ROADDUDE

Longtime Off-Grid/Vanlife Adventurer - On the Road In North America

  • Blog
    • Blog: All Posts
  • Gear
    • Bunduawn 360 Awning
    • Cargo Boxes & Cases
    • E-Bike: Sondors X
    • Spare Tire Bag (Storage, Garbage and Recycling)
  • Vanlife
    • DIY Composting Toilet
    • Install A Roof Vent
    • Stay Clean On the Road
  • Off-Grid
    • Adding Solar Power
    • Solar Panels: To Move Or Not?
  • Portfolio
    • Nightscapes
    • Landscapes
    • Story Portraits
    • Head Shots
    • Overland Gear
  • About
    • Site Map
    • Kudos: What Folks Say
  • Contact
    • Newsletter
  • Face Masks

Wanderin’ South of I-10

by Road

Wanderin’ South of I-10 from Jacksonville to Los Angeles, that part of the country below Interstate 10, is to be in Another America.

Nowhere is that feeling of being in Another America more evident than when south of I-10 in southern Louisiana. One of the last truly regional areas in the United States, south of I-10 in Louisiana is Cajun Country.

Looking West From the Atchafalaya Spillway over Lake Fausse, south of I-10 in Louisiana
Looking West From the Atchafalaya Spillway Near Sunset

Written with a fountain soda in mind, the grooves of the song Green River always come to mind when wanderin’ south of I-10 in Louisiana.

Well, take me back down where cool water flow, yeh 
Let me remember things I love 
Stoppin' at the log where catfish bite, 
Walkin' along the river road at night, 
Barefoot girls dancin' in the moonlight. 

I can hear the bull frog callin’ me 
Wonder if my rope’s still hanging’ to the tree 
Love to kick my feet way down the shallow water, 
Shoe fly, dragon fly, get back to your mother 
Pick up a flat rock, skip it across Green River

~ John Fogarty, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Green River

Van and off-road trailer on a gravel road atop the Atchafalaya Basin Levee Spillway, south of I-10 in Louisiana.
Gravel Travel, Southern Louisiana style, atop a levee near the Atchafalaya Basin

Cajun Country is one of the last places in America to retain as much of its culture and personality as it has. It’s obvious the moment you get south of the Interstate and away from the cities. Get back into the bayous where there are no big box stores and no fast food, and you’ll see what I mean. There’s plenty of original food, music, mixed patois, and warm hospitality.

Explore Cajun Country

Wind your way down two lane roads through the rice fields between small crossroads towns. Walk into Landry’s Meat & Grocery in Catahoula and get ya some warm Boudin. When I was there I was the only customer in the store not wearing white rubber boots. Head over to Kaplan and ask around where Suire’s Grocery & Restaurant is. Get a couple of plate lunches just for yourself. That way you can taste a wide variety of the best and most authentic Cajun Country food you’ve ever had. “If you want country cooking, come to the country” they say at Suire’s. I recommend the Turtle Piquant, though you won’t go wrong ordering anything there.

Gravel road atop the Atchaflaya Levee Spillway at sunset, south of I-10 in Louisiana.
Looking back down the levee at sunset

Go down through the cane fields and find Bonamis Grocery and get a coke and more warm Boudin. Listen to the local duck hunters talk about da poodoos and how someone used it in gumbo. It’s just an old corner store that sells beer, firewood and white rubber boots. A whole shelf of white rubber boots. Delcambre Reeboks, one Cajun friend explained.

South of I-10 in Lousiana is the best place to slow down, relish your environment, and explore to your heart’s content. I could write pages more about Cajun Country, and hope to soon. I have a mess of images and some video to explain.

NOTES:

The images in this post were done one late afternoon on the Atchafalaya Basin Spillway Levee. It is a long, high, levee in southern Louisiana that runs up from Charenton near the Attakapas Island WMA.

An interesting article with a great 1969 video of CCR performing Green River can be found at Creedence Clearwater Revival’s ‘Green River’ at 50 – Our Essential Guide to Early CCR.

Sign up for the Roaddude Newsletter to be notified of new pieces on the food, music, and culture of Cajun Country.

 

#atchafalayabasin #bayoucountry #cajuncountry #ccr #greenriver #actuallyincalitho #ha #runningthelevee #louisianasunset #sunsetonthebayou #igerslouisiana #southofi10 #takemebackdown #coolwater #graveltravel #creedenceclearwaterrevival #backroads #southernlouisiana #cajun #swamplife #adventurerig #offroadtrailer #lifeontheroad #homeonwheels #wanderingphotographers #wanderingsoul #travelphotographer #travellife #nomadiclife #nomadlifestyle

Filed Under: music, offgrid, photography, travel, vanlife Tagged With: atchafalaya, atchalafaya basin, bayou, boudin, cajun country, charenton, delcambre, kaplan, lake fausse pointe, levee, louisiana, south of I-10, spillway, swamp, travel photography

DESERT LIFE IS THE RIGHT LIFE

by Road

DESERT LIFE IS THE RIGHT LIFE…

off-road trailer with expansive awning and rooftop tent with ebike nearby in sandy beach setting
Base Camp Setup – PINS Jan 2019

though I’m digging having the Maine Coast Life in-winter-with-fam be the right life while preparing for Desert Life.

