Vistas are the joy of back roads travel. Every corner, every crest of a hill, every mile offers a new vista. And this country has some spectacular and splendid vistas.
Over the years I have seen some amazing vistas. Whether they be in the deserts of the southwest, the high plains of Montana or on the oceans in the east or the west, the views are endless and inspiring. Following are some of the vistas I have enjoyed and their locations. Enjoy the ride and the views.
Sunset at the Badlands in South DakotaSt. Anthony Sand Dunes in IdahoA view of the Portland Head Light in MaineHills of Shenandoah Valley in presunrise hours on Easter 2017Sunrise over the Atlantic Ocean as seen from Old Orchard Beach, MEGolden Gate Bridge in 2016Pacific Ocean near Reedsport, OregonCaddo Lake near Uncertain, TXHighway to Cody, WyomingA lonely highway in south central Nebraska, near OverlandHorse Country – Lexington, KentuckyCincinnati SkylineCoal Mine Canyon in Arizona, ca. 1983Delaware Seashore Bridge at sunsetSpacious skies over the Grand Canyon in ArizonaThe river into Juneau, Alaska as seen from a mountain top near JuneauThe mountains and the Yellowstone River as seen from US 89The long straight highway near Cohagen, MTBeautiful Highway heading into Virginia from KentuckyLouisville, KY as seen from across the Ohio River in IndianaThe Oyate Trail highway in southern South DakotaFall colors from the Virginia Creeper Trail in VirginiaBeach at Clallam Bay, WA adorned with seagullsNew York City at night as seen from Hoboken, NJSawtooths as seen from Lower Stanley, IdahoArkansas Hwy 8 near Amity, ARScenic cinder Hills and Shadows as seen on Idaho Hwy 33Bison relax along Lava Creek in Yellowstone while pronghorned antelope look on from the backgroundPanoramic View of Pittsburgh from atop Mt. WashingtonNiagara Falls, OntarioThe Tetons as seen from near Drummond, IDSunset in the Sweetgrass, north of Dunkirk, MTWhite Sands, NMA view of the New River Gorge in West VirginiaSunflowers forever near Lexington, KYWind Turbines seem to blossom like flowers out of the corn fields of IowaPennsylvania sunrise as seen from Boyce Mayview Park near Upper St. Clair, PAFall Colors from the Eagle’s Nest above Bancroft, Ontario near AlgonquinTexas Hwy 30 between Huntsville and ShiroHells Canyon in northeast Oregon is actually wider and deeper than the Grand CanyonThree Sisters – nicknamed Faith/Hope/Charity near Sisters, OregonSomewhere in KansasView of the Beartooths near Red Lodge, Montana from the highway was awesomeAmerica the Beautiful – A scene near Glacier National Park
Every April, bloggers from all over the world participate in the April A to Z blog challenge, and you can too. It’s a lot of fun and it’s a great way to meet other bloggers. To play along, all you do is make a blog post for each letter of the alphabet during April, then visit as many other bloggers as you can.
I live to travel the back roads of America. These are the core of my travels around the United States and Canada. They always offer the best of everything: scenery, traffic conditions and a myriad of surprises.
A gravel road south of Belvidere, SDA road approaching a checkerboard wheat farm near Cut Bank, MT
To me, the definition of a back road is anything that is not an interstate highway. However, I prefer the kind that are two lane and in many cases don’t even have stripes down the middle. Those are the best! I am even happy to be on a gravel road at times!
In this day of GPS maps and tracking, taking a back road is all the more opportune! If I take a road and get lost, I can typically depend on my GPS to get me back on the road where I’m going. But, more often than not, I don’t care where I’m going, I just want to see where I’ve been.
Killdeer Road near Athens, WIInterstate 5 near Sunny Valley, OregonHeading into a wind farm near Rugby, NDOn the top of the world on Beartooth Highway that borders Wyoming and Montana south of Red Lodge, MTA road in the middle of a cornfield near Bloomington, IL
Back roads are the threads and fibers of our country. Many might travel the big interstate to get from one place to another, but sometime along the way they will need to leave the highway and get on to a smaller road to get to their final destination. For me…the back road is ALWAYS my destination!
