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Image by U.S. Department of Defense Current Photos
A Belgian Air Component F-16 Fighting Falcon aircraft moves into place to be refueled by a U.S. Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker from the 340th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron while flying over Afghanistan April 8, 2011, in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. (DoD photo by Master Sgt. Adrian Cadiz, U.S. Air Force/Released)
Cádiz, vista desde San Carlos

Image by Biblioteca Nacional de España
Autor: Hauser y Menet (Madrid)
Fecha: 1892
Signatura 17/150/1/48
Consulta el registro bibliográfico en la Biblioteca Digital Hispánica
U.S. Route 66 Trip

Image by “Caveman Chuck” Coker
This weekend Anthony, Rose, and I drove U.S. Route 66 from the Wigwam Motel in Rialto, California to the Colorado River. We returned home on Amboy Road, California State Route 62 and Interstate 10.
Side Trips and Other Adventures
Note 1: In Hesperia we took a wrong turn and went through side streets to get to Victorville. We’ve been over Interstate 15—literally, hundreds of times—so instead of retracing our steps back to Route 66, we just enjoyed our unexpected adventure until we reached Interstate 15 again.
Note 2: When we got to Ludlow we drove around a bit and looked at ruins, including the Ludlow Mercantile building. It was built in 1908 using reinforced concrete.
Note 3: Goffs is on the pre-1931 alignment of Route 66. Its was called Blake between 1893 and 1902. I’ve driven through Goffs numerous times, but I never stopped. This trip, I stopped to take a photo and discovered the school house, now a museum of the region’s mining history. Be sure to see it.
Note 4: This is the 1931 Alignment of Route 66. We use this road quite often and didn’t see anything new and exciting this trip. We drove it anyway just because we were doing Route 66.
Note 5: Ever since I started taking the "Amboy Route," I’ve always wondered what is at Danby. We went out there and found abandoned buildings and mining structures. Real abandoned things, not tourist things. We almost got stuck in the sand.
Note 6: Ever since I started taking the "Amboy Route," I’ve always wondered what is at Cadiz. We went a little bit farther than the Cadiz/BNSF railroad crossing. We didn’t find much, it looked like some kind of tree farming.
Note 7: Here we made a little side trip to photograph two-bladed windmills per a request from someone. Anthony and Rose had never been out in the midst of the windmills before. We got stuck in the sand, but I was able to get us out.
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