Then Desert Life; that’s the one I’m after.

I might fit in some Gulf of Mexico Life (this image is on the Gulf) and some Bayou Life. Maybe a little Ozark Life and some upper Rio Grande in New Mexico Life.  Most will have to wait, though, or be brief as all get out.

My main push is getting ready for Desert Life in the Trans-Pecos. I may be on the road a year this time, who knows. I need to be prepared and ready for a variety of scenarios.

Cactus Capital of Texas

I’m starting in Sanderson, seat of Terrell County. Terrell County has a population density of half a person per square mile, one of the most sparse in all of Texas.

I can vouch when I’m there all of me will be in the same square mile. My mind is already there.

Sanderson and Terrell County is the setting for No Country for Old Men, Cormac McCarthy’s great novel and Academy Award winning film by the same name. The area is sparse, vast, rich with history and holds tremendous appeal for me.

Sanderson is the cactus capital of Texas, too. I hope to embellish local walls with murals of cactus using my painting skills, desert research and over 1,000 images made during last spring’s record Chihuahuan Desert bloom.

Near the eastern edge of the Chihuahuan Desert, Sanderson is perfectly suited as starting point for deeper exploration of my favorite part of North America.

I’m anxious to get painting, researching the Trans-Pecos more in depth, using new gear for recording bats—Sanderson has a great colony not far from Desert Air Motel–and writing more about the most diverse, unique and historical desert region in the Western Hemisphere.

Desert life is the right life right now for me.

It all starts in Sanderson.

 

#itallstartsinsanderson #sanderson #sandersontexas #chihuahuandesert #borderlands #padreisland #desertlife #beachlife #adventurerig #offroadtrailer #xventure #xventurefamily #goxventure #xventurersunite #desertair #batsofsanderson #terrellcounty #lifeinthedesert #thetowntoomeanforbean #bigbend #transpecos #ilovethedesert #myoutdoorlife #nomadic #nomadiclife #lifeontheroad #overlanding #overlandrig #bibe #thedesertiscalling

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: cactus capital, chihuahuan desert, desert life, right life, sanderson, texas

ROOM WITH A VIEW

by Road

More and more backcountry camping spots are discouraging or forbidding the digging of catholes. FTWDK, catholes are for squatting over. They should be at *least* six inches deep, seventy-five feet from any trail, and at least two-hundred feet away from any water or camp.

Social media has increased the visitation to backcountry and off-grid places at a rate seven times the increase in population. SEVEN TIMES, according to a study done in Seattle about Mt Rainier NP.

Contrary to what some overland sites preach, it is NOT the ‘increase in population, so get used to it, it’s inevitable’ type mentality we should believe.

Many folks that go to a specific spot they’ve seen online or read about on a forum giving exact coordinates are far from prepared. Even those who call themselves overlanders.

Over the last few years I’ve been to dozens of remote sites down single lane dirt roads, miles from any pavement. Some have a toilet building of some sort within walking distance or near the beginning of the road. Most don’t.

I’ve seen human waste and desert blossoms (used toilet paper stuck to the ground or cacti) in almost every spot. Often within a 15-20’ radius of camp where people cook and sit by a fire. Often WITHIN SIGHT of the composting toilet building set up to reduce this kind of humanshit. Multiple piles. Multiple blossoms.

If you’re going to some ‘for the gram’ type spot, whether camping overnight or day-hiking, be prepared. Prepared to pack out what you brought in. You should not have to leave anything behind.

The best and most compostable solution is to make your own composting bucket. You can get comfortable seats that snap right on.

The trick to eliminating odor and being able to use the bucket for a month or more before emptying is keeping solids and liquids separate. Use peat moss or coco fiber for solids. Use a jug for liquids. Empty liquid soap dispensers work well; just cut out the inner spout. Use ziplocks for used paper or use toilet paper meant for Marine, RV, or septic systems if putting it in the bucket. Pack it all back out. Dispose of it in proper fashion.

It’s not that difficult. It doesn’t stink. It’s not inconvenient.

Just do it. If you can’t or won’t do it, don’t go.

Here’s how to put together A Simple Composting Toilet.

