Gillette, WY, to Walsenburg, CO

No pictures today, I’m sorry. I was in driving mode!

I slept poorly in Gillette and so didn’t get back on the road till nearly 7:45. At least, the hotel provided me with surprisingly decent coffee and a bit of breakfast, so I was able to get going straight away after buying fuel.

It was going to be a very long day, so the plan was to haul ass to just shy of Denver, which would take me to lunchtimeish, the perfect opportunity to pause for a breather and to face the traffic on a full stomach. It would also be half of the day’s mileage, with the second half broken up into a few stops, so the worst of the day would be behind me once I got through Denver.

So I drove and drove and drove. Wyoming is exceedingly beautiful, much like home, only instead of rolling hills, it has peaks. I saw lots of buffalo!

I pulled into the McDonald’s in Douglas to get another coffee and send a proof of life. I came in with my own to-go cup and my coffee was on the house! How many big corporations will let you enjoy a comfy seat in their building, use their WiFi, and give you coffee with you giving them nothing in return?!

It was nearly 1:00 when I got to Loveland, Colorado. I had thought to do Cracker Barrel for lunch, but didn’t want to spend that much time paused since I had errands to run after. So when I saw a sign for a Panera Bread, it was easy to change my mind. The restaurant was really chaotic, but my lunch of a cup of soup and half a sandwich (with an apple to eat later) hit the spot and didn’t take long. Then, it was time to face the Mile-High City.

Thankfully, traffic through Denver wasn’t too bad, just really thick. The trick is to stick to the second lane from the left and just coast through. Once I was past the city, I exited at the Cabela’s in Lone Tree since I needed a new pair of Keens, having worn clean through my last pair in less than a year! Silly me, thinking that I could find sandals in Colorado in October. I was about to leave when a clerk finally freed up and came to ask if he could help me. He confirmed that they had absolutely no sandals beyond some Crocs and cheap flip flops left in the main part of the store, but that I should go comb through the ‘Bargain Cave,’ where I might find something else suitable. Bargain Cave?

He took me there and I went to the large rack of shoes. I’d come in hoping to get the charcoal and black Newport Keens, which would be more neutral than my grey and light blue pair, but now I’d be happy with any solid sandal that would be good for light hiking and walking heaps in Maz. About midway through the rack, I found the brown and black Newports in 8.5, the size of my old pair! Good enough! But they looked a bit big, so I tried them on and they were definitely a half size too large! I wonder which pair was mislabeled… I was really bummed because the rest of the rack appeared to be boots and shoes, but I kept going. The very last pair of shoes on the rack happened to be sandals… and they were black and charcoal Newport Keens. In a size 8. I kid you not. The exact sandals I wanted, in my size, and for almost $30 off. I think the shoes gods were looking out for me!!!

I promptly changed into them because, surprise, the weather has been WARM. It was so nice to get out of my boots and let my toes breathe!

Then, I drove another hour or so to the Apple Store in Colorado Springs. It was easier to find than I had expected in a large retail complex. I’m pretty sure this was my first time ever shopping at a real Apple Store. My experience shopping online through their app store and their products store has been generally atrocious (they completely screwed up my last order, for the very thing I had to pick up today), so I’m not surprised that I came out of the physical store absolutely underwhelmed. You walk in and there is no obvious place to get information. Instead, store clerks wearing grey tee-shirts with a very discreet Apple logo mill about and come up to you. There are tables set up with all the main products (computers, tablets, phones), and there are wall racks for accessories.

No associate greeted me when I came in, so I had a glance around and saw the rack with the adapters at the far end of the store. Of course, the one I wanted, the Thunderbolt to Ethernet adapter (so I can hardwire my Mac to the internet this winter) was at the very top of the rack, out of reach. I pretended to reach for it and that got someone’s attention. He got me what I needed then told me to go back to the front of the store and someone would check me out. Did that and that clerk passed me off to someone else in the middle of the store. This third clerk rang me up using a handheld device, then headed somewhere out of my line of sight to get my change. When he came back, he asked if I wanted an emailed or printed receipt. Since this was a business expense, I asked for a printed one. He hit a button on his POS device, then bent down under the table in front of him that held a bunch of iPads and came back up with my receipt!

Talk about inefficient! Yes, the store looks neat and slick, but that was a lot of extra steps since they don’t have an actual till area. I was not impressed and, in fact, felt very intimidated since they tried to upsell me by asking if I was sure I didn’t need anything else and did I want to look at the new iPhones (no thank you, I’ll be getting a free upgrade in the spring)? Apple’s products are great, but I much, much, much prefer shopping at a reseller that knows how to actually sell things!

That was my last stop, so I just had another hour and a bit left to do in the setting sun to reach Walsenburg. I would have liked to get closer to Santa Fe, but I was going to arrive at just shy of 6:00, so that was really as far as I could go since I avoid driving in the dark. By the time I came out of Safeway in Walsenburg with a banana for tomorrow morning, registered at the motel, and brought my bags into the room, it was dark. I actually had to pull out my warm weather clothes, something I wasn’t planning to do till Nogales at the earliest! Even with the sun down, the evening was really pleasantly warm!

