“On the road again - Just can’t wait to get on the road
again.” Willie got it right. After two and a half months of sitting still we were both happy to
hit the road on March 7. We always enjoy returning to Benson, especially seeing
the people we have come to know over three years, but our sense of escape was
palpable as we pulled onto the interstate to see Liesa in St. George.
One of the desert gardens at North Ranch |
We decided to make the trip in two easy stages. I had
planned to revisit the Burro Creek BLM campground in Wikieup,
AZ , but Kayeanne
held out for North
Ranch SKP
Park in Wickenburg,
instead. Since we were only staying the night we decided to dry camp rather
than hook up utilities. It had been a while since we dry camped and I wanted to
be sure all the systems worked before we really needed them. Everything worked,
which was a relief. The dogs seemed to remember the place, too, and were quite
interested in all the “news” since their last visit. We were struck by the
number of For Sale signs in the park. We were toying with the idea of settling
down here, but those all those signs seem to indicate something might be amiss.
The hiker ladies of Zion |
Guitar made from license plates |
We pulled into Temple View RV Resort in St. George the
following afternoon after an interesting, but uneventful drive. The new bridge
over Lake Mead at Hoover Dam certainly is more
efficient than the old road over the dam itself. I wanted to pull over and take
a few pictures but the turnouts weren’t designed for a rig our size. We avoided
rush hour in Las Vegas
and easily made StG by mid-afternoon. Coincidentally we were assigned the same
site at TVRVR that we had last summer.
With everything working on Ripley for a change, we spent the
next ten days visiting with Liesa and going to medical appointments. My hip
problem that started last summer didn’t respond to the first two epidural treatments, so we gave it one more try. It is
better, but I need to be more diligent with the exercises. Liesa has become an
avid hiker and she and Kayeanne went
for a long hike in Zion
National Park . Clearly it
was a great day.
We had a long standing appointment at Monaco in Coburg
to get the persistent slide leak fixed. Ripley was built there 14 years ago. We
hoped that, if anyone could get to the bottom of this, the guys who build him
could. We allowed five days to get to Coburg
(near Eugene ),
making it a somewhat leisurely trip compared to our usual road trips. Wells, NV
is…eminently forgettable. We spent the night in a dirt lot being alternately pummeled
by fierce winds and rain. By morning the coach and car were so plastered in
muck that you couldn’t see the color. We couldn’t get out of there fast enough.
Great pizza! |
The reason we went through Wells was to make the next day’s
drive to Boise
reasonable. We wanted to stop in Boise
to eat at PizzalChik, a local joint featured
one night on Diners,
Drive-ins and Dives. The show claimed that PizzalChik’s pizza was one of the Ten Best in the country. We had to find out. Folks, we haven’t eaten pizza everywhere, but theirs was the best we could remember.
Central Oregon semi-arid vistas |
We discovered Clyde
Holliday State
Park near John Day ,
OR , last year. We had an extra
day to kill before we were due at Monaco
so we decided to revisit one of the small gems of the Oregon park system for two nights. Because Oregon received three
times the normal rainfall this winter, all the rivers are full to overflowing
and standing water is everywhere. Clyde Holliday is located on the banks of the
John Day River . The park itself was pretty dry
but the main trail that we enjoyed so much last year was underwater. The first
night we were the only camper in the whole park. The word got out by the second
night; two more showed up.
From the beauty of the banks of the John
Day River to the
parking lot of the Monaco
service center in Coburg
was a bit of a comedown, but we were happy to finally arrive to get the experts
to fix our leak. Their workday starts at 6 AM so we were up pretty early to organize
the dogs and ourselves for a day out of the coach. Success was declared seven
hours and $1200 later, so we moved a couple of miles down the road to Armitage County Park .
We were so happy to finally not have to worry every time it rained!
