April 2017 – Winchester Bay , OR
View through the windshield at WBRVR |
Best chowda since Maine |
panoramic view across the channel to the marina and the town. The park is actually a county facility, part of the overall harbor development that includes commercial fishing piers, pleasure boat docks, restaurants, shops and marine-oriented businesses. We discovered good food and great chowder at Double D’s, outstanding pies at Kittie’s Kitchen, and quite decent sourdough bagels at the Sourdough Bakery. Fresh oysters, crab, fish and clams are
readily available at several places. The ice cream shop isn’t open for the season yet, and we are looking forward to it, too.
Looking up through the lighthouse lense |
After settling into the park, our next priority was to repair our schedule. Oregon
Parks and Recreation
Department has a great webpage where the state parks post their volunteer openings. We
were surprised to find that Umpqua
Lighthouse State
Park , a couple of miles away, still had host
openings. To make a long story short, we signed up to camp host there through
June.
Site 40 is a little tight but quiet and very pretty |
We moved into site 40 at ULSP on April 8 and quickly settled
into the camp host routine: clean the yurts and cabins, and the camp sites and fire
pits between guests. There are
five camp host couples sharing the duties so it rarely takes more than a couple of hours a day. The rest of
the time is usually spent on grounds keeping jobs. On April 29 we moved across the street to a
site next to the park headquarters and
workshop for May. Site 40 was ok, but a little tight for us
and very shaded. This space is quite sunny and has a lawn and flowers. We all
love it, especially the dogs, now that the rains have tapered off. We’ll be back in 40
for June, since this site was promised to others for the summer.
The neighbors come calling |
When we searched the OPRD volunteers page we noticed that Collier State Park
near Klamath Falls
was looking for people to staff the store and visitor center. That caught our
attention for a couple of reasons: First, we want to try something other than
camp hosting, and second, Collier is the home of the state logging museum. We
contacted the ranger and hit it off with her. The upshot of it is that we are
going to spend August and September tending the store and helping out in the
museum, including giving tours. We are really looking forward
to this new experience.
Home for May: we get PBS! |
When Monaco
built these coaches, almost the first thing they did was lay the
carpet. Unlike houses where the carpet goes in after the cabinets, in this coach the cabinets were placed on the carpet. The builders did not trim the carpet correctly in one small, unseen area where the slide gaskets channel water away. You literally have to lie down, wedged between the bed and the back wall and look up under the lip of the slide to see it. In effect the carpet became a wick that brought water past the sealing gaskets and into the interior. All it took was to cut away a small section of the carpet to break the wick and the leak stopped. We couldn't belive it was so simple! We watched it like hawks for weeks, but it appears to have stopped for good. We have had lots and lots of rain and not a drop has come in for a month. I can’t tell you what a relief it has been to stop worrying about that.
carpet. Unlike houses where the carpet goes in after the cabinets, in this coach the cabinets were placed on the carpet. The builders did not trim the carpet correctly in one small, unseen area where the slide gaskets channel water away. You literally have to lie down, wedged between the bed and the back wall and look up under the lip of the slide to see it. In effect the carpet became a wick that brought water past the sealing gaskets and into the interior. All it took was to cut away a small section of the carpet to break the wick and the leak stopped. We couldn't belive it was so simple! We watched it like hawks for weeks, but it appears to have stopped for good. We have had lots and lots of rain and not a drop has come in for a month. I can’t tell you what a relief it has been to stop worrying about that.
The other issue has been with the Aquahot system that supplies our heat and hot water. We've had problems with it since we bought the coach. We have spent over two thousand
dollars replacing components and countless hours in one of the bays under
the coach trying to fix a long series of intermittent problems. If stuff just
breaks it is pretty easy to fix, but intermittent problems just drive me nuts.
I have thought for some time that there was a subtle
electrical issue somewhere that was the culprit. I recently replaced half
of the wiring harness in the hope that it would cure it. Nope. The Monaco folks
found and fixed a connector buried under the front slide that carried the Aquahot switch
wires that wasn’t properly seated. For a few days it looked like that was the fix,
but when we got to River Bend it wouldn’t fire up at all.
It's not all hard work |
So, the unpleasantness at Honeyman has more than turned
around. The coach is working fine at the moment. Winchester
Bay is a great place to
be and the park folks here are a pleasure to work with. Life is good.
More soon,
Bob
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