 

@roaddude
@leavenotrace
@treadlightlyteam
@americanadventurist
@expeditionportal
@overlandbound
#roomwithaview #packitinpackitout #vanlife #nocatholes #desertblossoms #adventure #offgrid #solotravel #nomadlife #groover #imtiredofthisshit #beprepared

Filed Under: bathroom, business, camping, gear, offgrid, vanlife Tagged With: back country, bathroom, coco fiber, compost bucket, composting toilet, off-grid, peat moss

SHORE CAMPING & WASTE WATER

by Road

View of camp from the lake
View of camp from a New Hampshire lake

Hard to tell with the zoom of the phone cam foreshortening things, though camp isn’t quite as close to shore as it appears.

Still, too close to dump grey water from the sink, so I walk it up a good ways. Then it has far more earth to filter through before getting to the lake.

From habit and practice my grey water is basically clean rinse water. My dishes, pans, and all cooking utensils are wiped clean before washing so there is no food matter in my rinse water.

It’s easier than it sounds once in the habit. If you do end up with food particles in your rinse water, strain it before dumping. Animals don’t need it and you don’t want animals attracted near camp.

Wash Water: I make a very small amount, just a cup or two, with a couple drops of biodegradable soap in a wide mug, just big enough to hold a 3M sponge. I clean everything with the sponge over an empty tub. I don’t make a whole tub of wash water and another of rinse water. Too wasteful and unnecessary. The small mug of wash water is usually empty by the time I’m done with dishes.


For notes on what soaps and wetwipes I use when traveling and in camp, as well as what to do when there are no toilet facilities, check my Health and Sanitation page.

Once everything is washed, it all gets rinsed under a trickle from the tap. That gets caught by the tub.

No food particles, little to no soap bubbles; virtually clear rinse water. That water stays in the sink for quick rinse after messing with gear or firewood or for a quick wipe of the counter.

When the sink nears full, which is often only after a few days, I’ll walk it up and away from a shore a good ways to dump it.

Might not think so, but even biodegradable soaps take a while to break down and will accumulate in bodies of water, altering the normal balance.

Around bodies of water popular with campers, hikers, and small boats, that accumulation can be significant.

As will the amount of urine seeping into the lake from folks peeing in the woods too close to shore. Might not think this matters either, but it does. The sheer number of campers and hikers throughout a year can alter the ph of the water, allowing and encouraging different plant life and algae bloom.

Do I adhere religiously to all the above?

Nope, I’m not perfect at it. Though I keep it in mind and am getting better every day at evolving my routine and making it an easier part of my daily camp life.

Filed Under: camping Tagged With: best practices, grey water, shore camping, waste water

LONGER THAN A MEMORY

by Road

Icy road east of Boise City Okalahoma
US 412 East, Boise City, Oklahoma
There's a road, in Oklahoma 
Straighter than a preacher
Longer than a memory
And it goes, forever onward
Been a good teacher
For a lot of country boys like me

~ Steve Earle, Nowhere Road

I need to dig into my files to see when I made this image. Fifteen or more years ago now, I’m sure. It was after a huge blizzard turned ice storm in the peculiar part of Oklahoma where the panhandle touches four other states.

I was running blind with two lady truckers as we wound our way down through darkness in Colorado, trying to get through on any road still open in the storm.

Chatter on the CB told us the interstate ahead was fouled with jack-knifed trailers and four-wheelers sliding into each other with cars scattered like matchsticks.

I found a way around and led our little convoy over to La Junta and Lamar and then south towards Oklahoma. We were the only ones out as the blizzard howled on.

‘Driving by Braille!” one called out on the radio. That’s when you can’t see the road or where the lanes are, so depend on rumble strips to let you know you’re at the edge.

We hit the two lane, roaring through intersections in the dark, our headlights the only competition to the one or two streetlights in small towns covered in snow. I asked one of the lady drivers to get her truck out front and run lead. The snow was getting too deep for my van to plow through so I brought up the rear.

She couldn’t see on one windy turn and tapped her brakes, red brake lights magnified by falling flakes. The gal behind her, in front of me, slammed on hers to the sudden light, her trailer sliding half sideways and back. I hit mine too, counter steering my fishtail just like I knew what I was doing, sliding within inches of kissing the ass of that trailer.

We made it down to the big Love’s truck stop the far edge of Boise City sometime after midnight and all huddled into a booth to warm up, amazed we’d made it through and happy to lay eyes on each other after only meeting on the radio.

I made this image the next morning as I headed out on US 412 east of Boise City, sun shining and road glistening.

That’s a fifty mile long sheet of rugged hard ice.

Longer than a memory, this image takes me right back there every time I see it.

 

#longerthanamemory #iceroad #oklahomawinter #lonenomad #nomadlife #iceroadtrucker #straighterthanapreacher #steveearle #nowhereroad #ladytrucker #adventureawaits #roadstories #goneoutdoors #landscapephotography #onsomeadventure #myoutdoorlife #letsgetlost #blackandwhiteart #blancetnoir #artphoto 

 

Filed Under: photography, travel, vanlife Tagged With: blizzard, boise city, ice storm, lady truckers, landscape photography, nowhere road, oklahoma, photography, steve earle, travel, vanlife

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Next Page »

It’s Mask Time In America

Your order helps us donate more masks to communities in need.

