Thursday, May 26, 2011

Head West, Young Man (Part III)

     We woke early the next morning, our bodies still on East Coast time, and although the clock said 7:00, we felt rested and ready to head out into the park.  Eager to get Bro one last good, hot meal before he moved into his park headquarters, we headed to the dining room of the Inn, where I filled him up on eggs, bacon, oatmeal, fruit, juice, and lots of steaming hot coffee. With the satisfaction that a mother feels when she knows her offspring are well-fed, we got into our separate cars and set off for Lake Yellowstone.  The extra time we had gained from our early start meant we could take the longer Madison-Norris-Canyon route through the park and hopefully catch a glimpse of something interesting as we caravaned around the upper loop.
     I had the beginnings of a small lump in my throat as we drove off in our separate cars, sadly aware that our time together was quickly coming to an end.  I would spend several more days in the park, running errands, sightseeing, trying to grab a quick moment or two with Bro after his work day ended, but it wouldn't be the same as our trip cross-country together.  He would be settling into a new environment and certainly didn't need or want his mother hovering around. Before we left for the lake, I asked him if he wanted me to stay out of sight while he checked into park headquarters, not wanting to embarrass him in front of his new work mates, willing to be invisible if needed. I almost cried when he laughed at me and said, "Of course not. You're not going to embarrass me. That's stupid." Oh, how I love that boy!
     We arrived at the cluster of rustic cabins that served as the office, equipment room, training area, and staff headquarters.  Several rangers were seated around buckets of supplies, busily mending gill nets and taking inventory of equipment that was being hauled out of winter storage.  They were friendly, relaxed, and easy to talk to, obviously very happy with their work environment and pleased that a new crop of interns was arriving to help.  Cole offered to drive us to the "fish dorm"  which was located about a mile down the road. He had been a college intern last summer and was now a seasonal employee, a step-up from his last position but not quite full time. The rangers were quick to tell me that many interns returned as park employees, and I imagined Bro calling home at the end of summer to tell us that medical school had been ditched for a career as a ranger.
       The dorm was located in the employee residential area, a small community within the park where year-round and seasonal employees had cabins and homes.  Typical of national park facilities, the dorm was a dark brown, stained wood structure with several parking spaces lining the front, basic but solid and purely functional.  I was impressed with the large kitchen-- several sinks, four refrigerators, ample cabinet and counter top space, and a separate dining area off to the side.  Cole quickly informed us that the kitchen was a definite upgrade from last year, thanks to the fire started by a careless intern, a young man whose career with the national park system was short-lived after he burned down the kitchen.
       The dorm had eight bedrooms, with one hall designated as "Male" and the other as "Female." Until that moment, I had simply assumed that all the fishing interns would be "male", but about that  time, a blond girl named April walked out of her dorm room and said "Hi!." Well, so much for that theory, I thought, as I shook her very-female-hand and introduced myself. The thought of a co-ed dorm certainly put a twist on my mental concept of Bro's summer experience in Yellowstone, but I noticed that the boys already seemed oblivious to the presence of the opposite sex as they were too busy examining hand-tied caddis and nymphs and comparing a large assortment of fly-tying equipment.
      Dorm-style bathrooms and shower stalls were located on each hall, and the sleeping quarters opened into a large living area where a television, bookcase, sofa and chairs lined the walls. Jay and Dominique had already settled into their rooms at the end of the "Male" hall, Bro selected his room--lucky number four-- and began to move in.  As he unloaded supplies from the car, I made up his bed, unpacked his duffel bags, and folded clothes into his dresser.  It took much less time than I had anticipated for him to move in, and as the last load was positioned into his room, I knew it was time for me to head out. We said quick goodbyes, trying not to get locked into the land my nephew has termed "goodbye purgatory" (a hovering world of drawn-out farewells, multiple hugs and repetitive goodbyes from which we often seem unable to escape).
     I was alone now, in the park on my own, and actually a little excited about the prospect of a few days on my very own schedule, doing exactly what I wanted, a solitary traveller.  I could stop and take as many pictures as I liked, could gaze for hours at the scenery, could wander and meander and backtrack and lolly gag as much I wanted, without having to answer to a single, solitary soul. This could be fun.
     I had promised my family I would not do anything stupid while I was alone in the park, that I would not hike back trails or get off the beaten path, talk to strangers or pick up hitchhikers,  wouldn't chase bears or try to touch a buffalo, and I really meant to abide by those promises.  I started off on the right track, driving slowly through Hayden Valley, past Mary Mountain, snapping pictures from a respectable distance. I turned into the lower rim drive that led into the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone and only briefly pulled a "tourist" moment when I stopped the car in the middle of the road to take a  river picture from the bridge.  There were no cars in front of me or behind me,  the road was deserted, so it wasn't actually a dumb move. I did it rather quickly and figured it would not count as the "one stupid thing" that I had secretly allotted myself.
