Burnetts Ho!
Mel is writing this at an RV campground overlooking Montana’s Hebgen Lake, which sounds like it should be an anagram for something, but it isn’t. It’s just a funny name. She is gazing at an inflatable Pegasus, a floatie quickly abandoned by some poor soul who thought that it was reasonable to swim in what is essentially snowmelt from the Rocky Mountains in June, when the baby bison are still little orange puffballs and the hillsides are covered in fresh, un-peed-on wildflowers. Tomorrow’s low will be 26 Fahrenheit.
The Burnetts are traveling once again! Mel’s soul, which had gone into hibernation as she plunged herself head-first into working full-time again trying to fix people’s broken brains, uncurled its retracted petals as the scenery around her once again zoomed past at a rate faster than a leisurely stroll. This soothes the nomad. This time, the travels are by way of an RV, the nicest one they could get in Omaha, which means it is beige, and sort of crappy. No offense, Omaha.
We have named our RV “Jittery Jerry” after driving it through 40-knot crosswinds, wishing we could reduce sail the whole time.
The Burnetts are touring America’s West with two Colombians, because showing off North America to South Americans is fun to do. Of course, their friends barely made it into the country. When their flight stopped in Atlanta, they were questioned by Immigration:
“Why are you here?”
“We are going to do tourism in Omaha.”
“What? No one does tourism in Omaha,” the incredulous agent said, “Unless you want to see cows, and trees, and grass. What is the real reason why you are here?”
No worries! The Colombians arrived safely, after they switched to “visiting friends” as the reason, which is a much more plausible scenario for visiting Nebraska. It’s probably the only one.
After a frantic RV packing, after which the Burnetts had to make a familiar visit to an over-priced store to check off items on the list entitled, “Shit That We Forgot,” the crew were off, making their way North and West, with Mount Rushmore, Deadwood, and Devil’s Tower on the itinerary. And, of, course, they reacquainted themselves with the hours and hours of passagemaking, this time at ten times sailboat speed, but still long because America is sooo BIG.
One of the advantages to living in Omaha is that, whichever direction you head off, things are bound to get more interesting to look at. Even if you are headed deeper into America’s wild and sparsely populated West.
Seeing the beauty undulating past has been a little rough, as this prompts the Burnetts to recall some of the great sailing adventures now in the past. The mountains are gorgeous, but so is the sea.
And so, sitting in a Deadwood restaurant, draped in themed décor of cow skulls, horse hardware, weathered wood, and playing cards, listening to a guy in a long silvered ponytail belt out songs about the magnificence of the Black Hills, Mel realized something: cowboys are like sailors. They love the same self-deception sailors have: that we are free to determine our path through the wilds of mother nature while ignoring the fact that the land, wind, weather, and sea is totally calling the shots. Cowboys sail on living transports through rolling waves of green, and when they stop to rest, they look up at the stars and feel compelled to play stringed instruments. Their chosen vehicles even stink sometimes, just like boats!
Of course, a little tension arises when 6 people travel across the country in an RV. No one will listen to Mel’s John Denver collection and Allie refuses to draw a picture of a buffalo coming out of a geyser so she is DONE with all you people!
Despite such hardships, the Burnetts and crew safely arrived at their destination just west of Yellowstone, camping off of Hebgen Lake.
Hebgen Lake was chosen for a reason. The Burnetts are mixing this trip up a little by treasure hunting, because they have convinced themselves that after sailing around half the world, they are good at interpreting poetry. This has, of course, involved hiking, and we all know Allie’s tolerance of that. Many pictures have been taken of her lying supine on the ground, sweating and complaining. This is good for her, Mel thinks.
So far, no treasure. But Mel has taken 1000 pictures of the beauties of Yellowstone and the Rockies with her trusty travel cam. Her pictures remain the treasure she collected from her journey on the sea. So she has a little bit of treasure collected so far.
But a big box filled with gold would be better.
At night, after they fall to sleep exhausted and hypoxic on their Walmart-purchased foam mattress pads that make their crappy RV beds bearable, the Burnetts dream of topo maps and hear the words from that blasted poem echo in their heads, “Brown, blaze, down, meek, paddle, loads, high, cold.” Eventually, the plan is for Greg to don his waders and make his way up some wild river while Mel anxiously awaits his return, armed with bear spray. Hopefully, shouting, “Forrest Fenn!” will deter the bears, out of respect. The bear may even guide her to the treasure. If not, Mel plans to shout, “Holy Crap! Bear! Bear!” and spray the shit out of it, because apparently no one but Forrest Fenn, not even a bear, knows where this frickin’ treasure is.
We take our Colombian friends to a Greek restaurant. Welcome to America!
We head out in our monohull
Our trusty steed, Jittery Jerry
Typical views out the RV
American vacation scene
See! They did come here to look at corn!
The kids pose by The World’s ONLY Corn Palace.
This poor corn has no idea what its purpose is in life.
Corn art.
Corn Palace Marquee
Allie is so corny
As usual, our transport is packed to the gills with stuff
June is the best time to see the green grass of South Dakota
We want to reef the RV in the 35 knot winds
Summer weather
We’ve found the treasure!
