Friday 12/18
Novato, CA to Winnemucca, NV 368 miles
Our original plan was to leave at 0-dark o’clock on Saturday morning but the rain started earlier on Friday than expected so Bob came home and we were able to leave Friday afternoon. We made it all the way to Winnemucca for a late dinner. Traffic from Vacaville through Roseville was horrible but we managed to make really good time after that.
We did most of the organizing and packing on Thursday night. #ListMaking:

Checking into the Town House motel in Winnemucca (our third or fourth visit), we were distressed to hear that our favorite Basque restaurant, Ormachea’s, had closed in November. Booooo. So the Martin Hotel, the other Basque restaurant in town — and the only non-chain, non-casino place to eat — was where we headed. It was full of locals, as usual, most in cowboy hats, some in sleeveless dresses (35* and snow on the ground….wtf? ), some in Christmas finery. Pretty loud and noisy but we were happy. Bob had ribeye with all the sides and I had soup and salad and sides plus a few bites of his steak. House wine (included) is always surprisingly good at Basque places. We had a cocktail at the bar before we left: Chivas for Bob, Picon punch for me (a splash of grenadine, bitters, club soda and a splash of brandy – I always ask for more club soda). We fell into bed because we have another long day of driving on Saturday.
Saturday 12/19
Winnemucca, NV to West Yellowstone, MT 560 miles
We were at the counter at The Griddle at 6:05a. Eggs, Canadian bacon, hash browns and rye toast for Bob and oatmeal with walnuts and cinnamon for me. Good coffee so I got one to go. Leaving Winnemucca, very dark and cold:

Views of the morning:
Except for a gas and potty stop or two we kept going til lunch in Pocatello. On Yelp we found an Italian restaurant downtown, Villanos. The downtown area was very depressed and very depressing. We shared a caprese salad that was really good with cherry tomatoes. Bob had baked chicken with penne that he loved. I ordered a small pizza with artichoke hearts and mushrooms that tasted tinny. The excellent marinara sauce on Bob’s dish didn’t make it onto the pizza for some reason. Had a couple of bites and asked for a box for the rest because I didn’t want to hurt their feelings. But I threw it away at the next gas stop.
We saw a coyote! And out of the blue Bob said, “I have absolutely no stress.”
And. Then.
We got gas in Ashton, ID at 4:11, about 60 miles from West Yellowstone, MT where we decided to stay for the night. Those last 60 miles were hairy. It was snowing hard and getting dark fast. Neither of us had been on that road before and tons of traffic was coming towards us, down from Montana. The road was completely covered in snow. It was a long, slow 90 minutes!!
The Best Western Desert Inn was between a bar, Bullwinkles, and the Spitting Otter Pub so we didn’t have to drive again til morning. We got a really nice room for $89. It was snowing hard!

Had cocktails in Bullwinkles and watched it snow. Bob told the bartender that I like my martini really dirty and it was excellent. Turns out he added a splash of vermouth! Who knew? My life got more complicated because now I need vermouth… We traipsed over to the Pub for dinner.
My feet:


We always talk to the nicest people on these trips when we sit at the bar. Bob had the prime rib special and excellent French fries. I had a Caesar salad with a ton of delicious anchovies and a bison burger that I inhaled. I wish it were easier to get bison at home — in restaurants and stores. We each had a glass of H3 Cab from Washington that neither of us had heard of and really enjoyed. Bob had a piece of cheesecake and I had another glass. Learned that in one square inch, otters have one million hairs. No wonder they can live in freezing water…

