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Highlights From Our Electric Cross Country Drive

We drove our electric car cross country this summer, and it was a great experience. We saw friends and family, talked to lots of strangers, and visited as many bookstores, ice cream shops, museums, vintage clothing and coffee places, natural wonders, and railroad-related attractions as we could.

Switching drivers on a baking hot stretch of Utah Highway 163, in Monument Valley.

First, some thoughts on the trip:

We did this trip to reconnect with the world after a year of COVID. We were lucky to be able to do it. And the world is still there. People are still friendly. America is huge, diverse and awesome. There’s a ton of local pride everywhere. People do seem balkanized in geographic/economic and cultural bubbles. But people are still friendly everywhere.

The response to COVID is all over the map (masks or not, etc). Retail storefronts and offices and city centers are shockingly empty everywhere. Nonetheless, people are doing the best they can, trying to live life. Working, partying, hanging out, laughing. That was great to see.

Evidence of extreme weather is everywhere (smoke, extreme heat, flooding, really low reservoirs and rivers). And also evidence that America is deeply hooked on fossil fuels (so many cars and trucks, and so much oil and gas infrastructure). It’s gonna take a lot to change that quick enough.

We tried to minimize our own carbon footprint, flying only once to the East Coast. A friend drove our Tesla model Y east (instead of renting a gas car), and we drove it back. And the car did great, barely breaking a sweat in 7000+ miles. It was steady, relaxing and fun to drive, with heat-pump AC that kept us a cool 70 even in 110 degree desert heat. And we were able to give several friends test drives – and answer a lot of strangers’ questions – in our effort to evangelize electrification.

Charging wise, there were fast chargers – and also overnight chargers – everywhere, usually at convenient places to use the bathroom and buy food. We normally drove about 200 miles between charges (the car’s range is 320). We only got in trouble once, in Iowa, and that was my own fault for not listening to the car’s charging advice. We ended up having to backtrack 15 minutes to the last supercharger… but as a result did see the “largest truck stop in the U.S.,” and an awesome vintage truck museum.

We chose our initial route based on where we had family and friends, and then got recommendations along the way (e.g. Pittsburgh). From Chicago on we basically dodged the smoke from the western wildfires, and some COVID hotspots like Missouri. The smoke was heavy in MN/WI/ND/SD, so we cut across the plains (IA/NE) to Denver (still smoky), then to fresh air in the Rockies and Arizona (after a bit more smoke in Utah).

Here’s the list of the stops we made, with highlights below from each one:

Philadelphia, PA – Manhattan, NY – Brooklyn, NY – North Adams, MA – Westminster West, VT – Tinmouth, VT – Middlebury, VT – Burlington VT – Lake George, NY – Skaneateles, NY – Geneva, NY – Seneca Falls, NY – Corning, NY – Altoona, PA – Pittsburg, PA – Sandusky, OH – Ann Arbor, MI – Grand Rapids, MI – Holland, MI – Chicago, IL – Quad Cities (Moline, Davenport, Rock Island), IA – Iowa City, IA – Des Moines, IA – Omaha, NE, Lincoln, NE, Kearney, NE – Gothenburg, NE – North Platte, NE – Denver, CO – Buena Vista, CO, Salida, CO, Telluride, CA – Moab, UT – Blanding, UT – Monument Valley, UT – Grand Canyon (AZ side) – Flagstaff, AZ – Barstow, CA – Paso Robles, CA – Berkeley, CA


The rain was such a relief in Philadelphia, our first stop, that the 90 degree+ temperatures every day barely mattered.

Pennsylvania: Philadelphia


The view from Brooklyn to lower Manhattan after a storm.

New York: Manhattan and Brooklyn


Jenny Holzer’s “Inflammatory Essays” at MassMOCA

Massachusetts


Finally…the elusive cows on our friend Barry’s farm.

Vermont: Westminster West and Tinmouth


Ice cream – an important staple of any road trip.

Vermont: Burlington


The summer vacation tiki-boat party scene in Lake George, NY.

New York: Upstate


An exhibit at Pittsburgh’s Mattress Factory… the city has a really great art scene.

Pennsylvania: Pittsburg


Saw our first Meijer in Sandusky, Ohio. A gigantic Walmart-like market that goes on and on and sells everything.

Ohio: Sandusky and Cedar’s Point.


The DeZwaan Windmill: A bit of Europe re-created in Holland, Michigan.

Michigan: Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids, Holland etc.


We went to one day of Lollapalooza in Chicago’s Grant Park. It was a huge, crowded, loud, and fun.

Illinois: Chicago


Giant wind turbine blades parked at the Iowa 80 Truckstop (billed as the World’s Largest Truckstop).

Iowa


The barbed wire buffalo at the Sod House Museum in Gothenburg, next to the Tesla superchargers and ‘Lasso Espresso’

Nebraska


Colorful oasis in the desert after leaving the Rockies, on a very barren State Route 90.

Colorado


Arches National Park at Sunset

Utah


The light was beautiful – and it was cooler – in “hippee” downtown Flagstaff.

Arizona


For some reason the car routed us between The Mojave Desert and Death Valley… and it was hot!

California


And finally, a couple wildlife photos…

Puppy asleep in Brooklyn storefront.
Bear on the loose in the tourist town of Lake George.

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