Tags
anniversary, best burger ever, Fast Food, honeymoon, humor, In-N-Out, road trip, Texas, Whataburger
[My hilarious blogging friend, Brian Lageose, wrote about epic Texas road tripping here, and it reminded me of my honeymoon.]
A long time ago in a galaxy state far, far away…
Okay, it was actually Texas in the eighties, and my sister and I were on our honeymoon. The Hub and I had just gotten married, and my sister and her husband recently eloped, but none of us had any money. Her new husband had to get back to work, and the Hub flew back to Virginia, where classes were about to start with him as newly-minted professor. My sister had some vacation time, so when she offered to help me drive my car from my parents’ house in California to my new home in Virginia, we decided it was as close as either of us was likely to get to an actual honeymoon.
It was January, and we were starting from Los Angeles, so we decided to drive what was left of old Route 66.

Route 66—”Main Street of America”, “Will Rogers Highway”, or simply “The Mother Road”—was commissioned in 1926 and finally decommissioned in 1985. It stretched from the Pacific Ocean’s Santa Monica Pier in California to Chicago’s Lake Shore Drive on Lake Michigan. For half a century, Route 66 meant fast food, faster cars, and the fastest route to California for everyone from migrants fleeing the Dust Bowl and depression to young families bound for Disneyland. [Image credit: Route 66 (nostalgic Version) by jonathan nickens]
We went first to the Grand Canyon, where we bought postcards for our husbands that said, “Having a wonderful honeymoon. Wish you were here.” But we didn’t stay long, because:
- The famous mule ride tours cost more than both our wedding dresses put together. [NOTE: not a high bar…]
- I thought a successful marriage meant I should hang out in the same state as my husband, a delusion which my sister was incredibly nice about
not murdering me in my sleep for repeating ad nauseamsupporting. [Over the years, the Hub and I have refined this to aruleguidelinesuggestion that we try to tell each other which state and/or country we are each in, which we credit for a long marriage that has not (yet anyway) involved homicide charges.] - We were on a
fast-foodresearch mission to determine which was superior— California’s iconic In-N-Out Burger or Texas’ Whataburger. Don’t laugh: it was a long time ago, and there weren’t nearly so many of either restaurant (plus we had never even heard of Shake Shack or Five Guys).
As Californians, we had, of course, already done epic research into In-N-Out, and were pretty sure that Texas wouldn’t be able to compete. To this day, I don’t know the answer. That’s because shortly after we crossed the border from New Mexico into Texas, we noticed a police car speeding down the freeway from the opposite direction, lights and siren flashing. To our amazement, it pulled level with us, made a U-turn cut across the divider to come up behind my little car, then pulled us over and proceeded to issue a speeding ticket.
We were furious. Not because we weren’t speeding—odds are that we were, but it was Texas (and we’d been driving in a straight line for hours with every other car on the road passing us like we were standing still)—but because there was absolutely no way that officer could possibly have clocked us. He took my drivers license and informed me that the ticket would be a suspiciously round $100**.
**[NOTE for perspective: in 2019 dollars, that $100 is approximately equal to all the spare cash you have in the world until next payday, minus $20 and the potential refund for four wedding present place settings of Noritake china that you intend to return to Macys if you think your mother won’t find out.]
“No. Friggin. Way,” I assured my sister. Sure I was driving a car full of brand new wedding presents, but in the 1980s that meant I was transporting several fondue sets, a disturbing number of macrame plant holders, some old wine bottles artistically melted into ashtrays, a silver-plated toast rack, and a few items that puzzled us for decades (such as the wooden mallet with the intricately-carved wooden rings which I assumed was some sort of marital-aid but eventually discovered to be a cocoa-frother). None of them was going to fetch the $100 needed to ransom my drivers license or keep my car insurance rates from taking a disastrous leap, and I was pretty sure that sheriff wouldn’t take the new Cuisinart or the three-tier folding silver cake server in trade either. No, I would have to fight this outrage myself—for truth, justice, the American Way, and to have enough money left for Whataburgers research.
The sheriff wasn’t impressed, but told me to follow him back to town where he made a phone call to tell the local judge we’d requested a hearing. As we waited, we asked if there was a Whataburger in town, but he said he’d never heard of them. At last, the judge was ready for us and the sheriff ushered us into the courtroom, conveniently located across the hall from his office (which also appeared to double as his house). He introduced us to the judge—his wife. My sister and I looked at each other, paid the $100, and drove without stopping until we were out of Texas.
Three things did come out of that trip through Texas. Somehow that “speeding” ticket/tax-on-having-a-California-license-plate-in-Texas never showed up on my record or affected my insurance rates. My quest for the ultimate roadtrip burger has successfully continued over the years—BurgerMaster!—without (so far) any unfortunate cardiac-related incidents. And The Hub and I finally took a real honeymoon which only involved a minimal amount of jail time, but that’s for another blog.
But I’ll probably never know about Whataburgers vs In-N-Out.

BurgerMaster, Bellevue Washington. [moans]
What’s your best roadtrip food experience? Worst roadtrip legal encounter?