Sunday 12/20
West Yellowstone, MT to Livingston, MT 146 miles
Sunday we were downstairs getting juice and tea and checking the weather reports at 6a. Still snowing! And really dark; we didn’t want to be driving in the dark so we scraped the car with a borrowed broom and headed to the Running Bear Pancake House, recommended by Carlos, the bartender at the Pub. We got there at 7a and it was still quite dark. Place was full of snow mobilers. Bob was delighted to see pigs in a blanket (“I was 7 years old when I first had them in Green River, WY”) on the menu and I had a poached egg with Canadian bacon, rye toast and hot salsa. And, again, good diner coffee!
We left West Yellowstone at 8a and another semi-stressful drive given 6+ inches of snow. Everyone we asked had said the Bozeman to Livingston segment was liable to be icy and windy. Yikes. It was beautiful through Yellowstone Park (another coyote) and past Big Sky, into Bozeman. There was definitely ice on the roads but also lots of packed snow and trucks had been through scraping and dropping sand. The Bozeman to Livingston stretch wasn’t bad but it was windy. $1500 for new tires the week before was money very well spent!
Livingston is adorable. There is an old downtown that is pretty vibrant with restaurants, bars and coffee shops as well as shops, a beautiful post office, movie theater (showing Star Wars) and some lovely old brick buildings. We stocked up at Albertson’s on essentials and stuff for dinner and breakfast then we searched for a place for lunch. Our first choice, Montana’s Rib and Chop House isn’t open for lunch on Sundays so the next top Yelp was The Sport Bar and Grill on Main Street. We sat at the bar and ordered a fresh lime margarita for Bob (super refreshing) and a Bloody Mary verde for me made with fresh tomatillos and hot pepper/basil infused vodka for me. The. Best. Ever.
Bob had a bison burger with bacon and I had a spinach salad with smoked cherry tomatoes, crumbled blue cheese, crispy shallots and a warm pancetta vinaigrette. Yum. Oh and an order of fried pickles. With siracha ranch on the side.
We drove about 20 miles from town and got to our little (tiny!) cabin on Dexter Peak Road about 2:30 and quickly made ourselves at home. The bed is in a loft that Bob is barely able to sit up on without banging his head. It’s like camping and crawling into the tent. The kitchen is small but has everything we need – plus we bring a ton of stuff! We headed out to check out Pray, a teeny tiny — town isn’t right; hamlet? — with not even a stop sign but a church, Post Office and the Pray Cafe; Emigrant, about 5 miles away, and the Chico Hot Springs Resort. The Old Saloon in Emigrant is pretty closed down for the season serving only breakfast. We had a cocktail (the usual) at the bar and pumped the bartenders for area info. Checked out the Emigrant General Store (needed matches and ice cream) and drove by Chicos Hot Springs and the Rivers Edge Bar (tons of cars in front).
Views around the cabin and our closest neighbors.
We hunkered down in the cabin lighting candles (Jo Malone freesia and pear in the living room and Myers Clean Day in the kitchen) and finding football games/scores. Baked chicken breasts for dinner with a baked potato and roasted sweet potatoes and broccoli and salad. The oven is way off and the chicken did not cook. The vegetables took way longer than usual but tasted good. Tomorrow: buy an oven thermometer.
Monday 12/21
For such a funny bed in the ceiling, it is super comfortable and we both slept really well! It gets dark so early (by 5p) and it doesn’t get light til after 7a. Bob found ‘White Christmas’! It started at 7:30 after we caught up on news, weather, CNBC… so happy! I sing along (badly) to every song and laugh and cry at all the same spots. I made two cups of coffee and Bob made breakfast (fried eggs, Canadian bacon, sourdough toast, salsa). We caught up on emails, etc as best we could with sketchy wifi and headed into Livingston at 10a. It is a beautiful 20 miles on a two-lane highway surrounded by mountains. First stop was the butcher shop that wasn’t open yesterday and not open today either. We want to get a good beef roast or filet for Christmas. Next stop was Ace hardware for an oven thermometer.
Montana’s Rib and Chop House parking lot was already filling up at 11:45 when we arrived. Sat next to a nice guy named Tom at the bar who is a fisherman. Bob had a bourbon blood orange something (good!) and I had a local wheat beer. Bob had the special sirloin with mashed potatoes and a salad. I had the Dalryimple salad: romaine, chunks of apple, dried cranberries, crumbled blue cheese, almonds and spicy blackened prawns. We are definitely going back there. Nice atmosphere and people.
Stopped at Albertson’s on the way out of town for taco fixings for dinner.
Whenever we take road trips and are out in the ‘country’ Bob takes on this accent that is a cross between Forrest Gump and Smokey and the Bandit which cracks me up; nothing is really suitable for printing here but I cry with laughter.
Tuesday 12/22
We decided to drive into the park, about 40 miles away. We stopped in Gardiner at the Chamber of Commerce to ask about winter tours of the park and decided what we would like to do next Christmas! They have these snow trek trucks that will take you in from Mammoth Hot Springs (about 5 miles inside the park) to Old Faithful. The Snow Lodge is open so you can stay for a couple of nights and do snowmobile tours, moonlight tours etc and then trek back to Mammoth Hot Springs. Sounds like so much fun and so beautiful in winter with very few people.
After going into the park as far as Mammoth Hot Springs where we saw the snow treks, we had lunch at the Yellowstone Bar and Grill in Gardiner. We both had the Roosevelt Ranch salad: romaine and spring lettuces with a spicy corn salsa, shredded grilled chicken and a spicy chipotle dressing. Bob had a Blue Moon and I had Bozone Amber Ale. Cute little place that serves breakfast and lunch til 2p and was full of locals of all ages and sizes. They gave us two free cinnamon rolls when we left — past closing time.
On the drive back we saw bison, hundreds of deer, antelope and big-horned sheep, all within about a mile!!
We got back to the cabin late afternoon and played 3-13 and read til about 7p when we drove to Chico Hot Springs Resort and our dinner reservation. This is what it looks like at Christmas:

