Monday, March 31, 2014

T minus 23 and counting




Air travel.

Saying you are going to take a trip, planning it, and the eventual embarkation all exist in different worlds.

Hey, I have a great idea! Let’s take 8 weeks and go on a grand tour of some European countries. Visit a daughter, see some sites, visit a young man whom we hosted as a high school exchange student, attend the wedding of some great friends, drink some wine, eat some great food, taste some more wine, did I mention good food, oh yeah.   OK, now that sounds like fun….Yep, lots of fun….

Our trip planning initiation was compliments of the airlines, specifically American Airlines.  More specifically, using airline miles.  Combining prior trips, business and pleasure, with a linked credit card we had accumulated a lot of miles with American and these are to be the payment for the trip to and from.  American is a part of the One World Alliance and so our miles could be used for transport on a variety of airlines, but the trips  need to be booked through American.  Sounds easy and convenient.

Using airline miles is a bit like using Green Stamps. Remember Green Stamps?  For those of you too young to recall, you would get a sheaf of them when you bought stuff and you pasted them into a little book, which when full could be redeemed for merchandise from the Green Stamp catalog.  Airline miles are like that, only higher tech.  No licking and pasting.  

Logging on to the American Airlines web site, we are greeted by the admonition (that is the correct term I assure you) that  “Travel around the world just got easier” and “prepare to make some memories”. OK,  that is what we want…easier and  memories.  The small icon near the bottom of the page reads “redeem miles”.  We click it and enter the world of half-truths.

The redemption of miles is different from spending money.  The page that opens gives us a choice of class of service and below that an indication of the number of miles needed to book the flight leg.  Not all classes are available on every flight, nor are they available on every day,  nor the same on cost on similar days.  20K miles on a Tuesday will get you the same class and flight that 50K miles will on a Monday or 60K will on a Thursday.  The logic of air miles redemption is the same as for cash air travel, beyond human understanding.  We attempt to book our flights but find the desired selection of flights and classes of service will require a more experienced hand than ours.  As we leave the web page, we notice a small note that says, “plus taxes and carrier imposed fees”.  The note should be larger, because these taxes and carrier-imposed fees are.  Our air miles will get us a seat on a plane, but apparently no travel without taxes and carrier imposed fees.  Miles can be used for air travel are only a part of the  payment, a half truth.

So here is our plan; fly from USA to Italy, spend about six weeks traveling around Europe, catch a train to England where we will attend the wedding of some good friends and fly home from England.  This type of trip is referred to in the travel business as an “open leg trip”, which means for us humans we are not going to and leaving from the same place.  Such a trip cannot, apparently, be booked online using miles, maybe not even by cash.  American Airlines staff that handles miles redemption  is actually very helpful with this and young lady who was able to make it happen was most accommodating.  We are booked on a most direct British Airlines flight from Washington to London and connect, with plenty of time to make the connection, with another British Airlines flight direct to Milan.  Our miles allow us to take an overnight  flight so we can arrive in Milan a bit tired and fully rumpled from spending  about 8 hours flying and about 13 hours traveling.

Now, to get home after our adventure.  The return flight is not direct as it had been going.  We must leave London and fly British Airlines to Miami where we connect with an American flight to Washington, D.C.   Seems like we are required to make a stop both going and coming in order to reach whatever destination we are seeking.   A truth in blogging admission, the return trip was changed from our original plans and we are really indebted to the woman at the frequent flyer desk for American who spent considerable time helping these neophytes with this this trip booking.  Kudos and a high five for her patience and expertise.

OK, we have booked our flights using miles; Business Class, spent them like a drunken sailor on shore leave. Sobered right up when asked how we would like to pay for the taxes and carrier-imposed fees. (Remember them, small print lower corner of the page?)   Like I thought, air miles get us a seat but not transportation, for that we need real currency to pay the pilot.   Credit card out, number given, taxes and carrier-imposed fees paid.  I need to note that the taxes and carrier imposed fees are significantly higher on international flights than they are on domestic  flights. In this instance they add up to the equivalent cost of a round trip economy fare .  I think countries and airlines have recognized that American air travelers are a soft target for such as taxes and carrier imposed fees.  American visitors/travelers don’t vote nor live in the country.

Done!  Our first memories have been made and recorded.  We now have a deficit in the ‘easy’ bucket.

