US Roadtrips
Disclaimer: last time I owned a car was in 2006 right before moving abroad. I don’t need it, I don’t miss it. Both in London and in Chicago it would be an unnecessary expense. Also in most of my previous trips I’ve preferred using public transports to move around: buses, train, shared buses… Moving to the US I’ve discovered this, to me new, way of travelling: After a relatively short road trip with a mate from Chicago to Nashville in 2019, I really got into road-tripping in 2020 when I drove solo, the Route 66. Long desert roads, incredible everchanging landscapes: road trips in the US are different.
-
Chicago to New Orleans: a road trip through the musical heart of America
A new road trip through the musical heart of America stopping in some of the most iconic music cities in this country.
-
Day 11, 12, 13: Lafayette LA to New Orleans LA
I left Lafayette during rush hour, but it didn’t feel like it because the traffic was light. Despite this, the ride wasn’t particularly engaging or enjoyable. I am not really sure if this was because of the landscape, which – aside from a few small cities with gorgeous trees – was flat and plain, or because I knew it was the last leg of this road trip through the musical heart of America: 1,692 miles, 11 days, 8 live music shows and lots of food after leaving Chicago, I returned the car in New Orleans. Right after settling into the guest house and while waiting for the only concert I…
-
Day 10: Natchez MS to Lafayette LA
Taking the Natchez-Vidalia Bridge meant entering Louisiana, the last state of the road trip. The first part of the ride, another solitary drive with no other cars in sight for miles, began on the 15S, coasting along the Mississippi – both river and state – and ended with the long unpaved stretch on the riverbank road beside the Atchafalaya River. About 20 miles before reaching Lafayette, I took an airboat ride experience in one of the largest swamps in the country: brown waters, beautiful trees, friendly alligators, and zero regrets for the fried reptiles I had eaten no more than 48 hours prior. I am just a bad person with…
-
Day 9: Greenville MS to Natchez MS
I left the bed and breakfast at the sunny Belmont Plantation, where I had spent the night, and headed slightly back north for my first encounter with the mighty Mississippi River at Warfield Point. The streets had magically dried out by the time I set off, allowing me to avoid the highways for most of the drive. I’ve always considered the saying ‘everything happens for a reason’ to be a big load of nonsense that we tell ourselves to get through tough moments in life – and doing so, being totally acceptable. However, driving the unexpectedly unpaved riverbank stretch of the 465 South in a 4×4 was definitely better than…
-
Day 8: Clarksdale MS to Greenville MS
The landscape didn’t change much from yesterday during today’s short 81-mile journey, while the weather did, becoming more threatening as I approached Greenville. A few miles from the final destination, the rain made a groovy and loud entrance in the form of a nasty thunderstorm. With the water in the roadside fields growing brown and thick, I left the side roads to stay on the, for once, safer highway. Once in Greenville, given that the only blues bar in town was closed, I compensated for the lack of entertainment with more southern food: the usual catfish and fried veggies were joined by some new additions—okra, boudin balls, crawfish and alligator.…
-
Day 7: Memphis TN to Clarksdale MS
One of the shortest drives of this trip: 100 miles, which – aside from the very beginning, leaving Memphis – were driven mostly on the old route lying west of the new Highway 61: the original “blues highway.” Not the prettiest landscape, and the gloomy sky didn’t help, but on the flip side, with the temperature dropping significantly, wearing my leather jacket doesn’t make me look like an idiot anymore. Clarksdale: a tiny, unassuming, and rather deprived city at first glance, hosting a number of iconic, incredible blues bars. After all, the devil’s music was born in the cotton fields around here. Blues music, Mississippi beers, catfish, fried green tomatoes,…
-
Day 5-6: Nashville TN to Memphis TN
It turned out the weatherman was right. The rain came copiously all night long, stopping just a few minutes before I left the motel. The first 150 miles were as smooth as it gets, mostly driven along an empty Natchez Trace Parkway with a pale sun trying to make an appearance. My only worry was not to run over the pretty naive, turkey-looking-like birds attempting to cross the road without any notice.When a tiny little screw somehow found its way into the right rear tire of my car, everything changed, and a rather pleasant morning turned into a wasted afternoon. After four hours of pointlessly waiting in the middle of…
-
Day 3-4: Louisville KY to Nashville TN
The drive began with a bit of traffic leaving Louisville and ended with a bit of traffic approaching Nashville. In between, a slow 214 miles unfolded, including two glorious entries into Tennessee (it turns out, if the GPS says something, it’s most likely right), driving on beautiful, tiny roads surrounded by lush vegetation, farms, and livestock.And I believe I was the only person not driving a pickup in all of Tennessee. Nashville, AKA Music City. Music all day long, music all night long; neon lights, crowded streets, cowboy hats, leather boots, short shorts, booze, cold beers, warm whiskey all around me on Broadway. An unpleasantly humid and warm Monday night.…
-
Day 2: Indianapolis IN to Louisville KY
Postcard from Louisville, Kentucky I took it easy in the morning, leaving after 10 am, which was not my brightest idea ever, given the heat I drove through all afternoon. A few miles past Indianapolis, bored with the straight and uneventful state roads, I started improvising, hitting random county roads – a few of which were unpaved – much to the utmost disappointment of the mighty GPS, which was forced to re-route every other time. The closer I got to Kentucky, the browner the fences became, the whiter the houses, the pinkier the trees, the smoother the rolling hills were, the more numerous the horses, and, to my happiness, the…
-
Day 1: Chicago IL to Indianapolis IN
Postcard from Indianapolis, Indiana. I left a beautifully sunny Chicago later than expected – due to the car rental agency, well, momentarily not having any cars available to rent – driving slightly north from downtown to catch Lake Shore Drive at its most iconic stretch, right between Lincoln Park and Oak Street Beach, determined to drive as close to the lakeside as possible until reaching the Ogden Dunes. From there, it was an almost straight drive south through rural Indiana. Maybe not be the most interesting place on Earth, but the drive was smooth, the traffic nonexistent, and everything looks prettier when it’s sunny, right? A total of 223 miles,…
-
Seattle to San Diego: driving the Pacific Coast
I've been to the West Coast multiple times before but it was only single trips to major cities, flying from London or Chicago. Visiting smaller places was...
-
Day 19-20: Los Angeles CA to San Diego CA
Postcard from San Diego, California. I left the car rental center early, challenging Los Angeles’ infamous morning commute, to get to the furthest western point of another bucket list item: Mulholland Drive. A dreamy and hypnotic road stretching like a snake on the hills above LA. The morning mist might have been responsible for the disappointing lack of views, but it made the drive hazy and magical. David Lynch would have approved. Right at the end of the road, the sun came out, this time to stay, making the earlier switch to a convertible finally worthwhile. A couple of hours later, after a strenuous but victorious fight against the vicious…