I love Death Valley!

Warning: long and picture heavy.

People either love deserts or they hate them. I have met few who were neutral. I am one of those that love deserts – the vastness, the stubborn plants surviving in harsh conditions, the adapted animals, the massive empty skies, the mountains showing their bones without being hidden by extras like trees. Death Valley National Park is my second favorite national park behind only Yellowstone. We are here for two weeks, and I love everything about it except the lack of internet.

First, DVNP is huge! It is the largest national park in the lower 48. It takes a long time to get from one major site to another, so you can’t do lots of activities scattered across the park in a short time. We got in on Monday, 30 October, and found a primo site in Sunset campground at the east end of a row with nothing between us and the mountains. Since we had driven through two time zones in the last two days, I was hurting! I managed to stay up until 9:30 Pacific time, but it was hard. We had planned on activities on Tuesday, but I was so tired we just stayed at the Furnace Creek area across the street from the campground.

This is a sunset picture from our campsite. No editing, just my little point and shoot camera on a “low light” mode. Pretty impressive, huh?

We went to Pahrump on Wednesday to get an ATT phone and data plan, hoping it would give us better connectivity. It did, but not in DVNP. They use a private network, and pretty much nothing else gets through. Oh well, it should help other places.

On Thursday we got to Father Crowley Point, a canyon overlook where fighter jets from the numerous air bases nearby do training. We were lucky enough to get five flybys from a combination of F-18 and T-38s. Nice! I couldn’t capture a photo, but the sight of aircraft flying below you through a tight canyon is pretty impressive. There are aficionados that go out every day with radios to track the flights, and a pair of them were kind enough to announce the flights just before they showed up. Along the way we stopped at Panamint Spring Resort for lunch and a bit of WiFi. Well worth the cost of the sandwich. Of course I didn’t catch up, but I made a small dent in my backlog.

We have friends arriving too, and it was enjoyable sitting around the propane fire pit (no wood or charcoal fires allowed). It has been hotter than average, so we had to wait u til after sunset to get comfortable each evening. I really don’t like heat, so we gave in a few days and ran the generator for air conditioning.

On Monday, 5 November, we took a trip with the Death Valley 49ers for a private tour of the Cerro Gordo mining town on the west side of the Panamint range above the Owens Valley. Fantastic!

 

 

See that little cage in the bottom center of the last picture? That is what you would use to travel 900’ down. This is an unusual headframe in that it was completely inside a building.

Oh, and just in case anyone tells you the desert is just brown, you can show them this.

On Tuesday we did the Westside Road along with some friends. This is just a rough, sandy road on the west side of Badwater Basin with a number of historic sites. We got a nice surprise when we ran across the 49ers wagon train making their way to Furnace Creek.

Wednesday we didn’t do much, though I got some sewing done. I now have all the blocks for the RV quilt completed and we even laid them out, using the bed as a “design wall” to determine layout.

Thursday we drove Titus Canyon. This time our friends went with us in the Jeep since their dual real wheel pickup would have been challenged in a few spots. This is one of my favorite drives in the park, and I think you will see why. It starts with a long drive through sage into the mountains. Eventually you get to steep, rocky switchbacks with great canyon views. Eventually you go downhill a bit to the ghost town of Leasfield (a total scam that blew upon the investor’s faces), though I didn’t take any pictures this time. It was COLD with a nasty wind so we didn’t wander around like we usually do. Then there are more switchbacks until we got to the canyon wash you follow to the end.We were about the first through the canyon since we left early, and we were lucky enough to see four quail and even two desert bighorn ewes. The latter were a first for us in DVNP.

Remember I said it was windy? Here is a view of the dust storm from the exit of Titus Canyon. This is mostly in the area of the Mesquite Sand Dunes.