Back roads lead to numerous discoveries. I have driven back roads through every state in the United States (except for Alaska — I took a bus in Juneau, so does that count?) and always have come across something unique or interesting. I have driven through cornfields in Iowa and pineapple groves in Hawaii. I have seen many a wheat field in Montana and Saskatchewan. I love driving the roads through the mountains of Colorado, Montana and Idaho, but am just as happy on a desert road in New Mexico or Texas.
The Road through Juneau, AlaskaFollowing the Amish on a road near Aylmer, Ontario in CanadaA lonely highway in south central Nebraska, near OverlandMt. Rainier National Park in Washington
Sometimes my back road adventures are planned. I will have learned about something unique in a certain area and will try to go there via a back road. (You may want to check out my road trip from Bugtussle, KY to Bugtussle, TX — through Only, TN, for instance. See it HERE.) Other times, I just take a road and see where it leads. And that is often the most fun!
Not every back road leads me to where I want to go. I specifically recall a time on a trip in Missouri. Driving down the highway I saw a sign pointing to Romance. And as I turned there was also a sign pointing to Romance Church. Since it was only 2 miles down the road, I decided I would take the road to romance. It was a windy, narrow little road that eventually turned into a gravel road and by the time I got to the end of the road there was a large building with some people sitting out on the porch. It looked as if it might’ve been a church at one time, but it was obviously a residence. I believe that this was once the community of “Romance.” But there was nothing there indicating such and so to this day I claim that I took a road to Romance and it was a dead end.
I took the road, but never did find Romance in Missouri in 2011Success, Missouri direction
On a similar trip in Missouri I saw another sign to a town called Success. Obviously, my penchant for wanting to go to towns with unique names has always sent me down those roads. I turned left out of the town of Houston, MO and headed down the 16 mile road to Success. Much to my surprise, all the way along the road I could see abandoned old trailers and rusty old cars littering both sides. Granted, this is in a section of the Ozarks that is known for its poverty. I finally made it to Success and even got a photo in front of the Success Post Office. But I learned quickly, that, at least in Missouri, the road to Success is not very glamorous.
Success, Missouri
One time, on a road trip with the family through Louisiana, we came across a café in the middle of nowhere. We decided to stop and maybe try some Cajun food. They had blackened alligator! None of us had ever eaten alligator. But what was more fun was the Cajun music that was being played. There was a Zydeco band with lots of dancing and some of the dancers actually came after my children and asked them to dance. It was a wonderful and totally unplanned experience that we would’ve never seen had we not taken a back road.
Wind River Canyon, WY
Back roads always lead to somewhere, even if it is only a dead end. However, you’ll never know what’s there unless you take one! Following are a few more photos of some of the back roads I have been on. I have hundreds of these, so this is just a sampling. Enjoy the ride…. and preferably on a back road!
Rolling road near Gurney, WIDowntown Ironwood, MI. Check out the giant Hiawatha Statue at the end of the roadOn a quiet road near Baggs, WYThree Turkey Vultures block the road near Gray Hawk, KYRoad leading to the Bridge of the Gods near Cascade Locks, OregonThe Canadian highway near Fleming, SaskatchewanNM 152 near Truth or Consequences, NMThe road to Alta, WY near Teton Valley, IDLoop Road west of Sweet Grass, Montana right on the Canadian borderThe highway leading to Carhenge in Alliance, NEA local road near my home in Lexington, KYThe road through Bedias, TXDriving along the coast in Galveston, TXThe cornfields near Adair, IAI-80 near Green River, WYA gravel road east of Craig, COMain Street in lovely Stanley, ID (yes it is a gravel road!)SD 79 just south of the North Dakota borderThe long straight highway near Cohagen, MTDrive through the pines trees along OR 38 near Reedsport, ORDriving in the autumn colors of Algonquin National Park in Ontario, CanadaThe road in Ketchikan, AK ends with a cruise shipShare the road with the Amish in Arthur, ILThe lonely road into Lost Springs, WY – Population 4