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DAY 36 - CEDAR CITY UT to HOME - 480 mi, 9-3/4 hours
Rise and shine at 4 am MDT this morning. We were actually ready earlier than our planned 5:15 departure time, but by the time we went across the street, bought ice and loaded the big cooler, it was right at 5:15 when we left.
It was still dark when we took off, but you could see light starting to come up. Arriving at St George not quite 45 minutes later, it was just getting light and the Cracker Barrel was just opening. We were their first customers. Hubby had a tall stack of pancakes and bacon, while I had the Good Morning Breakfast and Multi-grain toast. What we've found on this trip is that iHOP and Cracker Barrel are our breakfasts of choice. Oh, we took advantage of the motel breakfast a number of time, but after awhile, you want something cooked just for you, and sorry to say, hotel waffle maker mixes are not exactly tasty (to us).
The Virgin River Gorge was as pretty as ever, and the river was really flowing. That didn't surprise us since we'd heard that Zion closed part of the park including Kolob Canyon because of the flash flood danger. Pictures of the Gorge area will follow.
Next stop was just north of Las Vegas, at the Chevron station on the Moapa Paiute Indian Reservation. At $3.12/gallon, we knew we should “top off” before heading home. Sacramento recently raised taxes on fuel, with a whopping 30c per gallon raise for diesel, so prices have gone over $4/gallon in most places in CA.
The first of the traffic issues started in Las Vegas. Slow. Stop. Go. Go fast. Stop. Go.
The traffic was lighter from there down to about Victorville. We were rather surprised, since we'd taken a chance on lighter traffic by NOT leaving at midnight like we sometimes do when departing from southern Utah. However, right after Victorville, as we started to head down from the Cajon Pass Summit, traffic came to a creepy crawl, for miles, all the way past the exit for CA-138. Apple Maps blamed it on a morning accident, but there was also evidence of construction.
We thought we were okay until we got to the junction with CA-91. Once again, we came to a stop, then crawled all the way down to Temescal Canyon Road. Fortunately we could get off the freeway there long enough to make a pit stop. Apple Maps said it had been an accident, but we only saw evidence (again) of construction.
Thought we were home free again, though we'd already wasted 30 minutes crawling in traffic, when we came to a halt again in Lake Elsinore. What's going on?!?! There was no evidence of an accident or anything like that on Apple Maps this time. We crawled from Lake Elsinore to Rainbow Valley Road, 23 miles, taking more than 45 minutes to do that.
Thankfully, from there on home, it was soupy but moving. When the express lanes started, hubby got in them.
Arrived home at almost 2 pm, about 75 minutes later than we expected. Ugh. But everything at home looked great, just warm. We turned on the AC. We unloaded the truck but are taking our time unpacking suitcases, etc.
Donna
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Photos - last day
LAST DAY'S PHOTOS
Bear in mind, all these were taken with an iPhone that desperately needs to be replaced.
Entering the Virgin River Gorge area, which is located on I-15 in the northwest corner of Arizona. There is BLM land there, with a small campground and picnic area.
https://farm1.staticflickr.com/923/4...429e0c6340.jpgIMG_6643
We were driving through this area in the early hours of the morning. The sunlight vs. shadows from the mountains makes it hard for wearing sunglasses.
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1789/...78d4166330.jpgIMG_6648
There are times when you feel like 4 lanes and a median strip are being squeezed between the rocks/mountains. They are!
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1824/...4cdacb85e4.jpgIMG_6650
One travels along the Virgin River for a few miles, sometimes being able to see the River. There have been flash floods upstream, closing Kolob Canyon (Zion) and the Narrows (Zion), so there was quite a bit of water here.
https://farm1.staticflickr.com/839/4...7c615f3bda.jpgIMG_6657
Leaving the Canyon and coming onto the raw AZ (then NV) desert, you could smell the recent rain.
https://farm1.staticflickr.com/845/4...1666819f5d.jpgIMG_6664
Coming into Las Vegas, first traffic jam of the day. These jams are the main reason why one should *never* plan a trip using electronic mapping travel times, nor should they plan hour-by-hour for their trips. Apple and Google Maps are great for trying to figure out WHY traffic is so backed up, though they aren't infallible.
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1821/...4184d512a0.jpgIMG_6665
Now, we are moving along and northbound is jammed up. Las Vegas' Mandalay Bay is the main reason for the picture.
