Thursday, March 30, 2017

Day 5 - Famous things

Not having been to Charlotte in my life other than to switch planes at the airport my hosts took me to the aviation museum out by the airport.  It fit well with A Higher Call which is the book I am currently reading and was physically close to all my previous encounters with the city being located at one end of the airport property.  The book has been an interesting read for the first 174 pages many of them read while waiting for the car to charge.  Now that I am down in warmer weather I can take my folding chair out and sit outside to read which is quite nice.  But I digress from the museum whose prize possession is the US Air plane that Sully landed in the Hudson.  They have done a nice job of providing information about the plane, the flight and how so many people had to do things right for everyone to survive.  It also had footage of transporting the plane from New Jersey to North Carolina by truck which was no small task either.

The right side of flight US Air flight 1549 where the impact with the Hudson dented the plane

In addition they had some nice examples of fighters as there is a wing of the Air National Guard at the airport and from the signage they have been able to convince them to give them a number of decommissioned planes for exhibit.  However they did not have a Flying Fortress which both Karol and I wanted to see as her father was a turret gunner on one during World War II and my book is partly about a pilot of one.  It is but a small disappointment as everything else was well done.

We then repaired to an Irish Pub downtown after demonstrating to the Downings that if you are going to have to pay for downtown parking you might as well get some electricity in exchage by using Plug Share to find a nearby parking lot with chargers and then being lucky enough to find one without a gas engine car parked in the space.  We electric car owners call that being ICE'd where ICE stands for internal combustion engine.  Three of the four chargers were in fact ICE'd but the fourth worked perfectly and while we ate at the pub Hobson ate a bunch of electricity.  Once we were all full we headed home.

Charging
Charlotte NC - The parking lot only produced 30 amps out of the charger but it di not cost anything or demand some esoteric card to start it.

Day 4 - Miscalculation confirmed

It is a long road to Tipperary but if you start in DC it is also a long road to Charlotte NC,  As I pointed out yesterday, most places in New England that are in adjacent states are near enough to reach before lunch time.  I was lucky to roll into the Downing's house before dinner and only made it because they held off cooking until I got there.  I guess my deteriorating estimates during the day made them suspect that I would be late.

While I was late in my goal to be on time I did stretch the cars limits a bit getting numerous warnings to slow down or I was not going to make it to my destination.  Having gotten so many and then having them melt away I think I figured out why we saw different warnings at different times during our long trip last summer.  The rather non-committal warnings I received seemed to emanate from a calculation the car does from your instantaneous battery reserve calculation which causes it  to pop up mostly when you are going up hill or accelerating quickly.  As I got none of the other more ominous warnings I suspect they originate from the other calculations the cars does like battery life based on the last 5,15 or 30 mile averages, and how much battery life will be left at the end of the trip.  As none of those indicators were ever negative the car would just gently warn me that I was playing with fire.

In any case I went over 200 miles on a not full battery and managed to show up in Charlotte with 13 miles left.  Lucky 13!  I did learn that the battery indicator which goes from green to orange at 50 miles goes rad at 15.  At the charger the other car was from Montana!  Montana is challenging to Teslas as the speed limits are high and the Superchargers scarce.  All power to her for buying such a non-complying vehicle to her terrain and making it work.


Having finally arrived it was great to see Gary and Karol in there new place. It is a great spot at the end of a cul-de-sac and a wonderful house with 10 foot high doors even in the closets.  I once again had a suitcase rack in my guest room.  Now I know why nobody comes to visit us.  We don't have one of those.  The steaks on the grill were delicious and the conversation lively.  They even have grandkids to talk about.

Charging
Woodbridge VA-  the is is in the middle of a parking lot to a very, very large mall which I entered to go the bathroom and then exited out the wrong side.  Thank God for the phone app that leads you back the car.   The long walk around the outside of the mall was =good for me though.

South Hill VA - I neglected to rad the very informative stuff about this on PlugShare prior to this stop and thus drove by it twice as it is an anomaly being not at a shopping center, not at a motel, not at a rest area including the big truck stop right of the exit but rather in the parking lot of an unattractive restaurant.  To add insult to injury PlugShare also indicated that one of the chargers was broken so again not having read up guess which one of the six I tried to hook up to first.

