recently, the resort has won awards for its innovative water conservation and solar panel techniques used in its snowmaking system. You can see the details of these systems and the rest of the history of Seven Springs from where the above article leaves off at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Springs_Mountain_Resort.

First Comes Pennsylvania

The countdown is now 14 days before we head west. First we have a shorter trip to Pennsylvania for a family gathering scheduled to begin a week from today. Next Friday, we’ll get on the road as early as we can to meet up with members of the Tracy family and friends at Seven Springs Resort near Bedford, PA. Even though we have only about 48 hours to share with each other, we usually manage to pack in a lot. Here are a few examples of what we can/will do.

Welcome Aboard

Welcome

Welcome to our CarrTravels blog. Roger and I have a summer full of coast-to-coast travel ahead of us; the map at the top of this page gives an overview of our route. We’ve chosen this blog to record the high points of our trips and to keep our family and friends up to date as to our whereabouts, and we hope you’ll follow along and share our trip with us. On the menu bar above you’ll see our Itinerary, and under What We’ll See you’ll find the highlights of what we’ll be touring on a particular day. The rest of the pages stand ready to absorb the photos and details of our trip. Once again, Roger has planned out a rich agenda. By the end of our trip, we’ll have added several more notable national parks to our list and increased the number of state capitols we’ve visited to 37. If you’re interested in the vehicle that’s going to carry us to all these places, check out Our BoxCarr on the menu bar.

We welcome you to travel with us vicariously. The easiest way is to simply bookmark this link (https://carrtravels.wordpress.com/) and check in from time to time. If you’d like to receive email updates when new things are added to our blog, just hit the Follow button to the right and follow the instructions. (There’s no need to create an account or do anything other than give your email address.) We welcome your comments too! There’s an option to leave comments with every post and on every page.

Our trip doesn’t begin until July 19, but in the meantime we’ll be taking the BoxCarr on a shorter run over to Pennsylvania to a family gathering and to make sure all systems are go. We hope your own summer will be filled with some good family time together and beautiful travels too. Enjoy!

Busted!

Busted

After three days of frisking our BoxCarr from top to bottom, Roger discovered a critical mass of gnawing and chewing detritus and mouse droppings that identified home base of our little monsters. In the rubber insulation of the wires buried under the hood directly beneath the windshield were several sections worn thin by mice teeth that covered a collection of well-chewed cicada bodies. Fortunately the mice had left the coatings of the wires alone, or we could have had some annoying (and likely expensive) electrical issues to deal with. For now, we’ve cleaned up their messes and disinfected the BoxCarr. We’re already strategizing locations for moustraps over next winter. Likely one of our biggest challenges will be to remember where we’ve placed them, as this time we plan to put one under the hood.

Mice on Board!

Cute Mouse3

Yuk! Fortunately no live, jumping bodies in our BoxCarr. Just specks of mouse droppings randomly dispersed and a box of Kleenex that looks like the remnants of a tornado. Enough to merit a top-to-bottom vacuuming of anything approaching enough dust to create a nest. Roger is threatening mousetraps. I’m disgusted at how many corners of the RV they can wiggle their way into.

Today was the first real day of getting our rig in shape for the Big Trip. We have a wee trip planned in 17 days to Pennsylvania for a family gathering. We need to use that time to make certain all systems are working so we can get done whatever repairs are needed. And check to make sure we don’t have any cute little stowaways on board.

We’re Off Again

Well, not today…or tomorrow. July 19 is out Takeoff Day, when we’ll head west for San Francisco. Eight days of travel through ten states, lots of open road, state capitols, and several hundred pictures will bring us to SF, where we’ll spend a few days with family, then head up towards Seattle for more time with family. Then we’ll head home, arriving on August 14. Twenty-seven days and eighteen states in all, with ten state capitols. We’re still perusing books for other sights to see along the way.