The Year Trip
Stories and updates from our year on the road.
Monday, January 9, 2017
The Dreaded New Years Resolution
Although our Year Trip is now a memory and we have been home for over 6 months now, I would still love to use this blog to share my writing to those that followed our adventure.
This week I wrote an article to start off the New Year. This year, like most years, I am trying to focus on taking care of myself and trying to find more time to do things that nourish me, one of the things that I always want to make more time for is writing, so I am starting the New Year off writing about New Year's Resolutions, follow this link to my most recent article for Red Tricycle...
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Cancer - We're Done with You!
We haven't written for awhile on this blog and that's largely because our trip has come to an end. We are now settled back at home in our house in Seattle doing all the things we missed (and didn't miss) last year. Back to school, back to work, back to after school activities, play dates, dinner dates, lunch dates and re-connecting with friends we haven't seen. We also came back to one thing we REALLY didn't miss during our trip, Andrew's cancer. Actually, the cancer prior to the trip was Prostate Cancer and the doctors got rid of that before we left, but upon our return we discovered a new cancer, Urethral Cancer.
Since I have been home I started writing for an online magazine called Red Tricycle, this week I wrote about how cancer has affected my life. November is also known as Movember, in an effort to bring awareness to men's health and diseases like Prostate Cancer, which is why I chose this for my topic this week. I will also continue to post my articles on this blog in hopes to reach a larger audience. Thanks for reading and for the support!
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Back to the Grind & Stats From The Road
We've been home for just about 2 weeks now and while we are all happy to have a lot more space, sleep in our own beds, see are all our friends and family and get back into our usual routines, I am still feeling a bit of a loss for our traveling days. Yes, I know I am very spoiled, we had a wonderful year trip and now it is time to get back to regular life, we can't live on the road forever. Or can we?
Could we live like this for longer? Maybe if every spot was this beautiful. |
While it might be tough with our girls as they are growing up and want to be doing the normal things kids do, we will likely stay put for awhile, but we can incorporate some of our traveling ways into our at home days. Since we have been home we unpacked our storage unit and we all got our rooms sorted, pretty quickly - taking a tip from traveling in our tiny camper, I am trying to remind myself and the family that every thing needs to have a spot to call home. It's easy to leave shoes, toys, dishes, etc all around a big house, likely people won't step on them or have to move them to sit down, like it would be in the camper, but in either home, its a good habit to continue.
Of course we were very happy to see our friends again!
Now as our adventure is coming to a close, I have a few things that I have been working on and want to work on in the future. While we were traveling, at the end of the trip we got a lot of questions about "How Many" or "What was your favorite", so we decided to put together a list of some of the statistics from the trip (both trackable and untrackable).
Our goal for this trip was not to visit every state or see every national park, our goal for this trip was to explore this amazing country of ours, we wanted our daughters to see all the opportunities that are available to them in our country. We wanted them to learn about all the types of jobs they can have, the places they can go to school and the vast amount of variety that is in the US, from the different types of landscapes and the many different people that live in our country. We also wanted to see as many as family and friends as possible. With these goals in mind, I think we achieved them. There are definitely more places in the country that we would like to go back to and visit, but we feel pretty good about the surface we scratched.
One of our last hikes at Latourell Falls in Oregon with Uncle Dan & Eva & Rodin |
Here is a breakdown of some of the statistics we gathered over our 9 months on the road: (Please let us know if there is a stat you are curious about, we are happy to share, this was just our initial list, more details of where stayed can be found here.)
