Photos Uploaded and Organized

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I officially have all my photos uploaded and organized (so far; I’m sure there will be more pictures of the rest of the trip home, which will wind up in the “headed home” set.)
I will still need to add captions and descriptions and such for everything, but I created separate sets of pictures for each day, and a collection for all the sets, to make it easier to browse through everything we did, in order.
My Route 66 New Beetle Caravan Flickr Photo Collection
Wigwam Motel on Foothills, Blvd.
The End
Me and Stephanie at the Pacific Ocean

Route 66 Retro Googie Signs

Route 66 -"Round for a Reason

Route 66"Big Things"

Route 66 Road Trip – To Chicago

Route 66 Road Trip – Chicago to St. Louis

Route 66 Road Trip – St. Louis to Tulsa

Route 66 Road Trip – Tulsa to Tucumcari

Route 66 Road Trip – Tucumcari to Roswell

Route 66 Road Trip – The RoswellR2K Show

Route 66 Road Trip – Roswell to Albuquerque

Route 66 Road Trip – Albuquerque To Williams, Arizona

Route 66 Road Trip – The Grand Canyon

Route 66 Road Trip – Williams AZ to Victorville, CA.

Route 66 Road Trip – Los Angeles

Route 66 Road Trip – headed home

Zig ZagMonkey’s Route 66 Adventures

Roswell2K Route 66 VW New Beetle Trip

Continue ReadingPhotos Uploaded and Organized

Googie Retro Signs on Route 66

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While waiting for my photos to upload, I was doing some ego surfing and found a nice woman named Cordelia had blogged about reading about our Route 66 road trip – and she mentioned that she looked up the word “googie” because I used it several times to describe some of the old retro signs along Route 66. I had intended to include a link to a definition of the term, but didn’t due to the lack of internet; it sort of made it hard to surf around.
Cordelia got a great definition from answers.com:

“Googie” describes a futuristic, often outrageous, building style that evolved in the United States during the 1950s. Googie architecture was designed to attract customers. The name “Googie” comes from a famous coffee shop in Los Angeles. Like the shop, Googie buildings often have flashing lights, sharp angles, boomerang and flying saucer shapes, and lots of glass and steel. On the east coast, googie ideas were expressed in the zig zag rooflines of coffee shops.The Googie style is sometimes called called Coffee House Modern, Doo-Wop, Populuxe, and Space Age.
—The article is attributed to Jackie Craven.

Also, Wikipedia describes “googie” thusly:

Googie, also known as populuxe or doo-wop, is a subdivision of expressionist, or futurist architecture influenced by car culture and the Space Age and Atomic Age, originating from southern California in the late 1940s and continuing approximately into the mid-1960s. With upswept roofs and, often, curvaceous, geometric shapes, and bold use of glass, steel and neon, it decorated many a motel, coffee house and bowling alley in the 1950s and 1960s. It epitomizes the spirit a generation demanded, looking excitedly towards a bright, technological and futuristic age. Googie or Populuxe style of architecture was characterized by space-age designs that depict motion, such as boomerangs, flying saucers, atoms, and parabolas. Building such as this reflects American society’s emphasis on futuristic designs and fascination with space-age themes.

In looking through all my pictures thus far, I have dozens, perhaps even a hundred or so, cool retro signs and buildings from along Route 66, so I’m going to put together, when I get the chance, a flickr photo set of just those pictures. Aside from being really cool, It will help me with some design ideas I have for a project I’m going to work on next…
Cool Googie Signage
Cool Googie Signage
Cool Googie Signage

Continue ReadingGoogie Retro Signs on Route 66

Kingman, Arizona for the night

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We decided to make an early night of it in Kingman, Arizona; staying at a Comfort Inn because they have a indoor hot tub and free wireless. Ah, sweet high-speed internet, how I love thee so. I thought I would never see you again. This way we’ll have some time to decompress and get an early start headed east in the morning. And upload some of the gazillion pictures I’ve taken, I hope. I’m realizing that I need to create separate sets of pictures for each day of the trip, but that’s not going to happen until I get home.
Geodome house next to I-40
Our friends Dan and Doug are having the billionth annual 70’s party back at home in Indianapolis; we’re keeping caught up with the festivities by twitter.
And if someone gets a chance, tell John Steele that Phoebe loves her new vacuum hose, and we are so grateful to him for being our personal Route 66 mechanic, along with Jerry. John Steele rules.
See all photos from Lompoc, California to Kingman, Arizona

Continue ReadingKingman, Arizona for the night

Good Morning, from the West Coast

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Yesterday, we reached our destination, the Pacific Ocean, and the official end of Route 66. It was an exciting day, and I have all those bittersweet feelings you get when you’re at the end of a big event and it’s finally time to say goodbye to people and head home. There’s lots I want to say about how nice the people we traveled with are, but it’s too soon, and I don’t want to be sad right now to say goodbye to them, because we’ve had such a great time.
We started out yesterday morning from Victorville, and drove through the very last legs of Route 66 – through San Bernadino on Foothills Blvd., where we visited the Wigwam Motels, one of the two sets that are left on Route 66. Phoebe looks great in front of a wigwam.
Wigwam Motel on Foothills, Blvd.
We followed Route 66 as it winds through Hollywood and Beverly Hills, and out to the Santa Monica Pier, when Route 66 “officially” ends, although Earl said it originally ended at Ventura Beach, but they moved it for tourism’s sake. Tons of great pictures along the way. L. A. is very pretty, and quite different than I expected, somehow. I took an unbelievable 535 pictures yesterday, so obviously, I was visually stimulated.
Last Remaining Route 66 Giant Orange Stand
Palm Trees
Stars on Hollywood
Traffic wasn’t really awful; very busy, but we managed to keep the caravan together better than I expected in the traffic. Chicago traffic was MUCH worse.
Kodak Theater
Giant Mexican Muffler Man
We spend an hour on the pier taking pictures and eating lunch, then Earl took us up the Pacific Coast Highway for a while, where we stopped at Farina Beach and walked around in the Pacific Ocean, and I called my mom, and Stephanie called her dad. It was very cool to have sand in my shoes from the Pacific Ocean.

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The End
My feet, Pacific Ocean
Earl lives in a little town called Ballard near Buellton and Solvang, north and west of L.A. along the coast. Buellton is the area where the film “Sideways” was set, so lots of wine growing. Also lots of horse ranches. Lots of stars and celebrities have ranches out in the hills in this area, too, so we passed where Whoopi Goldberg lives, and the golf course belonging to the guy who made Beanie Babies, and off in the distance we could see the mountain that’s above Michael Jackson’s Neverland ranch. Ron and Nancy Reagan’s ranch was out in this area too.
Earl and his wife Syd have a pretty home we visited for a while. We went to Sovlang for dinner – Solvang’s motto is “More Danish than Denmark” (at least, that’s what the t-shirts said) and the town looks like something out of a storybook; very charming. We ate dinner at a Danish restaurant with the rest of the caravaners, and then drove to Lompoc to stay the night.
Earl's & Syd's House
Solvang, California
Today we turn around and head home – we have four days of driving to do to get back by Tuesday. We’re coming back on I-40 and I-44. If we get a chance, we’ll stop in one or two Route 66 places that we missed on the way out, but mostly we’ll be on the road.
All Photos of “Route 66 Trip – Victorville to Santa Monica Leg”

Continue ReadingGood Morning, from the West Coast