There’s a phone call that I receive at least once a week. It always comes after dark. The line will crackle, and an anxious voice with a Boston or New York accent will say, “Hello! Hello, can you hear me? We’re on the road and we should be there by now, shouldn’t we?” The line will cut out and a minute later ring again. Maybe there is somebody there, maybe no service. If there is, the person on the other end is even more anxious. “I’ve been driving for hours. Do you know where I am?”
Sometimes they are lost. Other times they’re a mile or two south on Vermont Route 100 and just need a little coaching to steer them to the inn. Some guests arrive exhausted and relieved. Others are annoyed, as if it is my fault that they got a late start and left without a proper road map. Still others pace back and forth across the property trying to dial out on their cell phones. They are not happy to find out that rural Vermont is, well, rural. You mean you don’t have cell phone coverage around here? Other questions. Where’s the best place for nightlife? How can I get a fax? Or, my favorite, from someone who’d just spent several hours driving up from Boston, “What’s the nearest big city around here?”
You just left it, buddy. “But surely you have a McDonald’s in the valley, don’t you? You’re kidding. No fast food chains at all?”
I have one question of my own. Did you come to Vermont for the services?
Read the rest: http://theopinionator.com/travel/services_vermont.html