Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Day 12 - Nov 18 - My last day on the road

Talked to Janet and Mike last night and learned that scheduling isn't good for a visit with them. So am headed home. Today is my last day on the road!  Can't believe it's gone so quickly and I'm definitely not ready for it to end.  I was just getting a good start after getting most of the kinks out of the RV and the media stuff. But probably a good idea since I'm out of clean clothes and have some obligations coming up.
The purpose was to check out the operation of Doodle and of me.  I loved driving it but operator error like forgetting to switch the fridge from DC to AC when parked was still an issue until the last few days when things seemed to become routine without having to refer to notes.  And only once did I almost drive away without unplugging the electric cord.

I also learned and shouldn't soon forget that if all cabinets aren't securely shut tight, this is what happens:
                                                Luckily it wasn't the refrigerator!
                             
 
 Other things I learned:
  •  hippies know a good place to eat in town even if they look like they are stoned
  •  I can be totally happy and at peace alone driving thru the countryside.
  •  the Pacific Northwest has an awful lot of Christian radio stations.
  • a shower every other day is acceptable even if you aren't French
  • I can turn the heater on with my toe before getting out of bed
  • a blog every day is too much. Even I was becoming uninterested
Learn to look ahead for a pull out to stop when a photo op appears instead of flying by and wishing I had taken a picture.
 
12 days isn't enough time to make 7 stops for visits and do much sightseeing.  On my one year long trip around the US beginning in June 2015 I will have plenty of time for serendipity and adventure.
 
Skip reservations. It takes the spontaneity out of travel and with the RV I always have a place to lay my head at night.
 
Insider road information is very valuable. Only take the interstates when you are in a hurry. Secondary roads are much more interesting. That's where you'll find the real America.  For more read Blue Highways by William Least Heat Moon and Travels with Charley by John Steinbeck.
 
Become a packrat. Save the odd rubber band or plastic bag. You never know when you'll need it.
 
Look at the feedback on RV park websites about wifi signals. It can mess up reception on your cell phone. Post some feedback warning others about this.  What does the fi in wifi mean anyway?!
 
It's illegal to pump your own gas in Oregon. You can stay nice and warm in your car while the attendant does all the work. Why can't we do this in California and employ more people?
 
It's been fun letting you know where I am and what I'm up to on this 1400 mile journey.  Next year's trip will have only a weekly blog. 
 
Liz
 
 P.S.   Couldn't resist stopping at the historic Benbow Inn in Garberville. My first time there...went in and had a cup of coffee and sat by the fire after exploring the beautiful grounds.
                                                                           

                                                                               
 
 



Monday, November 17, 2014

Day 11 - Nov 17

Spent last night in the 7 Feathers Indian Casino RV Park near Roseburg, OR.  Absolutely first rate beautiful park. Know I disappointed them in that I did no gambling.  Only went to the Casino for the Buffet, which was only OK. It's hard to measure up to Las Vegas style casino buffets. I was tempted to stay for the MoTown Musical Review but it didn't start until 8 and I would be breaking my rule of not being in bars after dark. Before dark is OK.

                                               There were beautiful walking paths by a creek.
.
                                  
Spent the morning on hwy 199  from Grants Pass to Crescent City. I was a little afraid there might be ice but decided since I hadn't seen any ice yesterday morning and it was the same temp this morning I would give it a try. No prob and extraordinary views coming thru the Redwood Highway.
Thx for the suggestion of the route, Kev!

                                                                                                       
 
A funky collection of burl wood shops near Kerbyville.
 
 
 
burlwood mailboxes
 
The main house but no one came out to greet me.  What if I had wanted to buy something?!
Love poking around and exploring places like this.
 
 
Redwood Highway
 


The scenery is so beautiful.  I don't remember being this interested in the scenery when we came thru here on our honeymoon in 1962  headed to the Seattle World's Fair.
 
Trees of Mystery - Klamath, Calif.
 
