Whenever we went out to breakfast this summer, my friend Mary would update us on the license plate game she and her sister were playing. Their goal was to spot all 50 states before school started again, and by mid-August, all they needed was Hawaii.
I enjoyed following their progress, maybe because our family played the license plate game on every road trip when we were kids. My mom, who usually drove, loved the game, and although the plates were tough to spot from the backseat, we were all pretty good at it, usually compiling a list of between 25 and 30 on a 3-hour trip down the I95 corridor from Philly to DC.
Years later, my mom played the game in the parking deck at the Mayo Clinic, especially when it was crowded, and we had to wind our way up several levels to find a spot and then make our way back down after the appointment. Riding shotgun, she was very sharp-eyed and could identify cars from all over the country, probably 10-15 a visit.
Now, my sister plays whenever she drives around her hometown of Atlanta. She adds an extra challenge, too, predicting how many different states she might see on any given errand, and she's as good as my mom ever was.
When we got stuck in terrible traffic on the way back from the beach this summer, Treat and I played. Like Courtney, he added an extra challenge, but his was not writing any of them down. Instead, he would chant them in order whenever we saw a new plate. For my part, I predicted we would find 30, and we did.
Since I retired and it stopped raining, Lucy and I have been walking 3-5 miles a day through the neighborhood, and recently, I noticed just how many out-of-state cars there are parked on the streets around here. For example, today we saw ten: Virginia, Maryland, DC, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Washington, and Hawaii. That's a pretty good showing by any of the standards above.