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People Plan

You know the rest. Redlands Truck and RV told us the coolant reservoir was showing cracks and could fail soon. Having had problems with coolant in the past we chose to have them change it. About 90 miles East on the 10 (we were still in California) I started getting low coolant and check engine notices. We were on a long climb with no functional shoulder – construction – so I elected to push on, better to suffer repairable engine damage than risk getting rearended. Eventually the engine made the decision for me and began to shut down. How fun is it to lose power steering in traffic at 35 mph? I was able to get on to the 3/4 width lane shoulder leaving some of the coach out in traffic. The engine restarted and eventually we made our way to a safe stopping place out of traffic.

Since I don’t carry a gallon of coolant, the tech we spoke with suggested water and return to the shop for repair. We carry water in our fresh water tank, the only issue was getting it to the back of the coach and into the reservoir which has scant space above it to add fluid without a hose and a pump (Pictures are on Facebook). My Uncle Rube might have added some other creative pieces but I am pretty proud of what I did.

We made it back to the shop and they were working on the coach at 7 AM. I will update that report in a later post. 

We are well and busy redoing our schedule. Still planning on Las Crucis Friday afternoon.  The good news we had breakfast at Carolyn’s again. The wait staff welcomed us back and asked what happened to our planned travel.

Other than the call from grandson Azriel to tell us that he and Stacy are married!!! the rest of the day was uneventful.

 

Vamping

I admit I am waking in the middle of the night worrying about traveling across the country again. As I think back, I realize this is not something new. Every time we close to actual departure I obsess  at 4 AM when I should be asleep. This has resulted in several calls to various suppliers to confirm that I do have what I need that they provide. It results in my trying out various systems to be sure they are working. For the last couple of days we were using our onboard water pump to empty the freshwater tank so I could refill with fresh, freshwater. 

So far all systems are go!

After I wrote that the water pump quit working in the middle of a load of laundry. Westwind, our favorite mobile tech just left with some of our money and we now have a functioning water pump for the trip.

The key systems that we cannot try out are ourselves. It has been two years since we traveled cross country. We have allowed 30 days for the trip and we know it can be done in 11. There will be plenty of time to stop and rest. We are looking forward to many stops to visit friends as we go. For the most part we will be stopping at places we have stopped in the past. The roads are roads we have driven at least once. It is hard to travel from the southwest to the northeast 22 times and find routes we haven’t taken at least once.

My local activities still keep me involved. I am no longer president, I willingly relinquished that post when a wonderful alternative presented herself. I remain a member at large until next February. I have taken on working with two important committees as their Liaison; Insurance and Road Repair. I know somethingabout the first and am rapidly learning about the latter. 

I’ll post this now and prepare to write more as we go.

Travel Interruptus Continues

We have mostly been in the apartment for the past month. Carol has  not been feeling well and is not comfortable going anyplace. Some friends have come by for a visit and Josh has been a regular presence. Rohma has been with her family so we haven’t seen as much of her as we would like. 

Today was to have been special since Dan and his family were flying in for the weekend. However they woke up with cold symptoms and chose to keep them to themselves and not share. They are rescheduling for next weekend. Rohma and Josh will be coming over to spend some time with us and have dinner. 

This is not my usual newsy post, just a simple report of what’s happening. 


That was 3 weeks ago.  Where did the time go? They did come in the following weekend . There were 4 of them plus Josh and Rohma for a total of 8 for meals in the apartment. But then our friend Leora from Las Cruces came in for her Brighton High Reunion and joined our gang for Friday night dinner in the apartment! As we settled down from that Pricilla Douglas our former neighbor from East Avenue arrived on Saturday for a planned visit and we had planned to have her join us for dinner so again we were 9 for dinner. We have done 13 in the motorhome a time or two so 9 in the apartment felt spacious for us. 

Since that visit we have been getting out more and not just for medical appointments for both of us, although there have been plenty of those. We have the luggage out to prepare for departure on Tuesday afternoon. and we are getting ready for Yom Kippur. I have been blowing shofar at every service for the holidays that it is called for and for a group in a senior living setting who gather regularly. 

Although we have no plans to give up our RV lifestyle we have moved up Plan B and put down a deposit for an existing facility as well as the new one that isn’t under construction yet. That is the future. For now I have 18 months left in my current term as Board member at Jojoba Hills SKP Resort. This gives me plenty to keep me busy between Bridge games. Carol is looking forward to her projects. She has another building renovation project to lead.