Charlotte NC - Having researched ahead of time I it would be a good spot that would allow me to get wine and Mallomars to bring to Gary's house and sunscreen besides.  Regrettably neither the supermarket or Walgreens carried Mallomars It turns out to be just down the street from where Karol works but not know that at the time I could not go in a make a scene.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Day 3 - Divots and Salsa


Today was a semi-repeat of yesterday.  The day started out rainy but as we swapped stories in the family room the world outside brightened and we decided to hit the golf course.  And hit it we literally did, or at least I did, digging up whole sections of fairway and rough attempting to get the ball in the hole.  I was reminded of my father’s favorite expression which he learned in the 101st Airborne during WWII, “The difficult we do immediately.  The impossible takes a little longer.”  Most holes were difficult, some were impossible but despite the longer time it often took we finished in time to get my clubs back in the car before it started raining again.  The course was actually a perfect length, had good lies if you were in the fairway, had enough water to lighten my bag by four balls, but gave out free water so overall we had a great time.

We then repaired to this really cool taco place called Taco Bamba which had some incredible taco combos.  I actually had a calamari taco with black squid sauce in addition to a more traditional beef one.  The food was delicious, the place was plenty funky and I highly recommend it to anyone in the vicinity of the two locations they have.  The bartender was even from Long Island.

After that we went back to the house and once again stayed up too late.  This will be a tough stop to leave but other fun beckons so off I go in the morning to Charlotte, NC.  Of course I told Gary I would be at his house about noon using my New England logic that a trip from adjacent states should never be more than four hours forgetting everything I have learned about the size of states increasing outside of our little section of the country.  Having been disabused by my hosts that I could make it to Charlotte than quickly I am looking at a full day of driving.

Charging stops:

None – Car was immobile all day other than the hatch.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Day 2 - Hitting golf balls

 As will be the case numerous times during this trip Hobson spent the day sitting around doing nothing except allowing me to get stuff that I needed out of it.  This trip partly came about because I am going to play my annual round of golf with my buddies from elementary school in North Carolina.  Having nothing better to do than finish my basement I figured i would make a trip out of it.  I advertised in Facebook for a contest to win an ugly old man on your couch and got more responses than I could possibly see in three weeks.  While everyone would have been great to see they are not spread well geographically being mostly in just two areas in Florida, the Miami area and the Tampa area so I had to make some hard choices about whose couch to be on although in reality eveyone in Florida offered a bed. 

I did choose well in the DC area as the Holdcrofts are great hosts.  For a trip that I billed as a couch surfing trip this is much more like an upscale motel.  They even have one of those things you hang on your door to not be disturbed.  Breakfast, lunch and dinner are all included besides.  The rest of my hosts better have their A-game as the bar has been set rather high. 


In any case my buddy Jim, being been a dot your i's and cross your t's lawyer type, wants to make sure I am well prepared to face the courses in North Carolina so today we went to the driving range at Jim’s club and hit lots of golf balls in preparation to play real golf tomorrow as the next step in getting ready.  It was fun to play around on the practice tee with different stances and I even learned how to stand to get my drives to go more than 10 feet in the air.  This will be a big surprise to the guys from high school I have been playing with for years as they have never seen me hit the ball higher than the height of an NBA center off the ground.  They will probably counter that it barely clears a middle school guard's height but do not believe them.

Once having grooved our swings we returned to the house having picked up dinner along the way.  As Jim and I are both semi-retired we can sit around like college kids and solve the problems of the world.  As he was in high finance, which I know little about, his stories are intriguing as he describes the way deals are put together and the cast of characters that populate high positions in the financial world some apparently deservedly and some not.  We stayed up too late for a second night in a row.

Charging stops

None – Car was immobile all day other than the hood, hatch and front doors.

Day 1 On the road again!


Hobson after being assaulted by a Kia spent October  to December in the body shop only to be released to an assault by road salt  and sand on the New England roads.  Hobson wanted to put all that behind him and go South where frost heaves are not a danger to his undercarriage or maybe his owner did.  In any case we are off for a three week couch surfing trip that was planned so that I could see some old friends while I had the some time off.  So after throwing about half of the stuff I forgot to pack into the car this morning I set out to retrace at least the beginning of the trip this summer, namely hitting DC first.

