Monday, September 27, 2010

How To Take A Trip Down the 5




First Get all of your Stuff and put it in your car. The only reason anyone would drive to Southern California from the north state is because one would need to take a lot of one’s Stuff, including one's puppy dog.

(Unless, of course, you are a truck driver and get paid to do it,
or you have a crippling fear of flying,
or you own several children and Auntie Grandma lives at the other end of the state.)


The Stuff you are taking must include your ipod with some selected play lists of your favorite sing along songs. I always take my tambourine, too. Now don’t try this unless you can keep the rhythm without thinking about it too much. It could take your mind off of the huge amount of driving you are about to do.







The next preparatory activity is mental. Realize that the trip is long. It is boring to a normal person without a tambourine. There isn’t much to see, other than flat farmland.



There will be a few glimpses of the aqueduct; the vehicle Southern California people employ to steal water from the North State. Someone told me it is one of the three manmade things that can be seen from space. The other two are the Great Wall of China and the pyramids. I don’t know if that’s true or not, but it’s interesting to think about between songs.



Back to the mental preparation; as you are getting on the 5 from the 44, give yourself a little pep talk. Remind yourself that there is no reason to hurry. It’s a long drive and you might as well drive a casual seventy miles per hour. Set your cruise control and get behind a Walmart eighteen-wheeler.


Decide to just stay there in the “rocking chair,” as we used to call it back in our CB days. Sit back, relax, and enjoy the tunes.
I usually do this for, oh, about until I get to the olive-selling town, which is about 40 miles into the trip. Then for some reason I feel the need to get over in the passing lane. Suddenly there are new rules for driving.



Put the tambourine into the passenger seat. Push down on the gas pedal. Pass every car and truck in sight until you come to a stretch where there are no other vehicles. Re set the cruise control to seventy-five. You won’t get a ticket for going only five miles above the speed limit.
As other cars begin to join you on your personal highway space, play the “See how long you can go without stepping on the brake and popping yourself out of cruise control” game. This game can involve some close calls and it certainly keeps one awake. The main rule of this game is, you can step on the gas to make yourself go faster than the other cars around you, but no braking.







When you tire of this game, or see a gnarly accident that reminds you that it can happen, get back in the rocking chair and pick up your tambourine. Avoid getting behind any truck carrying any sort of livestock. (Trust me on this.) Tomato hauling trucks should be avoided too, as they bounce tomatoes out all up and down the 5. I’m pretty sure this is not good for the paint on your car.




Before long, you find yourself at the grape vine. Put the tambourine down, as you will be going eighty and eighty-five before you know it.



This speed will make up for the brisk twelve miles-per-hour you will be going when you get in Los Angeles traffic.



Exclaim to yourself that there are more people within your sight now than the entire population of where you live. Remember clearly why you moved out of that place.

8 comments:

My Grama's Soul said...

What a cute post my friend.....we have driven that exact route at least a million times when we would spend time in the San Juan Islands north of Seattle....Up I-5 always stopping at Harris ranch...and then a little further along someplace in Oregon.....ah...I remember it will and how boring it was.....WISH I WOULD OF HAD A TAMBOURINE!!!

Xo

Jo

Blondie's Journal said...

Oh, this is really funny, Lynn. I'm glad you kept your sense of humor through it all!

xoxo
Jane

Debby@Just Breathe said...

The aqueduct always amazes me when I see it and there always seems to be some truck with produce. I must say that I have never heard of someone playing the tambourine while driving, that's a new one!
That stretch of road is pretty boring for sure.

Furry Bottoms said...

First of all... THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU simply for the post title. You actually said "the 5". I've been redeemed.

Since I moved to Seattle, everybody has been trying to tell me I was wrong for saying "the" 5, and that it should simply be "5". I'm sorry, but interstate 5 is a noun to me. A person, place or thing... and it is a place and a thing. So I am comfortable saying "THE 5".

And now I see somebody else does too! Yessssssssss.

Okay, sorry. now about the post... You're so right. You have to pack a lot before driving down the desert of CA!

Pat @ Mille Fiori Favoriti said...

Oh my, Lynn! The photo of bumper to bumper traffic is the only one I am familar with on my side of the country. Going 85 miles an hour only happens in the west. Glad you arrived safely! California is a looooong state!

Happy To Be/ Gl♥ria said...

too fuuny Lynn...I have made this trip many times and still do...Hope you have a GREAT week my friend...hugs and smiles Gloria

drollgirl said...

oh the joys of traveling on the i5.

my parents live in nor cal, and i live in so cal. i have made the 6 hour trip at least 200 times. sigh. it is a bit of a drag! it is always such a relief when it is OVER!

Melissa B. said...

Funny! I-5 out West reminds me of I-81 out here. Too many trucks!