     The "one stupid thing" happened the next day-- a morning I had planned to spend covering every inch of the boardwalks and trails that lined Old Faithful.  The area is numerous with cone geysers, fountain geysers, and geo-thermal pools,  and if you are really lucky, you can time your visit to see many of the geysers erupting. This was going to be a very lucky day for me, all because I happened upon a group of "geyser gazers". These individuals are dead-serious about their geysers. They spend hours watching eruptions and talking about eruptions. They drive from miles around and plan vacations around geysers. Some volunteer in the park to keep detailed accounts of the geysers, and they  walk around with little notepads and pencils, marking the start and stop time of each eruption, annotating the complex histories of each of the major and minor geysers. They sit for hours waiting for thermal activity to begin, armed with water bottles, hats, cameras, and snacks. Gazers can tell you more details about each geyser than most people want or need to know.
Future Geyser Gazer
      I had no idea that geysers could be so addictive, but  I learned quickly after I stumbled upon the group gathered in front of Grand Geyser. I had just finished watching Old Faithful go off and was ambling on down the boardwalk. Nothing was happening at this particular point, but a small band of people had claimed the front row of benches that lined the viewing area by Grand, one of the biggest fountain geysers in the park. They were busily looking at their watches and scribbling in notebooks, and I was curious as to what had them so engrossed. I sat down beside a well-equipped woman, asked what everyone was so interested in, and learned that Grand was scheduled to erupt within 45 minutes.This was evident because the smaller vent beside Grand was active, with small eruptions occurring every 18 minutes, a signal that Grand was building up to blow. Directly behind us, Castle was in full glory, blowing water and steam in the air for it's full and impressive 45 minute eruption, the longest in the park.  The gazers informed me that the timing today was perfect to see all the major geysers erupt and that I was welcome to follow them on their quest. I joined their group and headed to Beehive, Anemone, Plume, Solitary, and Turban. We watched Riverside, where the water blew horizontally across the river, then  trotted quickly up to catch Daisy. As we walked, the gazers taught me about various thermal activity and the different patterns and signals that lead up to an eruption. They pointed out which geysers are active and which are asleep and which ones have not shown activity for extended periods.
      After trailing the gazers all morning, I decided to branch off on my own and head over to Morning Glory Pool, a thermal spring that used to be as blue and beautiful as the flower for which it was named.
    "Oh, you're going to see that dirty old pool?" a gazer named Tom asked. "It's a mess now.  If you want to see something pretty, you need to go up to Artemesia, it's beautiful, sapphire blue, and not many people know where it is."
         I had heard that Morning Glory had lost it's beauty, a victim of homicide by tourism.  Visitors to the park, enamored with the seemingly endless depth of the cerulean pool, were tempted to throw things into the water in a quest to reach the center of the earth.  As a result, many of the vents and springs that fed the pool had become clogged, and Morning Glory was dying a slow and ugly death. I was shocked at the change from my last visit. There was not a speck of brilliant blue left, and the previously crystalline water had become a contaminated, murky brown puddle of algae.
      Tom had been correct. Morning Glory was a mess, and I wanted to find the hidden pool and see something beautiful.  His directions to Artemesia had been brief: get off the boardwalk at Morning Glory, take the trail into the woods until the deep patch of snow (about two feet deep and 100 yards long), stay in the footprints in the snow, then just go on down the trail until you find Artemesia.   It sounded easy to find and I set off on my own.
  And that was the one stupid thing I did.  I wouldn't have taken the path if I had know when I started how remote the trail was or how deep into the forest it went.  I became a little leary as I walked down the narrow, isolated path and into the woods. I had assumed that as soon as I got past the snow patch, Artemesia would be just on the other side. What Tom had neglected to tell me was that after the snow, the trail would open into  a pasture full of grazing buffalo-- huge, horned beasts that eyed me suspiciously as I cautiously stepped around them.  The pasture led to a forested trail of old growth timber and heavy underbrush, territory that screamed "Be Bear Aware! Be Bear Aware!" with each step I took.  I had been quiet in the buffalo pasture, but in the forest, I clapped and yelled and sang "Go away bears, please, no bears, Dear Lord don't let me get eaten by a bear.."  I made as much noise as one scared, lonely woman can make in the woods, stomping and hooting and hollering to warn any roaming bear that I was there and did not wish to make their acquaintance.  
      At the top of the trail, the woods opened up onto a cliff that offered a breathtaking view of mountains in the distance and the river valley below.  I walked to the edge of the cliff and looked down. About twenty feet below, the deep blue and crystal clear waters of Artemesia sparkled in the sun, a gentle mist rising as the warm waters met the crisp, cool air.  I forgot about my fear as I stared into the bottomless pool, mesmerized by the intensity of the color and the purity of it's depths. The world was quiet and clean here, unspoiled by human hands. This had been worth the hike, and if I made it back to the Inn without getting eaten by a bear, it would have been worth using this moment as my "one stupid thing."
     With a deep breath and a lot of loud clapping and singing, I headed back down the trail, thanking God for showing me Artemesia.