Now that we have air transportation for the grand adventure our next steps include finding our way around the foreign terrain (trains are my choice) and finding a place to stay when not imposing on our children.  Stay tuned for these adventures in travel planning.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Sky City on Acoma Pueblo



On prior trips we had seen the signs on the freeway announcing the Acoma Pueblo.  “Visit Sky City” Visit the “Indian heritage and cultural museum” “see real Indian pottery and jewelry” commercial come on’s  that convinced us to take off ramp 182 on this recent cross country trip.

The cultural center and museum are about 15 miles off the highway. The road to them, the only road, meanders through the Acoma reservation. This trip to the center offers exposure to the current status and living conditions of the Acoma people. With the exception of the small cluster of modern buildings near the highway, an elementary school and two administration buildings, the buildings are small residential buildings clustered into what appears to be either communities or neighborhoods. Based on the apparent small size of the houses, it would seem that socializing is not home based but instead community oriented occurring in the community hall near the administration building.   The early Acoma were subsistence farmers eating corn, beans, and squash they grew to supplement the native berries and nuts along with the deer and antelope they could kill.  This lifestyle diet appears to have been replaced with food provided by the tribe through its distribution center, the second largest building in the administration center.  No gardens or other personal food provisions were noted at any of the houses we could see from the road.  Another large building in this reservation is the elementary school.  The K-8 school looked as modern and up to date as any found in an urban environment.  The nearest high school is a 30-45 minute ride to Laguna, New Mexico.

On the road to the center we encountered only two other cars, three if you count the police car that followed us for a while.  On arriving at the center we were greeted by a locked door and sign announcing the center was only opened on weekends. We were there on Thursday, no extended weekends here in Acoma.  However, we were not to be deterred, and so we drove a bit farther on the road hoping to be able to see the buildings on the mesa. A full sheet of plywood with “Visitors not allowed beyond this point” painted on it (LARGE ALL CAPS) ended our trip toward the mesa that held Sky City. Turning on a side road, one without signs prohibiting entrance, we looked for a picture opportunity.  During this exercise the pueblo police car appeared and slowly passed us,  twice. Not looking for confrontation, our photo excursion ended and we opted to leave the valley area and return to the highway.

I am placing a visit to Sky city and the Acoma reservation back on my bucket list of places to go.

While our visit was not as productive as hoped, it did spark a curiosity that led to some added research about the Acoma.

One of the first things discovered is that photography on the Acoma pueblo requires a purchased permit from the tribe.  This desire for privacy is further extended to exclude photos, videos, and drawings of the few ceremonies and dances.  Pictures of the homes and buildings are also limited to authorized sites.  This self-induced isolation seems a bit in opposition to the casino/hotel built and operated by the Acoma.  The Acoma prohibit alcohol on the reservation and none is served at the casino or hotel.  Regardless of this cultural abstinence, alcoholism is noted as being rampant on the reservation.  No buying or selling but drinking is OK; reality beats culture on this one.

The solitude desired is deeply entrenched in the culture and the result of a need for protection.  The original pueblo, now called Sky City, was positioned on a 350 feet tall mesa with the only access via a set of stairs carved into the steep side of the mesa.  This limited access provided a small measure of protection from the regular attacks by neighboring Comanche, Ute and Apache tribes.  However, this protection was not impenetrable.  In 1598, the Spanish Conquistadors sent explorers from Mexico to expand their land holdings and capture slaves.  The Acoma resisted a group of these explorers and killed eight of the invading Spaniards.  The next year an army of conquistadors came north invading the Acoma, killing about 600 and taking over 500 slaves thereby decimating the tribe.  Surviving Acoma rebuilt the pueblo but were forced to pay taxes to Spain until the mid 1800’s when the US acquired the New Mexico Territory.  

The Acoma pueblo includes about one half million acres.  Commercial farming is a large enterprise as are oil and gas production.  Uranium mining is also a part of the economic resources, however, this brought bad consequences by contaminating several lakes and rivers on the reservation.  Tourism, from casino/hotel operations, is a large part of the Acoma income.  Almost all of the approximately 4900 tribe members live and work on the reservation and yet even with the many various commercial activities, unemployment is high. 