Miles driven: 25,164.6
States slept in: 29
States driven through: 33
Provinces visited & slept in:4
Trips to Ford Dealers: 7 (Terrace, BC; Port Huron, MI, Bangor, ME, Virginia Beach, VA, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, Salt Lake City, UT, Ventura, CA - 5 oil changes, 3 dealing with check engine light, 1 set of new tires)
Oil Changes: 5
Tire changes: 1 - Salt Lake City
Tire issues: 1 - Caught a screw outside of Bozeman, patched and repaired in less than 20 min
National Parks & Monuments visited:
Canadian: 3 -- Jasper, Banff, Watertown
US: 27 Yellowstone, Windcaves, Badlands, Minute Man, Black Hills, Mt. Rushmore, Sleeping Bear Dunes NP, Acadia, Great Smoky Mountains, Mammoth Caves, Provincetown Monument, Dry Tortuga NP, Everglades, Big Cypress National Preserve, Zion, Grand Canyon, Alcatraz, Glen Canyon, Colorado National Monument, Joshua Tree, Yosemite, Newberry National Volcanic Monument, Gettysburg National Military Park & Cemetery, Death Valley NP, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, Presidio of San Fran, Redwood National Park, State parks visited: 10
KOAs: 28
Harvest Hosts: 7 (Coastal Black Winery in British Columbia, Younity Winery, in Maine, Bishop’s Orchards in Connecticut, 16 Mile Brewing Company in Delaware, White Barrel Winery in Virginia, Mockingbird Hill Farm in Georgia and Agua Dulce Winery in California)
Hotels stayed in: 11 (South Dakota, Great Wolf Lodge Niagara Falls, Bangor, Maine, Disney Cruise, Gettysburg, PA, Telluride, CO, Durango, CO, Snowbird, Timberline, OR, Zion, UT, McMenamins, OR)
Countries visited: 6 (US, Canada, Jamaica, Grand Cayman, Mexico, Bahamas)
Driveways slept in: 6 (Danny's, Waters', Heig's, Rutledge's, Quinliven's, Zimmerman's)
Houses slept in: 8 (Thompson's, Sophia & Yuki, Hayden & Steph, New Mexico Cabin, Janell & Glen, Nonni & Nonno, Sanya & Phil, Doris & Don)
BIG THANKS to all those that hosted us! These were some of our best times and best memories! We always appreciated a clean shower and a home cooked meal!
We were also so happy when we were able to meet up with family and friends on the road, such a treat to be able spend the holidays with loved ones!
Longest stay - Thompson's in Virginia (16 days!)
BIG THANKS to all those that hosted us! These were some of our best times and best memories! We always appreciated a clean shower and a home cooked meal!
We were also so happy when we were able to meet up with family and friends on the road, such a treat to be able spend the holidays with loved ones!
Visit with Houser cousins in Key West, FL |
Super fun Disney Cruise with Gorohoff Family |
Christmas morning with the whole Micheli crew in Orlando, FL |
Ending our trip with an awesome visit with The Bauer cousins in Oregon |
Flu shots/Dr's visits: 1 stop at the pharmacy for flu shots for the family, but otherwise we stayed out of hospitals and urgent cares (Thank God!). We all got a little sick, colds and a bit of an ear infection (for Siena) - but no one puked! Woo hoo!
Speeding tickets: 0 -- Also, patting our backs for this one, while we didn't really ever drive over the speed limit, I did get it get the truck up to 80 at one point, and then Andrew got mad and that's why I didn't drive that much.
Rear endings: Just one, by a guy in Las Vegas, again, one of the few times I was driving and getting on the freeway to head to Zion. His car was way more damaged than ours, so we called it good.
Ski days: 27
Ski areas: 14 (Taos, Santa Fe, Angle Fire, Wolf Creek, Purgatory, Telluride, Powderhorn, Steamboat, Alta, Solitude, Snowbird, Squaw Valley, Mt. Bachelor, Timberline)
Ski areas: 14 (Taos, Santa Fe, Angle Fire, Wolf Creek, Purgatory, Telluride, Powderhorn, Steamboat, Alta, Solitude, Snowbird, Squaw Valley, Mt. Bachelor, Timberline)
States we skied in: 5 (New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, California & Oregon)
Boat/ ferry trips: 6 (ferry in Vancouver, ferry to AK, Disney, Houser boat trip, Dry Tortoguas, Alcatraz)
Times stuck in the snow: 2 (Both times at the cabin - that driveway was a bear to get out of)
RV repair projects: 3 (new hoses for our toilet in Gettysburg, Andrew & Hayden fixing my light and other issues in FL, Andrew & Phil fixing the drawer in AZ - these last two were just really excuses for the boys to use tools and go to HomeDepot)
Fun times skiing this winter! |
Boxes sent home: 4
Number of states we left gear: 4 (Montana, Virginia, New Mexico, Oregon)
Times the camper pipes froze: Just once, but that was enough!