But this I do remember, Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox. I have this same photo in our honeymoon album from half a century ago.  So of course some of Bob's  ashes had to be resting here. He would be pleased.  This trip has been so healing for me.  Grieving takes strange turns as some of you know.  For me seeing these places again has given new meaning to all those years we spent together.
Trinidad, on the California coast

Day 10 - Nov 16

This first photo is for you, Cash. It's the little Lego man you gave me to keep me company on the ride home. He likes his view from the dashboard!
                                                                              
                                                                           
                                                                                 

So far no snow or ice and not likely to have any now that I'm heading South toward home. This incredible view greeted me as I neared Damascus, Oregon to see Connie and John.
                                                                   
                                                                              
                                                                     Mt. Hood                                                  
                                                                           
Our Bay area friends now have a several acre spread here in the Oregon countryside.  Their two cockapoos kept the visit lively and Connie is sending me the best recipe for apple bread from their own orchard.  I'll share......
                                                                  
    
                                                                               
                                    

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Day 9 - Nov 15

Drove south on hwy 5 expecting to run into ice but none all the way to Portland.  Arrived at Rebecca and Kevin's in Tigard to find Bud and Sandy so spent the afternoon visiting into happy hour when Becca arrived with the boys.


                                              Cash and Parker, Becca and Kevin

                                             
                                             Parker's Children's Theater Play
                                           
                                                              
                                                               Lego and Kevin

Kevin and Rebecca invited me to stay in their driveway for two days plugged into their house electricity which allowed me to experience yet another aim on this trip: driveway surfing.  I now have only one more method of RV travel to try, the infamous Walmart stay for free parking lot.






                                                                              

Friday, November 14, 2014

Day 8 - Nov 14

This is the half way point of my 2 week trip and I am holed up in a motel on hwy 5.  Had planned to drive to Portland yesterday afternoon but hwy 5 was a slow crawl out of Seattle due to an accident and it was getting dark near 5 p.m.so I gave it up. I had planned to get a motel once a week to wash my hair and watch some tv. Have been showering daily in the rv park facilities. Don't want to be the smelly old lady in line at the museum. Watching the news last night on tv and on my weather app on my phone tells me I shouldn't get back on the road until 10 a.m. because of icy wet roads. I have chains and I would think hwy 5 is no problem just because of all the traffic. But I will go slowly toward Becca's in Tigard, Ore..... I had a reservation for an rv park near Tigard last night but missed the cutoff time to cancel it so will lose my $30. 

Lesson learned:
This time of year you don't need a reservation at any rv park. None have been more than 1/2 full.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Day 7 - Nov 13

Drove to Bellevue, the home of many Microsoft employees, including David and Jody, the kids of friends Bob and Peggy Long. Jody took me for a great view of the Space Needle where we talked with a pair of flight attendants from Germany who wanted to know what to do and see in Seattle.  Jody told them of the Chihuly glass museum and made me wish I had time to see it myself.  Not on this trip if I'm to get home in time for an 80th b'day party of a friend.
                                                                         
                                                                            
                                                                            
             Jody brushing her dog almost makes me wish I had cats again. Almost.
                                                                                        
 
The Space Needle
 
A Chihuly art glass installation in a business office.
We had lunch with David downtown near his office after a tour of a Seattle which reminded me of San Francisco with its hills.
 
Seattle is a sentimental journey destination for me since Bob and I went there to the World's Fair in 1962 on our honeymoon. I feel like he was here with me today. 


Day 5 & 6 - Nov 11 & 12

Veteran's Day brought out many veterans waving flags as I passed under freeway overpasses.  Everyone honked our gratitude for their service as I headed toward Seattle.

Stayed at a KOA near Sea-Tac, the airport and also home of many Boeing plants in the area.  Will go to lunch tomorrow with Brian, a family friend who works at Boeing. Settled in for the night,  I woke up around 2 a.m. thinking someone was trying to break in.  There was obviously a storm going on that shook the RV like it was coming apart.  Once I decided it wasn't an intruder I went back to sleep, but in the morning woke up very cold. It was 42 inside the Doodle.  My electric blanket had gone off. I reached over and turned on the heater before even getting out of bed. Love this little rv.  The lights all worked because they work off the battery in the rv and the propane had the heater and stove working so I could have my breakfast. But didn't know why the electric blanket went out. It's old, I guess.

