The combination the weather and having done most of what we wanted to do, we decided to head back towards Rochester and get an early start. We made it to New Hampshire in about four hours. Where do you go when you go to New Hampshire? Of course you go to the White Mountains. Craig highly recommended a restaurant there. He raved about their chicken parmesan and their homemade cheesecake. There was no chicken parmesan on the menu, the cheesecake was bought from down the street, they messed up my order and their food, although tasty, made me sick. Nice. Just nothing of what I expected, nothing. Erin was a sweetie and pretty much drove the rest of the day. I could barely sit up in the passenger seat. We made our way to Mt Washington. Being extremely scared of cliffs (shall we recall the Hidden Lake hike at Glacier?), we thought it was a good idea to take the train up. It was $62. Sixty two. And THEN, the woman had to get snooty with me and say “do you know how much fuel it takes to get up there?” Well as a matter of fact, I do, and it’s not $62 per person. I quickly learned most everyone in New Hampshire was snooty, all the ones we met anyway. Anyway, it was $25 if you wanted to drive up the mountain, using your own car. It’s a private road… surprise, surprise. I knew I wouldn’t drive up there, or even be in the passenger seat. I would just have my head in my lap on the way entire way up and more so on the way down. Looking up at the sky though, it was still cloudy and foggy. So even if we did go up, we would’ve seen nothing but haze. So we chugged along. We made it to Cathedral Ledge and Diana’s Bath (waterfalls). Of course we’d see waterfalls. Erin was the one who got me hooked on them. So now it’s double trouble. Both sites were beautiful. I really wanted to see a climber coming up Cathedral Ledge. I even wanted to throw something to see if it hit someone. I know better, but it’s the devil in me, let’s call him curiosity.
We got our fill of fog in New Hampshire and decided to keep going. We took the scenic Hwy 112 drive out. It was beautiful with all the trees and changing colors. We didn’t get to see about half of it though because it got dark. The rest of the drive wasn’t very good. I started driving at this point. Both New Hampshire and Vermont are of full of little towns out in the middle of nowhere. The roads, or rather hills, wind like a path a child draws on a piece of paper when first learning to hold a pen. The rain wasn’t helping, nor were the lack of street lights. The towns were dead. Nothing was open. Not even lights were on. The houses seemed vacant and everything was just eerie. My fear was getting a flat tire, or something breaking down. God knows I’ve given my car a good beating the last couple of months. And since most of these places didn’t have reception, AAA would be of no help. We eventually made it to a major highway (phew! Or so we thought…), got off on the first exit. Hanover, where Dartmouth is. Yes, say it through your nose holding your pinky up. Daht-mouth. Any hotel within a 10-mile radius was booked. Yay for the Special Olympics. I was tired, hungry, had a rough drive and I really needed to pee. After roaming aimlessly and googling and calling hotels, we eventually found a place in the middle of nowhere that only took cash. I forgot to ask if they charge by the hour as well. It didn’t turn out to be a bad place though. I stuffed my face with leftovers, took a shower, and passed out.
Vermont wasn’t much different. We went to Ludlow to see Buttermilk Falls. We attempted to take the Skyline Drive in Manchester, but again, it was foggy, so it wouldn’t really be scenic in the least. I guess the weather didn’t work in our favor for most of this trip. But the one thing I enjoyed most about New Hampshire and Vermont is the trees. I think we drove through the perfect time of year. The red and yellow and orange and green… all over the mountains. They’re a Bob Ross painting. Happy trees. They’re not like the other trees I’ve been seeing along the trip. Evergreens are pretty and elegant, no doubt, but there’s something about the deciduous trees that are mesmerizing. It made me happy. Before, I felt like I had become… numb? Jaded? Incurious? Bored? I was never good with words. (I have the SAT score to prove it.) Anyway, seeing the trees like that made me think there’s still all kinds of beautiful out there and I haven’t seen it all. I just have to look for it.
09/23/11
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