Traffic was light for the most part reinforcing my good sense to travel this leg on Sunday.  Until I hit the Beltway the drivers seemed slow too.  I even passed a BMW going 55 in the right lane with the seemingly incongruous license plate “GO4IT”.  I guess you can go for it at any speed but I would have expected more alacrity from someone who paid extra to have that plate and a 5 series BImmer.   However the Beltway was a very different story as the crazy lane changes and excessive speeds on a crowded road were terrifying after 9 hours of pretty sedate driving.

One of the reasons the driving was so sedate is that Hobson took care of most of it.  He drove, Slacker did the tunes, and the driver danced and sang along.  It is a good thing I was alone.  Many people ask about the self-driving capabilities and so here is my take on it.  The car is a competent driver in most highway situations but I would compare it to watching a young child.  Most of the time they are doing what they are supposed to but in certain situations you cannot trust them to  make the right decision however you can often anticipate when they will go off in the wrong direction and so redirect them before they get into trouble.  Lane changes to the right lane near an exit you do not want to take are one of those situations to avoid.  The Beltway was full of anticipatory defensive driving that the car does not excel at so I had to drive that madhouse section.  All in all though the car drove through MA, RI, most of CT, most of NJ, DE and some of MD but none of VA.  It is not as easy as being a passenger but does make a long drive much more relaxing.

Having arrived at my Amherst roommate’s house in Virginia, the Holdcroft’s provided my favorite IPA, some excellent snacks, and then took me out to dinner.   No couch surfing here as I have a great bedroom with my own bathroom.  I may want to live with him another semester or two at this rate.   It felt like college again in some ways as we had a long wide ranging discussion until well after a sane bedtime for the older folks we had become although we did fall short of the time we used to stay up to in college.

A note at this point about this new part of the blog is in order.  Last time I had Michelle for a companion and as she drove I took pictures and wrote and when I drove she took pictures so it was possible to get pictures of the cool cars and churches we passed.  That trip was also more of a sightseeing trip with amazing stuff we were often seeing for the first time.  This trip is mainly on the I-95 corridor that is familiar territory and although I will be going to new places there will not be the majestic views one gets out West so there will also be fewer pictures of scenery.   This trip is mainly seeing people I like and spending time with them so will have a very different tone though I hope it will be enjoyable to read.  

One other thing about this trip is that unlike the last one I have done no advance planning for charging stops.  Some of this is cockiness on my part having a lot of experience now and partly is due to the increased density of charging stations on the East Coast compared with the flyover states.  Apparently Tesla owners are also expected to flyover also.  Looking at the map of stations prior to embarking things to make sure I was right about my travel plans I noticed that the number of chargers has improved a lot since last summer especially along routes I-70 and I-80.  I think this is where Tesla will win the electric car battle.  While it takes longer to fill up with electrons that petrol Tesla's can fill up in less than an hour which is not possible with any of the other pure electrics on the market.  By already having this in place when the Model 3 hits the market they have a huge advantage.

Charging stops
Darien CT – These chargers were not here last summer but allowed me to stay on I-95 rather than use the Greenwich chargers on the Merritt Parkway.  It also gave me a shot at reaching the Newark DE chargers without stopping in Jersey.


Newark DE – This is a big place with 12 chargers but 6 were taken and the Tesla owners there were wise to using only one of the paired chargers.  It turns out that each two chargers are attached to a single source of electricity which they have to share.  This then lowers the charge rate on both cars that are hooked up to the same bank.  With the six cars all on separate power sources I had to be a bad guy to someone by hooking up next to them.  I picked the car with the hatch open figuring they were getting ready to leave.  I was wrong and was stuck with slow charging until someone else left and I moved the car.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Epilogue - Some final impressions


Intro

First the answer to the question poised by the blog title is Adventure.  While there were things we missed because of charging issues not one day went by that we did not have a good if not great experience and as we spent as many days as we could on the road if we had added those things we would have missed something we did do.  Mostly we did miss some people due to the car's shortcomings namely Kelly Parnell and Sarah Smolinski in Nebraska, Ben Brandon in Colorado and Roger Ball in St. Louis due to a dearth of chargers on I-80 and I-70.  We also missed Ann Reynolds in Seattle due to Seattle unbelievably being a wasteland for chargers.  Those are things that we regret more than missing the places we missed like Nashville and Durango.

