Thursday, October 25, 2012

Random Thoughts After the Latest Trip


Always learning...

For the first time, we stored our cereal and crackers in zip-lock bags and kept them on the open shelf above the dinette. This storage method was very practical to access, kept the food from getting damp in the cold, wet weather, and avoided boxes which might abrade the vinyl wall covering of the insulation package.

Even with the optional insulation package and thermal windows, when it was too cold at night to leave a window open, by morning there was some condensation on the windows from our breathing, and on the vinyl walls behind the mattress and behind the dinette cushions. We will start pulling the dinette cushions away from the walls at bedtime to allow for air circulation there, but we can’t do this for the mattress, since it’s enclosed at three sides.

When we  ran out of propane in both tanks unexpectedly, one exchange tank of propane (Blue Rhino) purchased at a gas station in Ohio was about $23 with sales tax.

We love our Garmin GPS, and really like the feature that shows which lane(s) to be in in advance of a turn. We also like the feature which shows a pictorial representation of upcoming exits which apply to your route. Because the Garmin has a strong preference for interstates, sometimes we must insert a waypoint to force it to take the non-interstate route we have chosen.  We cannot imagine anymore the effort it would take, especially at night, to go back to navigation by maps.

It's our style to set the speed control for 60 mph as much as possible and just let the faster traffic move around us. It's a lower-stress way to drive.

Great Husband and I enjoy planning details for our trip by making a detailed Excel spreadsheet at home. It includes the expected campground for each night, the length of the drive for each day in miles and hours, GPS coordinates and addresses, museums or other special places we want to visit, and info for campgrounds. We send the spreadsheet out to relatives so they can know where we are for emergencies.
I like the thought of flying by the seat of our pants more than we do, but it doesn’t seem to work for us. 

On this trip, I drove the Flex under towing conditions for the first time ever. Great Husband loves to drive and tends to keep that job for himself. But a migraine overtook him, and suddenly it was my turn to drive. It was a little unnerving to get initiated to towing in a town rather than out on the highway, including learning to look at our Aero towing mirrors instead of the car’s mirrors. All went well.

I also towed on the interstate for the first time, and I found it so easy! It will still take me some time to gain confidence about changing lanes in traffic.  Great Husband and I are both convinced that our towing mirrors are an absolute necessity and it would be foolish to try to tow without them.

We have given several tours of the Escape on this trip, but are also surprised at how much interest is generated by our Ford Flex. Lots of people ask what it is and have never heard of this car before. They are surprised that we can tow a camper with the Flex and always ask about towing capacity and how much our Escape weighs. We think Ford is missing out by not promoting the Flex better than they do.

There has been a minor problem with the Escape’s electric cord getting tangled up on stuff under the bed, so Great Husband intends to build a little partition in there to keep the cord separated from the rest of the under-bed storage.

At multiple campsites, we have had a problem with our old water pressure reducer (used for years with our pop-up). The water flow would dwindle to a trickle and then Great Husband had to go outside and work some magic to get the flow started again. He thinks we are due to buy a new pressure reducer. His research has shown that some are advertised as lead-free, so that sounds good.

When we had the Escape 19 built, we asked Reace for longer stabilizer jacks than he was typically using. He installed some that we believe are the ones he has been using on the Escape fifth wheels. We are very pleased with the longer stabilizing jacks, and don’t need to put any wood under them, which simplifies life.

Speaking of wood, we need some shorter pieces for leveling on the next trip. We are using pieces of 1 x 6s and need some shorter ones that will fit between the two tires.

The black water tank indicator typically reads high. But since we have never come close to filling that tank, we don’t worry about the tank reading much. When we clean the tank thoroughly at the end of a trip, the indicator works fine again. 

The bumper pads under the stove cover and on all the cabinet doors are sliding around. We have pushed them back into position, but will they stay there? Hmmm.

We are pleased with our ability to hitch up. We have learned that after lowering the tongue onto the hitch ball, pull the tow vehicle forward an inch or less and that makes it really easy to lock the tongue onto the ball. 

We travel with a little electric space heater (1300 watts on high) and use that whenever we can. It is much quieter than the propane furnace and easily heats the interior of the Escape to a comfortable temperature. Plus, of course, it doesn't use our propane.

The awning is so easy to operate that we never hesitate to put it out, even if briefly. Whistling Son timed us at 30 seconds to open up the awning.

We are using microfiber bath towels, and they came with a loop at one corner. I’m going to add a second snapping loop near another corner, and we will hang our towels from the cabinet handles across the bed and across the dinette for indoor drying. For various reasons, there haven’t been too many days when we could hang the towels outside.

For this trip, we bought a TV. It is an Apex 19” from Walmart, and was under $100. It stores beautifully under the passenger side dinette seat, in an upright position, and using the foam packing material that came with the TV. The storage height is perfection, and the plywood seat presses down slightly on the packing material to stabilize the TV. When we ordered our Escape, we chose not to have the wall-mount for the TV. We had our cable connection installed under the driver’s side of the dinette. We set up our TV either on the dinette or on the flip-up counter extension. 

We brought our antenna from home to use with the new little TV. It looks just like a sheet of laminated paper, and works great. We can position it to get the reception needed, sometimes hanging it from a cabinet handle with a twist tie. It is called The Leaf and we got it on Amazon.

For the first time, we also got to use cable TV (an option with the Escape). We found that a 25- foot coaxial cable works well at the campsites we’ve encountered. Shorter may not be enough.

This was the first trip during which we made zero reservations for campsites in advance. It worked out in every location, although we were surprised how often the campgrounds were nearly full in September and October.