Indian art and crafts contribute are also a part of their resources.  Acoma pottery is noted as being very thin walled and decorated with Thunderbird and rainbow designs. After a pot has been made and dried the artist will tap it gently see if it rings. If it does, it is ready for final firing and decoration.  If not, it is broken, ground up and missed with new clay to form other pots. Early Acoma were  noted for making spherical “seed pots” in which seed for the next season would be sealed inside for storage until needed. When planting season was at hand and the seed was needed, these pots would be broken and the seeds retrieved.

The Acoma are just one of the 19 pueblos in New Mexico.  Among these 19 are five native languages with each pueblo contributing a distinct culture.  The success of their attempts to integrate with the majority varied and clearly demonstrate the problems that exist when a people’s culture is in conflict with that of the majority. Resistance, while not as futile as the science fiction Borg would have us believe, it is certainly a significant pressure facing the Native American Indian today.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Railroadman extraordinary



 (posted Feb 2014 to Facebook)

On our latest trip cross country we stopped in Jackson TN.  Jackson is nestled between Memphis and Nashville and so it is the kind of town you would stop at to get gas or maybe stay in because it was late and you didn’t want to drive any farther in the dark (this last one is my excuse).  That being said, Jackson has a real claim to fame.  The home of Casey Jones is located here.

Casey Jones, you say, isn’t that a mythical character made famous in country ballads? I thought so also, but reality is there.

Casey Jones, born John Luther Jones, acquired his nickname because as a youth his family once lived near Cayce, KY.  And he liked the spelling of Casey better and the nick name stuck.  Enthralled by trains from his childhood Casey started out as a brakeman, moved on to a fireman, and finally made engineer for the Mobile and Ohio RR.  Because of a tragic epidemic of Yellow Fever in 1887, he was able to move from the local RR to the Illinois Central.  He moved up through the ranks of the Illinois Central and became an Engineer.  He was so very good at this that he acquired the reputation of always being on time, “getting there on the advertised” as  railroad men would say.  He was so punctual that people along the line would set their clocks by his train.  This was possible because Casey Jones, like some other top engineers, installed his own whistle on the engine.  His distinctive sound started soft and built to full steam, and then tapered off at the end.  His distinctive sound was the result of his original design six pipe whistle he installed on the engine.

While known for his on time passion, Casey was also loose with the rules.  During his career he was cited nine time for infractions and spent 145 days suspended from duty.   While this would make him sound like a renegade engineer it is also important to know that the penalties for being late were worse than those for breaking the rules.  Casey’s on time prowess would soon get him promoted to engineer on passenger trains.  It was this promotion that would open the path to his death.  In 1900 Casey was assigned the passenger run between Memphis and Canton, MS.  This was a part of the “cannonball” run from Chicago to New Orleans. This route had the fastest schedule in the history of US railroading; the time were so short that some engineers felt they could not be met and quit rather than take on the route.  Jones signed on for the section of this run.

On the night of his death, Jones was not scheduled to work. The engineer on duty that night called in sick and when Casey was called, he went in to work.  Because of the late call in by the scheduled engineer, the train was about an hour and half late leaving the station.  Casey Jones was determined to make up the lost time and “get there on the advertised”.   Everything was going smoothly for Casey and his skill as an engineer would help him pick up all but about 5 minutes of the delay as he approached Vaugh, MS.

Unbeknownst to Casey Jones there was a problem at Vaughn.  Three trains were scheduled to be at the station at the same time and normally this would not be a problem since there was a passing track that could handle normal length freight trains allowing the passenger train to use the main rails and move through.  This night was different. One of the trains was ten cars longer than normal which meant that they would need to use a technique called a “saw by”.  This trick maneuver required both trains to pull onto the passing track until the last car was off the main track which would mean that the leading cars of the two would be out on the main  rails; the through train would slowly pull past the siding until its last cars had cleared the last cars of the trains on the siding. It would then stop while the siding trains would back up until the leading cars on the siding were clear of the main track so the through train could pull ahead and proceed on the main rails.

The “Ole 382”, Casey’s train that evening, was rounding a curve and the evening air was filled with a dense fog, combined both blocked his view of the upcoming siding and the problems there.  At 75 mph there was too little time to avoid colliding with the cars that sat on the main rails.  Even so, Jones tried all the means available, reversing the throttle and jamming on the air brakes, to slow his train but soon realized a crash was to happen.  He ordered his fireman to jump from the train, an order that saved his life.  Jones’ efforts had slowed his train from the express rate of 75 mph to 35 mph but it was not enough to prevent the collision and Casey Jones death.   Taken from its place at the throttle, Casey’s body was carried on a stretcher to the station, over one  half mile away. A tribute to him and his efforts to thwart the collision and protect the passengers.  Casy Jones was the only person killed in the accident.