Second I have to thank my boss at MCPHS, Linda Boyd for allowing me to substitute a friend of mine into my clinical days trusting me that he would work out well.  I also have to thank Arnie Nadler for being willing to fill in and for making everyone happy that he was there.

Tesla impressions

The car performed very well overall.  It is fast when you need it to be, stable on the road and always so quiet you wish the tires didn't make such a racket.  It did need to be rebooted a couple of times, was often overly pessimistic about our prospects of making it to the next charging station and was very dirty when it got home.  It did however clean up nicely.  The power is appreciated when you need to change lanes in a hurry or get past some old guy pulling a weaving trailer, the self-driving has mostly been good but you cannot let it go unattended at all times mostly because it is poor at anticipated stupid drivers cutting the car off.  Only once has it done something stupid on its own, swerving suddenly while driving down I-90 for who knows what reason.  While self-driving it works much like a horse would.  It will go down the road with little input but once in a while it gets spooked by something and all hell can break loose.

Kids seem more attracted to the car then adults and only a small percentage of people notice it is something different but those that do often ask questions.  I have caught people, mostly kids,  taking pictures of the car while they are surrounded by natural beauty and while it is covered with bugs and dust.  I guess someone who is including a car of the day in his blog should not be so surprised by people taking pictures of the car but we now take it for granted.

The navigation system needs some more functionality and it would be nice if the browser was more compatible with websites like Waze and Plugshare.  The browser and the map refresh also need to be much faster.  That brings me to the poor cell coverage which is mostly a problem for the audio system.  You can spend another $2500 and have satellite radio but as I did not envision this trip and I am spoiled in the Northeast by good coverage we did not order the upgraded stereo.  Once you get away from the coasts the coverage is spotty and that is irritating both for map updates and getting music that you didn’t bring with you.

There should be windshield cleaning stuff at Superchargers.  Only a couple of the dozens we hit had them and they were wonderful.

Even at over 20,000 miles there are still tricks to learn and the best way to learn them is talk to the folks at the Superchargers who have had them for a while.

There should be a way to get the car to stay on so that on very hot days you can sit in it while charging and keep the A/C running.  You can fool the car either by keeping a door cracked open or remaining in the driver’s seat in which case the car will stay on for about 30 minutes but if the driver wants to get out and the passenger wants to stay but not move it is a problem.

When cars leave the Supercharger area it is spooky as one is used to hearing the person close their door, start the engine and then accelerate away while the only noise one hears with the Teslas is the door closing and the next time you turn around the car is gone having left in complete silence.

Tesla’s are a coastal phenomena still.  We were almost always alone at Superchargers from the time we left Virginia only to pick up more folks as we neared California and then had company up to Vancouver but then were generally alone again until we hit Ohio.  It seems that few people are crazy enough to do what we did.  We did get some attention out west from the other owners with the Mass EV plates.

The EV plates on the car are a way to inform rescue personnel that they need to take different precautions.  The state encourages electric car owners to have them for that safety reason and do not charge extra for them.  There are no perks like being able to use HOV lanes or not paying tolls like other states have but the people from the other states thought it was a great idea so they could get those perks easily.  This was especially true of Californians who are required to put very ugly stickers on the back bumper and rear fender to get EV perks.

Most people ask about the charging stops which are a mixed blessing.  They are certainly longer than one would take filling up even at a crowded rest area filling station but they do get you out of the car and moving.  Most owners leave their cars and go somewhere but if you don't there is often conversation to be had.  All Tesla owners have something in common as they own fairly unique cars so that can be a starting point.  Certainly when we got away from the East Coast our license plates created some interest from others. 

Then we get to "Tesla time" as the guy who owned the Tesla cabs in Portland put it.  Tesla owners like to share information but on top of that other people stop to ask you about the car.  In three instances people deliberately drove into the parking lot to ask us questions while we were charging.  Other people just ask wherever you are parked which lead to spending the afternoon and evening with Tony and Gale but other times was a shorter conversation.  We learned from the people asking the questions most pointedly about diesel electric motors in trains and big mining equipment.  People who see the power of electric motors see the capabilities of the car better it seems.