Three Days Later

Things work out, some in surprising ways. I read 8 verses of Bereshit to plaudits from some – really good friends and family – and to my own limited satisfaction. To those who do not grasp the difficulty of reading a few words in Hebrew after a lifetime of training, I’ll give a short explanation. Hebrew as we use it in the US is written with marks next to and under the letters which are the vowel sounds. In the Torah those marks and any punctuation are omitted. rd ths sntnc wth t th vwls nd y wll gt th id. Even with knowledge of the words it takes some practice. Israelis and other Hebrew speakers can do this from context. For me, first I have to learn the text in Hebrew, then I have to learn to read the Torah text. Just to make it more interesting each Torah is handwritten and among the scrolls we have at Temple B’rith Kodesh there are a few different fonts and sizes. 

That was more explanation than I planned on. We concluded the service with the 3rd soundings of the shofar each sounding is made up of 3 cycles of  3 different blasts and the last sounding ends with a blast called Tekiah Gadola or the long Tekiah. This often becomes a contest if there is more than one shofar blower. The proof is when the congregation starts to giggle and starts clapping when the last sound is finished. This is probably inappropriate but very common.

Wednesday we set out early for a task that had been put off for the duration of Covid lockdown at the Canadian border. We have Trusted Traveler passes that give access to special lanes and one particular bridge across the border. The border guards on both sides recognize us as trusted and ask very few questions. Lying to them would result in loss of the privilege forever. Two weeks before the appointment I was notified that my card was in the mail and I did not need to keep the appointment. Having received no such notice for Carol we attempted to keep the appointment, arriving at the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge a few minutes before the appointment. She was not on the appointment list! There was some discussion during which one of the agents took Carol’s card to see why. A few minutes later she returned with the card and pointed out that it did not expire until 2024. We must have renewed it in 2019 and totally forgotten. I can see the payment made  back then.

We used the cards to drive over the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge to visit Aunt Dorothy in Hamilton ON which was the reason for all of this anyhow. I may have noted earlier that Aunt Dorothy was Carol’s mother’s youngest sibling and is cruising along at 99 years of age. She was only 6 when Carol’s brother was born. 

We couldn’t resist stopping in Niagara-on-the-Lake on the way back just to wander among some of the stores on the main street for an hour. It was too late to get tickets for any of the performances in the Shaw Festival. Of the plays being performed there was not one we really wanted to see. Neither of us feels the urge to see another staging of “The Importance of Being Earnest” by Oscar Wilde.

We continued home eventually on the Lake Ontario Parkway right on the lake. This is s favorite drive in the car. No commercial vehicles or RVs allowed, the bridge clearances are as low as 10 feet.

 

Days One and Two

Our flights were relatively uneventful. The plan was less than wonderful since it left us at JFK with all our luggage from about 11 AM until 4:30 PM. Because we had booked Delta separately from Iceland Air They would not check our luggage through. Once we picked up our bags at Delta Baggage Claim we were out of Security and had to wait for Icelandic to open check in to get back to “airside”. There are no reasonable options for food or comfort at any of the terminals before clearing security. As we stared at Dunkin’ having had breakfast at Dunkin’ in Rochester I remembered that the Saarinen TWA terminal had been salvaged and made over into a hotel which certainly would have food options. BINGO! in addition to a highly regarded restaurant (pricey in any event) there is a food court with tables and chairs that used to sit on our Sandringham patio after serving as our dinner set on Warder Dr. The food was reasonable and the comfortable lounge looking out the window at the Super Constellation that has been parked there made for a pleasant waiting area. I will admit that the third recycle of the 50’s and 60’s music at high volume eventually became overwhelming. 

We arrived at the Reykjavik Airport about on time and were picked up by an OAT guide (not ours) for transfer to  to the Selfoss Hotel where we met the early arrivals and those who had arrived with us. By 5 PM we had our entire party – minus one couple – for the usual OAT greeting and plan for the 13 days and the next day. 

Day 2 we visited two water falls, one of which those of us who were willing and able got to walk behind.

