Trip Peek #112
Trip #21
Impromptu PA

This picture is from my 2004 Impromptu PA trip which was exactly what the title says. It started with an impromptu work trip that put me in the middle of Pennsylvania a few days ahead of the Memorial Day weekend and finished with a drive home that filled the weekend. On Friday, I headed north through some interesting small towns to reach US-6 which I would follow west until it crossed US-62. US-62 took me to Ohio where I hugged the north bank of the big river till I was back in home territory. The photo is of the Sterling-built diner in Wellsboro, PA, on Route 6. The just-completed World War II memorial was being dedicated that Saturday and a real treat was attending a ceremony in Smethport, PA, that was coordinated with the events in D.C. On Memorial Day, I saw the very tail end of the parade in Portsmouth, OH. In between, I checked out the reconstructed Fort Steuben and the Ohio River Museum in Marietta.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #111
Trip #4
Little Miami

This picture is from my 2001 Little Miami River day trip. As this was only my fourth documented trip, I was still sorting out just how I wanted to handle things. In fact, this trip was undertaken primarily for practice and experimentation rather than for sightseeing and discovery. My starting point was near where the Little Miami River enters the Ohio River and I followed the smaller stream from there to its source. That source is not too far from the pictured Historic Clifton Mill.

I really got a kick out of reviewing the twenty-year-old trip to produce this Trip Peek. Of particular interest were glimpses of the abandoned Peters Cartridge Company and the rustic-looking Train Stop bar. The long-empty factory was recently given a new life with the opening of Cartridge Brewing and the Train Stop got a new owner and major improvements a few years ago and is now a popular riverside stop called the Monkey Bar.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #110
Trip #124
Dandy Trail

This picture is from my 2015 Dandy Trail day trip. The Dandy Trail was a scenic loop that circled Indianapolis, IN, in the 1920s. I would have known nothing of this loop were it not for friend and blogger Jim Grey who shared old photos and other knowledge of it on his blog. I combined my drive of the Trail with a gathering of area road fans at the historic Oasis Diner in Plainfield. It’s an informal group that often includes mister Grey but this time sadly did not.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #109
Trip #103
Bunkin’ With Unk

This picture is from my Bunkin’ With Unk trip although that is obviously not my uncle in the photo. The uncle of which I speak had taken to wintering in Florida and in January of 2012 I decided to accept his invitation to spend a little time with him at Lake Alfred between Winter Haven and Lakeland. I more or less dashed to Orlando on expressways then moved to the old Dixie Highway. During my time at his place, my uncle and I took in a little more Dixie Highway, including that brick segment near Espanola that had scared me off back in 2008, and I made a solo run to Bok Tower. When it came time to leave, I headed west on what some call the Tampa Loop of the Dixie Highway. None of this loop was ever formally made part of the Dixie Highway although much of it was tentatively recognized by the Dixie Highway Association pending certain conditions that were never met. This not quite official Dixie Highway passes by  Weeki Wachee Springs which is how I managed a photograph with Mermaid Karri.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #108
Trip #101
George for the Holidays

This picture is from my 2011 George for the Holidays trip. Although basically a Christmas Escape Run, the trip pieced together a variety of elements. It started in Louisville, KY, where the Louisville Slugger Museum, Frazier History, and Caufield’s Novelty are all clustered together about a block from the Ohio River. The first day ended at the 232 (now242) year old Talbott Tavern in Bardstown, KY. On the second day, I drove a combination of Jackson and Dixie Highways to Shelbyville, TN, where I spent the night at a horse farm. In the morning, I took in the nearby Jack Daniels Distillery then headed to Nashville for the trip’s central event.

That event, which supplied the trip’s title, was the Long Players performance of George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass in Nashville. I had picked up a good deal on a swankier than normal motel by booking three nights. My original plan had been to simply hang around Nashville but I managed to add a dose of complication. Belatedly, I realized that the southernmost point in my planned trip (Shelbyville) was quite close to where friends lived just over the Alabama border. I looked for a way to simply drive there for a visit directly from Shelbyville but the concert and prebooked lodging made anything but a driveby and wave impossible. So, after spending a night in Nashville, I drove to Alabama for a fun visit and Christmas Eve dinner. Christmas Day was spent back in Nashville, and that’s when the featured photo was taken.

