America is a country of wide-open spaces, dense cities, tall mountains, lush forests, expansive deserts, and all points in between. I recommend that every American leave home and explore the great lands of this nation at least once in their life to see the kind of beauty that no photo on the internet can replicate. There are many methods to get you out there from aircraft and ships to the trusty car. But if you’re adventuring on your own, there’s no better way to go than on two wheels.
Every year, popular resorts and cruise ships fill to the brim with people seeking relaxation, entertainment, and a getaway from the stresses of daily life. Some hop in a plane and fly across the country. I propose an alternative. Instead of your normal vacation destinations and forms of travel, take the long way around. In fact, just toss out that whole destination thing. Start at home, point in whatever the opposite direction is, and just go.


The concept of traveling without a true destination seemed completely foreign to me for most of my life. My family is full of lifelong RVers. We pick a campground and the extent of the journey was hauling our camper there. The idea of a campground just being a stop on a grander adventure escaped us. Then the pandemic hit and it changed everything. I discovered a part of myself I never knew I had.

You Have The Power
One of the greatest life-changing moments I’ve experienced thus far was the realization that I have more power than I thought. I spent my childhood and the very beginning years of my adult life too afraid to crack out of my shell. Constant negative thoughts permeated my brain, doubting if I could actually achieve what I wanted to do. Other thoughts told me I would be shunned for following my own path rather than the ones prescribed for me in the past.
At some point in 2018, it hit me. I already achieved so much in my life. I bought my teenage dream car and I navigated creating an entire new life for myself. Coming out as trans in late 2014 changed the trajectory of my life. I lost nearly all of my childhood friends and then lost my family for years. Yet, I emerged from the darkness triumphant. I beat the odds and found happiness in my new life. I looked forward to the future.
It was almost like a lightswitch had been flipped in my head. If I can essentially recreate a new person from the ashes of my old self, what else am I capable of?

I sought to find those answers. Later that year, I found myself off-roading my beloved Smart Fortwo through a forest. That weekend liberated me from the shell that contained the rest of my dreams and personality. But that wasn’t the only event. Back in May of that year, I decided to finally follow my longtime desire to ride a motorcycle. I always thought that maybe, bikes weren’t for me. They were for other, more skilled people.
Oh I was so wrong. My steed for my Motorcycle Safety Foundation Basic RiderCourse was an electric blue Honda Rebel 250. Its tank had a dent and its bars weren’t perfectly straight. Nobody else in my class dared go for the cruiser. Instead, they went for Yamaha TW200 farm bikes and Honda Nighthawk standards. I happily took the Rebel, and quickly learned that this whole motorcycle thing came naturally to me. It wasn’t long before I was taking the corners and slaloms like I was an old-timey racer.

On the test, I scored the shortest emergency braking distance the examiner had ever seen in over three decades of teaching the class. It took pulling in a second instructor to make sure I really did stop on a dime, impossibly close to the beginning of the score line. He then took my Rebel from me just to see if he could get anywhere close.
From that weekend forward, two wheels have always been a form of liberation I’ve yet to be able to replicate in a car. It’s hard to put my finger on why. I can theorize that part of it has to do with the fact that being on a motorcycle exposes you to the outside world. There’s no safety cage to contain and protect you; no windows to block out the weather or smells. Further, most motorcycles still involve the use of every one of your senses that isn’t taste.

Are both of your hands and feet critical to maintaining safe forward momentum and your safety systems? Unless you own a relatively new motorcycle, almost all of those are contained in the squishy thing inside of your skull. But even a new bike isn’t anything like a new car. Having proper reactions to your environment are essential to your survival.
Motorcycles connect humans and machines in ways most cars do not. Despite all of this, I’m still not quite sure if this is why motorcycling feels so much different than just piloting a car. Speaking of piloting, riding a motorcycle feels a lot closer to taking command of a Cessna than it does a Toyota Corolla.
Pair a rider with the perfect motorcycle for them and the result is a sort of symphony. Like an orchestra, the rider and the bike work together in perfect harmony. The euphoria from this alone can make a whole month. But there is a way to make it even better.
Travel Of Any Kind Is Great

