Headed for Kingman this morning. Here's the truck at a scenic rest stop early in the morning.
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The truck and I successfully crossed over the 7300 foot summit of the Arizona Divide. Then it started snowing, then the traffic on route 40 came to a complete stop and we all sat there in our trucks listening to Bing Crosby sing White Christmas on the radio while the snow accumulated on the road and our trucks.
What ever happened to the Global Warming we have been promised for the last 30 years? Here I take a 4 week drive around the country in the Autumn, and I've only actually seen 4 days worth of actual Autumn weather. The rest has been Winter weather. This is ARIZONA I'm driving through, not Minnesota.
After about an hour of Christmas tunes, the traffic finally began inching along (got to use the granny first gear on my truck for about 30 minutes) and we discovered that at the front of the tie up was a big rig that had jackknifed in the snow.
So finally made it to Kingman in the afternoon and stopped in at the Arizona Route 66 Museum. Route 66 was the primary road people used during the depression to flee the dust bowl areas of Oklahoma and find a new home in California. John Steinbeck's book (and the subsequent movie) Grapes of Wrath was about one such family, the Joads. Here's an old truck similar to the Joads.
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Long quotes from the book were posted on the walls of the museum where the driver of the Joad family truck worried about whether the sounds the truck was making were going to result in a breakdown that would mean tragedy for the desperate family. Kind of reminded me of my trip around the country in my old truck. Your ear does get attuned to any sounds out of the ordinary.
In addition to having Route 66 run through it, Kingman is a major railroad artery for the BNSF (Burlington Northern Santa Fe). Here's a train barreling by the old train station, now a RR Museum.
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