We had a cocktail in the lounge off the dining room and felt like we were in some resort in the 50’s or 60’s. LOVED it.
The dining room was packed with hotel guests as well as locals. Lots of white-shirted/black panted servers and a female sommelier. Initially, I ordered the special bison ribeye but it was sold out so Bob and I had the ‘beef Wellington for two, carved tableside.’ Bob loves it and the first time he ordered it with me was one of our very first trips together in 2000 to Mammoth when we stayed at the Tamarack Lodge and ate dinner at Convict Lake Resort. This was the first time I ever had beef Wellington and it was delicious! So rich but also delicate even though it’s puff pastry and a thin layer of pistachio and cognac duck liver pate wrapped around beef. Seriously, I loved it. The meat was phenomenal; tender and juicy. It came with asparagus and puffy potatoes – really light mashed potatoes piped into piles and browned. YUM!! Bob had prawn cocktail as an appetizer and I started with smoked trout that was heaven and took half of it home. Ditto the beef and potato mounds– plenty to have for dinner one night. The whole experience was delightful. We brought a bottle of wine but ordered a Siduri Pinot Noir from the (extensive) wine list.
We both want to go back and stay there for a night or two. At Christmas! Didn’t get home til 11p. Party on LOL.
Wednesday 12/23
We were up early and headed into town to the Coffee Crossing café with our computers. The wifi situation at the cabin is quite sporadic and unreliable. We both have been working off our phones and needed some real computer time. What a find is the Coffee Crossing! Sheree is the one-woman barista/sandwich maker/greeter/etc. We were there a couple of hours (at adjacent tables) and she probably made 100 cups of coffee and no idea how many bagels and breakfast sandwiches. She knew every person’s name and what their order was. “Hi love. A latte or a cappucinno this morning?” “Hey Dave, how is your mom?” It was such a lovely slice of small town community.

From there we went to Matt the butcher’s and ordered a small tenderloin for Christmas. Then to Albertson’s to shop for Christmas Eve and Christmas day. Then to Spirits Liquor to get a bottle of champagne (I remembered to bring the champagne stopper but forgot the champagne…. #listfail).
Soup bone:

We again landed at the bar at Montana’s just before noon. Kevin, the bartender, is the guy who made up the blood orange bourbon cocktail and I had to order it. Bob had another Kevin-made concoction: a bourbon and huckleberry version of a Manhattan; also very good. He ordered the grilled chicken and mashed potatoes on a bed of spinach and I had a bowl of mussels and frites that I would order it again in an instant. Kevin was great. He worked six years in Yellowstone, including winters so was a fount of information. A truly nice young man.
Holed up in the cabin playing 3-13, reading and watching Christmas movies. I have been reading ‘Grace’, the latest memoir by Grace Coddington and really enjoying. It’s a book book that I ordered when it first came out but it has been ignored by my bedside thanks to my Kindle. Then we decided to head over to Chico’s for a cocktail, about 10 minutes away, in the Saloon, adjacent to the dining room and the HUGE hot springs which was packed with people. Outside, 20*. We liked in here better.