One of the other fun things to do at the Encampment is to hear from the historical reenactor they bring every year. This year Steve Hale acted the part of Bill Keys, pioneer jack of all trades. He even had others at the Encampment play roles including Kenn McCarty who brings the Belgiums and wagon plus the blacksmith who was demonstrating his skills. There was a tie in with Death Valley Scotty, but the material spent most of the time on Keys’s time as a miner and rancher in what is now Joshua Tree National Park. We visited his ranch when we were there a couple of years ago. It has been preserved by the NPS as a significant historical site. Steve Hale really gets into character. Last year he was a rich and very proper insurance executive.

Friday was the big wagon train arrival, always a highlight. The last Marine Corps mounted color guard lead the way, though I seemed to have posted the pictures in the wrong order!

There were lots of other wagons and riders, but my phone data connection is giving me fits on pictures.

I can’t leave this post without talking about the music at the Encampment. There is lots and lots and lots of music! An amateur group plays in the campground every night, and professionals play on Thursday through Saturday nights. Most of it is old Western songs with some more contemporary western music thrown in for good measure. Last year there was some bluegrass too, but so far we haven’t had any this year (sigh).

To end this incredibly lengthy post, I will give some results of our motorhome experience. This is the first time we have boondocked for two weeks, and all the systems worked very well. I LOVE the solar installation! At most we run the generator for an hour to do the bulk charging, and the solar tops off the batteries easily even on these shorter days. We have decided to be generous with our water usage and dump every 5 days at about 80% full. We could go longer with a few modifications of our routine, but the dump site is close and easy to use here. The sewing machine works great on the inverter, but the iron(even my small one), pulls down the batteries quickly (not a surprise). I sew quite a bit, then do all my pressing at once with the generator on. The Instant Pot takes a lot of power, so I won’t be using it on the inverter except for shorter cooking times – no ribs for 25 minutes! It worked fringe for souls vide style egg bites though. The microwave works great on inverter to heat something up for a few minutes, but is too big of a battery hog for more than that. Another thing I discovered is that I really, really don’t like going without internet access for long periods. After 3 days, I was antsy to read my mail and some news so we would drive to Stove Pipe Wells or Pahrump to get data access. Lesson learned! I had to drive to Pahrump to get enough data access to upload the pictures for this.

We leave tomorrow and head to Needles KOA. We will be storing the motorcoach until we come back after Christmas. Sigh. Lots of cleaning up to do before putting it to bed, and we have to figure out how to get the bikes stored inside! I really don’t want to drive to Iowa and back with them, and I doubt the Iowa weather will be good enough to do much riding between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Out of Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona and into Nevada

Yup, lots of driving. No pictures either because I never remember to take any when we are just driving to a destination. We left Oklahoma on Friday morning after visiting my sister, my niece, niece’s husband, and their four month old baby. The baby was such a solemn little guy he was inadvertently hilarious. We stayed in a lovely campground in Oklahoma City, Twin Fountains near the Cowboy Hall of Fame. I definitely will stay there again on another trip.

We ended up Friday night in Santa Rosa Campground in, surprise, Santa Rosa, New Mexico. It was an old KOA so the sites were a bit narrow, but it was a nice and quiet place. Surrounded by that classic New Mexico landscape, I could smell pinons and enjoy the sunsets in that clear New Mexican Sky.  Another one worth a repeat for sure. There is a little restaurant at the campground that wasn’t too bad, so no cooking! Nice after a long day of driving the motorhome. I am getting in the grove for 400 mile days: drive a few hours, take a nice long break (30-45 minutes) then finish it up.

Saturday was another 400 mile day. We spent the night in the parking lot of the Twin Arrows Casino outside Flagstaff. We ate in the (well-reviewed) buffet at the casino, but it was so-so at best. Add into it the smoke that you had to walk through to get to the food, and it is definitely not a place to return to. The parking lot was nice though! Many RVers say they only pull into parking lots late at night, but we like to stop our drive no later than 4 or so. Here it was a good thing because the RV parking got quite crowded by evening. We got to position the coach so the driver side windows looked east onto the sage, and it made for a lovely sunrise. The long ride on I-40 made me want to plan a much more leisurely trip where we can stop and see all the lovely places we just drove by on this trip. Maybe 2-3 weeks, just sightseeing.