In 2020, I took the journey of a lifetime. I had cash in the bank, gas in the tank of a $500 Ford Ranger, and my girlfriend at the time as my first officer. We took that four-cylinder, rear-wheel-drive, manual truck out west. But for the first time in our entire lives neither of us had a real destination. Yes, our overall goal was to visit the main Gambler 500 event out in Oregon that summer, but that was more of a pit stop, not our final destination. My girlfriend (now wife) thought we’d just get back home when we got back home. So we pointed that truck west and drove with our friends in a convoy. There was no GPS, no timetables, and we didn’t even find accommodations until we figured we needed them.
On this trip, I saw sights that I never thought I’d ever reach in my life. I saw a massive buffalo statue in North Dakota. I got to tour Yellowstone National Park and watch Old Faithful. I got to experience four seasons in the same week as I drove through a searing hot desert in Washington state, bisected rows of towering trees in Oregon, and drove through a full-blown snowstorm on my way to Crater Lake. I never knew any of this was possible. I never knew I’d ever visit Yellowstone, let alone learn that Washington had a desert! I never thought anything that I did on that trip was possible.

That trip also had what I still consider to be the holy grail of camping spots. Somewhere in Montana, we put our stakes down in the middle of absolute nowhere at the Lewis and Clark Caverns State Park. That night, I got to see a starry night unhindered by pollution on one end of the sky while dry lightning cracked around a nearby mountain. It was perfect.
It was during that trip when I discovered another part of me. I didn’t know I had this sense of travel and adventure in me. I swam in a crystal clear Oregon mountain lake that couldn’t have been warmer than 45 degrees. I sped along the iconic Bonneville Salt Flats, and drove on the infamous loneliest road through Nevada. In the span of two weeks I lived a life I never thought I would and all of it happened behind the wheel of a junky 1997 Ford Ranger. The last time I talked about this story was my last-ever post for Jalopnik.

I sort of ended it like this:
I’m always thinking about what’s the next silly or great thing on the horizon. The world definitely has a whole lot of suck in it right now. And it sometimes drags me down with it. But when I swing a leg over a motorcycle or sit in that pilot or driver’s seat, it all melts away. I may not be able to control what happens in this world, but I can control this vehicle and the adventures that it will take me on.
If you can swing it, take a road trip without a destination. Do it for as long as you can and don’t be afraid to just go where your heart tells you to. When you come home, you might be a different person. That’s ok. Just remember to be true to yourself and don’t let anything or anyone stop you from being you.
But Doing It On A Bike Is Better

So then, after a life-defining trip like that, you’d think I’d be all-in on cars as the best way to travel. Technically, I believe the coolest way to travel is slowly inside of a train. However, for how romantic trains are, they do have their limitations. You are stuck with the timetable of the train, and comfortable accommodations on a cross-country train tend to be substantially more expensive than just driving or flying. You also can’t really just change your direction on a whim since you’re going wherever the train is.
As I just wrote above, a car is also an excellent, grand way to travel. But over the years I’ve been learning that there’s one step higher than a car.

Back when I was a bit earlier into my motorcycling experience, it was common for me to spend a day riding over 300 miles. I never had anywhere to go, but I experienced the world through the visor on my helmet and on two wheels. I would stop by my favorite beach, ride into the skyscraper canyons of Chicago, and watch the fireworks display of a small town nestled between endless rows of corn. Riding to these places made me feel more alive than driving to them ever could have.
My motorcycle was the vehicle that took me to state parks, Pride events, and to countless first dates. If you were at Chicago’s Pride parade in 2019, chances are you saw me in six-inch heels commanding a 1982 Suzuki GS850G with plenty of patina. All of these connections were made infinitesimally more memorable with the subtraction of a roof and two wheels.

I have yet to take a cross-country motorcycle trip, but I’ve tried. In 2019, I took a Honda Elite 150D on an off-road adventure in the Gambler 500. Those 205 miles the scooter lasted before grenading its engine were some of the most fun I’ve ever had on the Gambler 500 circuit. Back in 2020, I tried to ride a Suzuki Burgman 650 some 700 miles home from the East Coast. But I blew the scooter’s rear tire in Dubois, Pennsylvania, and had to drive the remaining 500 miles home in a U-Haul. It was nice being safe and warm in the truck, but there was nothing quite like seeing the rolling hills through my visor.
Riding somewhere opens up new ways to experience the world. Instead of just looking at a forest passing by your car’s windshield, you will smell the pine in the air, feel the cool breeze rush around your body, and have a nearly completely unobstructed view of the world around you.