praying like mad that I would not end my cross-country trip in the stomach of a grizzly.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Head West, Young Man (Part II)


     I paid $25 for a seven day pass that gained me access to both Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Park. I didn't mind paying the fee, as I was now the proud parent of a park employee and realized those fee dollars were being put to very good use. With Bro following behind in his loaded- up car, I put my brand new Nissan Rogue on cruise control at 45 MPH and started into the Tetons.  Snow capped mountains that had once been looming in the distance were now  casting shadows on the road, and the massive peaks of Grand Teton and the Cathedral Group were  clearly visible on this cloudless afternoon. As we approached the turnoff for Jenny Lake, Bro and I pulled over to snap a few pictures.  I made him stand in the same spot  where I had photographed him years earlier. The mountains and scenery hadn't changed in fifteen years, but the subject I was most interested in was taller and more self-assured than he had been at age five.  Seeing my grown son standing so confidently in front of the towering mountains gave me a feeling of security that I needed, a hint that it would be alright to turn him loose in the wilderness and on his own.
    We drove the loop around String Lake and Jenny Lake, both still completely frozen solid even though it was the middle of May. Patches of black ice dotted the road where snow-melt had refrozen, and stopping to take pictures began to be a little more perilous as we slipped and slid across the ice, a sure sign it was time for us to move on.  We finished driving through the Tetons without stopping for any more pictures and without seeing any wildlife other than a few shaggy buffalo that were beginning to shed their winter coats. 
The snow began to pile higher and higher on the sides of the road as we gained altitude heading into Yellowstone. The temperature had been steadily dropping since we left Laramie that morning, the thermometer on the car was hovering  at around 34 degrees, and as we started to climb through the pass from West Thumb to Old Faithful, the road became nothing more than a narrow tunnel carved out between towering walls of snow. Being a southern girl who thinks a dusting of snow qualifies as a blizzard, I was quite impressed with the fact that I was so nonchalantly driving  through mountains of snow with nary so much as a chain on my tires or four wheel drive. I congratulated myself for having graduated into the the rank of all-weather, marathon, cross-country,  professional road hog.
     We cautiously crept over the pass until we finally spotted the first puffs of steam from geysers that dotted the hillsides around Old Faithful. The snow was less prevalent here as heat from thermal activity warmed the ground considerably, and as driving became less intense, I began to scan the horizon again for any signs of animal movement, but only a few raggedy buffalo grazed in the distance. As we pulled into the inn, the name-sake geyser was just beginning to erupt. I couldn't help but think it must be a good sign that Old Faithful was welcoming us into the park with such a spectacular fanfare. Plumes of steam and a tower of water blasted straight up into the sky, right on it's predicatable schedule, and it was quite an impressive sight to behold as we parked the car and stood for a moment to watch. 
     It was a little past five o'clock, and even though the drive had been long, there would still be several hours of daylight left and it was the perfect time for animal watching.  Bro and I checked in at the front desk, grabbed a couple of room keys, and headed straight back to the car without so much as a glance at our rooms.  We wanted to see something big and hairy before it got dark- preferably a grizzly or moose- and there was no better time than dusk for animal gazing.  We drove past the Firehole River, where streams of smoke from geysers and steam pots permeated the air with an egg-like scent of sulphur. Buffalo roamed and grazed in spots where the thermal activity had melted enough snow to reveal coarse tuffs of old grass.  Several cows had caramel-colored calves close by their sides, and we laughed as we watched two of the youngsters playing chase around their mother's massive bodies.  The hooves of the young buffalo barely touched the ground as they leapt and ran, giving them the appearance of floating across the earth as they relished in their childish games. The mothers just plodded along, oblivious to the ruckus the calves were making, concerned only with finding another mouthful of the grass which was needed to keep up their milk production and to propel the endless cycle of eat, feed, eat, feed--a cycle that was driven by the hunger of both mother and child.
     We drove towards Madison Junction, then made the turn left that would take us by the Madison River and into West Yellowstone.  We knew this road would be a good spot to see the trumpeter swans that nested by the banks of the river, monogamous birds that mated for life and returned to the same nesting spot each year.  We were not disappointed, as the swans were exactly where we had left them on our last trip out west. There was something comforting about watching the great white birds, knowing that they were loyal and majestic and constant, traits seldom found in our own species, much less those of lesser animals. They embodied beauty and purity and goodness and gave one a feeling that there was hope in the world.
      The trip into town yielded no other wildlife, but we knew that a couple of good buffalo steaks were waiting for us at the Old Town Cafe, a local grill that we had frequented in the past because of it's prime beef and one of the best cowboy breakfasts around.  Once again, we were not disappointed as we cut into our tender and tasty buffalo, completely undisturbed by the fact that we were eating the same massive beasts we had photographed only moments earlier. With full stomachs and the last remnants of daylight lingering still, we headed back into the park for our last effort of the day to see something impressive. 
     We had only gone a few miles when the telltale sign of a bear appeared. Up ahead,  a line of cars had clogged the road,  and people were  parked on both sides of the street. Some were leaning out of windows, some were running down the edge of the street,  and cameras of all sizes and sorts were clicking like mad.  Immediately, we knew there was a bear. We edged between the line of parked cars and got as close as we could, rolled down the window and asked the most obvious question of the day, "What do you see?"
     "Bear," the nearest man whispered. "Over there, in the woods."
      He pointed to a spot about ten feet down the road.

