Blues and Moon Dust…..

Crater LakeCrater Lake – unretouched – the blues in the lake were simply amazing.

[this dates back to Aug, 2020 – don’t know why it wasn’t published then.]

We are in another campground. 5, 6 – I’ve lost track of how many since we left home.  Two or three weeks – maybe four in this one.  Cell data is good.  Sites are reasonably far away from each other.  Lots of trees so some shade.  We are at a higher altitude, so temps are a bit more moderate, but colder at night as well.  Water-electric only and currently we are on 30 amp and the pedestal sockets all look a bit burned.  But they work.  One AC is enough, but we could (and did for a few minutes) run both.  We hope to move to 50 amp sites today, presuming people move out on time.  The voltage on the current site was a bit low.  Our built-in ems/switch didn’t or doesn’t cut out for low voltage, but our Victron Inverter kicks in automatically when the voltage gets low and it was momentarily kicking in yesterday afternoon.  These campgrounds (Thousand Trails) are pretty busy – especially on weekends.  We try to schedule our moves for Monday-Wednesday, Tuesday being ideal for open spots.  Still, we sometimes end up taking what we can, then picking sites that will clear out the next day and moving.

Update – we did move the next day to a pair of 50-amp sites.  We are settled in, hopefully for the full three weeks.

Washington and Oregon, it seems are a vast volcanic wasteland. Yes, the scenery is great.  Lots of Pumice as graveltrees do grow here.  But away from the coast, much of it seems more desert-like, at least late in summer.  Nearly every peak you look up at, is a volcanic remnant.  There are volcanic rock cliffs and fields of lava.  Even the gravel on the roads in the campground is a form of pumice.  At first glance, it looks like normal granite gravel, but it is anything but.  Ground under car, truck and RV tires it turns into the fine, gritty, grey “moon dust” as some of the locals call it.  What passes for soil; a slightly brown version of moon dust barely seems to support life especially with the meager rainfall that makes it in off the coast.  The fine dust sticks to everything and with little to no rain, it sticks there until washed off.

We sometimes see deer in campgrounds such as this, as we did in this one our first day – a doe and two fawns.  Today, a buck wandered through, eating berries off the bushes.  A couple of days ago, they visited our kids campsite.  This morning we saw four domestic bunny rabbits running loose.  Seems they are permanent residents of the campground.  The grandkids are naming them all.  Bandit, Goldie, Buttersccotch, Oreo, Midnight, and more…

We continue to have minor repair issues.  I’m waiting for a new shade to arrive from Tiffin.  The auto stop mechanism on the front passenger side window shade disintegrated.  They offered to send me a new one.  We need to rework the gas fill on my daughter’s gas tank fill – it doesn’t allow the gas pump handle to properly seat down in the fill tube and thus won’t properly auto-shut off when full, leading to never filling the tank all the way in order to avoid spills.  Every day something needs to be repaired.  Bicycle repair daysSome days it is gluing a grand daughter’s toy back together or using a pin and epoxy to repair a plastic horse leg or getting out a needle and thread to fix a hole in my jacket pocket, a shirt or a sock.  Today it was going through and greasing all the bearings on one of the girls bikes.  One down, three to go.

 

Update: the shades arrived and have been installed.  Tiffin sent a return label – can’t imagine they want to pay to send back the broken shades – have asked.  I’d rather scavenge the still-working parts to avoid another request for a shade. There are 9 other manual shades in this RV.

 

We have rope lights, we wanted to install under the rig.  I got them installed a couple of days ago –Someone left the basement lights on! a four hour long, dirty gritty job. “We” aren’t sure we like them.  Kind of looks like we left the basement lights on.  8^}   We carry the bikes on the truck, on a hitch bike rack.  The license plate isn’t visible in that configuration – I need to find a way to move the plate to the bike rack or somewhere else on the truck where it can be seen from the rear.  I’ve ordered a trailer license plate + light bracket to do so.  We don’t want to end up helping someone fill their quota of tickets.