A few weeks ago, I was reminded of this glorious truth when Indian Motorcycle (IMC) invited me out to Las Vegas to try out its new PowerPlus 112 platform. IMC’s organizers charted a 200-mile course that had influencers and journalists carving mile after mile of scenic byway that cut around Lake Mead and through the Valley of Fire State Park in Nevada.
(Full Disclosure: Indian Motorcycle paid for my travel, lodging, and delicious food. This post is not really related to the bikes I rode out there or the press event. But the event did provide some inspiration. A review of these motorcycles is coming.)
Once again, out here I was reminded that motorcycles were the better way to experience America. During that trip, I had my music, breathtaking views, and 126 HP of American V-twin muscle between my legs. I didn’t need anything else. Anything else would have been too much extra.

As I rode through the Valley of Fire, the only thing separating me from those beautiful rock formations was some safety gear. I wasn’t surrounded by a cage and there was nothing impeding my view of the stunning environment. If you wanted to stop to really get a look at something, you just pull off, lean on the bike, and drink in the scenery. Being on the bike was travel with just the bare necessities.
As we rode through Lake Mead I got to get whiffs of the local flora and came to a stop to watch animals cross the road. We got to feel up close and personal with nature on that day and the motorcycles got us there. I imagine the feeling of riding a motorcycle is not much different than how some folks feel about traveling long distance by horse. You and your mode of transportation are one.

In my travels I’ve learned I’m not the only one who feels this way. Last year, my wife and I did our dream road trip, a drive down Route 66. One stop during our trip was the Meteor Crater in Arizona. While there, I saw a highly modified Triumph Rocket III with a custom front fork and a sidecar. I met the owner and his wife inside. They told me that the two of them had covered pretty much the entirety of the United States on that motorcycle, stretching from as far north as Alaska to the Southernmost Point in Florida.
Sure, they could have taken a car, they told me, but doing it on the Triumph made it feel so much more of an adventure. I’m so with them.