Last night we made it to Pahrump and spent the night in the Wine Ridge RV Resort. Very nice place though we didn’t use all the facilities. We did do lots of laundry and got our shopping done though. We will be in Death Valley for almost two weeks, and there isn’t much shopping there so we really stocked up. We actually stocked up more than I intended to since the baby back ribs and the meatballs were both BOGO. We should have plenty of meat! I also used the convection oven to cook up a bunch of maple bacon for future BLTs. Surprisingly the little store at DV generally has nice produce. We plan on leaving today with empty waste tanks and full fresh water and propane tanks. Weather shouldn’t be too bad though the forecast is for higher than average temperatures in the low 90s-upper 80s.

It is hard to get internet in DV, so posting will be limited except when we get into a town.

Leaving Missouri for Oklahoma

We left Pulltite on Saturday instead of our planned Sunday departure. I did get quite a bit of sewing done, and all the sub-blocks are now complete. I don’t think I have posted a picture of my sewing set up so here is one of the table and machine.

I have plastic tubs with sewing supplies on the sofa to the right of the machine, and pressing is done on the dining table to the left of the machine. Works pretty well! I have started using a small hand held iron instead of a big one, and I really like how flat it gets my blocks.

We decided to move a bit closer to I-44 to make going to and from Iowa a bit easier. We parked the coach at Meramac Springs Country Store and RV Park, and it was a hard! The park was full, but they said they had room for a rig our size. Wrong! With the narrow roads, tight turns, and overhanging branches, it took 20 minutes to get us wiggled in the spot. Even then we couldn’t open the awning without hitting the guy next door. We were amazingly lucky that the park emptied out after the weekend since I don’t think we could have gotten out without backing out the same way we got in if there were other campers around. I ended up going through two other campsites to get out to the road. Ugh. We will mark that a solid “Never again.”

We did drive back to Iowa to get our voting done though. Black Hawk county made it a very quick and painless process. We also dropped my daughter’s birthday present off at her our – a gift certificate for a massage plus some Ozark candy. Then back to Missouri Monday night. We did some laundry (I absolutely love having a washer and dryer in the coach!), and we just relaxed. Tuesday we drove into Oklahoma and bought a PikePass to allow easier travel on the tollways Oklahoma specializes in. It will also work in Kansas, and we do use the Kansas Turnpike too. We needed two of the RFID sensors, one for the motorhome and one for the Jeep. We thought the Jeep one had messed something g up because all of a sudden these three LED lights started lighting up! We had never even seen them before, and Kevin was at a loss. The Jeep dealer assured us they were an aftermarket add-on, so Kevin finally traced it to the AirForce 1 auxiliary braking system we had installed for towing. A bit more debugging, and he fixed the problem. Weird.

We also ended up buying a Dyson battery powered vacuum cleaner at the Costco in Iowa City on the way back home. The cat tracks litter everywhere, and I need either the generator or shore electrical power to operate the central vacuum. Since the tile floors will eventually scratch if we close the slides with dirt on the floor, this seemed like a good idea. We got the “Animal” model, and it cleans very well. Not much battery life on “high”, but the motorhome is much smaller than a house so it works fine for us.

We spent Tuesday night at the Walmart in Vinita, OK, just off the I-44 Turnpike. Nice and quiet. Wednesday we moved to Twin Falls RV Park in Oklahoma City. Very nice place with concrete pads, patios, lots of trees, and lots of space. Price was reasonable at $50 or so. We spend tonight here too.

Yesterday we saw my niece, her husband, and their four month old baby boy. He was the most solemn thing! Bald as a billiard ball with a classic baby stare. He played with Kevin a bit, then I held him and immediately seemed to put him to sleep. I have that effect on adults sometimes too! We also had lunch today with my sister, the baby’s grandmother. Pretty uneventful, but she doesn’t pick the best places to eat. I definitely expected better BBQ in Oklahoma, but the sides were pretty good.

