12.01: Preparation for the Paleo Road Trip

12/18/2021: Hustling Over the Sierra12/26b: Field Museum of Chicago, page 2
12/20: Morrison Jurassic Formation, Dinosaur National Monument, Utah12/28: Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh
12/20b: Swelter Shelter & Silo Shelter12/29: Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
12/21a: Utah Field House of Natural History12/30: Philadelphia
12/21b: Petroglyphs at McConkie Ranch12/31: NYC, Lower East Side
12/22: transiting CO, NB, and IA1/1/2022: American Museum of Natural History, NYC
12/24 & 25: Chicago1/2: NY World’s Fair Site, Queens
12/26a: Field Museum of Chicago, page 11/3: Bronx Zoo
Index of pages of the Paleo Trip

The fall of 2021, we felt that for the first time in two years, that we could feasibly travel. (1) The efficacy of the COVID vaccines had been demonstrated, and we were able to get boosters (and flu shots). (2) All of us were on a college schedule for the first time, so we had a month between semesters. (3) Gabriel had developed an interest in dinosaurs that has become quite involved. (4) We wanted to visit family on the East Coast.

One constraint was that we could not bring our teardrop trailer, Felipe. It has no brakes; and as a passive trailer it is a bit hazardous to tow across ice. So instead, I built a rooftop cabinet to carry our bags.

Test run of Bronson (our 2000 Passat) with the cabinet on the roof, to Orange County. No discernible impact on the mileage of the car, so my thumbnail aerodymics apparently worked.

Known as “the Cabinet of Dr. Calogero,” it is defined by these variables: (a) the front follows the profile of the windshield of our car, so that the slipstream of air could just continue over the cabinet. (b) the height of the side doors had to fit common rollie-bags. (c) the back was limited by the radio antenna built into the car. It is made of 4mm and 12mm marine plywood, the first time I have used this material.

The cabinet served us well for more than 8,000 miles of travel, and it meant that we could rely on all-weather tires to navigate across the country in midwinter.

At the last minute I added the wreath with solar-powered blinky-lights to cheer up our fellow drivers at night.

We laid our wreath at the grave of Frederick Douglass in Rochester, NY on our way back to California. I prayed to his spirit to guide us through these dark times of resurgent racial intolerance in America.

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