SeljalandsF0ss
Behind the Falls

From there we had lunch and a bit of shopping in preparation for a hike to a glacier. We were prepared for rain, we thought, and we understood there would be some wind, this being Iceland. We were not prepared for 20 mile per hour winds with rain and at one point hail. I have no pictures. We crossed the front of the glacier headed for the toe over glacial sand and water flows bridged by plank bridges seemingly moved into place for our trek. It was only 15 minutes to our destination and another 15 minutes returning with maybe 10 minutes staring at the huge wall of the glacier itself. I have no pictures, my gloves were wet through as were my pants and water resistant shoes. Somehow the old rain jacket I was wearing over a warm comfortable water resistant jacket staved off the worst of the water. on my chest and arms. I do have a picture of the “Super Jeep” Really a highly modified Sprinter capable of carrying our entire party of 15 plus guide over the glacier itself.

Super Jeep

Day Three is coming up soon. We are moving North and West from Selfoss.

Old Technology

We have a really old analog slide projector. Since Carol was developing slide shows for automated projection we have had a Kodak Ektagraphic 260 Viewer/Projector purchased August , 1981. There has been little interest in viewing slides in as long as I can remember, or since the coming of digital photography. The slide projector has sat in our storage closet since we moved into the apartment in 2012. Before that it was hidden away in a closest in our East Avenue townhouse.

A week ago, while visiting with us, Josh and Rohma asked to see our honeymoon pictures! I remembered that the back projection function wasn’t working properly. I went shopping for a replacement, there were two or three available on eBay, but no guarantee that they worked. I pulled ours out and set about finding out how to fix a 20th century, predigital device. There was no help to be found on YouTube! It is assembled with many identical Philips head screws. Which ones to take out? Josh arrived with some tools. I explained that the image was supposed to be projected to a mirror which sent it into the box where it was turned around to project on the screen. Obviously if there was one mirror there would be more mirrors inside the big box.

Initial back removal

The Back is Off and the displaced mirror is obvious

The unglued mirror

We turned it around and noted that the inner compartment where the power cord came from was an insert into a large box – 7 screws later the back was out and there were two mirrors, one was clearly out of place, the adhesive had failed after only 40 years or more. Shame on you Kodak! An application of some modern industrial strength double sided tape solved the basic problem, only shortcutting the actual process by an hour, and we had some lunch and proceeded to show 4 slide trays of 80 pictures each from our honeymoon and the aftermath. 

We followed up to the slide show by casting a video of Josh’s drone exploits at Jojoba Hills to our TV using current technology. 

In preparing to show the slides, I came across a box containing artifacts from my father’s desk. We opened the box and found glass paperweights which he collected. Here is one which I have decided to display.

It was always my favorite. We gifted a lovely round one with milliflora to Rohma and Josh. 

Cummins to Red Bay

We hung around in Charlotte area waiting for our appointment at Cummins to see what was wrong with the engine and to get it fixed. We were able to pick up 2 additional nights at McDowell Nature Preserve. This is a park I will gladly return to even if it does lack on site sewer connection. I was able to get a site for 4 more nights at Crowne Cove RV Park, a commercial park that was only 2.5 times the price of the county park. With our appointment for 8 AM  Tuesday at Cummins we decided to move over on Monday afternoon so we would not have to face Charlotte rush hour. They had room and 30 amp electric for us. 

Good news, bad news. At 10 AM they took the coach into the service area and by 2 PM they had it back in the parking area all ready to go. The bad news was that the problem was operator failure. I thought that as long as the coolant was above the minimum line I had plenty of coolant. Wrong! It wants to be almost to the maximum line so that accelerating uphill does not expose the coolant level sensor. Lousy design I’d say, lesson learned after 9 years of ownership.

More good news. Monday night we were able to go to dinner at 300 East Blvd with Leigh and Patrick. It was lovely and we had a good time getting in one more evening with them. Tuesday afternoon we were planning to meet Terry and David for dinner, again, since they were returning to Charlotte for a day or two.  As we made plans to do some shopping, the big black beast that they drive pulled in across from the coach. They joined us on the coach for continued conversation until dinner time when we drove separately to Living Kitchen, a vegan restaurant. To his surprise David found the food to be satisfying and well flavored. From my point of view it confirmed my opinion that Vegan restaurants are fine choices for dining. 

The big surprise at dinner was when we asked for the bill. At couple sitting a few tables from us had witnessed our happy party and our sharing  “Happy Birthday” for Carol when the waitress brought out a carrot humus dish with a candle in it. They paid our bill and left before we knew.  A wonderful random act of kindness. 