Ripley was embarrassed |
But then it did rain, and the leak was still there. If
anything it was worse. So, next morning,
Friday, we packed up the coach and went back to Monaco
and they tried again. Several hours later they declared victory, again. They had
resealed the top of the slide, and then told us we couldn’t pull it in for 24
hours, and it couldn’t get wet. That meant a trip to Home Depot to buy a large
tarp to cover the slide and some rope to secure it, and another night in the
parking lot. Saturday afternoon we returned to Armitage, still hoping that THIS
time they had fixed it. It rained that night and the slide still leaked,
so Monday morning found us once again at Monaco . To make a long story short,
again their efforts were for naught: the first time it rained the leak
returned.
For the time being, I am stuck; I have no solution. We
looked forward to going to Coburg
for 6 months but now the “experts” have struck out. If we position the slide
just right and tip the coach to the left just so, the water doesn’t come in,
but we have drafts in the bedroom and live at a 6° slant every time it rains.
That aside, we enjoyed being back in Armitage County
Park , especially since
our new Wifi receiver delivered Netflix every night. Being so close to Eugene meant we could stock up at Trader Joe’s, something
we hadn’t been able to do since Simi
Valley in December. We also spent a day furniture shopping
and finally replaced the dining table chairs that we had hated since we bought
the coach.
We had a few days to fill between Armitage and our
commitment to camp host at Jesse
Honeyman State
Park beginning April 1st. We tried to
find a reasonably priced park near Sisters, OR, but all of the NFS and Oregon campgrounds were
still closed for the season. A Google search turned up River Bend County Park .
The description sounded great and with a senior discount AND an off-season
discount the cost was only $20 a night, so we gave it a shot. Boy, were we
pleasantly surprised. River Bend is a relatively
new park along the Santiam
River in Foster, OR. The
sites are huge, paved and level. Each one has a large concrete patio. The whole
park is immaculately maintained. It is a little remote, though, there is no
AT&T cell service in that area so we had to feed our data consumption habit
by firing up the Verizon Jetpack. Withdrawal was short-lived.
The neighbors came calling |
Mount Washington got 3X the usual snow this year |
One day we decided that a road trip was in order. Sisters is
about 60 miles east of Foster on US 20 and filled with shops and restaurants.
US 20 would be a lot of fun on a motorcycle (Sam, and Mark note), with lots of
snow covered mountains, vividly green valleys and turns galore. The trip was at
least as good as the town. We wandered around, had lunch at a pretty average
place and then headed across the street for ice cream at the place with the
only line we saw all day. They were right, it was worth the wait.
On April 1st we headed west, bound for Jesse Honeyman
Oregon State
Park to camp host for four months. This would be a
new experience for us, sitting in one place about twice as long as we have
since we embarked on this odyssey. We were looking forward to running the boat
rental concession within the park, something quite different than we had been
doing at Nehalem every Fall. Unfortunately, those plans fell apart as soon as
we arrived. Despite our effort to communicate with the ranger in charge of
volunteers at the park we were assigned a site that was much too short for the
coach to fit into. That might not have been insurmountable, but we also had no
AT&T service, and none available for miles in any direction. We could get
by with getting data through the Jetpack (at a substantial cost) but we were unwilling
to be out of cell contact with family and friends for four months. We had made
it explicitly clear on at least two occasions when we discussed this assignment
with the ranger that AT&T service was non-negotiable.
When we attempted to discuss these issues with him he was
unresponsive, to say the least. He disavowed any recollection of assuring us
that AT&T service was available. When
he declared that by complaining we weren’t beginning the relationship on a
positive note and that we might be better off rethinking things, we walked out
the door, started the coach and we left. I hope he needed us a lot more than we
needed him.
If nothing else, this life has taught us resiliency. Within
three day we found another camp host position at Umpqua
Lighthouse State
Park in Winchester
Bay . We begin on
Saturday.
More soon,
Bob
This was a lot of moving this time around. I'm sorry about all of the leaks on the coach. It seems like the builders should have been able to take care of it, and for all the money that they threw at it, you should have something to show for your efforts.
ReplyDeleteHopefully you stay dry in Oregon while this gets sorted, but it IS Oregon, after all, and I wonder about the weather.