Wall Drug: Ye Olde Tourist Trappe
Allie with her Wall Drug purchase, which goes as expected
Our fancy RV has a DVD player with component output. Seriously.
We see the consequences of getting a big head.
Mount Rushmore, Corn Palace version.
Mount Rushmore, real life version
We discuss the founding fathers
Poor Teddy Roosevelt has to stare at Lincoln’s nose for eternity
Allie’s face would fit nicely between Roosevelt and Lincoln, you know
Benny and JoJo soak up the culture
Tommy’s odd way of looking at he world
Deadwood, South Dakota
We visit the Adam’s house in Deadwood
This jar kept cookies bug-free for 80 years while the Adam’s house woman left for California
Lovely gardens, even up north
Allie in her standard, “I’m tired of walking” pose
Our cowboy crooner in Deadwood could just as easily be at the Chat ‘n Chill, Bahamas
I bet Deadwood is AWESOME during Halloween
The bar where Wild Bill Hickok was supposedly killt
Cool bar ceiling
Old-school games and HOLY CRAP IS THAT A RATTLESNAKE??
Darnit, too far away for bear spray
Benny and Jo Jo are good travelers
We view Devil’s Tower and Mel talks about mashed potatoes
The scenery of vacationers
Devil’s Tower has some cool textural transitions
We scramble up the rocks
Note that Mel is down low, taking pics with her optical zoom
Scaling rocks is fun!
New things to see around every turn
Cute couple!
The scenery gets a bigger z-axis the farther we get away from Omaha
Greg’s pilot software comes in handy as we drive up the mountains
“Exploding Kittens” on the road
Jo Jo wins at the card games
Tommy celebrates his 14th birthday
Walmart was out of 4’s, okay!
More travel scenery
- Tommy gets some prairie dog pics
Prairie dogs remind Mel of the iguanas in the Bahamas
Moose! So far the only ones we’ve seen.
We are in the Rockies!
Bighorn sheep
Snow!
The spooky remains of a fire
Elk
Yep. We’re in Yellowstone.
- Beautiful rivers cut through the country
This big guy posed for everyone and stopped traffic.
- Many bison hanging out.
- You see tree trunks in all stages of life at once in Yellowstone.
Spooky landscape
- Here come the Yellowstone steaming water pictures!
- Love the blues and oranges
Even a teenager can appreciate this
- We hiked a ways to see boiling mud. Allie was not impressed.
- Typical road-side pond
The hot and the cold live together peacefully
Geysers always look so happy
The trees absorb the silicates
LIke a moon of Jupiter
Yellowstone must look cool to birds
Swimming pool idea…except not the boiling water part.
Water ripples like sand
Bacteria paint for us
More orange and blue
Why can’t they sell flooring for houses that look like this?
Obligatory Old Faithful pic
- We eat frozen liquids after seeing boiling liquids all day
They would not be smiling like that if that bear was real.
Pretty creeks
I think your pasta is done.
Must resist urge to stir with stick
Like a salt map I made as a kid
Many organic textures here
The big picture of Yellowstone
The geysers are all connected
Moon-like
Old Faithful from behind
We introduce the Colombians to Smores
Mine is perfectly brown, thank you!
We eat breakfast at a dude ranch
Didn’t know stagecoaches required sturdy straps!
- More pretty streams
Sagebrush. Smells better than it looks!
- The Colombians are great mountain hikers!
The kids are not great mountain hikers.
Tommy explores nature
The poem that haunts our dreams
We take a break from nature and go ziplining in West Yellowstone
Note Mel is taking pics from the ground
Jo Jo braves the heights
Allie bounces off the landing and gets stuck in mid-air
Tommy finesses his landing
Weird nature
Good hiking weather
We take a break at altitude to breathe
Hairy clematis. Mel loves Google.
We learn about the consequences of an earthquake here in 1959.
We take a hike just for scenery.
Cool “snags”
Lake used to not be here. Trees used to be here.
Mountain willow and its catkins.
Mel and family look for silver and gold in rocks.
Allie after hiking
After a long day of exploring, we take the Colombians to a “seedy bar.”
I’ve enjoyed reading your blog….I chose a different way to explore the west…fighting fires (aerial firefighting…putting retardant on fires). I think some of us just have wanderlust…..and it’s hard to be a doc, and still satisfy that….(done both…)
I have neglected the blog and am just now coming back to it. Fighting fires to avoid “burnout” has to be one of the “coolest” solutions I’ve heard in a while. Okay, I will stop now because I am gagging on my own puns.
Mel, just wanted to let you know William Wilson passed away May 10th. at age 80. Going to miss my fishing buddy and best friend. The Parkinson’s finally caught up with him. Thanks for all you did for him when at Faribault. He loved following you and all your adventures. Keep up the good work.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for starting to write again. Makes me smile every time. Spoken from a person traveling around in a 32 foot Colman Lantern. And I forgot everything…
Thanks for the compliment! Now that we are back home, we are having to deal with the fact that we now own two colanders, two can openers, two comforters…
Looks like a fun family adventure… just the kind of result the guy who hid the treasure hoped for. I think he would be glad to know. Well done.
It is a different country. Very different from what you sailed away from. Enjoy your trip and continue to take them. At 66 years old i still haven’t been able to sneak away.
Have fun!!