I would however not hesitate to take the car anywhere again.  I would also not be as anal about planning the entire thing including stops.  As the trip went on we learned to improvise and change things on the fly and then the last two days we completely seat of the pants.  If I were advising someone with as little experience driving distances as we had I would still suggest careful planning but only the first time out.  

Not a Tesla item per se but this is the first black car I have ever owned and I have to say I will never choose that color again.
  
National Parks
On both sides of the border they are jewels and the people who work at them are uniformly informative and helpful.  The maps they give are beautiful and usually all you need to find your way around the park.  In addition the US parks give you a newspaper that contained hiking trail information, news of fires and other happenings in the park.  We enjoyed all of the time we spent in the parks immensely not only because they were beautiful but also that we had the information we needed to make the most of our time there.  All of this great stuff for just $10 for the rest of Larry’s life.  By Michelle's count we went to 13 national parks so it was less than a dollar a park for us.  It makes paying taxes less painful getting that good a deal.  



Some impressions of different places
Different States Auras –You really feel the difference between states as you pass through them.  The differences between the South, the Southwest, the West Coast, and the Midwest are pretty stark.  While this is all the same country and our population is more mobile than in the past differences still exist between regions.  In this election year it makes one understand how hard it is to be everything to everyone.  No one person can embody all of this diversity which is why we need a Congress that can compromise and work to promote the best for all Americans while trying to do the best they can for their constituents.  


Utah – Southern Utah has striking scenery and especially Moab seems to be full of people from elsewhere.  As you get up to Slat Lake City the Mormon influence becomes more pronounced with more conservative dress, fewer places selling liquor, and a complete lack of coffee shops.  The scenery also becomes less interesting especially west of Salt Lake as there are just miles and miles of salt flats almost completely devoid of life.  It is mildly depressing.  More than half of the land is Utah is controlled by the US government and much of the rest is Indian Land as they now call the reservations.  This is probably why Mormons are spreading out beyond Utah in large numbers as with there big families the existing land for them is limited.  We did not see and theaters showing "The Book of Mormon" either.

Montana – Like Utah we spent several days there.  It seems at heart similar to the South in that it is very fundamentalist and politically conservative.  They are reflexively patriotic but also highly distrustful of the Federal government which seems somewhat paradoxical to me.  It has more signs about guns not allowed in certain buildings but is the only state that we actually saw a person carrying a gun.  The US government owns a large proportion of the land out west as illustrated by Utah but not confined to that state so they are always between competing interests for the various resources that they control.  As the government falls prey to Lincon’s quote that, “You can please some of the people all of the time, all of the people some of the time but you can’t please all of the people all of the time,” they are bound to be detested by a large number of disgruntled people out there no matter what they do.  

Canada – Canadians are just naturally nice.  They are not as incredibly nice in the West as they were in the East where we visited last summer but were very friendly.  We listened to the Vinyl Cafe podcasts for hours while driving as they are very entertaining and I am sure that influenced our views on Canada as Stuart McLean is just so warm and his stories while poignant at times are suffused with warmth and good people.  If you liked Prairie Home Companion you will love the Vinyl Cafe.  


Motorcycles
As different as the states are the motorcyclist subgroups.  We saw a lot of motorcycles especially as we are wandering in area of the Sturgis Bike Week when we were in South Dakota.  The Harley crowd, despite their outlaw reputation, ride much more sanely than most others and they are true tourers making up almost all the cyclists in the National Parks.  They aren’t completely safety conscious though as they often only have bandanas as their head protection.  They travel generally groups. sometimes rather large ones. and are a bit older. The BMW folks are also older but ride singly or in pairs.  They ride like BMW car people drive, always in the left lane, and well over the speed limit.  The Japanese bikes are rarely seen outside of urban areas and are hard to spot but important to see as they are generally riding at triple digit speeds, cutting from lane to lane and when traffic slows down riding on the line between the cars and once even riding between cars popping a wheelie.  If these guys survive they may someday be able to pick up beautiful Harleys in estate sales and ride like sane people.