We bought a year’s membership in Passport America since we could easily make up the membership price on this trip at just one of our chosen campgrounds. Passport America campgrounds give members 50% off the normal price. Their website lists the participating campgrounds. http://www.passportamerica.com/
By calling Passport America to order our membership, instead of signing up online, we avoided an extra charge for the printed copy of their participating campgrounds.


4-week Trip, Part 4

We planned a couple of days in Dayton, Ohio to wrap up this wonderful trip. Dayton is a great place to visit if you are interested in aviation.

We had a half day for the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park, which focuses on the Wright Brothers and on poet Paul Laurence Dunbar, who was their contemporary. I had come to enjoy some of Dunbar's lighter poetry recently, so to come across him here was a pleasant surprise.

Paul Laurence Dunbar
Wright Bicycle Shop

Reconstructions of the Wright catapult, rail, and airplane shed at Huffman Prairie Flying Field.
Because of the Wright Brothers' flights here, Huffman Field is considered the first airport in the world.

Release the 1600-pound weight to send the airplane down the 60-foot rail, and into the air.

We also spent a whole day at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force, where Great Husband soaked up details about military aircraft from all nations, displayed in huge hangars, and I took it in at a superficial level. The section I found most interesting was about the Berlin Airlift.

A Presidential plane used from Kennedy through the Clinton years.
 We were able to walk through this plane and several others on display.

Planes, planes, and more planes





4-week Trip, Part 3

After visiting Monticello, we headed on to Shenandoah National Park, and camped there at Big Meadows Campground. As I awoke on the first morning, I thought that Great Husband was deliberately saving on propane by keeping the temperature too low in the camper. This is a known trick of his. But not this time! We had most unexpectedly run completely out of propane, and were facing two very cold days and two more very cold nights with wind and rain and fog and no heat. I guess this was good for us and meant to keep us from being too spoiled.

At Shenandoah National Park, we hiked to a waterfall, walked a short distance on the Appalachian Trail, wrapped up in a sleeping bag to hear a ranger talk about killer storms in the park, and had a "French supper." Actually, the French supper was a multi-course meal meant to use up the food in our refrigerator, since there was neither propane nor electricity to cool it. It didn't include any French foods, but since it extended over a period of four hours, we decided it was French.

At times we also hung out in a big cozy public room in the Great Meadows Lodge, where there was a fire and Wifi to keep us happy.

A ranger talks about raptors, this one a red-tailed hawk.

Shenandoah National Park was built in imitation of the national parks in the western U.S., although it
doesn't have the great natural features of those other parks. In a very good display at the visitors' center,
we learned that there were many shenanigans in the park creation, and politicians
 and other movers-and-shakers displaced some 2000 property owners, some of them forced out
quite unwillingly.  The CCC came in to build park features, such as Skyline Drive,
and planted thousands of trees. So the park is essentially a planted tree garden.
Great Husband at Big Meadows Lodge

Enjoying fall colors at an overlook





4-week Trip, Part 2

Following our time in Georgia, we headed to Williamsburg, Virginia to visit our middle son, to be called Whistling Son in this blog. Whistling Son works in digital history at Colonial Williamsburg and it is one of our favorite places in the whole world. Virginia is teeming with American history and we've barely scratched the surface. We did visit Yorktown National Battlefield, Historic Jamestown, and Monticello on this trip.

Chesapeake Bay at First Landing State Park. We had a great weekend camping here.
But most of the time we camped in Williamsburg itself
and practically had a train track running through the camper. 
On a hike at First Landing State Park,
we saw bald cypress trees and knees
 (those odd, spiky growths).
Great Husband and Whistling Son on the beach

Fifes and drums at Colonial Williamsburg
Colonial Williamsburg is a wonderful restoration
where the Revolutionary Period is
presented as accurately as possible.
Lafayette speaks to the crowd.
He says he has been called "a statue
 waiting for a pedestal." Indeed!
Even the sheep are true to the period.
George Washington and the Continental Army had a decisive victory over the forces
of Cornwallis at Yorktown. The terms of surrender were signed here at the Moore House,
and this essentially marked the end of the Revolutionary War.

Reconstruction of a "stick and mud" building at Historic Jamestown
We enjoyed a talk about John Smith, whose story is full of craziness and unbelievable exploits.
Beautiful colors and perfect weather at Monticello.
We were surprised that Jefferson's house is on a mountain.
Monticello. After a very interesting tour of the house, we were free to wander the grounds.
We took a second tour to learn about Jefferson's ownership of slaves.
About slavery he wrote,"...we have the wolf by the ear,
 and we can neither hold him, nor safely let him go."
Monticello. Jefferson died in extreme debt, but the property was difficult to sell,
partly because of its position on a mountain. The house went
 into serious decline before ultimately being restored and preserved. 



4-week Trip, Part 1

We've just returned from a 4-week trip with the Escape, September and October, 2012, having covered a total distance of 3900 miles. Part 1 of the trip took us from Omaha to Fort Gordon, Georgia for the birth of our new granddaughter. 



We made a brief stop in Hannibal, Missouri . Here is the boyhood home of
Samuel Clemens and what they call "Tom Sawyer's Fence."
This part of town makes the most of the Mark Twain connection.
Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park
(Georgia and Tennessee)
commemorates these significant battles of the Civil War.
Driving tour of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park

Java Daughter and her family, stationed at Ft. Gordon, Georgia
A very young naval officer

The kids meet new little sister
 "Cupcake" at the hospital.