Of course, doing trips like these on just any motorcycle isn’t going to work. You’re going to hate traveling cross-country on that super cheap motorcycle I wrote about. You probably won’t have a ton of fun on a sportbike with a washboard seat, either. Most of the time, I see folks going the distance on hefty cruisers, touring bikes like the Honda Gold Wings, or modified hacks like that Triumph Rocket III.
The bike you choose for your journey should have enough power to cruise easily on the highway while also being comfortable for a full day of riding in the saddle. However many luxuries you want are up to you. Nowadays you can get sacks filled with whatever you want to drink and full-body electric heat for those cold rides.
Whatever you ride, wherever you ride, and however you ride, I recommend taking your time. Ride without a destination. Just point those forks in a destination and go. Who cares when you get home. But when you do, I think you will have found travel by bike to be one of the best ways to embark on an adventure.
I live in Canada in a relatively warm part halfway between Detroit and Toronto. I need four wheels and a roof sometimes, no choice. I really enjoy motorcycle riding and have two plated and insured sitting in the shed waiting for any day now to greet 2025 with the disappearance of salt from the roads. My riding seems to have a destination these days, most often back home after a few hours.
There was a time when I was more flexible and could ask somebody to feed the cat and disappear for a week or so with just phone calls every few days.
I miss those times, no matter what form of transport you prefer, don’t let those times get away unused. I can recommend a motorcycle, for the reasons listed in the article, when the weather is right it is IMHO the best compromise. (-:
Look up Gilbert Nicoletta on Facebook. He is a very interesting guy. Motorcyclist.. owns several. Did 50 states by age 50. Traveled Europe by bike too. (BTW: a GREAT tour guide in Cayman…) he has worldwide pictures on his page
https://www.facebook.com/share/1F2xZ9xffY/ I think that this is his page
…and for those of us who can’t balance on two online wheels…?
Honestly, something like one of those RTM Tango Trikes from a few years ago would be nice. A Polaris Slingshot looks like an X-Wing, sure (well, until they redesigned it… the new models look like an EX-Wing, coz they crashed.), but I don’t have that kind of license (or ANY kind, for that matter) — for a reason! I’ve actually been thinking of trying to get a Model T, since I’m actually handy enough to keep it going, but the truth is I’m on a fixed income and with food prices what they are, saving up for that is a mathematical impossibility: there’s nothing left to save.
But I have this crazy idea I’d love to try for a hybrid engine that’s basically a GY6 with magnetos and a TBI kit on one side, and an eBike hub motor opposite, joined by a freewheel clutch with manual override. The eBike motor would be primary drive, feeding off an ex-Prius NiMH battery pack; the gas engine would be the assist, for tall hills or when one needs enough current off the accessory batt to warrant running the alternator. Be kind of cool to actually build that and see if I could ride.
Generally my problem is a far-more-severe-than-most case of too many gauges and mirrors and controls and whatnot, and not enough space in the braincase, but I get the impression that if I can pare things down to a classic VW esque minimum, there’s at least a chance.
…right. No love for the coordinationally-challenged, or the RTM Tango. Got it.
Well, I never claimed I was ordinary, so I guess I’ve got that going for me, at least.
“But I have this crazy idea I’d love to try for a hybrid engine that’s basically a GY6 with magnetos and a TBI kit on one side, and an eBike hub motor opposite, joined by a freewheel clutch with manual override. The eBike motor would be primary drive, feeding off an ex-Prius NiMH battery pack; the gas engine would be the assist, for tall hills or when one needs enough current off the accessory batt to warrant running the alternator. Be kind of cool to actually build that and see if I could ride.”
I think we were trying to figure out if you were just Toecutter wearing one of those novelty Groucho Marx glasses-nose-mustache things.
(but seriously this sounds neato!)
Nope. I’m me… and thanks!
My father had to travel a lot on business, so for him travel was just the evil necessity for getting from Point A to Point B. Traveling for the enjoyment of travel was an alien concept for him. But Mom always longed for travel. She was nine years younger than Dad and imagined he would die first and then she would travel. But she passed first. So my siblings and I have been doing her traveling for her. Besides seeing and experiencing wonderful things, it makes us better people. As Mark Twain wrote, “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts.” I’m a retired old fart now and live/travel full time in a camper van. I spent the first couple of years hitting all the top-of-list sites. But now I seek out lesser known places and follow the seasons. I usually drive with the windows open and with the radio and HVAC off—sort of motorcycle-ish. The journey is as fulfilling as the destination.
Mercedes, I know in the past I have been critical, but goddamn this is an excellent article. I knew of the Indian press tour a few weeks ago. Cruiseman’s garage and Her Two Wheels gave reviews about the Indians they were riding.
I have my BMW 1150gs and I have used it for an Iron Butt to Michigan. I took it to the Top of Mount Washington, and I will be going to the BMW Rally in Tennessee this year.