Times we wished we had air conditioning: 2 (One humid night in Orlando and our last night in Death Valley)
Museums, Zoos & Aquariums visited: 15
Movies seen in theater: 5/6 -- Star Wars: Force Awakens (Siena & Andrew saw it twice, once in Orlando with the Micheli's and on the cruise in 3D with the Gorohoff's), The Martian (girls saw Charlie Brown), Deadpool (girls saw Zootopia), we all saw Civil War twice.
Dutch oven meals: 10 apx (we only had 3 dishes we cooked but made them over and over: Chicken & Rice, Lazy Peach Cobbler and Apple Crisp)
Times crossing the Golden Gate Bridge: 3
Universities Visited: 4 (MSU, ASU, Stanford, MIT)
Yoga classes across the country: 7 (Jasper, Bozeman, St. Augustine, Ft.Lauderdale, Telluride x2, Squaw Valley)
Running Races: 2 (Prostate Cancer Race in VA, Pat Tillman Race in AZ)
Untrackable:
Money spent - all of it
Gallons of diesel (Cheapest diesel at Buc-ee's outside of Dallas, $1.50/gallon)
Souvenirs picked up - too many
Meals eaten out
New people met
Family campfires
Fires in the rain
Fires in the rain
Quarters spent in laundromats
Walmart visits
Starbucks visits
Times girls asked how much longer (of the entire trip or on a specific drive)
Favorites:
Kathy: I think Maine was my favorite. I love Acadia National Park, even though I didn't participate in the big hike there. I loved the rocky coast line and the small coastal villages, Bar Harbor was a fun place to visit and the country side is beautiful there. I also really, really enjoyed all of our skiing adventures, staying at the cabin in the snow and being active and outside with my family, even in the cold of winter, was a highlight of the trip. Oh and of course Yosemite! Loved that place to death, the cliffs and hikes and the greenery of the whole place. I can't pick just one favorite!
Andrew: Key West, the weather was nice, it was warm enough to sit outside to drink our coffee in the morning and the sunrises were beautiful. But if we stayed too long we may have never left there.
Siena: I liked Texas the best, I liked the food and seeing our family. I really loved the ranch and the dogs.
Nadia: I really liked Florida because it was warm and I got to see all my family, we got to go to DisneyWorld and go on a Disney Cruise.
One of our many campfires in the rain - I think this was in Michigan |
Kathy: I think Maine was my favorite. I love Acadia National Park, even though I didn't participate in the big hike there. I loved the rocky coast line and the small coastal villages, Bar Harbor was a fun place to visit and the country side is beautiful there. I also really, really enjoyed all of our skiing adventures, staying at the cabin in the snow and being active and outside with my family, even in the cold of winter, was a highlight of the trip. Oh and of course Yosemite! Loved that place to death, the cliffs and hikes and the greenery of the whole place. I can't pick just one favorite!
Andrew: Key West, the weather was nice, it was warm enough to sit outside to drink our coffee in the morning and the sunrises were beautiful. But if we stayed too long we may have never left there.
Siena: I liked Texas the best, I liked the food and seeing our family. I really loved the ranch and the dogs.
Nadia: I really liked Florida because it was warm and I got to see all my family, we got to go to DisneyWorld and go on a Disney Cruise.