Tonight we are finishing up some laundry, the bikes are back on the Jeep, and we will pull out of here tomorrow between 8:30 and 9:00 to miss the early morning traffic. It will be probably 9 hours on the road followed by another 9 hour day afterwards so probably no posting. It should be smooth sailing on I-40 all the way though. As long as we don’t hit bad winds in the Oklahoma/Texas/New Mexico plains we will be fine.

More about the Ozarks

I am sitting in a parking lot that actually has internet, so I can post some more about the Ozarks.

First, just the general beauty of the area. The trees went really turning colors yet, but you can see just the promise of future color.

Love the fog that shows in the valleys.

Then there are the “wild” horses that roam the area. They are wild in the sense they aren’t owned by anyone, but they definitely are habituated to people. We saw these three, two mares and a foal, at Echo Bluff State Park parking lot. The foal got about 3 foot from me, and one of the mares grazed about 5 foot away. Definitely used to people!

That is the front of the car hood showing red. They moved even closer after I took this.

Yesterday was an absolutely gorgeous day, so I mostly just sat outside and read. It is the kind of day that makes me really, really regret I can’t get on the river, but I just don’t feel well enough. Today is a wet and cold day, so we are just hanging out at the state park campground using their WiFi. When I get back I intend on sewing for a while and then just generally cleaning up. With all the cloud cover we will definitely have to run the generator, and that means I can vacuum. After vacuuming, I will mop, and the floor is in desperate need of it!

Goodbye Alabama, hello Missouri!

We finally got all our warranty work done on Wednesday last week. We headed out fairly early on Thursday for Missouri. We had reservations at Echo Bluff State Park in the Ozarks, and we made it in good time. The campground at Echo Bluff, known as Timbuktu for some unknown reason, is just a big meadow with good interior roads, concrete patios, and lots of space between sites. They have planted trees and shrubs, but it will be another 10 years before the place looks good. Until then it is a very inexpensive and convenient place stop for a night or two – full hookups were $30. We got all the laundry done, and drove down in the car to Pulltite campground, the NPS campground we wanted to stay at for the next week. No hookups, narrow gravel interior roads, grass sites that aren’t very level, but only $6 a night without senior pass. I was worried about overhanging trees making it impossible to get the coach down the steep hill, but we decided it would be fine if I drove slowly and used both lanes a small needed.

Friday morning we left Echo Bluff and drove the 8 miles to Pulltite. Yes, that is how it is spelled. It was misspelled years ago from the expected “Pulltight” meaning the horses had to be carefully driven down the steep hill to the river. And the river is still,why we come. The Current River is a lovely gem, part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. Clear, cold, spring fed rivers are a joy to see any time of year, even in the cold and rain we got moving in. We will stay until Sunday, a total of 10 days.

It was overcast when I took it, but we are in a lovely riverbottom of deciduous trees.

We just drove around sight seeing until Tuesday when we made a purposeful trip into Springfield to see the World Of Wildlife museum at the Bass Pro Shop headquarters. Very, very nice, and well worth the price.

I did take some pictures of the Ozarks, but I haven’t downloaded them from the camera. I will do that tomorrow and post more.

Repair frustrations and more of the Natchez Trace

We are still sitting in the Tiffin Service Center parking lot. Sigh. We got into the paint shop on Friday, and today we had the paint finished up (buffing and such). They did a great job. I drove the coach back to our parking spot, hooked it all up, and 15 minutes later was asked to come to the cabinet shop. We only have one item left – a very poorly finished bathroom door. The very nice young man said the door had to be replaced, not repaired, and it would be two weeks! I nearly died. He saw my face, and said he’d go look to see if they had a spare one sitting around. Luckily, they did, and he said he’d get it put together and sprayed in “a day or two.” Yet another sigh, but not as big this time. We are hoping to get into Missouri on Thursday, but we will see what happens. Thank goodness I allocated lots of time for this trip.