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1809/...76b9404714.jpgIMG_6668
Jam #2, top of Cajon Pass. You get my drift.
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1785/...4854d8933f.jpgIMG_6669
Jam #3, between CA-91 and Temescal Canyon Road:
https://farm1.staticflickr.com/845/4...cd29be88f0.jpgIMG_6673
I did not take a photo of Jam #4. By then I was sick of traffic jams, as you might expect! I just wanted to get home!
Donna
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We've been home well over a week now, but I've never posted our summary. Our Colorado daughter and her family arrived two days after we got home, as they had tickets for San Diego Comic-Con long before they moved this past winter. They simply made arrangements for work vacation and with us. So I've been a bit busy, following a couple of grandkids around our house, taking them to the park, etc.
They drove here and back to CO in a loop. They took I-25 south to I-40, then the Payson cut-off to I-17 to I-10, where they stopped to see family in the Phoenix area. Then came to our house via I-8. They traveled in 3 days -- Denver to Albuquerque, Albuquerque to Phoenix, and Phoenix to San Diego. Then to get home, they took I-15 to I-70, overnight at Cedar City. They *loved* that drive, and the two grandkids did very well on that 600 mile day.
Reflections on our own trip were not too numerous. This time around, we were very happy with the accommodations that we chose, mostly happy with our food choices, and super happy with our fuel mileage and the ability to find cheap(er) fuel.
For lodging, this was about the first trip where everything was pre-booked except the last two nights. We did that to have far more control over what was in the room, on the property (pool was required, fitness center was a nicety), in the area, and of course, the price. Our most expensive room averaged $129/night including the taxes, but it had a full kitchen. Our cheapest room was the one that I booked 2 days ahead, on the fly, in Farmington, MO, at $66, and that was a Choice property.
For food, we ate at a mix of local places, local chains, and national chains. We still struggled with that bit about too much food (and it's difficult to take a "to-go" box with you in an ice chest) and the unknown calories. Still, I was grateful to have only gained 2 lbs in 5 weeks, of which I am now at a quest to lose again. It was easier to choose a healthy meal at the chains, honestly, because their nutritional values are posted online.
When you carry a cooler, you have to do one of two things: figure out how you can get those "blue ice" things re-frozen, or just buy ice every traveling morning. Most hotels don't want you to fill a cooler with ice from their machine, due to the supply-demand issue. We ended up buying ice, which ran a total of $30 into the budget. In retrospect, almost every single motel room fridge had a place for blue ices to refreeze. Some freezers were larger than others, however.
For us, the biggest budget expense was Lodging, followed by Food, then Fuel. Gas Buddy was our most used app, as it allowed us to plan for better fuel stops. I'd budgeted at $3.25-$3.50/gal and we only got close to that once. (I should add: this is for DIESEL.) That was in Cedar City, UT, at $3.29, and at home, $3.38 (but that was at the military base, home is running $3.69 these days). Our least expensive fuels were at Camdenton, MO ($2.74/gal) and, thanks to being given some Kroger points, $2.69/gal in Centennial, CO at King Soopers (it would have been $2.99/gal).
On the way home, we also discussed where we're going on next year's *short* trip, and then last night, my husband brings in the atlas and says, "so where should we go on our next *long* trip?!" That would be in two years.
Donna
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Great to see you had a good trip Donna. Enjoyed reading. loved the pics. Trying to get idea's for our forth coming trip. :)
Keith
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UPDATE in 2021:
Knowing that folks sometimes read older trip reports, here are some updates:
Econo Lodge at Osage Beach is now a mom-and-pop owned place. It still has the same owners, but they dropped the franchise contract with Choice Hotels. Prices went down a little, too. We'll be staying there again for a few days this summer, until our household goods arrive from CA. (We're moving to the Lake area.)
J Bruners is back in business. It was a temporary closure due to maintenance issues, from what I understand. They are just down the road from the old Econo Lodge.
Colonial Steakhouse in Oakley, KS, no longer exists. We pulled into the truck stop across the street from it, last summer (2020) and noted that it was partially boarded up. When I inquired in the truck stop, they said that they just threw in the towel a year or so before that.
California inspection station is now closer to the state line between CA and NV than it used to be.
Donna
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Update to the update:
EconoLodge at Osage Beach is now Schmitt's Creek, with new owners. Hopefully they will re-open the pool this coming season!
J Bruners is permanently closed., as is Colonial Steakhouse which is still boarded up in Oakley, KS.
Donna