Fall Colors – Part 1

One trip we always mentioned that we wanted to do was a trip to the eastern seaboard for the fall colors. We thought we would get to the Northeast in the fall and let the weather drive us south. We mentioned this to our friends George and Marcia, they were on board. We left on September 10th and would meet them on the way as they usually travel faster than we do.

As with any trip from your home base, the first day or two is always familiar. The same route, same towns, and oftentimes the same campgrounds. Our first nite was one of our favorites, Homolovi State Park. We got there and it was pouring rain with high winds (normal for Homolovi). I just hooked up the electricity and no other amenities. Didn’t even disconnect.

More I-40 travel the next day. Our stop was the Native American casino at Sky City. You can get spots there for around $20/night IF you ask for the discount. It is a decent RV park except for the terrible road into the RV park, it is abysmal. The park is on a slight incline so if you head into a spot you need to disconnect to get your trailer level. However, if you come in from the other direction, you can lift the tongue, stay connected and be level! We also set up Starlink here for the internet, worked great!

Yet another I-40 day. When heading east, you don’t have too many options in the western states. That changes when you get to Texas. We made our way through Albuquerque and ate at a local place off the road, Vicks Vittles. It was pretty good and it is always fun to eat locally. We stopped at Ute Lake State Park for the night. We stayed here with George and Marcia the last time we headed east with them. It is a good campground, with loads of space between the sites but it usually has a lot of bugs. It had a great sunset:

Our 4th day on the road started with finally detouring from I-40 and heading NE a bit to the Oklahoma panhandle. We passed through Dalhart TX and I read something interesting in their Wiki entry.

One more night before a bit of a break. We ended up at an Army Corps of Engineers (ACOE) campground at Fort Supply Lake near Fort Supply OK. We had a site that backed up onto the lake that was very nice, a bit windy. The next day was eastbound entirely in Oklahoma. We had been on the road for 4 full days and nights without disconnecting the trailer at all. It was time to take a short timeout.

We got to another ACOE campground at Brush Creek Park. It was right on the Arkansas River, just below the dam at Keystone Lake. We were just west of Tulsa OK. The next day was a ‘down’ day, not that we didn’t do anything, we just didn’t travel with the Airstream. It was interesting camping by the dam, many people were fishing the river and a horn would sound repeatedly whenever there was a change in the water discharge amount.

We skirted around Tulsa as we left and headed NE to our rendezvous with George and Marcia at Twin Bridges State Park. We had lunch in Claremore OK, the hometown of Will Rogers. It was very obvious that he was from that area and a huge amount of everything had his name on it. They are even in Rogers County! We got to drive along Route 66 for a long stretch primarily because I am too cheap to pay for a turnpike and back roads are better. We met the Chens at the campground and got to visit a bit with them.

George and Marcia had some friends/relatives to visit before our next connection so we parted ways in the AM. We headed into Missouri for our next stop. We took a selfie at lunch:

The evening found us at a private campground called Ruby’s Landing. My parents owned a campground for 10 years so it is always fun to stop at a rustic campground. But, this one might have been a bit TOO rustic. We were there on a Saturday night that happened to coincide with some Halloween camping event. Many scouts were camping in tents. Many others running around making noise, some being chased by a guy with a chainsaw and mask. It wasn’t too noisy in the late hours, luckily. I am glad we weren’t there for 2 nights.

Our next stop was just north of St Louis MO at a county park. Very nice location, good sites, and lots of trails around a man-made lake/river overflow. An uneventful drive through some very beautiful areas. But we keep pushing on to our next meetup location in PA. Our satellite setup is working great, with the TV on the left and Internet on the right (one looks to the south, the other to the north). The top of the truck is a great location when we don’t disconnect.

Following our theme of skirting around towns, we did the same with St Louis and continued ENE to the next state. Staying on a US highway instead of an Interstate highway we ended up south of Terra Haute IN at a county park. It was a beautiful park, a bit tight for the trailer but we made it. There were numerous restored historical buildings around a nice lake.

Another day, another state. This is much different than traveling in western states. Go around Indianapolis and end up at the Buck Creek State Park near Springfield IN. This is a beautiful campground, with lots of grass and trees. We saw a couple of deer wandering around. The camp hosts were very friendly.

Ohio was next, I couldn’t find a better route so we went right through the gut of Columbus OH. It was not a real issue but as we got to Zanesville I saw there was a Texas Roadhouse so that is where we ate. Downtown Zanesville was much more difficult with the trailer as it seemed much older and narrower. The reward was better than the risk. We spent the night at Barkcamp State Park. It had a large camp area for horses and a large infestation of flying stink bugs. The terrain was beginning to remind me of what I thought West Virginia would look like.

