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Since it’s Throwback Thursday (#TBT), I thought I’d share the story of 2 friends of mine and I who visited all 88 counties in Ohio in 24 hours (well, technically it was 23 hours, 34 minutes and 34 seconds).  We all subscribe to the philosophy of the Extra Miler’s Club, whose motto is that “the shortest distance between two points is no fun”.  Several of us (myself included!) have the goal of visiting all 3,143 counties in the United States

We did this on November 9-10, 2006.

efohc

The route

Solving “the fastest time to visit 88 places” is analogous to the Traveling Salesman Problem, which is actually considered not yet solvable in mathematical circles.  Now, I know what you’re probably saying – “But Dan, visiting every county in a state is analogous to finding a shortest tour in a graph which visits all specified disjoint subsets of the vertices of a graph!”.  So yes, to be more accurate, this is technically known as a “Set Traveling Salesman Problem” : -D

Compounding the problem is that visiting every county in a place is even more complicated than that, since you can claim a visit the county by visiting ANY PART of the county, and there are thousands (or more!) of ways to visit a county.  When you think about how many total roads there are in all of Ohio, you can see that even with computers, this is a difficult problem to solve.

So we did it the old-fashioned way, by hand, with lots of trial and error.  We had several iterations of the map, trying to stay on Interstates and other major roads when possible, and avoiding the large population centers (especially during rush hours).  We estimated the speed we’d be able to go on each type of road, and once we had an idea for a possible route, I took a Saturday afternoon to do a test-drive of a portion, to see if our assumptions seemed accurate (they did)

Visiting every county in Ohio: It’s GO time!

After months if not years of planning, we gathered at the Columbus airport on the night of November 9, 2006.  Since I live nearby, I had driven there, but we were picking up some out-of-town friends, as well as our rental car.  We had booked an Economy car, but of course they didn’t have any of those, so they gave us a minivan.

(SEE ALSO: Why does renting a car feel like such a scam?)

Not what we were hoping for, given the differences in gas mileage and the amount we planned on driving, but in the end, the extra room did make it a pretty good choice.

Because there were no smartphones, I actually printed out our entire route, page by page, into 2 huge binders of maps that we brought with us, which proved hugely beneficial when a road we were scheduled to take in Morrow County proved closed by detour.

We started down in the southeastern corner of Ohio, at the border of Monroe and Belmont counties.  We wound our way through Amish Country (saying hi to Carrie from Freakin Flyers!) up into the northeast corner of the state before skirting around the edge of suburban Cleveland, down into north-central Ohio and then back west on the Ohio Turnpike before heading south on Ohio 66 (“The King of Roads”)

We got pulled over by the police while heading through Columbus.  When I tell people this, they often ask if we told the officer what we were doing.  Uhhhh yeah I could see how that would go down.

Uhhh Officer, we’re trying to set a land-speed record here, so if you could just speed things up… that would be great mmkay?

The middle of the night – is this a road? Or someone’s driveway?

As we motored through Athens and into Southern Ohio, we hit a snag.  The route called for us to turn off OH-93 in Lawrence County and then go 2 miles east on the ominously sounding “Blackfork-Peniel Road”

blackfork-peniel-road

That’s an actual Google StreetView picture of the road in question.  Looks fine, right?  Well, it quickly devolves into a dirt trail through the woods in the middle of the night.  It was here that we first coined the term – “Is this a road?  Or someone’s driveway?” We probably spent an hour trying to make sure we had crossed the border into Gallia County.

Finishing up

After that fun adventure, the rest of the trip was pretty straightforward.  We came in Cincinnati on OH-32, scooted around the northeastern suburbs, up I-71, cut through Xenia and Dayton and then finished our trip in Preble County, coming in at 23 hours, 34 minutes and 34 seconds.

If you’re looking for more information, including in the van trip reports that we phoned in (remember, no smartphones in 2006), you can check the table of contents for the trip out on my old site – everywhatever.com.

I actually submitted this as a record to what was then known as the “Universal Record Database”, now known as recordsetter.com, where it was one of the top 300 records that were included in the RecordSetter.com book of World Records.  When the book came out, there was a book tour that came through Cincinnati, and I went on morning TV with Dan and Corey (the co-founders) to talk about my record, and took part in a book signing.  So… you know… I’m big time 😉


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