Bear seen on road to Mammoth the next day

      We crept a little further down, both of us peering into the darkening woods, when suddenly, I spotted a slight movement in the underbrush.
     "I see it!" I almost screamed, wildly pointing and gesturing to those around me. The backside of a  bear was barely visible as he lumbered through the thick growth of trees and brush. He was casually pawing the ground and grazing for tidbits as he walked, seemingly oblivious to the crowd gathered around him, and he quickly slid out of view as he headed deeper into the forest. 
     It was not the best sighting of a bear, and sadly, Bro had not been able to get a good glimpse of the creature from his side of the car, but it had whetted our appetites and we now knew that bears were out there, and we were going to find them.
      It was the end of our first day in the park. We had travelled over 2175 miles and had safely arrived at our destination. In one day, we had seen more snow than in a lifetime, had watched geysers erupt and thermal pools steam, had viewed nesting swans and grazing buffalo, and had seen just a hint of a rambling old bear. With a few good pictures and  two very tired bodies , we cranked up the car and headed back to the Old Faithful Inn. Tomorrow, Bro would move into the "fish dorm", his summer home on Lake Yellowstone, and we were both in need of a hot shower and a good night's rest. There was much to be done the next morning, and it was time to call it a day.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Head West, Young Man (Part I)

“If you want to make a boy a man,

Send him out west with a rod in his hand

Turn him loose in the wide open land,

Teach him to live by his own two hands,

And he’ll come home a seasoned man.”

                                              Beth Daly







The best part about taking a thirty-six hour road trip with your college-aged son is that for thirty-six hours, you have him back again, just you and your boy, on the road, alone. He may not be the tow-headed boy who loved sticks and rocks and snakes and lizards and tall trees and cowboy hats, but for thirty-six hours, he’s your little boy again, and he’s all yours.

For any parent of a college-aged kid, you know how precious those hours can be. For those of you who aren’t there yet, be forewarned, and cherish each moment you have. Teach your children that when Christmas and Mother’s Day and birthdays roll around, they can forget about goofy gifts and cards and flowers and candy; what we really want is time—precious time with our children, and even more so when they are our all-grown-up-still-feel-like-our-babies-think-they-can-conquer-the-world-believe-they-are-invincible-only-call-home-for-cash-college-aged-kids.

