Wednesday, August 28, 2019

The Sweatiest Road Trip Ever - Day 3 - The Great Mayonnaise Crisis!

Day 3 -

Today was, and this is not going to shock many of the more astute readers, a day full of driving.
We awoke at our hotel and began the day with a toast to crappy coffee.
Crappy coffee tastes slightly better when you drink it out of a mug that your best friend made. Thanks, Ben!
The view from our hotel seemed scientifically designed to remind you that no matter how crappy your coffee is, things could be infinitely worse.

Yes, your coffee may taste like watered down road grit, but at least you didn't have to sleep there.

And it worked. With this renewed, revitalized outlook on life, we packed up Squanket and headed back on the road. Our goal for the day was to make it to Jacksonville, FL so we could have breakfast with my brother and his wife who had recently moved to that area.

Off we go. Kerri is still behind the wheel to prevent me from stopping at The World's Largest Anything.

We had, without any question, arrived in The South. There is a palpable change in the air. I'd like to say that it was the smell of peaches and honeysuckle, but it was, in fact, hot asphalt and diesel fumes. There is a distinct increase in Jesus-themed slogans and billboards.

Awwwwww.
I'm not sure what sort of sin you have to commit in order to need a billboard begging for forgiveness.
Wow. It must have been a whopper.

Seriously. What happened?

WHAT DID YOU DO?!?!

Was it you? It seemed rude to ask. And, possibly, dangerous.

I did enjoy the juxtaposition of the signs begging forgiveness with the signs advertising the "Adult Superstores".

We didn't stop because


Kerri

claimed that

I'm still not

an adult.

As we avoided temptation at every exit, we passed a sprawling trailer park flying a football-field sized banner reading "TRUMP THE LEGEND - 2020".

We also passed a U-Haul storage facility that advertised it as a great place to store "RV - BOAT - WINE". Seems fancy, right?

Southerners, as a general rule, tend to have fewer bumper stickers on their cars than we New Englanders do. We did see many, many alarming "Trump Forever" stickers.

We also saw this cryptic window decal of Jesus shooting a basketball.

And there are also a staggering number of billboards for injury lawyers. I suppose that people spend time reading the billboards, crash into other cars, and then need accident lawyers. It's brilliant, really.

We stopped at a Welcome Center in South Carolina and enjoyed some real southern heat and humidity.

It. Is. SOOOO. Hot. Here.

Tori was afraid her feet would melt if she touched the ground.
South Carolina did have a lovely welcome center, complete with a metal seat, baking in the sun. Naturally, we forced our children to sit on it for a photo.


Don't touch me. Also, our legs are cooked to the seat. Thanks, Dad.
I'd love to show you the natural beauty of South Carolina. I assume it has some. Our view was somewhat limited due to the astounding number of semi-trucks on the highway.

Ohh, look, kids. A truck!

You can see some greenery there. Past the truck.

Hey! Is that a field?

Pretty!

Oh, dear. It seems like death is sort of a self-solving condition, but what do I know?
This is as close as we actually got to seeing any turf or sod in South Carolina.

Look at that beautiful blue sky. 

...sigh...

Hey! Is that a tree?

The majesty of the highway landscape.

Kerri enjoyed the camaraderie of sharing the road with the truckers. 10-4, good buddy! 
And then, it was time for lunch.

We made the regrettable mistake of deciding to combine lunch and a stop for gas. We somehow managed to find the most filthy Exxon station in the entire Northern Hemisphere.

"This seems like a good place to get Hepatitis A, B, C, and K," Tori cheerfully announced.
"Don't lick anything," I growled. "You'll be fine."

We did make the potentially life-altering decision to use the bathrooms at this gas station. Maybe we would need a funeral solution afterward. Who knows?

Without getting overly personal, I made the decision to not wash my hands after seeing the condition of the sink. It seemed safer that way.

After surviving the squalid bathrooms, we naturally wanted lunch. The only place with any sort of shade was right at the gas pumps so, in defiance of all good manners, we ate right at the pumps.

Fresh tomato sandwiches are a weakness of mine. I could eat them every meal in the summer and this trip had come right in the middle of the tomato harvest. I had picked a few tomatoes from our garden just before we left for this trip. I also baked a fresh loaf of bread and packed up a small container of mayonnaise. These are the only things that belong on a tomato sandwich and I will listen to no arguments about it.

Trying hard to suppress the memories of the bathroom, I carefully sliced my tomato.  I gently laid out the bread.  I looked for the mayonnaise. Where was the mayo? HOW CAN I HAVE A PROPER TOMATO SANDWICH WITHOUT MAYO?

Tori, ever the trooper, slipped back into the gas station and grabbed a few mayo packets from the sandwich case. Yes. I'd eat mayonnaise from a place where the sink was too dirty to wash my hands. The irony is not lost on me, thank you very much.


Crisis averted. 

As I finished my sandwich and licked the last few precious crumbs from my fingers, Kerri asked, "Did you ever wash your hands after using that bathroom? We have hand sanitizer right here."

I began resigning myself to a painful, undignified death.  Maybe I should order a few billboards to be installed along the highway so that others will repent not washing their hands.

The good news is that I didn't die.

The better news is that we were making better time than we had planned on. Mostly because we didn't take and scenic routes. Mostly because there aren't any scenic routes available.

Ohhh, scenic. This might be the only toilet in South Carolina worse than the one at the Exxon station.

Or, maybe this one.

This is as close to a scenic view as we were afforded.

Soon, our brief journey through South Carolina was at an end.

Good-bye, old friend.


Hello, new friend.

The most striking thing about Georgia was that it was almost exactly like South Carolina.

Except it had a light house,

unabashedly cheap gas,

And lots and lots of peaches.

And as soon as we had really started to appreciate Georgia, we were in Florida.

Well, thank you!

Behold, the bridge into Florida. We had arrived.

Our plan had been to stop near Jacksonville and pop in on my brother and his wife for a quick breakfast before we hit the road to get Tori to school on time. We made such good time that we arrived in Jacksonville earlier than we had planned.

Pat & Carolyn very graciously changed their plans from breakfast with us to dinner with us. We joined them for a delicious BBQ dinner at their beautiful new home. It was relaxing and fun and delicious!

Pulled pork = joy.

Me and my kid brother, Pat. Thanks for the wonderful visit!

Since we still had about 5 hours of driving before we reached Fort Lauderdale and Tori wanted to check in by 2:00 at the latest and I still hadn't died of gas-station-induced dysentery, we decided to get in another couple hours of driving.

We made it to a hotel in Daytona and spent the night.

I don't know what the view outside the room was like because it was dark. But inside the room:

Maybe don't leave the card advertising your "Squeaky Clean" rooms next to the eggshells and cracker crumbs scattered all over the desk. 


Tomorrow: Move In Day for Tori!






3 comments:

Smilin' Simon said...

I love your blog!

Mom said...

Thanks for the family update of Pat's whereabouts.

Wade Brandis said...

Not sure if you were using the hotel coffee allusion against the Super 8 across from the hotel you stayed at, but from my personal experiences, most of the Super 8's I've stayed at over the years have been more or less fine. Super 8 is a franchised chain so one Super 8 might not be as good as the location in the next town over, or even in the same city.