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  1. Been *by* Port Jervis too many times to count, but never actually stopped there – guess I should, by the sound of it. We normally get gas in Matamoras, or right over the line (at NY Exit 1 off I-84, whose ramp actually dips into NJ…still with me?) The best part about the NJ station is that they will (well, *have to* by law) pump your gas for you – which is a real treat on a December night (or, this year, an April afternoon…)

    It’s interesting reading about your adventures in the Northeast, as I grew up in central MD (right between Frederick and Hagerstown), and when my parents visited (and fell in love with…and decided to build a house in) Maine in the middle ’90s, I made the first of many journeys to New England…right up 81 and 84, just as y’all have done. For some reason, we’d always end up driving very late at night – so, when I was learning to drive, my mother would put me behind the wheel of my folks’ 16-passenger van (there is, after all, no traffic on I-84 in PA at 3am) and beseech me not to screw up and kill everyone. She got 20 winks (half of the traditional 40, as she had to keep one eye open in case of the aforementioned screw up), and I got valuable driving experience (after you drive a vehicle that big, a car is a piece of cake). So, in a way, you might say I grew up on I-84…and 81…and 90…and 95…

    Now that I’m in GA, the journey home is twice as long – 23 hours altogether, but I enjoy every bit (well, maybe not the Richmond-Washington demolition derby stretch). I’ve become so familiar with places between here and Maine that I reckon myself a citizen of the whole East Coast.

    By the way, I’m in Abbeville right now, and the temperature here isn’t that much different than it is there – after all, 73 and 37 do have the same digits, right? 😉

    Enjoy the rest of the trip and have a safe journey home!

  2. Not sure you need to seek the place in Port Jervis out, we were tired of eating the free hotel buffet breakfasts and wanted a *real* bagel. After I passed by the easy entrance I had to circle the block and toss in a u-turn because Roxanna’s was on a street surrounded on three sides by railroad tracks, a 4 lane road without a crossover and a bridge…

    I learned long ago to avoid I-95 from Virginia to Connecticut (and I’m not too fond of it in SC, GA or FL either.) My preferred route to the northeast is I-20, I-77, I-81 to I-84. I stop in Connecticut, but if I was going to Maine (had aunt/uncle/cousins in Waldoboro) it would be up I-91 to the Mass Pike, loop around Boston and then up 95.

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