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One day, I was coming back from Calera, Alabama. I had a friend I wanted to see in Memphis, Tennessee and I thought that I was going to have to drive all the way up to Nashville and cross over on I-40. When I put the address in the GPS, it said to get off the Interstate and head down the back roads of Alabama. Well that's a little nerve racking when you have no clue where you are and you don't know where the GPS is taking you. I decided "What the hell. What could go wrong?" and off I went. I ended up on Alabama 157 that took me to US Alt 72 which ended taking me through the rest of the state and through Mississippi right to Memphis. I was impressed on the ease and speed of the drive (65 mph speed limit through most of Alabama). I also saw a lot of beautiful countryside, abandoned gas stations from a time gone by, and a lot of classic cars waiting for an eternity for either their savior or to be sent to the scrapper. It was one of the most calm drives I had in a long time.
U.S. and State Highways can come in many shapes and sizes. They can be a two-lane blacktop that winds through the landscape or they can be a 4-lane divided highway, very similar to an Interstate. They can take you right through the middle of little towns scattered through the state or they can bypass towns and cities to be a non-stop route. You can still have rest areas and truck stops just like the Interstates or you can have crazy little roadside attractions and small town diners. In all honesty, they can sometimes just be faster than the Interstate System, especially if you are going diagonal through a state, not directly North, South, East, or West. Yes, you can end up driving through small towns that will slow you down, but it is never for more than a few minutes. Yeah, there are stop lights too, especially when two major roads intersect or are going through a larger town, but you will not usually get held up too long.
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So, my fellow travelers, if you're not in too much of a hurry and want to get off the beaten path for a while, try a State Road or U.S. Highway. While they may not all be perfect or the most direct, you can end up seeing a part of the country that you may have not known exists.
Safe Travels