It's been a great ride! Thanks to all for following along on our crazy adventure! |
Friday, May 27, 2016
Up the West Coast
Highway 101, just North of the California/Oregon border |
Before I tell you about that trip 20 years ago, I need to go further back in time to my introduction to the road trips. As a child my parents would shuttle me and my brothers most every summer the 1,750 miles from Seattle to Canadian, Texas to visit my grandparents. However, my memories of those childhood trips are mostly of the places we stopped along the way such as any motel with a swimming pool and Hole N' The Rock. It wasn't until college where I truly fell in love with the driving portion of the road trip. Perhaps it started with reading Kerouac's "On the Road" and "The Dharma Bums", then later looking for any road trip I could be a part of, such as one weekend drive from Pullman, Washington to Oakland, California for a Grateful Dead concert that I didn't even have tickets for.
The southern Oregon coast is amazingly beautiful! |
As we reached the West Coast near Los Angeles we headed North up the Pacific Coast Highway. The windy road did a number on my 1988 Pontiac Grand Prix's breaks. By the time we reached San Francisco I had to take the car in for some expensive break repairs (luckily funded by my parents). The trip had already taken longer than intended and it was time for Chris to return home to Seattle. I said goodbye to Chris as he flew home to Seattle. I was lucky to have my college buddy Kelly offer me a place to stay with him and his brother in Walnut Creek as my car was in the shop over the weekend. It was during that visit that I was provided with my first experience with sushi (I think I had told Kelly I wanted to have a typical California meal). With my car in the shop for the weekend, and nowhere to go or way to get there I was invited to join Kelly for a visit to his parents in Chico, California (home of one of my favorite beers Sierra Nevada).
When the Grand Prix made it out of the shop, I decided it was time to make my final push all the way to Seattle up Highway 101 from San Francisco. I drove most of the nearly 900 miles in a single push driving over the Golden Gate Bridge and on up Highway 101. I made at least one stop in Oregon along the coast to sleep in the car for a few hours before continuing up the coast eventually cutting over to I-5 north of Newport, Oregon, and heading home. This is pretty close to the path we will probably take, but we will take much longer to cover those 900 miles.
I don't think the idea of me and my family being on this 9 month trip was something my mother particularly liked. Maybe it wasn't the road trip so much as having her two of her grand daughters away for so long. However, I think in many ways, she is the one that cemented my love of the road trip by giving me use of that gas card 20 years ago. And thank you mom for never making me pay you back for those many hundreds of miles of gas you bought for me. I truly love road trips, and with this trip I don't think I've fully become the "King of the Road Trip", but perhaps a Duke or something.
Labels:
family road trip,
on the road,
road trip
Location:
Coos Bay, OR, USA
Thursday, May 26, 2016
10 Things... From the Girls
The girls’ recent writing assignment was to tell us 10 things they will miss (or have enjoyed) on the trip and 10 things they are looking forward to when returning home. Here are their lists…
Siena’s -- 10 Things I liked About the Trip:
1. I liked all the cool mid-evil looking buildings in Quebec City.
2. I liked staying with The Thompson’s so long it felt like we lived there.
3. I liked visiting all our family in Disney World and on the Disney Cruise.
4. I liked visiting the ranch in Texas and playing with Millie, Mars and Quigly.
5. I liked skiing in New Mexico with Bando & SaBebe.
6. I liked seeing Nonni & Nonno in Palm Springs and staying at their house with them.
7. I liked going over the Golden Gate Bridge in San Fracisco.
8. I liked going to Alcatraz and learning about all its history and the people who lived there.
9. I liked staying at the awesome KOA in Petaluma and doing activities every day and meeting friends.
10. I liked the cool Skunk Train and seeing the Redwoods from the train.
Siena’s -- 10 Things I am Excited About For Getting Home (in order of how excited I am about it):
