Veterans

Curves in Life can bring pause, numbness, and questions

Curves in Life can bring pause, numbness, and questions

All around good guy, You will be missed Steve!

The Long Road Home

The Long Road Home

“What every one of us looks for, but damn few of us gets to see...is just what's over the far horizon.

 The trick is ... to know it when you see it, and an even bigger trick ... is to know what to do about it when you find it.” – From “Last of the Dogmen”

Oklahoma City – Revisited Part 2 - Twin Fountains RV Resort

Oklahoma City – Revisited Part 2 - Twin Fountains RV Resort

“We have been “Traveling Life’s Highways” (seeing America through the eyes of a veteran) over 23,000 miles around the United States and Canada.  For almost five months, we have stayed in over 100 RV resorts including: National Parks, KOA, Good Sam, and many mom and pop campgrounds.  Twin Fountains RV Resort is the best that we have found.”

Sedona, Arizona

Sedona, Arizona

“Whatever path brought you here
There is a reason why you came,
Through you may not know it now.” 
― Ilchi Lee, The Call of Sedona: Journey of the Heart

Meteor Crater, Winslow, Arizona

Meteor Crater, Winslow, Arizona

“But to carve the Grand Canyon, Earth required millions of years.  To excavate Meteor Crater, the universe, using a sixty-thousand-ton asteroid traveling upward of twenty miles per second, required a fraction of a second.  No offense to Grand Canyon lovers, but for my money, Meteor Crater is the most amazing natural landmark in the world.” - Neil deGrasse Tyson

Grand Canyon National Park

Grand Canyon National Park

“The wonders of the Grand Canyon cannot be adequately represented in symbols of speech, nor by speech itself.  The resources of the graphic art are taxed beyond their powers in attempting to portray its features.  Language and illustration combined must fail.” - John Wesley Powell

Horseshoe Bend

Horseshoe Bend

“Adventure is a path. Real adventure, self-determined, self-motivated, often risky, forces you to have firsthand encounters with the world” – Mark Jenkins

Viking Surprise Helicopter Serial Number 64-13670

Viking Surprise Helicopter Serial Number 64-13670

“If you are in trouble anywhere in the world, an airplane can fly over and drop flowers, but a helicopter can land and save your life.”

Vietnam Veterans Memorial Angel Fire, New Mexico

Vietnam Veterans Memorial Angel Fire, New Mexico

“When sons or daughters die in battle, parents are confronted with the choice of what they will do to honor the courage and sacrifice of that son or daughter.” – Doc Westphall

Memorial Day 2018

Memorial Day 2018

“I asked for all things that I might enjoy life,
I was given life that I might enjoy all things.”

A Brotherhood from Innocent Days Gone By

A Brotherhood from Innocent Days Gone By

“All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.”

A new day dawns

Monday, April 9, 2018

Crashing early last night around eleven after multiple long days of working on the RV it was easy to stop and pass out.  During the night I awakened to the soft sounds of popping corn as it had started to rain lightly.  I have always loved the sound of rain fall on a camper or RV as it gives a soothing feeling of calmness.

I rolled over and fell back asleep and woke up about seven to go outside for a short walk across the river.  The sounds of the water cascading off the rocks were ever present during the night as the river is just a few yards away from the RV.  No one in the campground is awake, a sleepy little village made up of about twenty campers.  The rain had stopped, only misting now and the clouds hung low over the mountain just past the treetops here.

It’s time to make coffee and relax a bit before breaking camp and heading into Cherokee to visit the Indian museum.  Coffee pot, check, thermos, check, coffee cup, check, coffee filters . . . now where did those get packed?   Pull out water from the refrigerator . . . it’s frozen, not a good start for morning coffee.  Digging through things while the coffee water boiled I cannot find the filters anywhere so I do not let it dampen things and move on to plan B, use a napkin to strain the coffee grounds.  It worked but the edges of the napkin wicked the fluid and it dripped on the counter top.  Easy cleanup on aisle 1.

Finally fresh coffee to drink as I ponder where the filters are, it’s always those little things to work out when you start a new adventure that makes you crazy.  Planning for the food, the cleaning supplies, the clothing for all kinds of weather conditions on a trip like this there is always something to forget or you did not think of.  I planned well and things are here in the RV it’s just which nook or cranny is it placed until I learn the location of things.  Things under benches you do not want to have to dig through everyday so placing things that you use for easy access and cold weather jackets in the not used much areas is the way to do it.

Anyway, that’s how the morning went but with coffee and a bowl of cereal it is off to a damp but great start to this new dawn.  More later today . . . !    

Cherokee, North Carolina – Museum of Cherokee Indians

The first stop on this journey is in the town of Cherokee, North Carolina.  It is on the reservation home of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation.  At Oconaluftee Indian Village, the 18th-century Cherokee lifestyle is preserved via live demonstrations in the summertime at the outdoor Mountainside Theater, the drama "Unto These Hills" tells the tribal story.  Cherokee is the southern gateway to the nearby Great Smoky Mountains National Park features campgrounds and Appalachian hiking trails.  It is also the southern start (or end) of the Blue Ridge Parkway. 

After a stop at the Cherokee Veterans Park it was time for a visit to the Museum of the Cherokee Indian which was really informative about the history of the seven clans which make up the Cherokee nation.  They are: Long Hair, Blue, Wolf, Wild Potato, Deer, Bird, and Paint. 

There were displays on basket weaving, pottery, wood carving and bead work.  The information about the “Trail of Tears” was informative and heart breaking seeing the visuals in this museum of how this tribe was forced westward from their native lands.

Why Travel?

Traveling Life’s Highways is the website created so you can follow along and participate on this journey across America. 

The website is: travelinglifeshighways.com  

“A journey is best measured in friends rather than miles.”

Join me as I wander and write about the places traveled.  Good Friends make the time and experience whole and sharing the places and stories along the way keeps everyone involved and hopefully amused by what is seen and the people met Traveling Life’s Highways.

“I don't know where I'm going, but I'm on my way”

For many years now I’ve wanted to travel the country, write about it and give you a point of view “seeing America through the eyes of a veteran”.  Much has happened in our lives and I think we have all lost a little of the feeling we had so many years ago when things were simpler, the roads before us were not filled with so many potholes to avoid, and we looked for the good in everyone.  Maybe it wasn’t Mayberry but we thought of America once in that way and I want to find it once again and show everyone it still exists during this conflicted times. 

Most of life is about attitudes and how you act and react to things happening to you and around you.  Often we judge things and cynically look at thing with a skewed perspective.

“Your living is determined not so much by what life brings to you as by the attitude you bring to life; not so much by what happens to you as by the way your mind looks at what happens.”   — Kahlil Gibran

During these travels I will be showing photos, blog posts, and other things (possibly a weekly podcast) so you can follow along, comment and share your stories of your travels.  I will be using multiple platforms on social media; the Traveling Life’s Highways website, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter and Youtube (pod cast).

“All you need to know is that it’s possible.” – Wolf, an Appalachian Trail Hiker

 I have felt this way for years and Mark Twain expresses it beautifully:

 “Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do.  So throw off the bowlines.  Sail away from the safe harbor.  Catch the trade winds in your sails.  Explore.  Dream!  Discover.”

 Please hit the Like button on the pages so you will be alerted to the next photo, blog post or funny experience Traveling Life’s Highways!  (Yes Placido Flamingo will be on this trip)

D. Whittington