(Honestly, I'm trying to get all the notes in from my drive so I can get back to the present. )
The wind doesn't actually seem to be sweeping down the plains as I cross the border, but the billboards do get shorter. I guess Oklahoma doesn't want to distract drivers on 44 from the lovely view of, uh, nothing.
Every 25-50 miles, you pass a town, and the state highway authority cleverly provides you with a sigh that invites you to "See Eggbeater!" The Highway People want you to know that Eggbeater features 6 restaurants and 3 hotels, plus a campground. So, I'm thinking "Eat-and-or Sleep Eggbeater!" might be a better fit.
I'm just saying.
Many miles in, I pass the Welcome Center, which is also the first rest area. It's not remarkable, except that I now understand why Missouri put a rest area one mile inside its border. At first I thought it was just for people who wanted one last chance to relieve themselves in Missouri, but I guess there was a more practical reason, namely that Oklahoma didn't put one a mile or so inside its border. What's Oklahoma's problem?
Still, I like the idea of competing rest areas.
"Last chance to pee in Missouri!"
"Peeing in Oklahoma is OK!"
Or something like that.
About 3:45, Sprout At last, here's the toll booth. Oklahoma wants $3.50 for the privilege of driving on the turnpike. The booth attendant is very friendly, though. Older guy, he reminds me a little of my grandfather. You find that wiry, ageless white man only in the Five State Area, which is TX, OK, AR, LA, and NM. At least that's what they used to call the weather maps on the teevee news in Dallas when I was growing up.
The world's largest McDonald's straddles I-44, and although I thought about stopping, I didn't really feel like it. I wanted to eat in Tulsa, and since I was a little hungry, I figured I'd better not stop. I've been there. anyway. It's big, and it does straddle a highway. Very impressive.
5:15, approaching Tulsa I had called Fedward, a Tulsa native, earlier to get directions to "the place with the chili dogs." (OK, actually I called him because I was at QuikTrip, and he wasn't.) So as I approached Tulsa's rush hour, I pulled off 44 and went to the Coney I-Lander. Ordered a regular coney, which had chili, onions, and perfectly shredded American cheese. When I told the cashier that I'd been waiting about seven years to have one of these dogs, he comped my meal.
The dog lived up to expectations. Really nice chili. I could have eaten that chili solo, and I wouldn't say that about the chili you get on most dogs. If you're ever in Tulsa, make your way through the strip mall jungle to the Coney I-lander. It rocks.
Oh, Fedward, they're hiring!
Spend an hour walking around the strip mall, because I had reached the point where I needed not to be moving.
Dusk, Oblivion, OK I spot a regular sized billboard that reads I Vote Democratic in old-fashioned script. Again, I wonder about the conceptual art teachers in the heartland who are responsible for the random messages. At least this one make sense.
9:30, Almost Texas, OK I am clearly not going to make it to Amarillo tonight because of my late start and my detour through the strip mall. Pull off the highway into the parking lot of a Days Inn, which looks a little disreputable. So I decide to turn around, but instead of doing that, I manage to go about half a mile on an utterly deserted but surprisingly well lit road. It takes half a mile for me to recognize what I'm doing, which is driving on the road to Lost.
I end up in a Holiday Inn. The lobby is full of drunk guys. I can tell from their outfits that they are all cowboys. Or at least they want people to think they're cowboys. The counter girl is trying to call them a cab. In Almost Texas, OK. All righty then.
Thus endeth day two.