One thing I would recommend is motocamp off of one of your bikes. It is an interesting experience and can be fun. The first part is how to get all the gear on your bike. Then you ride to your destination and then Camp and get everything back into the bike. For me it reconnects me with nature if I’m camping in the woods. Or gives me a unique experience like the time I camped at a Drive in Movie theatre on my motorcycle.
Again, Great article keep the rubber side down.
Travelling by motorcycle can be great and better than a car. It can also be worse. Weather plays a big roll.
One of my best trips was riding from Alabama up to Milwaukee for a BMW national rally on 2 lanes roads, and then wandering back south with no set plan. Riding the Croatian coastline before they joined the EU and became mobbed with tourists was great too.
On the other hand my wife and I did a fly and ride trip to Arizona last April. Normal temps are 80F +/- that time of year. When we landed it was 102F. 102F on a motorcycle is miserable. We salvaged the trip by scrapping our plans to explore southern Arizona and instead headed north to elevation.
I used to live in AZ Bullhead AZ. The residents start putting their boats in storage when temperatures fall into the 90s. Of course these are the same people who turn the heat up when it is the 80s.
We noticed that most motorcyclists in Arizona wear no gear. We wear all the gear – including an airbag vest for me.
I find 50F to 70F the perfect temp to ride. Above 90 – 95F gets pretty miserable and colder just requires a bit more gear.. I would rather ride a motorcycle in 15F weather than above 100F. Heated seat, heated grips, heated vest and we are good to go along with the normal gear.
It is all what you are used to. A few years ago we were in Hawaii when a winter storm came through. It dropped to 70F at night. The next day the Airbnb caretaker asked if we were OK and said she had slept in a down jacket under every blanket she had that night. We just said yes, we were fine and left out that we had slept with the windows open enjoying the cool breeze.
+1, my leather winter jacket is sized up for layers underneath. My summer jacket can only be so thin while still existing though. I never ride without long pants, a jacket, and gloves (and helmet of course). Not up the street, not just this once. Even when it’s hot at shit and the sweat is pouring off me.
Same here. I learned that lesson the when I had my first crash my freshman year of college ridings less than a mile to the gym.
20 years ago I rode my bike every day regardless of temp. When it got hot I would put ice in the pockets of my aerostitch to help cool me on my commute home in the afternoon. Today – I just don’t ride when it gets too hot.
I’ve done few long motorcycle rides and wish I could do more. I also think a bicycle gets you even more into the landscape with less PPE and a slower pace.
That said I think a van on slow roads is a great road trip vehicle because I can set up anywhere for a cup of tea and a snooze. One of my favorite breaks on a trip was pulling onto a random forest road in the Ochocos for an impromptu picnic surrounded by trees
Somewhat off topic but tangential…the best way to see a city is on an eBike. My wife and I did that in Kyoto last year and it was fantastic. No car to park, easily kept up with traffic, and easy to ride. We saw waaaay more of the city than we would’ve with a car.
I know this will get me lightly murdered on a car/vehicle site, but I think you’re wrong. The best way to see a city is riding what the old timers in Stephen King books would call shank’s mare. Nothing to park at all. Need to go a long distance quickly, find the light rail.
I love the idea of the trip, but I don’t love the thought of doing it on a motorcycle. I don’t need to get rained on and/or hit by some doofus in a truck. My Boxster would be a great companion for such a trip. It has two trunks, so I could bring more than one change of clothes along, and the top goes down so I can experience the sights and smells of the locale. Plus, it’s a sports car so I could take winding roads at a more brisk pace than a cruiser bike could achieve.
Sounds like a plan to write your own, “Travels with Charlie” novel.
That book and “Blue Highways” have been a significant influence in my life.
Putting it on my list to buy
Love this, and I would add that if you are ever in a place where you don’t need to cover a lot of miles, and if you are able, consider traveling by bicycle. Literally nothing in common with traveling by car.
Once while pedaling through Belgian farm country I got into a “race” with a horse. Another time in Ireland I ran across a shepherd and his dog and promptly got herded by the dog. Being on a bike is really being present in a place.
There’s a great essay by Valeria Luiselli on bicycling being the perfect speed.
https://outoftrue.substack.com/p/manifesto-a-velo
Just don’t decide to ride the length of Route 66 in July or August. I did, and while it was a great trip it was too damn hot to get off the bike in full ATGATT riding gear to enjoy stops along the way.
What the Sam Hill is that bridge in the distance?
https://images-stag.jazelc.com/uploads/theautopian-m2en/20200626_161956-scaled.jpg
I’m not sure how many will get that reference, if they haven’t crossed the river on US 97.
Yes, that’s among the good roads in this area.
Mosier to The Dalles (stop at La Provence!) and back on Sam’s old highway is such a lovely ride. Or keep going to Maryhill and visit his old mansion and even the Goldendale observatory.
As part of the annual Concours de Maryhill the Maryhill Loops Road is open to the participants so I got to drive it in my SAAB 96. In this shot of the show field my car is in the third row, second from the right end, orange with a roof rack and a faded racing number just visible on the hood. It’s parked next to another 96:
https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/583c9490be659429d110c269/56464eb0-7ee0-4fd3-b47f-b1e15cfa1345/Concours+de+Maryhill+drone+pic+2.jpeg
This is a much better shot of the area but, alas, not quite as good a shot of my car:
https://static.wixstatic.com/media/df308e_d8e1f27b057a457cb1391399ef89dc7b~mv2.jpg
What an amazingly diverse gathering of cars! How often do you get to park a SAAB between two SAABs?
Well, back when I had three of them this was something I could arrange from time to time…
https://live.staticflickr.com/2828/9936422986_08df147532_c.jpg
but in the case of the Maryhill show it helped that the Northwest SAAB Owners Club was also taking this as an opportunity to hold a meeting:
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/54376710383_26ca57a89d_c.jpg
I plan to retire next year and set out on the road in my ’76 BMW 2002, driving cross country with no real destinations except the Arizona Meteor Crater, the Hoh Rain Forest, Monument Valley, and Harrison Glacier. Sorry, no motorcycles. I like being dry and warm.
I really enjoy your writing and wish your idea was ideal and I hate to be Danny Downer however with what I endure on the roads daily it sadly seems that a motorcycle or bicycle journey across this country has a bit of a death wish angle to it. Maybe it’s my paranoia but the echo of “donor cycle” rings too loudly in my head.
Are teslas still rear ending motorcycles at full speed?
Not sure about that but a coworker got rear ended by an elderly lady in a Nissan.
She told the cops that he backed up his bike into her. They almost believed her until his wife pointed out that the motor cycle has no reverse.
I was riding home from work one day on surface street with a 50mph limit. Up ahead the light turned yellow. I did a time-distance-speed calculation (guess) and decided I should stop. Meanwhile, the driver behind me figured she could beat the red. Bam! She punched my GS750 out from under me and I went airborne, thinking, “This is going to hurt.” I was out for a while but came to as the EMTs arrived. I rolled over and gave the driver a finger, then crawled to the curb. No injuries other the the trauma of all my muscles having been violently jerked and slammed. Ever since, I’ve never tried stopping during a yellow light if there’s traffic behind me—no mater what I’m driving.
Nah they have full self driving better than a human capability.
Forgot the /s
Someone pointed it to me that you notice so much more the slower you go. And, while a motorcycle is great, a bicycle lets you see the whole journey play out slowly.
Sure, you cover less ground, but you’ll certainly have earned that beer at your destination.
“Of course, doing trips like these on just any motorcycle isn’t going to work. You’re going to hate traveling cross-country on that super cheap motorcycle I wrote about.”
Nope I’m out.
(JK)
I challenge you to do this in Florida during season (Winter/Spring).
My dad did many cross country trips on a Honda Silverwing. It is built as a commuter scooter, but since his hips aren’t too good it was easier to have a step through.
From MN he has traveled to the Pacific Ocean near Vancouver, the Atlantic Ocean at Maine and Nova Scotia, as well as many trips to Montana and Colorado.
It is for most of the reasons outlined in this article that one day I’d like to tour the USA in my home-built electric velomobile. I’ve even designed it in a way that I can sleep in it and avoid hotel bills, carry it into homes/abandoned buildings if the weather is particularly bad, and carry everything I need in the trunk space(electric blanket for heating, small cooking stove, cooking utensils, clothes, food, tools, computer, ect).
It will be travelling at reduced speed vs a motorcycle due to ebike laws in most of the USA limiting me to 750W/28 mph when the motor is assisting my pedaling(I can legally go faster than 28 mph as long as my legs and/or gravity are combined contributing 100% of the effort), which will allow me to better take in the scenery, but when I’m in an unpopulated area with no cops or in an area where these restrictions legally don’t apply, I could turn the speed/power limiter off and move through a location like a car.
The last iteration of my build could go almost 10 miles per penny of electricity at 30-35 mph. I also have no insurance costs, and get exercise along the way.
Charging during meals or breaks could conceivably allow me to cover 400+ miles in a day. If the battery runs dead, not only will I have solar panels on the next body to help with that, but I could still pedal it on a disabled motor to faster-than-bicycle speeds as long as I’m not having to lug the thing up a steep hill using the granny gear.
I wonder if folks still bomb down I-5 to Ashland from the top of the Siskiyou Pass? I recall you could hit some crazy speeds with a big front chainring.
Do it!
One of the best things that ever happened to me was getting fired, I’d ride all over the country and take my sweet time finding a new job.
I’d agree and would love to do this someday. I don’t have faith that the cars and trucks sharing the road will not do something stupid and involve me in an accident. They probably walk away whereas I probably don’t.
I love riding my CT around the northeast. I would love to take it on a cross country ride- a trio did it in 2023, hitting all of the lower 48 on the little CT125s (and one CT110 for a few). Sure it goes slow, but only more to see then!
In my younger days, a buddy and I flew to LA, rented a pair of bikes, and rode Highway 1 up to San Francisco. It was an experience I’ll never forget and one we still talk about to this day.
Aww, you turned around just where Hwy 1 starts to get fun.
Yeah, sadly that’s all our circumstances allowed for at the time. It was also getting awfully cold the farther north we got. Someday I’d like to go back and do some more.
Correct.