I went down Rt 66 with my parents from St. Louis to Needles, California a year and a half ago (jeeze it seems like forever, and not at the same time) for my graduation gift.
It Was Awesome!
We drove on the interstate through oklahoma (from Kansas to El Reno) because its oklahoma and the weather looked sketchy (which it was, we passed the weather channel storm chasers) but otherwise we tried to drive mostly on the Route (easier in some places than in others)
We didn’t actually hit the route until we got to Lebanon, Mo (we stayed at the Munger Moss Motel) but for most of the way between St. Louis and Lebanon Rt 66 follows right next to the interstate (its the access road) it kind of counts.
The second day we drove from Lebanon, MO through Kansas (Mater is in Galena, Kansas) and to El Reno, Oklahoma (just west of Oklahoma City) we found the “ribbon road” or “sidewalk road” that day (its only one paved lane because in 1934 when oklahoma was supposed to pave Rt 66 they didn’t have the $$ to pave 2 lanes, and they haven’t repaved it since, so its basically gravel, we got stuck behind a tractor pulling a hay bailer there)
The third day the clouds were all gone, but the wind wasn’t. We drove from El Reno to Tucomcari, NM (stayed at the Blue Swallow!) we stopped at the Oklahoma Rt 66 museum in Clinton, Okla. and ate lunch at the Big Texan in Amarillo, we also stopped at the midpoint Cafe in Adrian, Texas and got a piece of pie each. New Mexico has the best “Welcome to” sign too, just saying. Tucumcari was fun, theres a rock formation nearby that looks (to me) a little like a car, theres a “T” painted on the side and they light it at night (reminded me of the “RS” in the carburetor rock in Radiator Springs). The Blue Swallow was really cool, they still have rotary dial phones in the rooms and they teach you how to use them if you want, all the garages have Rt 66 related murals in them (and there are 2 with Cars murals!)
The next day we drove from Tucumcari to Holbrook, Arizona (stayed in a Wigwam! aka Cozy Cone). We stopped at the petrified forest/painted dessert (Where I can totally see where Pixar got the geology for Carburetor County, it looks like the area between the painted dessert and the petrified forest, and the interstate doesn’t see any of it) and a few other stops. At the Wigwam Village they have classic cars parked in front of each teepee, including a tow truck, a beat up old Hudson Hornet (the license plate says “doc Hudson”), and a Chevy that looks like Ramone but with baby blue paint.
The following morning we drove to Winslow, Arizona for breakfast (you know the Eagles song, “Take It Easy”? “Standin’ on a corner in Winslow, Arizona” theres a memorial to that song, I hadn’t heard it, my mom found it on youtube) then we drove through the Arizona dessert (it was only like 90 degrees) and stopped at the Meteor Crater. For most of the day we could see a little purple-blue mountain on the Horizon and it kept getting bigger, sometime in the afternoon clouds appeared around it, because the elevation was causing water to condense at the peak. These were the first clouds we had seen since the storms in Oklahoma. Eventually at like 2 that afternoon we got to the mountain… It’s where Flagstaff is. We could still see snow on the very top of the mountain (in early June). Make sure you drive the stretch of Rt 66 from Flagstaff to Williams if your out there. Williams is where the Grand Canyon railroad starts/stops and their train like suspiciously like the Polar Express. We also drove through Sleigman, Ariz and a tiny place in the middle of nowheresville called Hackberry where we saw 2 living things: the manager of the general store, and a donkey standing in the shade of a large bush. Oh, and it was 111 degrees at 5 pm there, not a fun place to get out of the AC. Needles was a little warm too, I don’t think it got below 80 degrees all night, it was still hot the next morning when we left (heading back east )
On the way back we caught the stuff we skipped: the Grand Canyon (spent like 2 days there), Albuquerque, The Rock Cafe in Oklahoma (Dawn, the lady who owned it was the inspiration for Sally), The Cadillac Ranch in Amarillo, TX, the Wagon Wheel Motel in Cuba, MO.
All in all, if you ever have the chance to go… DO IT!! but make sure your car has working AC, you’ll need it… oh, and make motel reservations if you want to stay at the Blue Swallow or any of the other famous motels/hotels/motor courts, etc, and take a camera
ok, I’m done… for now