The Harley crowd is also mostly baby boomers and they are having more trouble getting onto their bikes so many have converted to tricycle riders.  There are Harley trikes, Honda trikes and some companies like Polaris that just produce trikes without ever having made motorcycles.  This is the near future of motorcycle sales to allow these older folks to keep eating insects as they ride even as their balance and strength decreases.


Travelling by car versus RV

RV’s whether self contained or trailers being towed allow one to not have to unpack at every stop, keep you in the same bed and have kitchen and bathroom facilities.  We are not doing that this trip and have no experience with it but would like to comment on what we do know about travelling many miles by car staying in campsites with RV’s and in motels.  As we have not done an RV trip take this with a little caution.


I have already mentioned above what I see as the big advantages of RV travel.  In addition you can also see that in a self-contained RV you can get up, stretch a bit and even lie down while travelling which has to be more comfortable than sitting in the car hour after hour.  This obviously is not an advantage for trailer folks though.  What are the disadvantages?  From talking with folks travelling in that fashion the biggest issue is the cost of fuel.  This year gas prices are not bad but we heard quotes from 6-15 mpg from people touring in this way.  The Tesla of course is free to drive as long as you remain on the Supercharger network but even had we brought a conventional car we would have gotten between 25 and 50 mpg depending on whether we took the Alfa Romeo at the low end or the VW diesel on the high end with the Toyota in the middle.  This would obviously much cheaper so to keep the RV competitive one has to prepare most meals rather than eat out as we did day after day.  With a majority of our money going for food and most of the rest going for motels you can see where you could break even money wise if you were careful.  

The only clear advantage of the car is the ease of driving.  There were some National Park roads that banned vehicles over a certain length, usually between 22 and 25 feet cutting out most RV’s and all car/trailer combos.  To combat that many RV owners tow a car further complicating the driving while the car is attached and requiring taking it on and off to drive it.  Pulling trailers allows one to leave the trailer behind but still leaves you driving a big truck around.  Speaking of big trucks out west there are many more trucks than in the Northeast and they are also bigger ones.  To use one brand as an example, Ford F-150’s are the most popular ones in the East but are rarely seen out West where F-350’s are very common.  They even make them in more female colors for the women to drive.

What we did need and what we didn't need

We brought a cooler which took up a lot of room and which we did not use.  I took extra pairs of sunglasses and reading glasses which never left the glove compartment except when we pulled them out. 

We should have brought something to pound in tent stakes with.  The LED light that hung from the ceiling of the tent and included a fan was great to have.  The headlamp got very little use as campgrounds tend to have a lot of light. 

We used maps from AAA on occasion so they were somewhat useful but the guidebooks were worthless.  Trip Advisor was very handy though.

Plug Share is another app you need if you are driving electric.  It not only tells you where the chargers are but comments by other users give reviews of the local eateries and can guide you to especially difficult chargers to locate.

I have kept an old 3 blade razor in my travel kit as I had extra blades for it when the 5 blade razors appeared and I was too cheap to waste them.  Unfortunately I forgot to check for extra blades which I apparently had used up.  Therefore from about the second week shaves were painful and increasingly ineffective despite spacing them out.  But having two 5 blade razors at home I was not about to give in an buy another.  So on long trips make sure your supplies will last or you can procure new ones on the road.

Writing a Daily Blog

I did this selfish reasons and they turned out to be sufficient motivation to continue day after day.  It had very little to do with keeping our friends informed of our whereabouts.  Frankly at times it felt a little like we were bragging about the car or about the trip which makes me a little uncomfortable.  The web enables us to foist more of our lives on other people than maybe they need and I was really not planning to do that.  Although I was not happy to see the number of readers dropping as the trip wore on it did verify my feeling that there was no reason to do this for the world at large.

So what were my goals?  First, I wanted to document the trip as it was happening so we could go back and remember it better.  A trip of this length with at least one activity planned per day could easily get blurry.  Looking back especially at the beginning of the trip it is all a little fuzzy so it will be good to use these descriptions to tell where the photos were taken and what the sights contained in them are.

Second, I wanted some practice writing.  As a science jock in college writing anything other than an occasional lab report was painful and as a dentist we wrote some pretty lousy prose in the patient's records.  As one ages you are supposed to try new things and so this was part of that.  Unlike picking up a musical instrument for my new learning experience the people I love could ignore my blogs while they could not ignore my poor musicianship.