Jackson, MS may just look like a way station on the way to someplace else, but when you look closer there is the legend of Casey Jones. 

The following recording is from 1900 by Robert Hunter.  While it plays loose with the facts, it starts the legend.

UFO's, Oil Wells, and antelope

(originally posted in Feb 2013 to Facebook)


During our travels this summer I was digging around in my bucket list to see what could be crossed off.   On the list were two items that had been there for a while and were well worn from being shoved downward in the pile; Roswell, NM and Carlsbad Caverns in NM.  Actually, Carlsbad could probably have been crossed off a very long time ago since I had visited it when around 8-9 years old. That was well before I even had a bucket list and so I kept it on the list as one of those things to do or places to visit “when I had time”.  Well, I had time and so why not?

These two places are rather like a package deal since they are close to each other.  Both are on hwy 285 at the southern edge of New Mexico, about 300 miles from Albuquerque.  Leaving Albuquerque on I40, hwy 285 turns south just a bit east of Moriarity and provides a pathway into the most unoccupied areas in the state.  Long stretches of two lane road bordered by barbed wire fencing on one side and by a combination of fencing and power line on the other.  Only there towns show on the map, Encino, Vaughn, and Ramona.  In reality, only one of these is a town, Vaughn, the others are a bit less.

Encino is the first to appear on this trip.  This place is located at the intersection of Hwy 60, a cross-country road from the past era before the interstate routes, similar to Route 66, its more well-known sibling. Hwy 60 provided a more southerly routing to cross the USA during the early age of the automobile.  At its peak Encino boasted, a newspaper, a high school, a Federal Post Office, a motel, a hardware/dry goods store and a train depot.  Dry land farming and livestock provided the income for this town.  However, the depression and subsequent economic failings forced the railway to close the depot in 1965. Construction of the Interstate freeway system in the 1960’s drove the final stake into the heart of this town by diverting much of the traffic from Encino. The high school closed in 1982 followed by the motel and stores.  The post office, opened  in  1907, remains but with a population of only 43, this would seem to be a target for congressional budget cutters.

The history of Encino includes two noteworthy items. It is the home of R.C. Dillon, eighth governor (1927-1931) of New Mexico and the presence of murals painted on the high school gymnasium walls by Hallie Williams, a noted southwest artist.  The murals that depicted southwestern scenes are, like Governor Dillon, gone.  The high school is in the process of being demolished and the murals, painted directly on the inside walls, have succumbed to time and neglect.  Our need for the speeds of the freeway to get us where we are going has focused our attention on the destination to the neglect of the trip itself.

Just a few miles, 12, from Encino is the town of Vaughn.  Vaughn has a functional railroad depot, however its use looks to be mainly for freight clearing and not for passengers.  There is a station with a room for travelers to wait.  Its condition and dust train indicate that passengers are a rare commodity.  The rail tracks are filled with tankers and cars laden with crude oil from the Permian Basin wells and potash from the mines. (more on this later) There is a hotel with cafĂ© which, based on the exclusive abundance of AT&SF trucks, owes its existence to the railroad.  Two churches, one Catholic and one Baptist, exist as does a K-12 school.  The one service that Vaughn lacks is its own police force.  Sometime back the elected chief and Vaugh’s only paid officer was indicted on drug charges and with his resignation the town dropped its own police relying on the county sheriff.  Additionally, one volunteer officer and his drug sniffing dog provide patrol.  The drug sniffer is important for this town since it has been the center for several large drug busts.  The remote location and sparse police coverage make Vaughn a focal point for smugglers.