Went to lunch with Brian at a place called Bahama Breeze and had a hot toddy to warm up.
.
 
After lunch I gave up trying to charge my laptop while driving and alternating it with the GPS plug in and bought a universal electric charger. There will be other charging cords I leave places so it will come in handy, I'm sure. Now I can charge the laptop at night like normal people.
 
Arriving back at the rv park the electricity was out all over south Seattle because of the storm last night. That's why my electric blanket didn't work. It needs to be plugged in to shore power and the rv park power was off. It was too late to go to another rv park and besides my app told me the only other ones were in Bellevue and with commute traffic I wouldn't get there before dark, another rule of mine not to drive after dark.
So I called my rv guru, Nacio, who told me I would be unintentionally Boondocking tonite.  That's where you camp without hookups. Great! I did want to experience every kind of camping on this trip but thought I would save that for another trip. It's really an adventure now.  He told me to turn on the generator for an hour or so, then turn it off and turn the heater on. Do this until I go to bed and then put on many layers of clothes and all the blankets I have. The generator runs on gasoline from the vehicle and it was only half full so I couldn't leave the generator on all night. Besides, its' noisy and drives the neighbors crazy. At least I was better off than the tent campers in the next aisle and the young man who seemed to be sleeping in his car!
 
So I did some blogging on the computer which had some power left until I got tired of typing with gloves on and went to sleep at 7:30 feeling like a stuffed sausage with all those layers of clothes.
Woke up hours later thinking surely it's morning. It was 10:30. Closed my eyes remembering reading that when people freeze to death its like falling asleep. But I did wake up in the morning at 7 feeling pretty good to be alive. It was 35 degrees inside the Doodle.
                                                                            
 
 Still no power in the rv park. So glad to get out of there toward Bellevue that I forgot to stop in the park office and see if there was a refund for no electric.
 
What I learned:
You won't die without heat. You'll just be cold.
Don't be tempted to heat with propane from the stove. That's how to die, not freezing to death.
Your electric blanket will only operate when you are plugged in to shore power.
Always ask to use a person's photo. They may be in the witness protection program.
 


Day 4 - Nov 10

The Doodle looks cute among all those huge RVs.  It's my baby...

 
Had dinner with Doug and Bernie, our good friends from the 5 years we spent in Tucson, Bob's last years with the postal service before retiring in 1992. Bob headed the Southwestern Division of the Motor Vehicle Division and Doug was head of Personnel. Now Doug is retired and they have a large RV they call Thor.  It's in for repair now because Doug tore off a fender making a turn Bernie told him he shouldn't. Those two are just as much fun as ever.  We went for Thai food and it was just like old times when we saw them at least once a week to go out to dinner. Except little Timmie is in med school now and Bob was with us only in spirit.
 
Stayed at 99 RV Park in Vancouver which has the amenity of having a Verizon store next door where I went for phone help. All the RV parks have wi fi but some of their signals are so weak that your phone can't connect but it keeps trying and blocks your emails.  So at that point you may as well turn off the wi fi to read emails and then turn wi fi back on to save data. Travel is so easy now and so irritating when some things don't work as they should. I use Google in my phone to get distance between cities to stick to my 230 plan of driving no more than 230 miles or no later than 2:30 in the afternoon.  Then I use the RV Parky app in my phone to find an RV park w/in those 230 miles. It all works great when it works.
 
