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Tag: route 66

Into the Desert Wilderness🌵
Stray Decay Along The Way

It’s hard to get anywhere on Route 66 because there is so much abandonment that pulls me over. Even what isn’t abandoned looks abandoned, weather-worn and time-loved… crispy and texturous. To follow, some stray decay along the way.


Into the Desert Wilderness🌵
Abandoned Fort Courage

With several exploration fails, I was happy to peep Fort Courage standing tall from Interstate-40. Braving the harsh temperatures and whipping winds, I made the most of my short stop. Currently for sale, this large collection of structures may soon have new life. Or it may not. Such is one Read more…


Into the Desert Wilderness🌵
Route 66, Holbrook, Arizona

Before I drop a bunch of Route 66 neon, I want to give a big shout out to Chinese eateries across the country who always offer a reliable vegan options. This well needed meal was from Mandarin Beauty Restaurant. Mapo tofu Also, it is a great thing that veg snacks Read more…


Into the Desert Wilderness🌵
Wigwam Village
Holbrook, Arizona

The wigwam villages are a quintessential part of road culture–many registered as historic landmarks. Staying off Route 66 in Holbrook, Arizona, the Wigwam Village was a must for me. A delight upon arrival, the vintage cars that filled the lot. Made for some of my favorite style picture-taking… vintage style. Read more…


Into the Desert Wilderness🌵
Route 66 Roadside Decay

Traveling Route 66 you’ll see evidence of its faded glory–in physical form. The construction of Interstate 40 made it impossible to travel its entirety; it bypassed some of Route 66’s stops leaving them suspended in a dead road, leaving their roadside stops left to decay. To follow, some of that Read more…


Into the Desert Wilderness🌵
On the Road

Though I needed the Kelso Dunes in the Mojave Desert for a backdrop of a special photoshoot, I only stayed briefly. But these hours were my initiation into the road, an offering to wild time… time that exists outside the constructs of tedium–impractical, untainted, and because of these, unsustainable. Its Read more…


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 12
Meet Me in Santa Rosa


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 11
Sun ‘N Sand Motel

Santa Rosa’s Sun ‘N Sand Motel is partially collapsed and the remaining rooms are scrapped and their doors remain wide open. Parts of the roof are caved in and at least one wall is wide open to the street. Locals are disturbed about its sad state as it has become Read more…


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 10
Ghost Town of Cuervo, New Mexico

Part 10 of abandoned ruins along Route 66 is the almost-ghost town of Cuervo, New Mexico. I learned after I returned to New York that this place had a strange lure. 😬


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 9
Ghost Town of Montoya, New Mexico


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 8
Old Man Wilkerson’s & Trailer
in Newkirk, New Mexico

Every exit of Route 66 brought new ruins to explore. A few were on my radar, but others were exciting discoveries… like this structure I am calling Old Man Wilkerson’s in the near-ghost town Newkirk. Just one of many towns that began when a rails came, but ended when the Read more…


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 5
Tucumcari, New Mexico
Paradise Motel & Cafe


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 4
Tucumcari, New Mexico

The Heart of the Mother Road, I very much enjoyed my stay in Tucumcari, New Mexico. The whole town embraces roadtrip culture as bygone ruins stand next to thriving road establishments in a sort of living museum. Seemingly frozen in time, I was able to book my stay at a Read more…


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 3
Tucumcari, New Mexico


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 2
Glenrio, Texas

One doesn’t have to explore far beyond the exits of Historic Route 66 to find some dynamic decay. This decay, artifacts of a bygone era of car travel, was the reason for my trip to the area. To follow, the first of a lot of decay I wandered through. Starting Read more…


Spring Break Decay-tion
Off Route 66, Part 1


Spring Break Decay-tion
Cadillac Ranch in Amarillo, Texas

Part of my personal roadtrip philosophy is the belief that at the start of any roadtrip you have to pay some dues to the road up front… to indebt yourself to it, prove yourself worthy of its plentiful fruits. This usually entails an immediate long drive with minimal stops after Read more…


On Route 66

Though we’d left TX behind spent the evening just west of Oklahoma City, we needed to drive through the panhandle to reach our next destination, Santa Fe, New Mexico. A good 7 to 8 hours drive from where we had woken up, we pit-stopped in Amarillo, Texas at Eat-Rite, a Read more…