The road from Vaughn to Ramona is just like the road from I40 to Vaughn.  It is two lanes of uninterrupted boredom.  The range is fenced but the cattle herds are few and far between. The occasional hawk resting on one of the power poles that parallel the road offers a change in scenery. The one spectacular interruption to our trip was the arrival of a large herd, 50+/-, of antelope.  These graceful animals moved along parallel to the highway mindful of but unconcerned with our presence on the road.  Their attitude changed when I stopped the car to get their picture.  Immediately upon opening my door the lead bull changed the herd’s direction and led them off away from the road into the open range area at a run. Periodically a power line will branched off and ran into the range to feed the motors that power pumps providing water to the far ranging cattle and probably the herd of antelope.  A very few windmills dot these rangelands and those appeared to need some repair.  There are a few gates with metal signs supported overhead. These appear to be entrances to ranches with names like Johnsons, Garcis, and Longworth cut into the swinging metal sheets.  Any dwellings that might be associated with these signs are well beyond the sight line from the highway.  These ranches are like the town of Ramona; they exist because they have a gate with a sign on the highway, but stay out of view.

200 miles and 3+ hours after leaving Albuquerque we arrive at Roswell, self-appointed capital of UFO landings.  Our interest in Roswell stems mainly from a TV program that played on the theme that aliens had really landed and were going to the local high school as teenagers.  A weak reason, I know, but since this city is on the way to Carlsbad Caverns it worked for me.  My expectation was not disappointed, in fact it was surpassed but not for the UFOs.   The UFO center is well done, a bit kitschy but the story it tells about the 1947 alleged UFO crash is well presented and the documentation gives pause to the non-believer.  Newspaper clippings are accompanied by testimonials from locals and out-of-towners vouching for strange occurrences and seeming cover up by government officials.  I left the UFO Research Center, that’s its real name, still uncertain as to what actually happened in 1947, I am a bit  more open to the possibility of extraterrestrial events.  What concerns me most is the question that remains—if aliens really came here and they have not come back, is it because they judged us not worthy of another trip?

The real surprise of Roswell was the Roswell Museum and Art Center.  Surrounded by an area of paintings and sculptures, in the middle of this building is a recreation of Robert Goddard’s workshop.  Robert Goddard is considered by some the father of the Space Age.  During the period from 1926 to 1941, Goddard and his team launched 34 rockets and obtained 214 patents for such items as the liquid fueled rocket and the multi-stage rocket, both integral to modern space age explorations.  His work was revolutionary using gyroscopes and directional thrusters for controls and after several tries, he successfully sent controlled rockets to altitudes of 1.5 miles.   Despite his brilliant science and dogged determination, Goddard was not able to garner the public’s attention, or significant financial support for his research.  The largest benefactors were the Smithsonian and Clark University, where he received his PhD in 1912. 

The lack of public support and ignorance was demonstrated by a New York Times January 1920 editorial deriding the possibility of rockets operating in the vacuum of space. This editorial followed by one day a Smithsonian announcement promoting the use of rockets instead of balloons for high altitude research.  The NY Times editorial stated, “After the rocket quits our air and really starts on its longer journey, its flight would be neither accelerated nor maintained by the explosion of the charges it then might have left. To claim that it would be is to deny a fundamental law of dynamics…”   In July 1969, after the launch of Apollo 11 the NY Times offered the following correction; “Further investigation and experimentation have confirmed the findings of Isaac Newton in the 17th Century and it is now definitely established that a rocket can function in a vacuum as well as in an atmosphere. The Times regrets the error.”  Score one for science and Robert Goddard, PhD,  albeit 28 years after his death.  NASA recognized Goddard’s contribution in 1959 with the naming of the Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, the largest collection of scientists and engineers in the nation solely engaged in exploring our universe.  

While Roswell’s fame lies in outer space, Carlsbad’s seems to be securely bound to the Earth.  Entering town we are greeted with the sulfurous aroma of crude oil. Carlsbad sits on top of large oil and natural gas deposits in the Permian Basin.  Additionally, Carlsbad has large potash deposits surrounding it and is the largest source for this mineral in the USA.  The railroad and its sidings that runs through the town is filled with tank,  hopper, and gondola rail cars either filled or waiting to be. No one seems to object to the delays waiting for these train assemblages to pass through the town intersections. These trains and the rich deposits they carry secure the importance of this small town as a part of our energy and agriculture resources furnishing oil, to fuel our transportation, and potash, for the fertilizer to grow our food.

We stayed in a Best Western motel.  This sprawling establishment caters to the miners and oilmen who work in the field. The parking lot is filled with pickup trucks, many with dual rear wheels, laden with equipment to enable working in remote locations.  Compressors, generators, vices attached to bumpers, and a variety of toolboxes adorn the beds of these working trucks.  Company names with “repair” “service” and “logistics” fill the side panels.  The restaurant is filled with men in coveralls soiled from days of labor.  Meals are large portions; salad bar plates are no different in size from the dinner patters.  From our booth along one wall, we can see these workers silently eating.  Weary from their time in the field dinnertime is for eating, not talking.  In addition to the workers, there are a few other couples, like us older and most likely retired.    Some have the Carlsbad Cavern brochure open, obviously planning for tomorrow’s adventure.