Lesson learned:
Hook up to wi fi but if you can't read your emails or use some apps take off  wi fi or go to a Starbucks
 
 
 


Day 3 - Nov 9

No glitches today except I did panic an hour after getting gas thinking I had forgotten to replace the gas cap. I had. Whew! It would have been a long way back to retrieve it. Drizzly light rain here in Oregon. Missing Bob.
                                                                                
 
About my RV. The latent hippie in me has wanted a VW bus since the 1960s, preferably one decorated with flowers. But my 72 year old pragmatic self told me it would be too small (and no bathroom) to be comfortable on a one year trip around the US starting in June next year.
I named my little RV Doodlebug because that is the bug that doesn't go in a straight line, just like I will be doing on my road trips around the US.  It's a 1999 Roadtrek on a Dodge Ram Van chassis, 18 ft long, only a few feet longer than my car so easy to maneuver. I like sitting up high to see over cars.  And it's safer altho I know if I tangle with an 18 wheeler, I'm toast!  It rides very cushy compared to my car which is a hard ride but keeps me awake. The van is so smooth it almost puts me to sleep. Time for another coffee or go in the back for a nap.

For the last two months since I bought it, I've been trying to learn all I need to know about operating it. Auto mechanics are a foreign language to me.  It's been like studying for a final exam and if I blow myself up on the propane stove it will be my final exam. Added to that has been trying to learn the new Smart phone and laptop. My head feels like it's ready to explode.
Spent the night at Jantzen Beach RV Park in Portland.

Day 2 cont'd

Beautiful views of the winding steep grades of the Siskiyou Pass coming into Ashland, Ore. and the scary gravel lanes that end in a pile of sand to hopefully stop those huge runaway trucks. Mt. Shasta appears as a surprise around a bend in the highway.

                                                                              
 
 
Visited with Bruce and Barbara in their beautiful hilltop home in Ashland but was so excited to see them I forgot to take their picture. Their daughter Allison and son in law Kent have started a winery  called Reflection Vineyards outside Yakima, WN.  Wish I had time for a stop but must leave somethings to do the next time.
 
Stayed the night at Glenyan RV Park in Ashland where I scattered some of Bob and Bogey's ashes by a pretty little lake. They will like being near the ducks. This trip so far has been very healing for me seeing the beauty of nature.  Bob is with me enjoying it, too.
                                                                                  
                                                                          
 
                                                                            

Monday, November 10, 2014

Day 1 and 2 on the road - Nov 7 and 8

This is a practice blog as well as a practice run up to Seattle so don't expect too much!


Left in the Doodlebug at noon right after the Boutique Board meeting. Went to Hollister (yes, I know it's the wrong direction for Seattle) to visit brother Mike. Driving thru the Salinas Valley with the rich black soil called black gold by farmers reminded me of John Steinbeck's wonderful stories of this Long Valley.
 
 
 

 Had a nice chat with him over politics and family and he gave me a roll of duct tape my friend Carolyn says I should never be without on the road. He also wrapped my electric cord in black electric tape where some of the wires were showing. Big brothers are a blessing!

 
 


Checked in at Casa de Fruta RV park intending to head over to hwy 5 in the morning.  This is my first ever experience in an RV park and I learned a lot!  Got there at 3, checked in and parked the rig but didn't hook anything up before going to dinner at the restaurant where great niece Sara is waitressing.  Had a good dinner and visit with her.

 
 Casa de Fruta has changed so much since I was last there 20 years ago. A  pair of beautiful peacocks were on the path back to the campground.
 
 


Upon returning to the RV park found that a large motorhome has parked right next to me in the park which had all kinds of empty spaces.  He was so close to me that when he pushed his slider out it touched the electric box where he had already hooked up but the door wouldn't open so I could hook up! Luck was with me as it was 5 minutes to closing for the office. The young woman who came out with me saw my motorhome neighbors were also out to dinner by now so she asked me to move to the next aisle to a different space which I did.  I asked her to watch me hook up since this was my first time doing it and she said OK after I plugged the cord in.
While making the bed I discovered I had forgotten my pillow so made one out of what seemed to be my softest blanket. It wasn't.