I headed to Corine’s restaurant, practically next door, for dinner, which was world apart from the last meal I had there. I guess the moral of the story is not to have the special? I had the chicken fajitas this time and they were excellent! The guac was particularly delicious. I wish I had a fridge here so I could have brought back leftovers, but the portion wasn’t ginormous and I made it through while chatting with a lovely lady from Arkansas.

The Anchor Motel is just as acceptable as it was about five months ago and only $50 a night. Even with my $92 room last night (!!!), I am going to be well under budget for accommodation since I got such a good deal in Nogales. Fuel is also much cheaper than I had budgeted for, so even with the higher prices in Mexico, I’ll be well under budget for that, too. Pretty sure this is the first trip of my life that’s going to cost me less than I had budgeted for!

I’m meeting John for brunch in Santa Fe tomorrow, then we’ll see how far I get. I just realised that I’ll gain an hour Monday so if I want to stop early tomorrow, and do a longer day Monday, that will be fine. I just have to make sure I have time to stop at the Walmart in Benson to do my final errands (and figure out how to fit a few boxes of cat litter into my truck) and not get to Nogales tooo late. Hopefully, the shoe gods will still be with me and I’ll find a pair or two of Earth Spirit brand sandals to supplement my Keens for when I want to dress up a bit more. I still have the pair I picked up in May, of course, but I’m afraid I’ll wear them clean through before the winter’s over. It doesn’t matter how much I pay for a pair of sandals, they rarely last me longer than a season, so I’m glad that Earth Spirit is such a reasonably priced brand for the quality you get. Wish I could say the same for Keen…

Off to bed. I want to be on the road by 7:00 tomorrow!

19 thoughts on “Gillette, WY, to Walsenburg, CO

    • Friends who fly in with their cat say it’s tough to find in MX, so they asked me to pick up for them as much as I can carry! 😀

  1. Thanks for the check in.
    Next time though Colorado try to stop in Trinidad.
    It’s the mafia headquarters for that area. Really it is.
    Anyway great pizza there.

  2. Hola Rae!

    How exciting! You’re on the road. I’ve read all the posts since you started, but decided to save any comments for the last one.

    Your hike though the Devil’s Tower park was interesting. Did that used to be called the “Devil’s Post Pile?” Or am I thinking about something similar but different? It’s interesting that the Native Americans regarded it as something divine while the white settlers associated it with the devil, no? That gives you some insight into the European/Christian mindset.

    So I’m curious why you aren’t traveling through El Paso/Ciudad Juarez to Durango and then west to Mazatlán? There’s a new Durango/Mazatlán highway with the Baluarte Bridge which appears to be an engineering marvel, not to mention very beautiful. (https://goo.gl/maps/5tWW9JptAMJ2) Or perhaps you want to drive with beaches on your right.

    In any case, buen viaje y buena suerte!

    Saludos,

    Kim G
    Boston, MA
    Where you are doing absolutely nothing to dissuade me from driving back to Mexico myself this winter.

  3. Since I live in the mountains just outside of Denver, I really identified with this post. I felt like clapping after your Cabela’s story. I was going to make the trek down there for the exact same sandals last week. Sounds like it would have been a waste of time. Thanks for such detailed descriptions. Feels like I riding shotgun.

    • Kathie, there were a lot of different kinds of sandals in the Bargain Cave. Might be worth checking it out if you have another reason to come into the area…

  4. I buy my Earth Spirit sandals at Walmart. Generally every year I buy two pairs because I like them so much. I am afraid one day I won’t be able to find them and then what will I do! I always get compliments on them as well, usually from women who tell me “I love your sandels, where did you get them?” When I tell them Walmart, you can see them shrink back and think “Walmart”, I would never shop there! I’m a Walmart poster child, head to toe Walmart, so I think there reaction is fun! Enjoy your journey and time in Mexico. We leave for our adventures in three weeks,

    • Leanne, Earth Spirit is a respected brand in Europe. Kind of a shame they’re sold through Walmart here because they are excellent shoes. I’ve had the same experience where someone likes my shoes until they know where I bought them. Silly. Have fun on your adventures!

  5. You should totally leave a review for the Apple store on Yelp. I plan on doing so next time I have to endure going to ours. They used to be nice but now it’s awful. You can rarely get a next day appointment for an iPad issue – usually it is a week out. And when you do show up for your appointment, they check you in but then you wait… and wait… and wait. If they are going to make you wait, they should at least offer chairs. 🙁

    • There’s a really good reseller in Richmond that I would drive all the way too before going to an Apple store if I was in your neck of the woods. My experience put me off Apple stores forever! And no chairs?!

      • I really have no need of Apple stores overall. I was there for iPad battery replacement and as far as I know, a reseller can’t help me with that. Anyway, they told me I could go sit out in the mall but it has been my experience in life that out of sight out of mind, so I didn’t want to attempt it. I will say that the person helping me was very kind and through. But if I never have to go there again, it will be too soon.

        • I think a reseller could help you. I went to the one in Richmond to have the battery replaced on my MBP. I made an appointment for that through the Apple website.

          THEY TOLD YOU TO GO SIT OUTSIDE THE STORE?! OMG.

  6. Pingback: Costs For the Trip Down to Mexico | A Life By Design

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