For many years, I had made a point of carving out a week each spring to take a special road trip with my young son. I believed it was as important for mothers to allot time with their sons as we did with our daughters. I admit, I love to shop and get manicures and pedicures with my daughter. Nothing thrills me as much as having a girly-girl day with my favorite female offspring, but I am also the mother of a son, and my time with him is just as precious. So each March, Bro and I would set off an annual trip that was tailored around his interests, which fortunately, also happened to be mine. As much as I loved my pampering, I equally enjoyed hiking and fishing and the great outdoors, so my trips with Bro tended to be nature related and rugged. This meant sweaty treks through the Everglades, the Okefenokee Swamp, the mangrove forests of the Florida Keys, or any barrier island that would guarantee encounters with alligators, crocodiles, wild boars, manatees, big fish, raccoons, and mosquitoes. I loved every minute of hiking through muck and mud and sloshing through swamps and forests, and I dream about those trips still.

This past week, I was once again given the gift of time with my son as we barreled across ten states and two time zones, a thirty-six hour drive en route to his summer job as a fishing intern at Yellowstone National Park. It was reminiscent of our swamp journeys when he was younger, car loaded with binoculars and fly rods, hiking boots and water bottles, the only difference being we had traded bug spray for bear spray and Bro now did most of the driving.

Bro had wanted for years to head west to work in Yellowstone National Park, but his tightwad parents told him it didn’t make sense to drive ten states away and pay room and board to earn minimum wage. He’d end up owing somebody money-- probably us-- before it was all said and done, and the Scotch-Irish thriftiness that dominated my DNA just couldn’t settle with that. We insisted he dig ditches and work construction in the great state of Virginia instead, where by the sweat of his brow he could earn minimum wage rent free and come home to a home-cooked meal and free laundry service.

He did this for several years, laboring furiously in the intense heat of Virginia summers, applying blacktop to parking lots, painting fences, pouring cement, digging ditches and cutting grass. After a few summers of hard labor at minimum wage, the college scholar began to search for other options. Being the earnest and innovative young fisherman he is, he researched his options, applied for an internship with the Student Conservation Association (a group I had never heard of), and landed a job that paid his expenses to Yellowstone, gave him free room and board, paid him a stipend for the summer, gave him a $75 per week debit card for expenses, but even better, HE WAS BEING PAID TO FISH! We couldn’t argue with that, so it was “Head west, young man, head west” with a blessing from both his parents.

I had the great honor of being selected as the back-up driver to accompany him on his journey west. It was the first time since Bro had left for UVA that I had been invited to travel with him, as the first lesson he learned in college was that his fraternity brothers were much more interesting than his rapidly aging mother. I was practically giddy with excitement and anticipation. 

We left Richmond, Virginia shortly before 5 a.m. on a Friday morning, Friday, the thirteenth, to be exact. We were determined not to let superstitions ruin our excitement and were convinced we could haul across the country in two days time. We crammed our sleepy bodies into a tightly packed car loaded with fishing gear, groceries, clothes, boots, bedding, and a cream-cheese pound cake, and expected to roll through the gates of Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Park on Sunday. It was a 2175 mile drive and the current temperature in Wyoming was 24 degrees.

We listened to Spanish music and talked about religion as we drove through the foggy mountains of West Virginia; I was intensely interested in hearing Bro discuss his theological beliefs and hopes for the world and tried not to interrupt with my own ideas as he divulged his deepest thoughts. The sharp crests and deep gorges of the Mountaineer state softened into the rolling hills and blue-grass horse farms of Kentucky, where lush pastures protected by miles of fencing fairly oozed with the scent of deep pockets, blue blood and aged bourbon, a stark contrast from the sparsely populated but coal-rich hills of West Virginia.

Upon entering the farmlands of Illinois, the recent deluge of rain that had caused flooding in the Mississippi Valley became evident as most of the fields were submerged under a wide swath of water. At first glance, I thought perhaps all the water was retaining ponds or lakes or irrigation beds, but after passing miles and miles of water-drenched fields, I realized that much of the rural, agricultural land of Illinois was completely submerged under water. The rising cost of food prices was fairly audible as we passed flooded field after flooded field. I dreaded arriving in St. Louis and the banks of the swollen and rapidly cresting Mississippi, as reports of flood stages and cresting dates inundated the news on the radio. The Army Corp of Engineers was busily working to determine which flood gates to open to relieve pressure from the raging waters, which communities to sacrifice and which to save. It was a no-win situation, but decisions had to be made and sacrifices were imminent. Having lived through several episodes of flooding in my own home, it made me nauseous and depressed to think about what the families that lived along the banks of the raging Mississippi were facing. The smell of mildew permeated my memory and I mourned the loss of pictures and scrapbooks  that my own floods had consumed and I knew those raging waters would soon be consuming the memories of others.
I was shocked at how relatively calm and subdued the mighty river flowed through St. Louis, only slightly above flood level and leaving the downtown area safe and dry. It was hard to imagine the destruction and turmoil that was building downriver as the water gained momentum on its southern descent, and I prayed for the souls that bordered its banks and for the havoc that would soon consume their lives.