The leftover beef and potatoes with roasted cauliflower, carrots and broccoli were yummy and the cabin was toasty.
Thursday 12/24
We were up really early and headed back to the Coffee Crossing with our ‘puters for an hour or so. Sheree didn’t even ask for our order! She made me an almond milk latte with two shots and Bob an Americano with two shots. Yesterday he had a blueberry muffin and she asked if he wanted one this morning (no). Amazing. We shared a table because it was more crowded and, again, she knew EVERYONE.
Kevin, the bartender, had recommended Pinkys on Main Street for breakfast but it was closed so we went to The Other Café, a small breakfast/lunch place that always has a bunch of cars in front. I was anticipating being disappointed (“Sit there” said the elderly owner/server pointing at the only empty table in the crowded corner of four; “we don’t poach eggs”) but it turned out to be perfect. Bob got a huge plate-sized pancake, fried egg and sausage patty; I ordered a fried egg over easy with an English muffin and hot sauce. Really really good.
We picked up our filet from Matt, the butcher, (yeah, we know people) and then got some cheese, prawns and crackers to have lunch at home. Played 3-13, read and watched a super sappy movie that I cried the whole way through. “Looking for Santa Paws” or something that involved little orphan girls, a mean foster woman, an ill Santa and an adorable talking (yes) Golden retriever puppy. Seriously. Do the math. I was a mess.
Dinner was a fabulous pork roast with potatoes, carrots, petite peas and pearl onions in our trusty red Le Creuset dutch oven that goes on every trip. Cheers.
Friday 12/25
Snow on Christmas morning!! Very light and fluffy. We just had to go in to town — an adventure in the snow! — and Sheree had said the Coffee Crossing was open til noon so…..

Left the cabin just before 8a after clearing the snow off the car. The temperature hovered between 18-20* on the drive in and out of town, snowing the whole time. Snow makes even crappy things (dead cars and trucks, broken fences, dirty rundown things) look beautiful. Nothing in town was open except a couple of gas stations (regular $1.99) and motels. And Coffee Crossing. Turns out they give free coffee to all customers on Christmas Day. Again, she just made ours without even asking; Bob’s Americano was in front of him before he even stopped saying good morning. Awesome woman.
We got back to the cabin just after 9a and made YOYO breakfast. I had an omelette with leftover roasted cauliflower, broccoli and carrots with hot sauce and Bob had scrambled eggs, bacon, potatoes and toast (he calls it Formula 4-4-4 and I have never understood why).
Lazy. Day. John Wayne movies on AMC and snow and wind outside. Champagne. We played dominoes.

Since the plan is to leave at the crack of dawn on Saturday, we packed up the car with stuff we won’t need til we get home before we made an early Christmas dinner. And while we were doing that this happened.
The little one we named Stella after the lovely little malti-poo puppy who is our occasional houseguest when her people need to leave her behind. She was fascinated with my car. Our guess is that she liked the salt from the highway. The Warriors were on tv and we were in the middle of preparing dinner but we were mesmerized and going from window to window for at least half an hour. It was so much fun watching them paw the ground to move the snow away.
Dinner: perfectly cooked filet roast, baked potatoes, roasted broccoli and leeks with red pepper flakes and salad. Full disclosure: originally wanted to make potatoes au gratin (almost nothing stinks up a house better!) but we forgot parmesan cheese so made baked potatoes and roasted the leeks.
Saturday 12/26
Pray, MT to Elko, NV 628 miles
It snowed another inch or two during the night and got much colder! But thankfully, for the first time since we have been here: no wind. We were out of the cabin at 7:20a, dark and snowy and 7*. No sign of any of our deer though their tracks were back and forth all over the roads. Needless to say we were first tracks until we got on the main road. What a beautiful drive into Livingston! The full moon that we were unable to see on Christmas due to clouds, was gorgeous!

We gave Sheree a bottle of Moss and Roxx Lodi Ancient Vines Zin and got our coffees to go.
The full moon was in front of us until the fog took over in a big way. Bob wanted to show me the headwaters of the Missouri where the Gallatin, Jefferson and the Madison come together – part of his Lewis and Clark adventure last spring – but it was a complete white out with fog and snow. And negative temps. The lowest was -8*.
We happened upon the Wagon Wheel Cafe, with a dozen cars in front, in a tiny town in Idaho called Twin Bridges around 10a. 2* and partly sunny. We sat at the counter and Bob ordered one sausage pancake and one bacon pancake. We could see the cook and he put chopped up cooked sausage on the flat top and poured the pancake batter over it. Then he did the same with chopped up bacon. Ridiculously delicious! Bob said they were the best he ever had — and he has had many….. For the record, he preferred the sausage and the waitress agreed. She said it’s like sausage cake. And boring but ideal for me: two perfectly cooked poached eggs, an English muffin and hot sauce. And a couple of pieces of canned pineapple.
The rest of the day was gorgeous. We stopped in Twin Falls at Idaho Joe’s for a quick bite around 3p. They are known for their pies – and have at least a dozen on offer at any time – and we have been for breakfast a few times but never for lunch. I had a bowl of vegetable soup and a house salad and Bob had a burger, fries and a slice of sour lemon cream pie (“Burger, fry and pie”). He didn’t eat even half of anything but said he would order it again.
I found the Thunderbird Motel online because it was close to our dinner restaurant of choice, The Star Hotel, a Basque restaurant. We are still mourning the loss of Ormachea’s and don’t really like The Martin Hotel so the allure of staying in Winnemucca is gone. We went to Lucciano’s, an Italian restaurant, in the old part of Elko a couple of years ago for lunch and really liked it but wanted to try The Star.
Other than the ‘Th’ not working on their neon sign (“ underbird Motel”), we were thrilled with the huge double king room for … drum roll…. $44 including taxes, etc! (That is our comforter from home on the bed…. even I wanted more heat!)

