Well, I did it! I completed my bucket list item and visited all 50 states in America. As a fun surprise for finishing with North Dakota, my husband and I were able to join the ‘Best for Last Club’ hosted by the Fargo-Moorhead visitor center. The visitor center sits right at the intersection of North Dakota and Minnesota, in Fargo. A team of nice people on staff made the completion of 50 states a truly memorable experience and fun picture-taking opportunity! My husband and I loved every minute of it. That night we savored a celebratory dinner at Rosewild in the Jasper Hotel (not to be missed) reliving stories from our travels during the past 20 years together. We mailed ourselves a postcard to memorialize the occasion and later joined the club community on Facebook. Now I interact with others having the same thrill. I’m loving seeing the joy that traveling this country brings to all types of people.
With that bucket list item ‘checked off’, I have sat down to soak it in and reflect. Where do we most want to return? Should we move to one of these new places? It is tempting. If you are like us, you consider this every time you visit a new state and explore its’ nature, food & drink specialties, and local culture. We’ve been in Arizona over twenty years now and a new adventure is appealing. I’ve swooned over farm wineries in Virginia, stunning Fall colors of the New Hampshire mountains, red Maple forests of Vermont, rolling plains of Idaho, and the white sparkling beaches in Alabama. How do I even begin to convey the beauty and variety across the 3.5M square miles of the United States? First of all it begins with a heart overflowing with gratitude and appreciation that I’ve had the health and circumstances to travel. And have the privilege to live here in America. I’ve seen and done. God is good.
The goal to visit all of America began for me with an airline career at age 18. The airlines paid little but I managed to get on a few planes. One of the first trips I took was to drive up the entire California coast, packed with Mission Impossible cliff edges and road twists. Then, of course I had to go pay my respects to Elvis at his Memphis mansion. I felt the windy chill of Chicago for myself. The magic of America got to me. The freedom and opportunity to see anyplace I wanted. Still, you know how it is after you marry and have kids – time flies. Career and life changes became consuming. And ‘yada, yada, yada’, years pass. It was 2012 that I became re-ignited with travel after taking my first cruise. I realized that I’d been talking about ‘when’ for a lot of things yet putting them off. So, I changed it. I adopted the new attitude of ‘let’s just go’, vs. ‘someday’. I booked that trip to see my favorite football team in another state (go see the Bronco’s stadium!). I took ALL my work vacation time. It made my life completely different, when I compare ‘before’ and ‘after’. It feels like a few years are sort of lost in the ‘before’, actually. I was less present when I didn’t proactively plan time to have new experiences and lived in a work obsessed auto-mode.
A big part of why visiting new places brings joy is also who you travel with. Because having the right partner means having the best experience. That can also mean only YOU! Choosing to travel alone might be the best choice for what you want to get out of traveling. After all, travel companions can enhance or detract from the adventure, just as our choice of people we include in our lives makes such a difference. Personally, other than for work, I have not taken a trip to a new place by myself yet. I am certain I would enjoy it! I love traveling with either my husband or my daughter and son who have joined us. A partner by your side who shares a similar energy level, passions and likes, transforms seeing new places into glimmer moments and not just travel memories. For me, it would not work to travel with someone who needs to sleep in. As a ‘rule’, I start every day early, explore physical activities outdoors and nature, find the craft brews, attend a concert/sports event if possible, eat local fare, have a least one ‘dress-up’ dinner, drive the countryside, savor a slow sunset, and sightsee the ‘must do’s’ in every new place.
Since having a nature experience is one of my ‘must do’s’ of any trip. Many times a national park, scenic hiking trail, or lake is the destination a trip is planned around. We live in the Phoenix area, so we especially love trips that involve cold weather season. It’s amazing how comfortable we feel traveling in cold weather because we’ve planned and expected it, but when it goes below 70 at home we need a parka! (my Arizona peeps understand). One cold memorable trip was when we took the Bridge Walk across New River Gorge in West Virginia. We chose to visit in October for its array of spectacular colors and then, surprisingly, the temperature dipped into the 20’s. Deep greens, bright and rust oranges, rich gold, and velvety reds surrounded every step during the tour. Our breathe floated in the air in front of us like a guiding spirit. Walking the 3030 foot bridge about 900 feet above the river truly was the ‘walk of your life’, made more memorable by the chilly weather. I highly recommend this exhilarating experience!
So, I ask myself, what are your top favorite states? To think of it, I get a tingling sensation along my skin as if I’ve just exhaled blissfully under the hot sun. For a moment, it just soaks in. I am flooded with memories of golden aspens, waterfalls, beaches, sparking sunshine upon a lake, fresh cider donuts at a farm, the gurgle of a creek flowing over rocks, the bustling city view from a corner high-rise hotel room, the breathtaking landscape of a sandstone Arch right on the edge of a mountain, tasting fresh sugar can juice in the fields of Hawaii, crying at the majesty of a glacier, and other countless moments each worthy of their own article. I could go on. This country is every shade of beautiful.
So it’s hard to pick favorites. I believe the feelings we take away from visiting a new place are colored by life’s perspectives and experiences at the time. What might feel like a favorite to me today may not have ten years ago. My view of livability, diversity, conveniences, and opportunities for any location is based on how I currently perceive the world and what I think is best or worst. We all have personal views in this regard, that scarcely stay the same over time. A huge benefit from travel is to expand our minds and understand history and how people live in different places. Taking home a little bit of the culture and learnings from each place is the most satisfying result of every journey. Like the taste of that heaping fried pork tenderloin sandwich at the Northside Cafe in Winterset, Iowa when my husband and I visited for a Bridges of Madison County tour. I don’t know if Clint Eastwood ate it when he visited, but I will never forget that sandwich!
I do think I have ‘Oscar winners’ that are my top states in this beautiful country, but I will caveat it like this. Spending a week in a state and in just one to three cities of that state is a limited view. I acknowledge that. However, although limited, it’s a lovely view. I’m so happy and blessed to have seen what I have seen!
#1 Arizona – Living here is hard to beat. It is sunshine 24/7 like living in a constant vacation. Outdoor scenic adventure is bountiful. You can go north to enjoy all four seasons, and even snow ski. It’s accessible to California beaches and western/midwest states. And it is true, a dry heat is a pleasant heat.
#2 Virginia – a top producing wine state with access to beaches and absolutely gorgeous countryside and seasons. I’m in love with Charlottesville. I like the ability to access many states from this location. Weather is rarely severe in any direction. The Fall season of this state romanced me and it is rich with history.
#3 Vermont/Rhode Island/Maine – maybe it is because I grew up in the South and have so little experience with these states. But I am enamored. The coast, the harbor towns, the quaint farms, and countryside. The way you are lost for words at the view atop Cadillac mountain in Maine. I tell myself I could learn to live with snow. We met the nicest people and spent quality time in road trips seeing every mile we could across these states. STUNNING. Especially loved the charm of BoothBay Maine and Newport, RI.
I was surprised by the crystal beaches of Alabama and the serene plains of Idaho. I’ll go back again. Picking what to revisit is something to look forward to! For now, I sit back in gratitude and appreciate what I’ve experienced and cherish it. How we are enriched by travel is found in the stronger stretch of our smile, the increased intentionality of our breathing, and a deeper appreciation of the sunrise and sunset each day. Every place is carried in us, filling out our heart.