Missouri was not what I expected. For some reason, I had imagined wide open fields of brown and gold, but Missouri is lush and green, a land of rolling farmlands and trees. Not only that, but in Columbia there is one of the biggest Bass Pro Shops in the country and an outstanding little restaurant several miles down the road  called “Catfish Corner,” where for ten bucks you can get a blackened catfish with cole slaw that will make you cry for more.

Nebraska….God bless the Cornhuskers, but it takes FOREVER to drive across Nebraska and it all looks the same. Field after field after field, so similar I was bleary eyed trying to determine if we were moving forward or driving in circles. The only way I could tell we were making progress was by counting the flocks of Merriam turkeys that dominated the fields. Strutting gobblers and feeding hens dotted every field we passed…. twenty, thirty, forty to a flock. Gobblers in full strut marched proudly in front of oblivious hens, women interested only in securing the next meal necessary for good breeding. If not for the turkeys, I would have been delirious in Nebraska.

But then, after miles and miles of Nebraska, we finally, joyously, deliriously, exhaustedly arrived in Wyoming. Suddenly, the monotonous fields of Nebraska rose into the glorious hills and vast plains of Wyoming. Snow began to dot the hillsides, the sky seemed to expand, the horizon enlarged, and the air grew crisp and fresh. We had done it, not alone, but by the grace of God and with his angels watching over us, but we had done it. Thirty-six hours, ten states, and two time zones later, we were in Wyoming.

Now this is the funny thing about college kids. They live in insulated, isolated, surreal communities. Their connections seem small, but we adults are confused if we believe that. As we pulled into Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Bro glanced out of the window and casually said, “Oh, there’s Alexa

“What?” I yelled. “You already see someone you know? You have to be kidding me.” We had been on the road for 3 days and I had not run into a single soul I had ever met in my fifty years on earth, yet my son was already bumping into acquaintances on his first day in town.

Unfortunately, he was unable to respond to my questioning because he was on his cell phone chatting away with Alexa, who was in fact strolling casually down the sidewalk of Jackson Hole. He was busily making plans to meet up with her later in the week, along with the twenty-five friends of hers who were also working in Jackson for the summer.

“Oh, to be young again, to be young again!” It wasn’t the first time I cried that chorus on the trip.

We ate lunch at the Cadillac Bar in Jackson Hole, where we ravenously consumed wonton cigars of goat cheese and shrimp in a ginger sauce, a smoked turkey baguette, and a healthy chop salad. Three days of driving had ramped up an appetite, and we were hungry for hot food before we entered the park. I picked up my rental car at the airport in Jackson, and learned a good financial lesson. I had reserved an economy car for $17/day and was expecting something about the size of a tuna fish can on wheels. It was all I would need for just one person, and I wasn’t particularly picky about what I would be driving, but upon arrival at the rental car counter, I was immediately asked if I would like to upgrade to midsize car.

“No thanks,” I responded, “the economy car is fine for me.”

The agent waited a moment, fiddled behind the counter for  a second, and then said, “I’m sorry. We don’t have any economy cars. We’ve upgraded you to a midsize.”

I gave her a puzzled look but said, "OK, works for me."

Lesson learned. I received a brand new car with only three miles on the odometer for the same price as an economy compact. They didn’t even stock economy compact cars at the airport but would try to convince you to “upgrade” to a midsize, a car you were going to get anyway. Upon refusing, I got a brand new Nissan Rogue with all wheel drive for the same price as a tuna can on wheels. It made my Scottish blood just jump for joy, and I thought the trip was going very well.

We had been on the road for three hard days, travelling sixteen hours on Friday, twelve on Saturday, six on Sunday from Laramie to Jackson, and still had to travel several more hours through the breath-taking vistas of Teton National Park towards Yellowstone, where by nightfall we would arrive at the Old Faithful Inn.  The journey had been incredible so far as we had driven across our great country, but  the real adventure was just beginning as we left Jackson behind and headed deeper and deeper into the National Park...