Was it a good idea? Yes! We pitched our tents in one intimately familiar place (Sheridan Lake campground in the Black Hills of South Dakota), one well-known place from visits long ago (Yellowstone Park in Wyoming), and one completely new place (Mt. Hood National Forest in Oregon). Dad indulged in his favorite activity: cooking breakfast at the campsite. Mom managed to keep warm at night. I loved moving at Mom and Dad’s pace and moseying through each day. When I had the urge to do some extra hiking at Lake Sheridan, I just followed the trail that weaves around the lake down to the dam and up to the old mountain lookout, while Mom and Dad napped beneath the pines.
Spending days together on the road was an experience too. We fell into new roles: I did the driving, Dad sat beside me with maps and comments, and Mom relaxed and napped in the back seat. Between Dad’s road habit of drinking Dr. Peppers and my habit of munching on carrots and tamari almonds, Mom continually handed out treats (including copious amounts of black licorice). Once or twice we ate lunch while driving, and then it became Dad’s job to make sandwiches from all the goods that Mom dug out of the cooler and handed to him. He buttered bread spread out on his lap, put cheese on mine and ham on Mom’s, and handed out carrots and chips while Mom got out juice and milk. “I’m busier than a cranberry merchant,” Dad said. “A cranberry merchant?” I was perplexed. “On the day before Thanksgiving,” Mom finished from the back seat.
My driving tested Dad’s patience. His preferred speed is faster than mine. “This is a road trip, not a race,” I told him every time he suggested I pass the car in front of me. But a week into the trip I noticed he was adapting to my pace and even enjoying the opportunity to watch the country as we drove lesser highways that flowed along rivers and crossed over one summit after another.
Using brother Dave’s GPS was helpful, except for those times when we got annoyed with all of her recalculations. “She says to turn right in four miles,” Dad would tell me. “No, she said in POINT four miles,” I would tell Dad. “Recalculating,” Mrs. GPS would say.
I’m back in Alaska now. I spent a final few days savoring sunshine and quiet in northern Washington, driving gently on the advice Charles ElDorado gave us back in Wausa to “set your speed at fifty and stay there.” A car does indeed use way less fuel at 50 than it does at 70, which gave me time to contemplate making personal changes that would count even more, like using my feet and my bicycle...a subject I'll explore somewhere besides this blog. I touched down in Anchorage long enough to see Mamma Mia! with Lisa, then climbed aboard a packed ERA plane for Kodiak. Next time I'll be trading the plane for the ferry.
Amtrak took Mom and Dad back to Omaha. During their last few days in Oregon, they enjoyed a boat ride on the Rogue River with Aunt Elaine and others. Now they’re in Wausa, unpacking and doing laundry. The simple tasks and luxuries of home.
One thing they won't be unpacking is their old double sleeping bag. I couldn't believe it when they left it with Heather and Hanna. (Do Grammie and Grampie mean to retire that essential piece of camping equipment? Do my daughters understand its historic significance?) That heavy, bulky bag – olive green cotton on the outside, red flannel on the inside, with the sides sewn together to replace a zipper that broke sometime last century – is not exactly high tech but it's a survivor. One cold Yellowstone morning long ago, Colleen and David and Diane and I crawled shivering out of our own little bags and dashed from the big yellow tent into the frosty sunrise. While we ran around the campground looking for bears, Mom and Dad stayed snug in their well-worn double bag. And now they casually left it on Hanna's porch in Portland as my whole camping life flashed before my eyes.
Tonight I’ve been watching Olympic swimmers and finishing this chronicle. I love watching athletes in their prime but even more I love keeping up with those parents of mine. For them, every age is prime. They’ve boated and skied and prayed and camped and hiked their way through life. They’ve practiced their faith all over the world. They’ve built Habitat for Humanity houses from Waco to Harlem to Budapest. They brought joy to Marie and Christian’s wedding in Uganda and they bless all of us who are family.
Truth is, my parents are the sanest and healthiest people I know.
Before I sign off, here are some moments that stay with me:
~ Seeing Mom relax while Dad does the cooking
~ Dad’s rendition of the lutefisk joke
~ Seeing Mom and Dad silhouetted on their tent walls and hearing them softly read to each other by flashlight
~ Watching Hanna and Heather put their inheritance to work
~ Our bonfires, both pre-sunset and post-sunset
~ 2,847 * miles of meandering conversation
~ Traveling mercies, every day
* From Dad’s log book