My friend Mary had supplied me with cookies that included an entire gingerbread family that I photographed at various locations along the way. On Christmas Day, I decided to pose one of the Gingers on stage at Legends Corner on Nashville’s Broadway. Musician Buck McCoy not only tolerated the intrusion but participated. Exactly nine years later, I found myself looking at pictures taken by Buck. His apartment was just across the street from where an RV filled with explosives was detonated on Christmas Day 2020. Buck’s cellphone videos were some of the first visuals many people, including me, saw of the damage. The blast destroyed Buck’s apartment and most of its contents but just days later country star Brad Paisley gave Buck a new guitar so he could “get back to work and make a living.” He is doing just that including at his long-time regular Legends’ gig.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #107
Trip #130
Miles of Possibility

This picture is from my trip to the 2015 Miles of Possibility Conference in Edwardsville, IL. I had made trips to other conferences but this one was different. There had been Lincoln Highway conferences and Jefferson Highway conferences but this was a Route 66 conference. It was, I believe, the first of its kind. Route 66 events I attended previously were called festivals with car shows, vendor exhibits, and maybe some pay-your-own-way group meals or parties. There were vendors and some party like goings-on in Edwardsville but it was organized around a full schedule of presentations that people actually paid to attend. It worked and, although I have only attended one other, there have been Miles of Possibility Conferences every year since with the exception of the COVID riddled 2020.

The conference was a two-day affair with the first day ending in a concert in the Wildey Theater and the second — October 31 — ending in a Halloween Party. I made it a seven-day trip by spending three days getting there and two days getting home. The day I spent crossing Indiana included stops at the state’s three concrete airmail arrows. I spent two days crossing Illinois with stops at both Route 66 and non-Route 66 attractions. Part of the first day following the conference was spent with a group of conference attendees that disbanded in Saint Louis. From there, it was US-50 all the way home.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #106
Trip #79
Lincoln Highway West

This picture is from my 2009 Lincoln Highway West trip. The last part of the trip would be my third caravan to the National Corvette Museum for an anniversary celebration. In 1999 and 2003, I drove Historic Route 66 to join a caravan in Los Angeles. This time I would join a caravan in San Francisco. I had previously driven the Lincoln Highway east of the IN-IL border in piecemeal fashion and would pick it up there to drive the western bits. My oldest son lived in San Francisco at the time and joined me for the first part of the caravan east.

The Lincoln Highway portion of the trip allowed me to see in person things I’d only read about or seen in videos. As I looked over the journal in preparing this post, I was saddened to see that some of those things were already gone. Among them is the fellow cleaning my windshield in the accompanying photo. Dick Grudzinski died in 2016. Kensinger Service and Supply lives on, however, with Dick’s grandson Joe managing, pumping gas, and washing windshields.

The sixth day of this trip coincided with the tenth anniversary of the first ever live post to this website. From that day forward, a sidebar in the trip journal paid homage to the events of ten years before.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #105
Trip #58
Indiana Cool Roads

This picture is from the 2007 Indiana Cool Roads trip. The picture is of the big dome at the West Baden Springs Hotel around which Pat and Jennifer Bremer organized the trip. The small caravan got there on cool roads like IN-58 and IN-450 then toured the recently restored 1902 “Eighth Wonder of the World”. We spent the night nearby then part of the group drove to and toured Santa Claus, Indiana, the next day. The small group became smaller and in the end, I led a one-car caravan on to Owensboro, Kentucky, before heading home.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #104
Trip #102
South from the Wrong Turn

This picture is from my 2012 South from the Wrong Turn day trip. In 2017, the Robert E Lee – Dixie Highway marker in the picture was moved to private land a couple of miles to the north but in 2012 it stood where two Dixie Highway alignments separated just south of Franklin, Ohio. I was aware of both alignments and thought I had driven them both but I had not been aware of the marker and had not seen it. Learning of the marker led to me realizing that my idea of where the alignments split was incorrect. I had made a wrong turn when I’d driven the Dixie Highway in this area, and I made this trip to correct that.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.

Trip Peek #103
Trip #41
Zane’s Trace

This picture is from my 2006 three day trip over Zane’s Trace in southeast Ohio. Now called the Olde Wayside Inn, the pictured building was named the Bradford Inn when it opened in 1804. It’s where I spent the first night of the trip. East of Zanesville, the National Road generally followed the 1797 Trace when it entered Ohio in 1825. Even so, there are many remnants of Zane’s Trace that are distinct from the National Road. I scheduled this outing to coincide with an open house at the National Road Museum east of Zanesville where a new guide to the road, written by Glenn Harper and Doug Smith was introduced.


Trip Peeks are short articles published when my world is too busy or too boring for a current events piece to be completed in time for the Sunday posting. In addition to a photo thumbnail from a completed road trip, each Peek includes a brief description of that photo plus links to the full-sized photo and the associated trip journal.