Oh, and we finally stopped by RV dealer/body shop to get an estimate on the repair to the right front fender that someone hit.  The amount was ridiculous – over 5 times what Allstate says it should cost.  Now we have to get yet another estimate and try to resolve the cost differences.  The other person was clearly at fault – so in the end, this shouldn’t cost us, other than the never-ending hassle of getting estimates and trying to arrange a repair when most RV service places are at least a month out.  Our best bet is to find a regular body shop that is familiar with working on RVs (fiberglass, diamond coat etc).

And – I realized the cell booster is connected through the wrong kind of coax – which may be affecting how well it works.  We bought a directional antenna and I didn’t see the kind of improvement I expected.  Then I remembered we installed that booster “in a hurry” and just used what coax we could find (75 ohm, run of the mill coax) and what should be installed is low loss 50 ohm coax designed for that purpose.  I now have the correct coax and need to run it from outside to the inside cabinet location of the booster.

We did replace our old hotspot with a new Netgear Nighthawk M1 a couple of months ago, which is working fairly well.  Sometimes, AT&T doesn’t work so well, but we are making good use of “unlimited”.

We also got the e-bikes out at the last camp – and did some riding around the campground.  We have yet to take a longer trip out on them, but they are fun to ride wherever we are.  It’s a bit of a chore to get them on and off the truck – batteries come out, fold-down handlebars and seats.  Then lift them up – lock them on and I have a heavy homemade tarp I strap down.  The first two tarps I tried flapped in the wind on the highway and shredded on one day’s travel.  This one appears to be holding up well.  They come off when we plan to stay for a week or more.  It’s nice to be able to not have the backup warning beep incessantly when the bike rack is on AND be able to see out of the backup camera.  It is also possible to buy a cable to extend to a new camera mounted farther back on the bike rack, but the cable is $80+ so I’m thinking I can make my own.

We were thinking about adding a kayak to the menagerie – which seems to have turned into planning to add a kayak.  In the era of Covid, it appears kayaks are in shorter supply than toilet paper.  We don’t want a cheap one – nor crazy expensive.  Just a tandem we can hit the water quickly with or even take fishing (we did some fishing down on the gulf).  Deb has a model picked out – if we can find one locally that is the required color, and a roof rack – it will be ours.

Update:  We found a place nearly three hours away that had a couple of orange kayaks of our chosen model.  The model we wanted came in three colors – we preferred the Caribbean blue, orange was our second choice, and ugly green our third.  We couldn’t order it over the phone or on the web, so a trip was the only way.  We got there – and low and behold, there was a blue model on the floor.  Seems the someone managed to order it – and it sat in the back of the store until they canceled – one hour before we got there.  So, we got our kayak and managed to get it home to the RV using some temporary foam supports and lots of tie-downs.  Rack parts are on order – seems finding exact fitting rack parts for our vintage ford truck take a bit of work.  So, does, it seems, finding a decent place to go kayaking.

Our first trip out, we choose to skip the small stream that runs past the campground, due to lack of decent places to get the kayak into and out of the water (80 pounds and 13 feet long).  We went to a park on the Dechutes river – seemed calm enough, but when we got out on the water we realized it was a 4-5mph current.  We did manage to get the kayak up the river a way, then coasted down and loaded back onto the truck.

Our second trip out, we picked a small lake 35 minutes away.  It was too busy, and we could see people walking out 100 feet from the launch area, still barely getting their ankles wet….  So, we went to another nearby lake that looked better – launched, went about 100 feet, and ran into a sand bar.  Rerouted – and more sand bars.  About 500 feet away from the launch, after getting out and towing the kayak, we gave up.  We talked to some other people and got pointers of where else to go – but apparently, with no rain and most of the mountain snow gone, low lake levels are the norm in this area.

Third time, however, was the charm.  We found a small volcanic lake with a non-busy boat ramp and lots of beach.  It was surrounded by hills (caldera walls) so somewhat shielded from the wind.  We still have a lot of practice before we will consider ourselves “experienced”, but it was a good trip.

