Covid 19, 20, 21 rambling….

Covid 19, 20, 21 rambling….20211228

We left home late last year, for a few months in warmer climes.  We’ve in the the RV now for 6  25 months.  We are camped near home in Texas, but can’t be in our home due to front line health care workers living in our house (relatives).  We did venture into the garage to exchange parts/tools and rarely inside with appropriate PPE to grab a few things for the next part of our journey.

Like most everyone else, we are tired of isolating, but just the same, we are tired of being wary of catching the virus.  Like many of you, we are in the over 65, somewhat more vulnerable crowd.  While we are healthy and eat Keto style, even a somewhat mile tour of the disease is not something we want to live through.  And in close quarters, if either of us picks it up, then likely both of us do.

We aren’t entirely isolated.  Our daughter and her family of six are camped beside us and will be traveling with us, when we escape this park.  We are camped in a small town, not far from home in a private park.  We are careful of contact.  Everyone in the park maintains their distance.

So, let me tell you a story.  The other day, I was filling up my truck at a local gas station.  As usual, I was being careful about what I touch, sanitizing, etc.  As I stood there, a guy – overweight and older 55-60, walked out of the station and most of the way to his truck, he was rubbing his nose with his hand, finishing off with a general wipe of his mouth area.  Then he handled some stuff in a storage area of the truck, then got in and drove away.  Did I mention he was one of those snack food delivery guys that put the stuff on the racks in the gas station?  Think about that, next time you want to pick up some M&Ms or chips in a gas station.  I figure his route probably took him in, oh, say a 20-mile radius.  Just enough to cover a nearby city that happens to have a meatpacking plant – you know one of those Covid Petri dishes?  I’m sure they have gas stations that the people working there stop by on the way to and from the plant.  Maybe even a snack room inside the plant.

I’ve been told, by close relatives, that they live in a more or less rural setting and therefore they don’t have to wear masks or be particularly careful because there isn’t a lot of Covid running around.  Even though they are within a few miles of a major city.  Even though there are still people commuting into the city for Essential Work.  Even though they live near an Interstate or major thoroughfare.  Circles, that extend for miles and miles.

Hey people, this is like sex and STDs!  Except you don’t get to have the fun part.  Whomever you include in your isolation circle, you are including EVERYONE they include in their circle.  The circles get pretty large, pretty fast.  No, you can’t prevent all contact with everyone, but you can choose some level of reasonable control.  Covid induced isolation insanity KILLS.  It kills because people get tired, then convince themselves that dangerous activities really aren’t that dangerous.

Like Wisconsin.  I have lots of relatives up there – and quite a few who bristle against the “illegal” stay at home orders.  Last night, the state supreme court, met by VIDEOCONFERENCE (mmm because they didn’t want to get the virus?) and invalidated the state Stay at Home order.  Within minutes, bars were open and crowded with STUPID Wisconsonites acting like they’d been freed from a terrible imprisonment.  How they reconcile the “legal decision” with the fact that the virus was still on the way up in Wisconsin – one will never know.  Perhaps this is just another form of Darwinism – except they will take a lot of older, perhaps more intelligent parents and grandparents with them.  And now it seems, they will take a number of small children and their parents with them too.  Long term exposure to the virus appears to be leading to the inflammatory crisis with small children and the average age of those hospitalized with the virus is dropping – many down in their 40’s.

We have another week or so in Illinois – then hope to head somewhere out west, to low Covid zones where we can isolate in parks or boondocking locations to ride out the summer, at least while looking at forests or mountains.  Of course, all plans are subject to where things go in the next few weeks and months.  At this point, there is no certainty that this is going away any time soon.  Treatments will get better, improving survival rates, yet being retired – any stay in the hospital is likely to push us toward financial ruin.  If and when vaccines come out, we will be in line as early as we can get there.  So, we are preparing for this to last a long time, while hoping the worst of this virus goes out with 2020.  Obviously it didn’t go out in 2020, or even 2021.  Things are shaping up to make early 2022 as bad if not worse than the previous two years.

Meanwhile, repairs and alterations continue as much as I can, as a distraction to the world mess.

Mike

Hiding out, fixing again!

Can’t hide from leaks…….

We are hiding out in central Illinois hoping the virus blows over without taking any family and friends with it.  Yesterday, we noticed a bit of water in the middle of the main room across from the entry door.  We couldn’t figure out where it came from and chalked it up to a spill.

Today, it rained and blew and rained for hours, hitting the right side.  Another puddle, bigger, showed up.  This time we traced it under the kitchen cabinet.  It was wet under the front drawers.  I removed the water heater access door – no water.  We pulled the bottom large door under the stove – no water.  I pulled the back off the inside of the cabinet behind the sink plumbing – there was water puddled on top of the water heater.  Great…..  I went outside and opened the door (which hides the seal between the heater and the fiberglass wall) and of course, there was almost no sealant and what as there was hard and cracked.  This is in a nice Tiffin, Class A, 15 months old.  It was blowing hard and raining – I grabbed some roof patch tape and tried to dry off the fiberglass and install the tape as a quick, temporary fix.  It looked like it would work, but it didn’t.  Back out and with a little less rain, I grabbed a tube of clear silicone caulk and dried a few inches at a time and applied it to the top and sides.  That seemed to work.  We left a small space heater running on fan mode only blowing into an open drawer slot, venting out a cabinet door for several hours to dry the undercabinet area.

We don’t full time in our RV, yet.  It sometimes sits in storage for a couple of months.  If we had not been in the RV, I hate to think how much damage would have occurred.  Thus I will be doing a full inspection of seals on the RV to make sure we don’t have any more that could start leaking at any time.  Just not now, its 40 degrees and 20 mph winds.

Thought the story was over?  When we went to close all the shades for the evening – the front shade wouldn’t go down.  It moved a couple of inches and stopped.  The sunshade worked, so I expected power was ok.  I started looking/feeling around the upper left corner – and yes, water!  Dripping down from above, it was hitting the motor end of the shade.  I pulled the back out of the cabinet above the driver and traced the water to the fiberglass lip just above the upper left corner of the windshield.  I went outside with some silicone – and the windshield seal was fine – it was the marker light, not sealed against the body.  They had tried to seal the through hole from the inside but not well enough.  I sealed it quickly with silicone.  Then we put our fan to blow air up toward that corner and a couple of hours later, it worked.  Today, in the daylight I have to go up and check the other four marker lights on the front.

Add to that, a slide that may not be working correctly, a slow bathroom sink drain and a plugged black tank flush…

Stay tuned…..

Mike