USD100 is a huge fine, Barb. Corruption is clearly alive and well in Texas [or was at that time]. Maybe that is why the South Africans like to go there [smile]
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You really have to admire the efficiency of that little operation though. They probably supported themselves and their entire town on the proceeds of their “tax” in out of state license plates.
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Road trips in England? Are you mad? That’s crazy like trying to make polite conversation with your proctologist and asking if he’s seen the latest Star Wars only to be told with a disconcerting echo that given what he’s found so far he may well catch s glimpse soon and it might explain the grommets. I did once try and drive from Southampton to Birmingham but eventually I was parolled near Oxford on the A34 when my family insisted I didn’t miss another of my father’s triannual poetry recitals
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This comment! Where to start… In the first place, I suppose it’s with my most sincerely heartfelt gratitude that I’ve never had occasion to engage a proctologist on the subject during working hours.
Second, of course, is that I grew up in California, where our birthright includes 24/7 access to parking, swimming pools, and our own set of car keys the day we turn sixteen. It never seemed the least bit weird to tell people my son was going to “nearby” University in Montana—and then hop in the car for the 9-hour drive to visit him for the weekend. (LOTS of great roadfood along the way…)
We think it’s cute how close stuff is here in the UK, and are constantly amazed by how few people know they can drive there.
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Does Route 66 really not exist any more? How do you decommission such a long route? How do people get to California now?
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By the time we were trying to drive it, most of Route 66 had been absorbed into a growing interstate freeway network, including the preferred if supremely boring I-80 route. Vintage corvettes, old gas stations, the Wigwam Motels, and the rest of it are mostly gone. And to be honest, most people just want to reach their destination as fast as possible, so an eight-lane freeway with regular rest stops boasting Starbucks, McDonalds, and relatively-expensive gas sounds better than a twisty two-lane road where you’re never quite sure whether you’ll make it to the next gas station.
I would have liked to stay in a Wigwam Motel though…
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We went on Route 66, stopped in Kingdton, and stayed at a creepy run down hotel, where the hotel manager was meditating on a mattress in the office. Very weird. My most memorable road trip, however was from Baden-Baden, Germany to Venice, and we managed to cross the borders without passports only official Air Force papers, and almost ran out of gas on the Autobahn. That was a trip to remember!!!
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Good times!
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Texas is a lot like the state I grew up in – Nevada. There are certain rural areas where you don’t really want to stop and where the law pretty much does as they like! Great story – I’m glad you survived.
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It really was a wonderful honeymoon!
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Unforgettable, for sure!
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Oh gosh Barb… LOL. I’m not sure it was such a good idea for me to read this in the circumstance… But it sure was funny. Mega hugs.
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Oh no Teagan! I can’t believe I posted that right before your trip.
It reminds me of the international flight I took years ago, back when a flight showed everyone the same move. The first movie up was Tom Hanks in Cast Away—which begins with epic scene where his plane crashes into the ocean.) After a waterlogged Tom barely makes it to his island, the Captain announced that the movie was going to be stopped because the plane was heading for “unexpected turbulence”. People weren’t sure whether to laugh or cry, so there was a lot of both.
But we did make it, thanks to great flight crew and even greater alcohol stocks. You’ll make it too, although hopefully with less alcohol consumption. Just in case, you might want to consider a travel companion:
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Wilson-Cast-Away-Replica-Volleyball/27104384
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You were flying with an airline that was showing an airplane crash movie? Wow! (I’m a pilot.)
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I’m not sure who had the movie-choice job back in the day, but—unless their goal was a spike in alcohol unit consumption—this was pretty much a fail!
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Barb, thank you so much for the kind mention! Much appreciated.
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Thank YOU for the hilarious inspiration!
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Oh my goodness! You’ve opened a can of memories. I’m going to give them a good think and see if I can pare down the fiasco’s, er, stories on those trips. I’ve seen parts of route 66 and even bought some Route 66 fabric in Winslow Arizona which is trying to stay alive with a few tourists. I’ve seen that TeePee Motel. On the way to Holbrook. I don’t know that I have ever thought about the food though. I usually traveled with sandwiches or something equally as cheap and distasteful. Loved reading this and I know about driving through Texas and other states where small town officers collect their out of state taxes. Geoff’s comment made me laugh out loud too. This was hilarious.
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Loved this, Barb! My choice is In n Out Burgers, but I think it’s a personal preference and not a generalization. We did the same trip as you did, including the mule ride (we brought a little money but that cleaned us out and we slept four in a one bed that night. Would love to go back and do Route 66 again!
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I remember a short (UK) road trip back from seeing family one New Year. I’d had car trouble on the way up and had dismantled the shroud that covers the steering column in an attempt to get my light stalk-switch working, to no avail. So I travelled back in daylight, negating the need for lights, leaving it all dismantled for easier fixing back home. A police 4×4 passed me and I noticed the officer in the passenger seat having a look down into my car. They pulled me over. They thought that the state of my steering column suggested the car had been hotwired and stolen. I could easily prove the car was mine, but was nonetheless nervous as it stank of alcohol. A bottle of bubbly had fizzed out and leaked everywhere on the journey up
I always loved the idea of doing Route 66, didn’t realise it was no longer as such.
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