The Muffled DrumFinally, in my spare time, I’m working to get my brother’s books onto Amazon.  He wrote a dozen books – some history of our ancestors and several about the Central Wisconsin Veterans Memorial Cemetery (and other cemeteries), near which he lived.  He did extensive research on the veterans (and their wives) that are buried there as well as providing a great deal of corrections to the official record-keeping there.  James G. Gardner passed last spring and he asked me to take care of his library.  I knew he wanted to make his set of books more available, so that is what I’m working on.

Sometimes, all you need is to look up!!!                                            Then again, sometimes looking down is funny too!

Fire BanJust look up

 

Fog to Frozen – a learning experience

I have a long list of posts to make, but life this winter has been anything but conducive to sitting down and writing – until now.  This post takes us from the Gulf Coast, to single-digit temperatures in north-central Wisconsin.  We would normally winter somewhere in the southwest, where, though it might not be especially warm, is usually dry.  Instead, we chose to stay on the gulf coast, central in this country, so we could make a run to the ancestral home if we had to.  One of my brothers was quite sick with cancer.

We spent over a month near Gulf Shores braving the clouds, fog, rain – with just a few days of sunshine.  Then we headed west to Galveston Island in hopes of a little less fog and a little more sun.  By chance, our GPS headed us through the Bolivar peninsula – headed for the Ferry.  When we first realized we were headed to a ferry with our 34-foot Class A and Toad, we pulled over and mulled whether we should turn around and take “the long way around”.  A phone call informed us this ferry could handle us easily and was free and likely saved us a couple of hours and a lot of traffic over going the long way around.

Galveston Island is a pretty nice place, with lots of beaches – far enough west, some you can even drive on.  We were in a nice park – albeit a bit far from town on those days when we needed to go shopping or “touristing”.  There were plenty of good grocery stores – even a Costco within driving distance (1+ hours away).  We had our bicycles and our metal detectors and made use of them.

Meanwhile, we monitored conditions in Wisconsin – and decided to leave Galveston with a week to go into February.   We took two days to get to near Champaign, IL where we live part-time.  We had been studying the weather in Wisconsin and starting two days after our intended arrival, they were forecasting temps down into the 5 to 8-degree range – for three nights.  We hadn’t experienced anything like that in this RV.  In fact, the lowest temperatures we had experienced, was 24 degrees and 20+ mph winds in a Walmart parking lot halfway between Galveston and Champaign.   The furnace ran almost continuously, and we had no other source of heat. Temperatures in the right water bay went down into the lower 30’s.  The plan was to stay in Illinois for a few days to collect supplies for the cold siege and get a couple of other errands done.  The COLD plan – pick up some heavy tarps in the garage and pre-cut them for installation up north.  Before we left Texas, I ordered three rolls of 3M outdoor no-residue tape (delivered home) so I could tape the tarps to the RV and hope they came off cleanly.  I also picked up a couple of 20-pound propane tanks from the garage and the external tank adapter I had previously purchased for the RV and got installed.  I also collected the heaviest extension cords and all the electric space heaters from the garage.  Lastly, we picked up a couple of 1-inch thick pink board 4 x 8 ft sheets.  We planned to bring the main slide in on the coldest nights, but to wrap the sides of the bedroom slide with the foam.  I measured, pre-cut and stored them in one of the pass-through storage areas.  Lastly, we picked up a pressure mounted curtain rod and heavy insulating curtains.  We would use this to provide a barrier between the front driving area and the main room of the RV.  So, went the plan.