 


In the middle of the night my cell phone which I keep on the bed beside me started buzzing and saying my battery was almost dead. How could this be since I plugged into shore power and did everything right according to my checklist (thank you, Nacio).  It was midnight and I was panicked that I had killed my cellphone and wouldn't have it for the upcoming trip so called Bobbie.  Sorry, Bobbie.  She tried this and that unsuccessfully for the last 5 minutes before the screen on my phone went blank. Then I became philosophical...if I have no cell phone I will travel the old fashioned way. But what if I have a breakdown in the middle of the nowhere and no way to call emergency road service?  I need that phone. So went to sleep after e-mailing Bobbie that I would come back to Berkeley to see what could be done.



In the morning had a very good persimmon, cheese and my Metamucil which for me is my morning coffee and waited till the office opened to tell of my dilemma and ask for a refund since I was obviously not hooked up to shore power all night as I had paid for. They gave me a $10 refund of my $30 and said the person who helped me hook up was new and should have told me to also put the breaker switch on (as Nacio said I should but thought this park was different since I wasn't instructed to by the person from the office).
While sitting a few hours to have my battery recharged now that I was hooked up correctly, my neighbor, Frankie, came over to visit.  She's been on the road for a year in an old Winnebago waiting for her Fema money from Katrina so she can rebuild.  At least that was her story. She shared way too much of her life as I kept trying to guide the conversation back to her travels of where she had been and where she was headed. Finally had to give up on her when she started in on Obama.  They say the most interesting people on the road are the ones you would never talk to normally.  Frankie was one of those.

On the way back to Berkeley for phone help I stopped at home to pick up the pillow I forgot and check to see if the laptop charger Bobbie mailed back to me a week ago had shown up yet.  It hadn't so I cooked the two apples I brought in the microwave at home (since the RV microwave is now on the fritz I suspect because of the electric fiasco last night).  I can't eat the apples raw because they are too hard on my upper plate but are good cooked. Now who's sharing too much!? I've notice that people who live alone often talk too much. Hope all my ramblings in this blog are meaningful.

Then to Bobbie and Nacio's where they explained about the cell phone that it isn't dead, just needed charging, Did some more tutorials on the internet, had some good Chinese takeout and to bed in the RV.  Decided to take a shower in it just so I could be sure everything works.  Plan to mostly shower in rv parks for convenience.  Forgot to be sure the RV was level. Some water went down the drain in the floor but most of it ended up at the front which I then bailed with the large rag I had brought along to be used to wash the back window.  Squeezed many rags full into the sink but finally got it all up and went to bed.  The shower was actually very refreshing and in the morning the plastic curtain was dry so after a cup of tea with Bobbie I bid them goodbye thanking them for saving me again and headed to Ashland.

 

  GYPSY took me on 80 to 505 and then to 5 bypassing Sacto. Thank you GPS! Love the way it sits in its cup mount right next to the steering wheel so all I need to do is glance over to see how many miles to the next turn.  And when I leave the van I take it from the cup space and store it under the seat so it isn't visible and an invitation to break in to be stolen. Thank you, Bobbie and Nacio for finding this clever device for me. I have the smartest kids!

My first day on the road was a great learning experience!
Here's what I learned:
Don't forget your pillow.
Always hook up before the office closes.
Put the breaker switches on when hooking up. Don't depend on rv park people to know.
Be sure your campsite is level before taking a shower or running your refrigerator.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Still Prepping

A day spent in Berkeley with Bobbie giving me media tutorial on how to create this blog, among (numerous!) other things technical.
Luca waited patiently for us to finish.
 
So, we took a much needed break at the dog park with Luca.


 So back at home the Doodlebug gets packed for the trip. It seems that every time I mark something off the to-do list, I find something else to add! Will take the electric blanket, it is likely to be cold....



Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Getting Started


Taking the Doodlebug to Seattle on a shakedown trip. Warranty over end of November so have to get the miles in. Neighbors stopping by for the Doodlebug Open House:  Richard Holmboe, Joan Fury,  Jean and Ken Brady, and me.