On Saturday we took another trip along the Natchez Trace, this time heading towards Nashville. The pictures are from along the Trace.

This shows the old footpath and how it divides into different paths to go around what became mud puddles as the path as it wore down.

This is the Gordon house from 1818. It is t open for visitors, but it is pretty impressive anyway. The owner had a concession from the local Choctaws to operate a Ferry and trading post. He did just after the house was built, but his wife lived here until 1849.

This is the Inn (known as a “stand” in this part of the country when the Trace was active) where Meriweather Lewis committed suicide. Poor fellow was being stiffed by the US Government on a bunch of bills that he then had to cover from his own pocket. He was looking at bankruptcy, and was depressed. He is buried about 100’ away, his grave marked by a broken column indicating his early death. So sad.

Sunday we just hung around locally. I made some of the wonderful Instant Pot egg bites with sausage and cheddar cheese this time, and I also made an Instant Pot cheesecake. Both turned out wonderfully. I also got my sewing machine set up to get some work done on the quilt for the coach. Hopefully I will have all the blocks done before we go home for Thanksgiving.

 

Scenic south and Tiffin warranty service

We finally made it to the Tiffin Service Center campground on Monday afternoon. We got the call while we were on our way to Tupelo to visit Elvis Presley’s birthplace museum. Oops! Back to Red Bay to make the move.

We did get to drive just over 40 miles on the Natchez Trace on our way to Tupelo though. It is the oddest National Park I know. More than 400 miles long, but only as wide as the road in many places. Here is a view of the gorgeous heavy deciduous forest along most of the route. Obviously it is still late summer in this part of the country.

We did take time to walk part of the original Trace which was just a foot trail.

This section led to a small and lonely Confederate cemetery. There is a tiny Confederate flag someone left.

We also stopped to see the Pharr Indian Mounds, dating from 0-200 CE. Pretty impressive after 1800 years!

Once we got settled in the Tiffin campground, we just relaxed and watched TV. Kevin’s newly installed satellite is working great! This is not a campground for relaxing outside. Not only is it miserably hot here, but it is another parking lot, suitable for waiting for service but not camping.

Yesterday we decided to drive to Meridian, Mississippi to buy me a fold up sewing table. I have one at home, but forgot to bring it! We both figured it would be good to just keep this one in the coach. Kevin feels like death warmed over with his bronchitis though I am beginning to recover. It was 7 hours in the car because we took a “scenic” path. Not terribly scenic though since it was mostly just a road through lots and lots and lots of trees.

We did get with the service writer, and he said we had a couple of days wait to get into an Express Bay. That gives you two techs for two three hours to get most of our warranty items done. The final item will be in the cabinet shop, and that requires an additional wait. Sigh. Luckily the two days wait turned into a day and a half, and we moved into the Express Bay a little after noon today. All of our items were taken care of, but a ladder from the next bay fell against our coach and put a nice big scratch in the paint. Another sigh. They are hoping to get us into the paint shop tomorrow morning, but we will see. We still need the cabinet shop, but I am hoping they put us in the wait line immediately rather than waiting for the pain shop to finish. Oh well, the parking lot is free since we are under warranty, and it is full hookup.

i am also including a picture of cotton fields since they are everywhere around here!

Made it to Red Bay, Alabama

We left Iowa about 1:00 pm on Friday after running a number of last minute errands. We spent the night in the Walmart parking lot in Hannibal, MO. Nice quiet place. We got around Saturday around 9:00 and headed to Jackson, TN. We spent the night again in a Walmart parking lot. Like most small towns on a Saturday night, there were some young idiots in very loud cars cruising the parking lot, but it got quiet well before midnight. Since we only had 100 miles to go, we took our ever loving time getting out. We finally got to the Tiffin Service Center campground by noon. However we found out the campground was already full. Tiffin recommended we go to the Red Bay campground a couple of miles away. It is just a big gravel parking lot, but it has 50 amp full hookups. Cheap at $25 a night, but it would have been free if we were at the Tiffin site. Hopefully we can move in the next day or so. The roads all the way from Iowa we’re divided four lanes with the exception of the last 20 miles or so.

