MEMORY LANE - NEXT EXIT

Welcome to Route 66 Chronicles where the neon still glows bright along Route 66, shiny new Studebaker cars roll from the factory in South Bend, the Edsel is the talk of the town, and tail fins represent the latest in automotive styling.

We at Route 66 Chronicles work hard to ensure your stroll down Memory Lane is a pleasant, enjoyable, and memorable one. In addition to regular posts by award winning author Jim Hinckley, there are numerous links to sites, including classic roadside locations, that will help in your endeavor to plan the ultimate trip along the Main Street of America and other legendary highways. In addition there are also a number of links to sites that provide technical information, as well as support, to keep your vintage car on the road.

We have also added a wide array of information about Kingman, Arizona, the self proclaimed "Heart of Historic Route 66", that is updated daily.

Before you leave meet the proprietor and learn about forthcoming projects by this author. Please take a moment to give your impressions, thoughts, and suggestions as to how we may make your visit more enjoyable.


Thank you - the Route 66 Chronicles team



Monday, April 6, 2009

ANOTHER DETOUR, ANOTHER GEM





The loop drive through Wupatki National Monument and Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument exemplify the essence of what I hoped to capture with Route 66 Backroads. See, driving Route 66 is an adventure everyone should experience at least once.
However, to myopically focus on the gems and treasures that line the shoulder of this legendary highway is to miss its most amazing attribute as a portal to an endless array of adventures only found with short detours to the north or the south.
This delightful loop drive of 35 miles begins less than 25 miles north of Route 66 and the community of Flagstaff, Arizona. Stunning scenery, haunting ruins, horizons broken by snow covered peaks and the haunting beauty of the Painted Desert are but a hint at what this amazing detour of less than one hundred miles has to offer.

The drive north on US 89 begins with the hustle and bustle of Flagstaff but soon gives way to pastoral scenes of vintage stone constructed ranch buildings nestled among towering pines against the backdrop of the snow covered San Francisco Peaks. Tragically an almost endless stream of traffic makes it very difficult for the driver to notice but that all changes the monument you enter the boundaries of the national monument.
The first stop is Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument, a stunning wasteland of red cinder and black lava flow sprinkled with towering pines and dotted with the looming cone of Sunset Crater to the east and the snow covered San Francisco Peaksto the west. A number of hiking trails, short and paved as well as rocky and semi strenuous, provide enough access to the inner sanctum of this wonderland for a lifetime of memories and to spark a hunger for return visits.
From Sunset Crater the landscape begins a dramatic change from forested to one of stark high deserts broken by formations of terraced red rock. Enhancing the haunting feelings inspired by these vast empty lands are the broken towers and ramparts of Wukoki Pueblo and Wupatki, Lomaki Pueblo and Naiakihu Pueblo, remnants of a vanished civilization that once dominated this forbidding land.
For those who enjoy scenery best when it is seen through the windshield this drive is a must. For those who enjoy mixing the pleasure of awe inspiring scenery flowing past the windows and walks among the ruins then this little Route 66 detour should not be missed the next time you motor west, or east, on the old double six.







1 comments:

  1. While you are on this side trip on US Route 89, there is a splendid little wilderness area to visit. Strawberry Crater Wilderness is located between Sunset Crater and Wupatki on Forest Service roads east of 89. There is a short trail that climbs the west side of the crater and allows the hiker to experience a volcanic cone up close and personal. To see a few pictures of Strawberry Crater, visit the US Route 89 website, www.us89society.org, and go to the Flagstaff to Page road trip guide.

    James Cowlin

    ReplyDelete

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FROM THE PEN OF JIM HINCKLEY

  • GHOST TOWNS OF ROUTE 66, by Voyageur Press, summer, 2011
  • GHOST TOWNS OF THE SOUTHWEST, by Voyageur Press, 2nd printing June, 2010
  • BACKROADS OF ARIZONA, by Voyageur Press, 2nd printing spring 2009
  • BACKROADS OF ROUTE 66 by Voyageur Press
  • CHECKER CAB PHOTO HISTORY published by Iconografix
  • GREETINGS FROM ROUTE 66, by Voyageur Press, fall 2010
  • THE BIG BOOK OF CAR CULTURE, published by Motorbooks
  • American Road, feature articles
  • Cars & Parts, monthly column - THE INDEPENDENT THINKER
  • Hemmings Classic Car, feature articles
  • Kingman Daily Miner, automotive and travel columns
  • Old Cars Weekly, feature articles
  • Route 66, feature articles
  • Special Interest Autos, feature articles