Third, it gave me something to do while Michelle was driving.  We had a rule that whoever was driving picked what we listened to. She liked to listen to podcasts when we could and that was engaging but if we could not get a signal for that she went often enough with silence so the writing was a good way to spend the time.   Michelle also sleeps later than I do so it kept me busy while she got her beauty rest.  


Sunday, August 21, 2016

Day 51 - That's all folks!


All good things must end and this trip is no exception.  We left our last motel this morning nice and early.  Larry actually took the car down to charge at 5:30 am and then went back to pick up Michelle who was ready and raring to get going.  As it against all of our principles to not do something interesting rather than just drive we debated several possible activities finally converging on the New York State Museum in Albany.  The museum was a big maze and every time you thought you had seen it all you would look left or right and there would be a whole section you hadn’t seen.  Set up like that, the exhibits did not always flow well, but when you got into them they were very interesting.

These offices should be easy to rent

We also got a bit cocky on the last day.  The car called for three stops between Buffalo and home.  We ignored all recommendations and showing just how good we are at this we made just two stops even though the car whined and told us to slow down regularly every tune we crested a hill.  Even though neither time did we come in with a 20 mile buffer the worst one still had 14 miles of room even though the battery icon looks empty.

In any case, we must say here on the last day,  we are glad that spending as much time with each other was really good fun. There were no homicidal tendencies that resulted from spending so much time together.  It is nice to be home and we really need to get back into some sort of routine but it was a blast to be on the road too.  Thanks for reading and for those that don’t want to give up reading yet Larry will publish an long epilogue that discusses the trip as a whole and what we learned about the car and the country that he feels he must share.  

Regular Features
Statistics Corner
States involved:  We drove through New York the long way and then almost across Massachusetts the long way.  The last time we had been in these states was on Day 1 and we spent less then a Supercharger stop number of minutes in them combined that time.

The final tally for the trip.  


Here is what you need to know.  The battery indicator shows the number of miles left based on 285 Wh/hr so we were pretty close overall to what we were expected to use.  The number of kWh we used is staggering.  That would run our house for half a year before we bought the Tesla.  This car is twice as efficient in energy usage as my 50mpg Passat TDI so it is staggering how much energy Americans use to get around.


Charging
Buffalo NY – 30 minutes – The chargers were just up the street from the motel so when Larry got up earlier than Michelle once again and having no blog entries that were not done he decided to kill the time until Michelle 
 got up and going getting the car ready for its last day on the highway.

Utica NY– 60 minutes - including a very large breakfast.  So large that Larry did not eat another meal that day.  We had skipped the Syracuse charger  which Hobson wanted in order that Larry could keep his hopes of visiting Cooperstown alive but alas that didn’t happen.

Springfield MA– 30 minutes – Although we cruised in almost empty again after ignoring Hobson’s suggestion of Albany but as we didn’t need too much to get home we didn’t hang around any longer than it took Michelle to finish a salad at Panera her last meal on the road.

Home - Hobson’s home garage will be the charging station until wanderlust hits us again..

Church of the Day – Lousy picture through the window with reflections galore but a nice church


Coolest car of the Day – It has to be Hobson for taking such good car of us for the past 7 weeks but I did get this shot of a Mustang that blasted onto an entrance ramp in front of us and then disappeared.  Hobson could not chase due to our stretching resources to get down to two stops.



Hobson's bug covered nose


Song of the Day  - There are too many songs that can contend for this, the last entry for this blog and too many "but thens" in the next sentence but bear with me.  I had planned days ago to use Willie Nile's "American Life" which slacker had played way back in South Dakota but early in the morning I was convinced the answer was the depressing “The End” by The Doors but then Slacker played “Highway Star” by Deep Purple and that seemed to fit the day better as it wasn't so depressing but then the lyrics of “This is the Life” by Amy McDonald especially the line "Where are you going to sleep tonight?" really resonated so I can’t decide.  Therefore I declare a big tie.

Coolest Thing of the Day – Larry- sleeping in his own bed for once.   


Coolest Thing of the Day - Michelle – The New York State Museum.