“Ordering again, because your masks are the very best.” Jason M. Lincoln NE

FOR SALE: Fujifilm X100F Digital Camera Kit

“Ohh…you make high end masks. These are VERY nice!” ~ Katy D, Maine

EVERY ORDER includes sample pkg of filter materials, including 3 layer N95 MERV 16 Certified material.

sample package of a variety of filter materials for Roaddude Premium Face Masks
Sample package of filter materials

“I wear my masks for 8.5 hours at work. They are comfortable all day and don’t get damp or itchy. I appreciate the adjustable ear loops, too!“ ~ Emily, Miss Portland Diner

eGift Cards from Roaddude Premium Face Masks
eGift Cards: Keep & Use, Print & Give, or Email as Gifts

U.S. could face months of virus shortages among global competition. – Politico

FREE SHIPPING Over $60.00


FAQ
Where are face masks required?
Where do you donate masks?
How can I help more directly?
How do I care for my masks?
What materials are used?
How do face masks work?
Where can I order face masks?
This design! Are you an engineer?


To help more directly with our mask donation efforts:

Face mask donations lined up for finishing with ear loops, bagging, and shipping

We accept disposable gloves, disposable masks, and hand sanitizer to send with face mask donations. Please contact me for details.

You can also Make a Donation. All contributions go directly towards materials and shipping costs for masks as well purchasing the items mentioned above to include in mask donation packages.
~ Thank you!


Family of four wearing Roaddude cloth face masks.

“We love them and wear them everyday – the masks are comfortable, breathable and easily adjustable. We’ll be ordering more soon.” ~ Carolyn


Kudos from Customers:

“The best design I’ve seen.” ~ Richard F, California

“We love your masks and use them all the time! They are the best fit from different types we tried. I was actually thinking of ordering more :)” ~BW, Cambridge MA

“We really love them. The quality is amazing and they are comfortable. Will be great for hiking and work.” ~ Beckie G, SW Harbor

“Both my husband and I love the masks. Fit very well and stay in place when talking.” ~ Susan W, Livermore Falls

“The masks arrived today! Thanks so much. They are terrific! Best fit, most comfortable, most stylish of any I have worn or seen.“ ~ Elaine J, SW Harbor

“Excellent mask! Highest quality and fit. Find it very comfortable and breathable. Much better design than the pleated style. If you care, please wear!” ~ Jane W, Scarborough

“Outstanding quality comfort and fit. These are as good if not better than pictured on the web. Worth the wait and cost. I would buy again. Have recommended you already. Five star ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ rating!” ~Janet, Rockport

“Got ‘em!!! Arrived today and they are impressive.” ~ Bob B, Maine

“Thank you so much for the quality masks. The fit is great. Good work!” ~Lynn B, Maine

“Really quite nice and much needed!” ~Kathy H, Maine

“That’s nice, dear.” ~Ma


Help Roaddude Tell More Stories
& Make More Masks


THE BIG PAUSE of 2020

ROADDUDE.COM is usually about one man’s travels and photography around North America.

During The Big Pause of 2020, however, it is about making quality cloth & fabric face masks and face coverings for the public. Every mask purchased enables more to be made for donations.

Stay safe, stay clean, stay healthy!

Thank you for your orders and support!

Roaddude.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and other affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to sites like Amazon.com and Adorama Photo.

Where Is Road?

Back Cove, Maine, working on:

  • – Premium Face Masks
  • – portfolio & prints
  • – prep for painting desert mural
  • – South of I-10, Another America
  • – Roaddude Food Cookbook
  • – improving storage functionality in van
  • – website improvements
  • – my tan
  • I hear it’s autumn. Is that true?

Recent Posts

  • It’s Mask Time In America
  • Adventure Rig: Coming Into Its Own . . .
  • Morning Breakfast Muffins
  • DARK SKY BONANZA
  • RED CURRY LENTILS w/ SWEET POTATOES & SPINACH

Links

Links to various things I mention in posts and on insta: linktr.ee/roaddude

…

Tags

astrophotography big bend books boots borderlands camp cooking canoe chihuahuan desert cincinnati compass desert life favorite spots gear gloves great blue heron greek chili Harold Gatty hats hitch hornbeck hornbeck boats landscape photography local local eats logo map milky way nature photography nomad nomad canoe off-grid offgrid photography receiver recipes recovery reflections roadrunner skyline star chaser Tom Brown Jr tracking tradition travel vanlife

…

Advert: Recovery Gear | Digital Cameras
  • email
  • insta
  • tumblr

Content & Images © Roaddude, All Rights Reserved 2016 –2021