January 2019 – Benson AZ
1/2/19: Sunny Arizona |
When we pulled into Benson on December 31 the office was
closed until January 2, so we backed the coach onto OUR new lot and peered
anxiously through the windows to see what we had done. The outside is great. It
has been freshly painted and the roof is just four years old. The windows are
also new, nice vinyl thermopane units. The slider work ok but is pretty dated.
We’ll replace it at some point but for now I’m
going to try to find new rollers for it.
going to try to find new rollers for it.
When the office opened and we got the keys, the interior was
a bit of a letdown. It needs more work than we expected, not because it is in
bad shape, but because it wasn’t finished very carefully. The carpentry is solid
but the craftsmanship is kind of slapdash, to put it kindly. Lots of
refinishing, replacing trim, adding base boards, paint, probably wall paper,
certainly carpet, etc. I am finding that my enthusiasm for this kind of work
has waned a little, but none of it has
to be done tomorrow, or even this year so we’ll get to it as we can.
to be done tomorrow, or even this year so we’ll get to it as we can.
We love the lot. High on our “wants” list was a full concrete
pad to park the coach on, and a paved walkway to the street so that the dogs
didn’t have to walk on the gravel all the time. The lot has both and it’s in
good shape, or will be when I patch the corner I drove the coach over. We also
wanted a covered patio area and it has a small one that has some view.
This park is arranged in terraces and we wanted a rim lot.
This one is on the top row on the highest level in the park with an expansive view
across the San Pedro
Valley to the east to the Dragoon Mountains .
The setting sun shinning on the mountains is spectacular, and the play of light across the valley is fascinating at all
times. Now, if it will just warm up and stop blowing, maybe we can enjoy it!
Sunsets are pretty awesome |
We start the engine about once a week to refill the air
tanks (never have found that leak)
and got a serious scare. The turbo boost pressure read zero. Revving the engine
didn’t move the gauge. Dollar signs started flying through my head as I tried
to figure out what was going on. The engine sounded completely normal. How
could a turbo go bad while the engine wasn’t running? No one I talked to in the
park had any suggestions. One guy very generously disconnected his engine
management system and brought it over to see if that would tell us anything. It
did, but we didn’t understand it at the time. I spent
hours on the internet and
on the phone with Ed Woznicki trying to understand what was going on. We
finally concluded that we were stuck and it was time to call a pro. Tucson
Truck Service sent one of their mobile rigs out with a computer full of Cummins
diagnostic software. After reading all the data exam and an exhaustive physical
exam and test drive the conclusion was…no problem. I guess the hundreds of
times I’ve started this coach I never looked at the boost gauge while in
neutral. I watch it all the time when moving, but never noted that it doesn’t
move when the engine has no load on it, even when revved up. The turbo only
operates when a load is placed on the engine. An expensive lesson, but worth
every penny for the peace of mind. It wore me out, though.
RV'ing is great |
And, as I write this, the front slide started to
leak again last night. At least I’m pretty sure what that is and how to fix it.
Rereading that sounds very negative. All that
notwithstanding, we are really happy to be back in the Co-op, especially as
official lot holders. We’ve made several friends over the years and it was
great to reconnect with them. We do look forward to seeing them and bringing
each other up to date on what we have been doing for nine months since we last
were together.
As I have described before, “Co-op” means that everyone
volunteers to share all of the work needed to keep a place like this running
smoothly. Think of it like a small town. There are groups and committees that
take care of the extensive common areas throughout the park, maintain the structures
and infrastructure, review architectural requests for modifications to casitas,
plan entertainment, help take care of folks when they get sick, plan and run a
very busy entertainment schedule, write bylaws, install, maintain and
troubleshoot a good wifi system, operate the office, run two private tv
channels, plan budgets and run community charity events (the Co-op is the
largest charitable contributor in the town). We both jumped right into the
thick of it: I rejoined the Landscape and Facilities groups, and Kayeanne started
back up with Bingo, Helping Hands, Beading and Polymer Clay. Kayeanne is now
one of the regular callers at Bingo, and I got talked into managing disposing
of all the brush and cactus waste that we generate. All in all, we certainly don’t
get bored.
Despite all the other distractions, we are beginning to fix up
the casita. For this year, we’ve decided to replace the interior trim, add baseboards, refinish
and paint the ceiling, wallpaper the living room and replace the carpet. There are
other changes we are talking about, but we’ll wait a year or two to see if we
really want to move walls, replace doors and other “stuff”. We’ll see how far
we get this season.
More soon,
Bob
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