Good Eats

As some of you know, I'm into whole, natural foods.

It'll be fun to find all the cool cafes and restaurants across America. I'm thinking I'll have better luck in big cities and college towns. But you never know!

Sunday morning in downtown Spokane I got an organic latte from Natural Start Bakery & Espresso – a cafe with wi-fi that caters to students attending Gonzaga University.

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For lunch, an "everything but the kitchen sink" omelet at Huckleberry's Natural Market, a chain with locations in eastern Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana.

There, I tried yerba mate tea for the first time, with organic milk and raw honey. It smells like horses and hemp; I love it!

May 12, 2009

For the past several days  I've been staying in Elk, Wash., near Rand and Becky Miller (pictured below, right) and four of their eight kids – along with other extended family, friends, nine Arabian horses, three dogs, four cats and a small batch of chickens!

The Millers are leaving at the end of the month for a 4 1/2-month trip to Meuselbach, Germany.
They've got a recording studio there and for years have been creating contemporary Christian music with and for the youth of Eastern Europe — a population they feel has been neglected by other Christian evangelists. 

Becky was in Berlin in 1989 when the wall dividing communist and free Germany was torn down. She is still impacted by what she saw.
On the west side, "There were neon lights, flowers in buckets. Everyone was wearing Nikes. People were moving quickly. I can't remember one person wearing a coat," she recalls.Becky
Rand
"But on the east side,
everyone was wearing coats, dark wool coats… There was not one building painted. The walls were so worn down. The streets were completely potholed."

Becky believes spiritual and cultural echoes of that divide remain to this day.

To hear some of the music the family has created, check out:

www.myspace.com/blacktaxxi

www.myspace.com/loveshopefulsorrow

Becky paints, too!
www.arabianart.net

The Ranch – a second (and sometimes third) chance at recovery

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Described by friends as an "old hippie who got saved," Adrian Simila runs The Ranch, a men's recovery center just north of Spokane, Wash.

About 50 men, most of whom were formerly homeless, reside there on more than 20 acres, maintaining the property, caring for livestock and running a community food bank and other programs.
Housing is offered to anyone, with few restrictions, says President Darrow Burke. There is a heavy emphasis on discipleship programs for the residents, he says.

"We have a lot of guys who (initially) only stay a couple months," Burke tells me. "A lot of the time, they come back."

DouglasBrian Douglas (pictured left) graduated from a similar program 10 years ago, then met Simila.
Now he works at a lumber mill in Idaho and lives at The Ranch part time to preach and help out.
In the beginning, "I did not want to be saved. In fact I didn't want anything to do with God, because I was raised in such a religious family," he says.

Adrian Simila's wife and Ranch secretary, Janis Simila Janis(pictured lower right), says funding for the ministry, launched in the mid-90s, has been down along with the economy. Expenses run about $5,000 per month, with an additional $1,000 per month needed for a newer women's facility located nearby.
"It's quite an interesting life, living in community here as long as we have," she says.
"We keep going by God's grace. It takes a lot of wisdom."

Burke was nice enough to show me around on Friday and hook me up with some salad from the food bank.

Here he's standing in front of a building that will hold classrooms, bathrooms and a sanctuary when needed money comes in to finish it.

Darrow building

This 1973 International Harvester bus is one of a motley fleet The Ranch has acquired over the years for outreach at events, such as barter fairs, says Burke.    

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(The white bus in the background has been converted to run on propane!)

Patriotism abounds (in the little things)

This morning I missed a flagpole gathering in Deer Park for the National Day of Prayer. I heard there were lots of people there.
Honestly, after so many days of cleaning, packing, planning and driving, I'm content to be parked down a winding dirt road, away from everything.
This afternoon, while I was hanging out with the folks I'm staying with, a U.S. Census Bureau worker came by to inquire about the number of residences here. Wonder if he counted my RV?

Old cars and politics…

The highlight of my stop in Ritzville was talking to the guys outside Tracy Jirava's auto shop. I stopped to look at a 1989 Camaro with its guts hanging out. (I own a third-gen. Camaro and have definitely been there!)

The car belongs to 19-year-old Eric Hille.

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"It's probably the most boring town you're ever gonna find," he says of Ritzville. But he concedes it's a good place to be American, though the  current state of our economy "is kind of ridiculous."
"I hope Obama fixes it."

Also outside the shop was retired World War II veteran and Ritzville City Council member Barney Streeter, 85.

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Serving in the sixth infantry division of the U.S. Army, Streeter spent time on the ground in North Africa and in Italy, including "five months of hell" on a beach in  Anzio.

"I fought for that old flag and I'm still proud," he says.

(Sadly, I'm not sure he'll be checkin' out my blog. "I'm old-fashioned. I don't go on the Internet," he tells me.)

Ritzville, Wash. May 5

 For picturesque Americana, you've come to the right place.

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Just make sure you can handle the wind!

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Here's a "Where's Waldo" shot for you guys:

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Can you spot my RV?

What about all the flags?

They're part of a 'just 'cause' program that runs May through September, explains Mary Graves,IMG_0070 Ritzville Chamber of Commerce administrator.

Graves and her husband, Terry Kaas, moved from Bremerton, Wash. to this town of less than 2,000 residents, three years ago. Their goal was to retire, but they ended up taking jobs in the community. 

A former marketing professional, Graves sees a future of increased tourism for Ritzville due to its proximity to Interstate 90 and role as eastern Washington's wheat and grain transport hub.

"I think it is on the verge of itself. I think in the next few years it's just going to blossom," she says.

First day on the Road – May 4, 2009

I've headed east on Interstate 90! Stopped in Ellensburg to get gas, then at the Ginkgo Petrified Forest trail, just outside Vantage. By the time I finished my peanut butter sandwich, we were the only ones there. I love that.

We walked the trail of petrified wood stumps (elm was the most beautiful, I thought,) and ventured out on the hiking trail for a little bit to smell flowers and herbs and listen to the light rain soak the parched, volcanic earth.

Armani is being a really good girl. I think she will do fine on this trip. She takes her guarding job very seriously, but lets people and cars go by at a safe distance without barking. And she LOVES the RV. Everything in it works pretty well — a few scars and leaks — but that just makes us feel well-traveled, even at this early phase.
At 8 – 9 miles per gallon with a full load and moderate wind, we are taking it easy! I figure it may cost me $75 in gas just to get to Spokane, so why rush things?

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The rain and all the miles were making me sleepy, so we found a rest stop to chill at for the night. Listened to the Tom Petty Ezra gave me on the way. I will stop in Ritzville tomorrow for gas and breakfast and then on to Spokane and Elk!

About to leave

I’m just days away from hitting the road.

It’s taken a lot of work and planning and there is still more to be done! But I am so excited. This will be an amazing adventure and an important project — documenting the state of patriotism around the U.S. and taking a snapshot look at certain subcultures: newspapers, churches and Indian reservations. It will also be a chance for you to see how I do living frugally in my small, mobile home. I’ll include some juicy tidbits in the “diary” category.

Please message me with suggestions of places to park or visit, as well as topics to photograph and write about!

Sharon