The next day confirmed my suspicions, we drove through Wheeling WV on our way to Pittsburgh PA. Our final stop was Penn Wood Airstream Park. We stopped here in 2017, enjoyed our stay, and decided to come back. We were here for 4 nights, and George and Marcia were meeting us here in a couple of days.

We really needed to do some laundry so that was first on our list, along with a Chinese buffet. The next day we had our main meal at a local farm-to-table restaurant. Took a little walk to the Climax tunnel. This is an old railroad bed that was repurposed into a 28-mile walk/bike trail, we only did a small portion of it.

George and Marcia showed up right on schedule. We did a little drive on the back roads of this area of Pennsylvania and took them also to the tunnel to see the area.

The fall colors had not changed all that much in this area yet, not to the degree we were looking at. We continued moving NE, but that is in the next installation.

Eastbound leg #2

Leaving our camp spot in Texola, OK, I noticed there was a minor attraction in this itty-bitty town. Marcia found it also so we had to go by it! We drove down a road like this to get there:

We ended up at the one-room jail:

We continued eastbound but this time on some actual Route 66 road top. We had not been able to divert too much from running on I-40 until now! My trip routing took us on primarily state and county highways, bypassing the bulk of Oklahoma City. Out on these roads, you get to see small towns and all kinds of things traveling along:

Courthouses in the middle of the road!
A farm implement that you need to give a WIDE berth.
And wind turbine blades.

We spent that night in Henryetta OK at one of the worst RV parks I have ever stayed in. Almost worse than the one in Fort Stockton, TX.

Leaving the next day would get us to Arkansas. A state we have not been to with this trailer before so we can put another sticker on our map. We again got on a back highway, saw some great scenery, and ended up in…..Toad Suck!

This is just outside of Conway AR and it was an Army Corps of Engineers campground that was put in next to the dam and locks on the Arkansas River.

A closer view of the locks. You can see the bridge of a barge near the red signs.

This campground is tremendous, with lots of grassy areas, with full hookups but it was SOOO humid! If anyone happens to go there and finds a pair of binoculars, let me know because I think I lost them there.

Conway is close to Little Rock and we were here for 2 nights so we took a day trip down to look around. We first headed to the Capitol Building:

To the north of the capital is a memorial to the “Little Rock Nine“. This was the group of nine black students that were enrolled in the all-white Central High School in Little Rock. It was very controversial. After our capitol visit, we went to the National Historical Site regarding Central High School and learned all about this incident.

As we were looking around we talked to a man that actually went to Central High about 10 years after the ‘nine’ did. He said it wasn’t any better then, which is too bad. In light of all that is going on in this country, I found a plaque and statement that I think sums up how it should be:

Exactly!

The next stop in Little Rock (North) was Marcia’s recommendation for a stop at the Old Mill. This building was used in the opening shots of Gone with the Wind. You can walk all through it and around the grounds. It was a great find, way to go Marcia!

The next day was the short leg to Wynne AR. This is where Roxie’s mom was born so we were going to do some research and it was where we would part ways with the Chens. They would continue on to the east coast and we would return back west. We hit Wynne right around lunch so we had to eat and found a southern food restaurant (Johnson’s Fish House and Diner). We parked in the back:

We stayed at Village Creek State Park near Wynne. A wonderful park with great amenities and scenery. We saw deer and fox from our site in a grassy area across from us.

We were there for multiple days and we did a bit of research about Roxie’s mom but there weren’t too many records, at least we got a feel for the area. We all did go around and investigate the area. One day we went to Memphis to go to the National Civil Rights Museum. We had to get tickets for an afternoon visit so decided to eat somewhere. We ended up at Gus’ World Famous Fried Chicken. Not sure how world-famous it is but it was pretty good.

The National Civil Rights Museum is on the site of the Lorraine Motel. This is where Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated. It was very informative as I am not old enough to remember the happenings.

The room where MLK was standing.
The view from the building where the shooter was.

Another day we took a day trip to another location of historical significance. However, on the way I found some curious train tracks that crossed each other:

The place we were heading to was the Louisiana Purchase State Park. This park marks “the initial point from which all surveys of property acquired through the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 originated”. It was all swampy with an elevated boardwalk to the marker:

The happy group at the marker:

We were happy to get there but the sweating was real! And we wouldn’t be very happy soon after this picture. More about that in the next installment…