Saturday, July 28, 2007

Coolest thing ever

Ok, I know we already sent a post tonight, but we just witnessed the coolest thing ever to be seen in a campground. As we were sitting at the table finishing up dinner, a herd of about 30-40 buffalo including babies came walking right through the campground. Of course, we grabbed our cameras and went and took video and pictures. I think Miles is one of very few 4 year olds who can say he was only yards away from a real buffalo.
Just seeing that sight, has made the heat worth it. Boy I am glad we opted to camp in a National Park instead of in town somewhere.
Seeing the buffalo up close sure beats the two deer that walked through our campsite last year when we were in Wyoming.
We will look at the pics tomorrow and if there are some good ones, we will post them tomorrow night.
Happy Trails.
P.S. I was just informed tonight I made a mistake on our Crater Lake post. I typed that it was the biggest lake in the US when actually it is the deepest lake, not the biggest, I think those would be the great lakes. I think all this hot weather is melting what left I have for brain cells.

Oh, the heat...


You know, the entire point of taking the Northern route was to enjoy some cool, non-california weather. Apparently the weather gods ignored us, and we have an incredible heat wave following us across the country. We actually got 10 drops of rain yesterday (I counted). It is 10 degrees warmer here in North Dakota than it is in my hometown in Southern California. Someday it will rain! Notice the green line (our route) follows the path of maximum heat.

We have also tried rough-camping it a couple nights in state and national parks, ones not known for amenities such as 50-amp electrical service. The motorhome is behaving perfectly, the batteries and solar panels let us live in comfort comparable to the tent campers next door. But I have this big air conditioner on the roof that is useless. Tomorrow we will spend the extra bucks for a full-hookup campground and luxuriate in cold AC and hot water. Tonight we dine on grilled ham-and-cheese sandwiches and cold beer ( the fridge works). Oh, wait, we're out of beer. Guess it has to be cold Martinis tonight.

We drove through Miles City, Montana today. A huge build-up to a huge dissapointment. Miles slept through most of his namesake town. We stopped for the unique wal-mart (only 10,000 of them in the country). We discovered that Miles City, Montana is where the locals deport all the old, senile drivers to. Yup, if you don't know how to drive, or love to drive on city streets at 5 mph while weaving from lane to lane, Miles City is your town. I am not kidding, I almost hit the same rear-spring sagging, ciggarette-smoke belching, no-one-under-80-allowed-inside Caddilac three times in 5 blocks. This will NOT be our retirement town.

Now we are in Theodore Roosevelt National Park. Since he established the NP system, I guess they felt they had to give him a park. The great ones were taken, so he got the leftover. But it's a pretty damn good leftover, with lots of bison (not buffalo, as Kendra/Kassandra/Ka-teenybopper working for the park service explained to Miles).

Friday, July 27, 2007

Still in Montana


Well, did you miss us? Made it in to Montana yesterday, still in Montana today, Probably still be here tomorrow. Montana is a looong state. Decided on a whim to take detour to Lewis and Clark State Caverns, a large cave system that was NOT discovered by Lewis and Clark.
This is a really cool cave system that has not been entirely sissified. You have to climb a mountainside 300 feet to reach the entrance. Fortunately, once there it is 300 feet down through the caverns, and a horizontal trail back home. Unfortunately, Montana is in the middle of a heat wave and it was 97 degrees on that mountain. The constant 50 degrees inside the caverns helped. Ominously, automatic defibrillators are prominently displayed throughout.
The cave was beautiful, Miles was very good, and now we are all sore.
Tomorrow Starts the mad dash for New York. No more fun side trips, we Must make it back to Grandma and Grandpa's house. Freeway blast, here we come.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Still traveling north


Crater Lake in Oregon

Well, we left Oregon today but not before seeing the great Crater Lake. This lake is the biggest in the U.S. , and it is so beautiful. Take a look at these pictures. No, that is not the sky you are looking at that is the true blue color of Crater Lake. This will be a place we visit again in the future.
After seeing the very beautiful Crater Lake, we continued to head north on 97 through the rest of Oregon, and we ended our day in Mary Hill Washington. Tomorrow we will start heading for Montana. Join us then for more adventures and sites.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

We are finally out of California!

Man, this state is Looong!


So we spent last night in a small marina rv park right on the shore of the main Stockton shipping channel. It's the furthest inland deep sea port on the west coast. (still nothing compared to the Saint Lawrence seaway). Still, the prospect of huge ocean-going ships cruising by your back door does sound cool.


Well, after the entrance excitement, we settled in to a quiet dinner and a good night. Met a retired Stockton City fire captain and swapped stories and beer. Turns out the big ships don't come in every day, so we missed the one entry. But this morning we saw fishing boats, rowing teams, and even a couple scruffy tugboats. And, Miles got to throw half the gravel pad back into the channel.


As we were buckling Miles in for departure, our neighbor came over and said, "Hey, a big ship is coming. It sure was.


Now we are in Oregon, think we will make Washington tomorrow. Except I forgot that Oregon is 55 mph everywhere, for everybody. AND THEY ALL FOLLOW THE RULES!


Maybe we'll make it...

Monday, July 23, 2007

Interesting Times...


"May you live in interesting times" is supposedly an old Chinese curse. If so, who cursed us?

Last year our trip started with a bang (literally) when the turbo resonator blew up less than 60 miles from home. Fortunately we knew about this problem and had planned ahead, with a spare ready to go.

This year has started much more ominously. The two adult partners on the trip started out with a major difference of opinion about "sense of urgency" and "get the lead out" and on the other side, "quit your bitching and help pack this damn thing". Once solved (reduced to mumbles), we were on the road. After a stop to fill with propane, then we were on the road. Then a stop for fuel, THEN we were on the road.

In other words, we didn't make it too far the first day. We are in Stockton, camped on the banks of the big river. Supposedly tomorrow morning ocean-going ships might travel by less than 100 feet from our campsite.

What else could go wrong today? As we were pulling in to the marina / rv park, one of us smacked the motorhome into the guard shack. The guard shack lost, but the motorhome sustained some damage too. The XM radio antenna was guillotined, so we are back to CDs until we can get a replacement.

Then later another one of us wiggled the tablet PC the wrong way and shattered the screen. It still works, but looking at the screen is like a scene from "Harry Potter" where he peers through a dark mirror. It's now on to the backup, so navigation is now going to be quite spotty, if it works at all.

Last year's trip only got better from the poor start. Let's hope this one gets better, or ...

Another Road Trip Excursion

Tomorrow 7/23/07 we are off again on another driving adventure. This time we will be heading all the way back to Watertown New York. Follow us on this year's journey to see where the Wandering View will end up next.