I have done less traveling in the United States than most of the guys, although I dare say I have done more international travel than any of them. According to the guys' rules, to be able to count a state (or country for that matter), airport-only stops do not count (which is a reasonable disqualification). For me, the no-airport-only rule disqualifies the states of Arizona, Colorado and Michigan, as well as the countries of Japan and South Korea. I have seen the inside of the airports in Denver, Phoenix, Detroit, Tokyo, Osaka and Seoul, but never left the airport grounds so can't count them.
Going into this trip, I had been to 27 states. I have also been to 16 countries. The states are too numerous to list, but the countries I have been to are:
- United States
- Canada
- England
- France
- Belgium
- Luxembourg
- Netherlands
- Switzerland
- Liechtenstein
- Belgium
- Austria
- Hungary (behind the Iron Curtain in 1985)
- West Germany (when there was a West Germany in 1985)
- East Germany (travelled through on a train between Cologne and West Berlin, but the machine gun toting guards with dog teams searching the train grant me the "i'm claiming this one anyway" privilege)
- Greece
- The Philippines
I have looked into Italy from halfway up the Matterhorn in Switzerland, but never actually set foot in it. As close as we live to Mexico and the Caribbean nations, I have never been to any. Sadly, all non-US travel was before my geocaching days, so my geocaching country count remains one.
Back to the subject at hand... US states. The Dakotas trip added six states to my tally: Colorado (non-airport), Nebraska, South Dakota, Montana, North Dakota and Minnesota, bringing my total to a modest 33 out of 50.
States remaining to be conquered (17 in number) are:
New England (1) - Maine. The final northeastern frontier. Beautiful.
The Southeast (3) - Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee. Tennessee for some Civil War sites, or music and barbecue, but other than that...
New England (1) - Maine. The final northeastern frontier. Beautiful.
The Southeast (3) - Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee. Tennessee for some Civil War sites, or music and barbecue, but other than that...
Pacific Northwest (4) - Washington, Oregon, Alaska and Idaho. I was so close to Idaho on my Park City, Utah business trip, but was a couple hours of daylight short of being able to bag this on the same geocaching run that got me Wyoming. I still regret the "so close but so far" feeling on Idaho. I have a brother in law who lives in Portland, and I keep thinking that while he is still out there the family ought to visit...
Southwest (3) - Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico. Never having been to this part of the country, I am nonetheless fascinated by Navajo culture and mythology. As an aside, anyone interested in a good mystery novel with lots of character should dive into anything by the late Tony Hillerman...My wife has been here on a couple of occasions, and raves about it. Overall, this area is very high on my "must see" list. And there is, of course, the Grand Canyon, which I have only seen from 35,000 feet in an airplane.
Mid-South (3) - I'm not exactly sure how to classify this area, but I am putting Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Kansas into it. General definition, I guess, is north of Texas... No real reason to go to any of these places, but Kansas has a business connection, so maybe someday I will end up there.
Upper Midwest (3) - Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin. Difficult; I am not sure why I would ever be here, and doubt that I would ever plan a trip, but who knows. Business travel to Detroit is the most likely possibility I guess.
So that's where I stand. The geocaching states "to do" list stands at a much more imposing 32, but that is the subject for another post.
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