The drive up was uneventful.  Mom’s place has a 600-foot-long uphill driveway.  We asked mom to have it sanded before we got there – and we made it up without difficulty.  Turning around was fun, but a few sawed off branches and we made it, backing in next to the garage (barn) where there was an outside 15-amp socket.  Placing the tarps started in earnest the next day and was finished the day after that.  It might have gone quicker, but there were other things with my brother that took priority.  The tarps didn’t go as well as I hoped.  I had planned to use Velcro between the sections – but the stuff I had didn’t stick well in the high 30-degree temps I was working in.  So, everything got taped and every bit of the three rolls of a special tape got used and then some.

Rover with skirtAs I was about to place the last pieces of tarp the second day, I saw a field mouse attempt to run out from under the RV – but ran back in.  Crap!  We do carry some mouse traps, so after that last tarp went on, 4 baited traps were left inside.  The next morning there was one clean untriggered trap and three victims.  I cleaned and rebaited all – and got a fourth mouse, but none after that, so the tarps were doing that part of their job.  I was pretty sure the RV was mouse-proof as I had gone over very carefully – but one can never be entirely sure.

So, I need to diverge a bit.  Propane tanks on RVs are always in unsealed compartments so any leaks can disperse.  My main tank would be inside the skirts.  When I installed the external tank adapter, I very carefully checked ALL the fittings on the tank to make sure nothing was leaking.  Most of the time there, we used the external tanks, saving the internal tank in case we couldn’t refill the portable tanks for some reason.  There is one issue with the external tanks.  All propane tanks store as a liquid – which boils off to gas for use.  That liquid to gas conversion absorbs heat, cooling the small tanks.  The lower the propane gets, the faster the tank cools.  One morning early, the furnace was “missing” or “flaming out”.  The 20-lb tank was about ¼ full and wasn’t generating enough pressure to make the regulator keep up with the furnace.  I didn’t take the thermometer out that morning but other times I measured tank temps down as low as -18.  I’ve read you can buy tank heaters, similar to water pipe heaters, but I didn’t have time to catch up to any of them.

Since we wanted to move the main slide in/out and we had to have the engine running to do that – when the skirt got around to the engine exhaust – I wrapped it with some fiberglass insulation and taped around it – and to the skirt.  I also checked the temperature with the engine running – and it wasn’t very warm at all.  We did the same with the generator in case we needed power that we couldn’t get from the garage but never needed it.

We also took a couple of smaller tarps up to the roof and bungee’d them over the Air Conditioners.

Lastly, the steps retract when the engine starts – with no easy way to turn them off – so the tarps had to go over the steps so they could move in/out and still seal.  That ended up a pain in the end, but there was no good way to seal the tarp to the frame underneath.  I did tape a couple of doormat pieces to the steps so they weren’t too slippery, but there were still a couple of near falls.  For future functionality I’m going to find a way to completely disable the steps.

When the temps got down to 5, we were using the furnace, the electric fireplace (on low) and a space heater in the bedroom.  The furnace also kept the water bays above freezing.  We were only plugged into a 20-amp circuit, so we also put an AC amp-meter on the line and had Deb turn on each electrical appliance so we knew what we would be drawing.  One good thing – the 3000-watt Victron inverter we installed has an assist mode.  I programmed the max amount of current for it to draw from the outside power and it used the lithium batteries to supply the rest of the current demand from inside appliances.

Did the skirt work?  Sure did.  When it was 5 degrees outside and 20mph winds, it was a good 15 degrees warmer inside the skirt, thus the entire bottom of the RV was only seeing 20 – and no wind.

Was it absolutely necessary?  Don’t know.  We might have survived without it, using multiple circuits from the garage and several space heaters.  Might have.

Would I do it again – hope never to have to.  We did look at a skirt kit – one where they give you stick on mounts and the material and you cut and install it – but it’s expensive ($1k+) and it was unlikely they could have shipped it in time.  I think our Tiffin 32SA can probably do better in the cold than we thought it could, but I think I would never take the chance willingly.  We expected to have to stay for weeks, which we did and bailing because it was cold wasn’t really an option.

As it turned out, we lost our brother.  It wasn’t unexpected, but it did happen literally without warning one morning,

James G Gardner, you will be missed.

mike