The Open Road is an iconic image.
Watery waves of heat rising off the blacktop, wheels purring as they rush over asphalt. The ever-changing picture show rolling by outside: the motley greens of a forest, the pastel brushstrokes of a desert, the sharp lines of a mountain, the open blue sky over a canyon. The windows rolled down, the radio turned up, and all the world before you, accessible from the endless miles of connecting roadways that weave and curve and loop their way across the land.
The road has always called to me. After graduating college, I decided to answer it. I packed up, built a tiny home into the back of a cargo van, and took off. Every step of the way was an adventure, from buying the van to saying goodbye to it.
You can read about it all here, starting with buying the van and converting it into a tiny home, a process which took 2 years. I took two major trips in the van: the first through Canada and around Alaska, and the second in a loop around the United States. Ultimately, Danica and I visited 25 American states and 4 Canadian states together, including national parks, capital cities, historic sites, and more.
Unfortunately, I realized that as great an experience traveling with Danica was, van life wasn’t really for me. In 2020 I decided to sell Danica and use the money to embark on new adventures, which you can read about on Pushpins and Passports.
Yes, You CAN See Yellowstone National Park in 48 Hours
One of them shoved the other so hard he stumbled within two feet of my bumper. I was afraid one of them would fall on my van, and these creatures are so huge and brawny that I was sure the thin metal hood would just crumble under its weight.
Can You Experience Yellowstone National Park in Less Than 48 Hours?
With the surplus of people and deficit of safety measures, in addition to the sprawling area which made finding an overnight parking spot difficult, I decided to toss my four-day plan out the window and just try to do as much of Yellowstone as I could in as short a time as I could.
3 Unexpected Adjustments to Vanlife: From a Few Incredible Days in Grand Teton National Park
I was surprised how much my impression of it changed as I worked my way around the shore and then up the mountain for a bird’s-eye view. Phelps Lake is gorgeous, in a lot of different ways.
What to Expect If You Throw Your Keys Away in a National Park
And what the hey, if I was going to be stuck in the parking lot until Monday, apparently hallucinating trail information, and things literally falling apart around me, I figured I would just pop open a cold one and watch Disney movies.
Community in Nature: Welcome to the Rockies
I don’t have to know you, because in this small way, we’re the same. And we’re in it together.
From the Darkest Skies to City Lights: Salt Lake City
Follow your instincts, be spontaneous, discover things you never knew were there to be discovered.
And that’s how I discovered vanlife.
Wrapping Up Great Basin National Park
The Bristlecone Pines are worth a visit to the park all on their own. It’s difficult to capture the brutal elegance of their gnarled branches, the rich color of their weathered trunks.
The World From 13,000 Feet
It’s hard not to feel invincible standing at the end of the crest, the mountain dropping straight down on nearly every side, the world unfolding before you like a butterfly spreading its wings.