With farewells  at the door we returned to the coach and departed Cummins the next morning to an uneventful drive to a stopover at a Jellystone RV park which will get a mediocre review only because how unlevel the site was. The next day, Thursday, found us arriving in Red Bay after yet another uneventful drive. We will be here for 7 to 10 days before moving on. The route from here is still in the thinking stage, we have time. 

In the mean time I have a chipped tooth that I hope to have addressed next week – every dentist in the area has taken Friday through Sunday off. I’ll live.

Day One of Westward Bound

A totally uneventful day. I suppose I could stop right there.

We left the apartment at about 9 AM as planned. And had the coach on the road by 10:30, about 30 minutes after my fondest dream departure of 10. With the usual stops for fuel and driver change we arrived at Harrisburg East RV Park just before 5 PM. Our site, #102, is the same one we were on a year ago. It is still only close to level but the jacks got me level with all the tires touching the ground this time. 

Is that enough excitement to write a post about?  Carol made biscuits and wonderful omelets for dinner. We have to consume the eggs so we can help Malena and Dan with their egg supply.

Tomorrow we have less than 4 hour drive to Malena and Dan’s. Since the car is still hooked up departure is just a matter of disconnecting and storing electric, water and  sewer lines. Oh yes because the site is so steep I need to store the spare step I carry along for places like this. 

The route tomorrow is  I81 south to I 66 to 17 to 29 and then hook around the C’ville  airport to head to the house.  

Still not exciting. We managed to watch the PBS News Hour tonight. Wish we hadn’t. I’m still too attached to being informed and all it does is aggravate me. 

We are really looking forward to our visits in the coming weeks. 

Aren’t you glad you read this 🙂

Man Plans

It’s trite. It’s true. Well, lets just say that planning can be an invitation to some laughter someplace.

We are not going to Canada tomorrow. It seems that in all my research I failed to notice that even though we are vaccinated we still required a positive antigen test to go with our negative infection test. Oh, and it had to have been at least 2 weeks before crossing the border. I learned this while preparing my arriveCAN app which you cannot even begin to prepare more than 72 hours before planning to cross the border. I know the detail is in the pages and pages of detail that the Canadian Government  has posted. If you don’t check the box on the arriveCAN app, you cannot get approval. If you do check it and its not true the penalty is either a $5000 fine or refusal of admittance to Canada. I guess the choice is up to the border agent’s whim. Not a risk I choose to take.

We are now working on what to do with the three days we are here in Rochester that we were not planning on. We may even sit still for a day or better go for a long walk.

On Saturday Josh, Carol and I went for a long walk along the river (The Genesee River that is) in the northern part of the city. It was delightful to get out and stretch our legs. The trail is one we have ridden on our bicycles many times in our bicycle riding past. It was pleasant to take it slower on foot. As we returned to the Maplewood Park where we had left the car Josh and I went down a trail to the Lower Falls.

Genesee River Lower Falls 

I don’t know that I have ever been to this viewpoint and the only time I remember seeing these fall was from a boat coming up river from Lake Ontario or peering over the Driving Park bridge as we drove over.

Driving Park Bridge from Beneath

 We continue to find new vistas to explore and visit in the city where we have spent most of our lives. 

A Long Day, a Stop in the Desert

This morning we woke up in Benson AZ after a lovely visit with Ellen and Lon, lunch at a mediocre restaurant in Benson, I’m being kind, but it had the benefit of being open, and a long time over ice  cream and on our coach. Catching up is always good. We figured we were two four hour days out from Jojoba Hills, but decided to stretch to to about 6 hours, because as Carol said, “our rule is made to be broken on occasion.” 

After fueling in Yuma we decided to make a stop along the road in Anza Borrego State Park, or any other open space not marked “no camping” along S 2. Somehow six hours became almost eight before we settled into a lovely spot with a sign “Jojoba Wash” Really! we didn’t even know it existed until after we started to set up. We are about 90 minutes out from Jojoba Hills, so we will take our time getting underway in the morning. 

The drive was totally uneventful, a wonderful thing, and Obama’s book “A Promised Land” continues to carry us down the road. I am not sure I could sit and listen for the many hours it takes, nor am I sure I could read it, but for hours on the road it is a wonderful companion.