The Best Western offers a ‘free’ breakfast.   While this enticement is meant to lure travelers to stay the night, it really only works or those who have children, do not travel a lot, or workers who are traveling on a per diem allowance.  This motel’s array of breakfast food was slightly better than some others we have partaken.  Scrambled eggs, sausage, biscuits, pancakes, gravy, grits, mixed fruit and two juices were all appropriately served and heated or chilled.  I believe the motel saved money on dishware by buying only one sized plate, large.  This is surely appreciated by the mechanics and field workers who use the motel.

As I mentioned before, Carlsbad Caverns are a late addition to my bucket list.  I have a vague recollection of a family trip to the caverns when I was probably around 9 or 10 years old and since it is only a dim memory another trip was certainly in order.  We qualify for the Senior Pass offered by the National Park Service.  This lifetime pass, available to those over 62, was sold to us by another “senior” who worked at Montezuma’s Well in Arizona.  At only $10, it has paid for itself many time over including this visit to the Caverns.

The first thing I learned about Carlsbad Caverns is that they are not actually located in Carlsbad.  It is 20 miles from the city of Carlsbad to the entrance gate for the Park; form the gate it is an additional 7 miles to the visitor center. Once at the visitor center, there are two ways to get into the cavern itself.  There is a 1.5 mile trail that provides access through the bat cave area.  No, no, not the ‘bat cave” but the actual home of a large colony of Brazilian Free Tailed bats.  These mammals can be seen during the evening hours leaving for nighttime feeding on insects.  The other option, the one we chose, is an elevator that carries you 750 feet vertically underground to the floor of the cavern.  We were there in the off-season and so we encountered very few other visitors on our walk around the main area in the cave.  There is a well-marked trail, about 1 mile long,  around the perimeter of the big room.  This is the self-guided tour and it took us about 3 hours to complete the trip, including time for pictures and just standing in amazement at the  array of stalagmites, the ones growing up from the floor,  and stalactites, the ones growing down from the ceiling as well as cascades of limestone and gypsum that look like frozen rivers.  The growth, or lack thereof, is dependent upon the weather at the surface.  Recent droughts have stalled the steady creep of these natural wonders.  Recognizing the  thousands of years in their making,  just standing in front of these aged mineral deposits gives pause to consider their steady growth and development in this hidden cave while turmoil and chaos effected changes to the Earth above.

Carlsbad Cavern is only one of several hundred limestone caves in this area that were formed by an inland sea over 200 million years ago. More recently, just a few thousand years ago, American Indians lived nearby leaving evidence of their lifestyles and culture in nearby encampments. Spanish explorers traveled this area in their quest for gold and treasures in the 1500’s.  With Mexico’s development into a separate country and its  fighting the territorial expansion of the United States expansion in the late 1840’s  the exploration of this area was limited.  Mexico lost their southwest holdings in 1850, and the New Mexico Territory was created by the US. The jostling for land supremacy was followed by pioneers settling into the area.  The occupation and fencing of prairie land previously occupied by native Indians provoked violent and bloody wars that lasted until the late 1800’s. US military power, continued development and settling of the New Mexico Territory resulted in it becoming a state in 1912.

Leaving the Carlsbad Cavern’s  visitor center we stopped at an overlook to survey the Chihuahuan Desert.  This expanse of desert and range land stretches several hundred miles from inside Mexico to the middle of New Mexico. From this overlook we can see into Texas and follow the meandering course of the Pecos River.  It is easy to imagine the thoughts of early American Indians and subsequent European settlers and as they stood looking at the territory available to them.  Clean fresh water to drink, fertile land to farm, abundant wildlife to hunt, the gods have provided a heaven.  

The road is a merciless mistress; luring with promises of new and better sensations.  Adjusting my seatbelt, I turn the key and move the transmission into drive.  Turning on to the highway I press on the gas and speed to new horizons knowing, hoping, I will not be disappointed by the Greek god of travel, Hermes and his bride Peitho.