It was clean, new bedding, thick towels, flat screen. Yeah, we’ll be back. We watched the Eagles and Redskins for awhile and then headed to The Star. It was packed but two stools miraculously emptied and we parked ourselves. I had a Picon Punch and Bob Chivas. It was FREEZING (1*) and lots of snow. And yet. There was a silly girl on a date in open-toe sandels, bare legs and a sleeveless dress. Even if she got dropped off and picked up AT THE DOOR, what a nut job.
We put our name on the list and were only one of four two-tops in the entire place. All big parties of 6, 8. 10. 12. I swear we were the only non-locals, though many of the families included other out of towners. After less than a half hour we were seated and before Bob got to the table from paying for the drinks ($11…total), the bowl of soup and bread was on the table.
We found a new favorite. The servers (all young females) are charming and share in the serving and clearing. Bob ordered the petite filet (12 oz. LOL) with a side of mushrooms ($1 re-LOL) and tons of sliced garlic. I just had the sides, knowing the mushrooms and a few bites of the filet were mine. The food is way better than The Martin Hotel and on par with Ormachea’s. Filet was tender and pink. The sides, while much too much, were all tasty: soup with loads of cabbage, tomatoes, chunks of potatoes, beans and onions; green salad with a ‘house’ ranch-like dressing; green beans with yet more sliced garlic; roasted garbanzo beans; baked beans; angel hair pasta with a tomato sauce; French fries. I ate almost half the bowl of soup, a couple of bites of the salad (too much dressing), lots of the green beans and garbanzo beans and a bite each of the pasta and baked beans. Plus some filet, all the mushrooms and a few French fries. OOF! Bob brought the cheesecake, minus two bites, home. Oh and we had a bottle of Klinker Brink Zin for $35. Entire bill: $84.

Sunday 12/27
Elko, NV to Novato, CA 499 miles
Woke up at 4:30a as we planned to be on the road ASAP but weather channel said “-4*, feels like -16*, and foggy”. Oh s***.
We watched for awhile and then just decided to go for it, counting on trucks to be on 80W that we could just stay behind. It was FREEZING. We left the car running with heater and defrosters on while we got some hot tea for the road in the lobby. Outside, Bob threw some hot water out of his mug and it immediately vaporized into nothing. Not a drop hit the ground.
It was dark but roads seemed ok except for Emigrant Pass which was foggy with swirling snow; it looked like the contents of a cauldron on the road in front of us. Bob, as always, drove like a pro.
We stopped at The Griddle in Winnemucca for a quick breakfast (apple cinnamon pancakes and two poached eggs with rye toast and we split an order of Canadian bacon) and the coffee place next door was actually open! So we got an Americano and almond milk latte for the road. Really the only two things worth stopping in Winnemucca for now… sad.
From there we only had one potty stop at Fallon and pushed through to home. Buzzed right along until just past the Truckee inspection station when we met up with all the crazies. It was pretty awful until Applegate and then really awful in Sacramento about 2 miles before the 80 and 50 merge. We were cursing Bay Area traffic after more than a week of NONE.
Made it to Novato about 2:40p. Except for the last 2+ hours, a dream of a trip. We always say it but: maybe our best one ever.
Some little bits I couldn’t fit into the narrative but loved about Livingston:
Persnickety Dry Cleaners.
Mark’s In and Out Burgers sign: Closed for the season. Reason? Freezin
Rivers full of ice but the many fly fishing shops were all open, every single day but Christmas.
Zero California license plates after Nevada until we were back in Nevada. Not one.
















Our last sunrise photo. 35* with some wind for the first morning.
































































