We have all our forms filled out for our warranty work, and some time tomorrow a Tiffin SC rep will come out to evaluate the time needed to complete our list. That will decide how long we have to wait our turn.

I admit this is a short post without pictures, but I should have more to post when we can get out and about. It is, unsurprisingly, very, very green here. It was also ridiculously hot today, almost 90 degrees! Should be better tomorrow, but I still miss my cool, dry mountains and deserts. All those folks who retired and moved to Florida – good for them! I can’t even imagine it.

Camping close to home – Big Woods Lake campground

We got back from Estes Park safely. We had intended on camping at Fall Lake in northern Minnesota, but the forecast was for lots of rain and cold. We instead decided to camp near home with the motorhome, trying out the new doodads Kevin has been installing. It let us know what we didn’t have in the coach which is handy when you are heading out for 7 or 8 weeks. We were able to have most of the kids and all the grandkids out for dinner one night. Luckily there was a small playground since the coach is pretty small for 9 people! It was about the only night we didn’t have rain.

The weather has been terrible. It has rained, and rained, and rained. We actually had the wettest month on record, and we still have days left! Not just the wettest September, but the wettest ever. This is NOT the way the river is supposed to look in September. I bet the farmers will be using an awful lot of propane to dry the corn this fall.

We even got a backsplash installed in the house. I am quite pleased with the look even though the grout needs re-done some. That will be finished tomorrow. Kevin and Nick adjusted the electrical boxes to get that nice, even look.

Even though we are leaving tomorrow, there is still one more thing Kevin intended on finishing, a portable water softener. We are just going to take it with us, and he can work on it later. Everything else got done: solar, solar controller, electrical monitoring system, battery monitoring system, cell phone booster, dash cam, and a new satellite antenna. We definitely don’t “camp” with all this stuff! It is nice for “living” though.

Tomorrow we pack up and head to Red Bay, AL for some warranty work. We will probably spend the first night in the Walmart at Hannibal, MO.

Wildfires and more elk

We decided to go sightseeing today, but at a lower elevation since I had a bad headache the last two days. We took a lovely trip from Estes Park to Glen Haven then on into Ft. Collins via backroads. We wandered through a valley and crossed over a creek a number of times. It was classic Colorado backroads – mountains, ranches, hills, creeks, pines, willows, cottonwoods. Just as we got to the Cache le Poudre river (highway 14) we saw lots of smoke and then an active wildfire. Fire trucks from volunteer departments and the Forest Service passed us on the road, including a big van with Pike Hot Shots. When they bring out the Hot Shots, you know a fire is getting serious work. We pulled over and watched for quite a while. Here are some pictures and video. As usual, I apologize for not having the video in a easy format, but it is worth it.

Those itty bitty dots on the cliff top are firefighters.
The fire was only a few hundred feet from the road

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The Fire is known as the Seaman Lake Fire, and it is already partially contained according to this source: https://www.coloradoan.com/story/news/2018/09/12/seaman-fire-prompts-voluntary-evacuations-threatens-poudre-river/1280800002/

While in Loveland for lunch, we found we had a fire going flat! Walmart changed the tire, but I wasn’t willing to buy any of theirs. We ended up going to Big O Tires in Estes Park, and we get four new tires put on tomorrow. Painful price though.

After the pain there, we decided to head one more night out to RMNP for the elk. This time we decided to go to Horseshoe Park, and what a good choice it was! We first saw the young buck with his small harem of 3 we had seen in Morraine Park. Then came a much bigger buck with a large harem of 13 cows, yearlings, and calves. We watched while the big buck ran off the younger and stole his little harem. Of course there was much bugling involved. It was wonderful.

Tomorrow will be new tires, a leisurely breakfast in town, just goofing off, and a Chuckwagon dinner. Then home on Friday.