1. Seeing all of my friends and family and telling them about our trip.
2. Playing with Legos (even though I won't have any new sets right away).
3. Celebrating holidays AT HOME!!
4. NOT driving get with our house on the back of our truck and people looking at us weird.
5. Sewing clothes for my American Girl Dolls.
6. Seeing and playing with all the toys we left behind.
7. NOT waking up to Mommy’s yoga butt in my face every morning.
8. Having ONE backyard – not like a million.
9. Decorating my room how ever I want it.
10. Sleeping in my nice comfortable REAL BED NOT COUCH!!
Nadia’s 10 Things I Will Miss about the Trip:
1. I will miss the adventures.
2. I will miss being with my family.
3. I will miss going to different states.
4. I will miss going on cool hikes.
5. I will miss exploring campgrounds with Siena.
6. I will miss exploring new trees.
7. I will miss staying at cool campgrounds.
8. I will miss watching cool movies and saying “I've been there”!
9. I will miss playing playmobile in the forest with Siena.
10. I will miss meeting new people.
One of our cool hikes at Yosemite
Nadia’s 10 Things I am Looking forward To when I get home:
1. I will like sleeping in my own room.
2. I will like seeing family that we missed on the trip.
3. I am excited (of course) to see friends.
4. I am excited to go to real school.
5. I am excited to play at our park.
6. I will like to see our toys.
7. I will like playing in our backyard.
8. I am excited not to go out to eat so much.
9. I am super excited about having my own room.
10. And definitely not being in the truck.
Saturday, May 21, 2016
Challenges
After Kathy's post the other day I got to thinking about our life at RV parks and how we've come to really enjoy KOA's. Of course KOA's aren't perfect, it's just better than many of the alternatives. It was considering those "alternatives" that got me thinking and wanting to write another post about the challenges of life on the road. It's been seven months since I last complained about life in our tiny box, so I figure it's been long enough and I can now recycle the topic.
Obviously there are numerous challenges, but in most every way the challenges are smaller than they are back in our house in Seattle, just as our home on the road is smaller. For example, back in our house in Seattle, around the Christmas prior to our trip, our washing machine was found to be leaking. Six months later, numerous calls to our insurance company, our mortgage company, various contractors, and a few thousand dollars spent on our part, our floor finally fixed and we were without use of kitchen for only 4 of those 6 months. Compare this to while traveling, we found our camper toilet to be leaking, six hours later and a couple hundred dollars and the local RV repair guy in Gettysburg fixed us up. I know the example is kind of comparing apples and oranges, but no matter how big your problem is in an RV it is almost always resolved in a week or two (perhaps at the cost of a new RV, but that's still far cheaper than a new house). So now that I've admitted that all of my complaints and problems are small problems, here are the issues I've been thinking about lately.
Small Challenges - There are four of us living in a very small space. Before this trip I naively thought (thanks to misleading blogs on the internet) that if we were limited to such a small space we would limit our belongs to the bare necessary for happy survival and everything would be more simple. Well we did limit our belongs a lot, several times. We carefully limited our belongings before we left. Yet those items we we originally left Seattle with were way too much, and consequently have been left all over the country (Montana, Virginia, New Mexico, Oregon) with friends and family (thanks everyone!). There have been multiple LARGE shipments of stuff back home (big thanks to the moms for allowing us to ship our stuff to you). I am certain we could still downsize a lot more, but at this point why bother. So we continue on with all of the stuff supposedly needed by a family of four and everything is piled into every corner everywhere (as those who have been unfortunate enough to tour our camper will attest to). The problem is when you suddenly need one item that due to the passage of a few days has slowly migrated to the bottom of the pile. You can't find it. From time to time I will climb to the side of the bed where my belongs are stowed and try and organize it, and it will stay organized, but usually only for a few hours at best.
Internet - The largest bill we pay these days in our cell phone bill, and that's because we've bought so much data (20GB shared on AT&T and 10GB on a Verizon MiFi). This month for the first time we've gone over our AT&T data. On the road I've found pretty much all wifi (free or paid) sucks (this includes our beloved KOA)! Two of the very few exceptions are Starbucks (thank you Google) and Tim Horton's in Canada, but you can't spend all your time hunting down Starbucks (or Tim Horton's). Often when you do find your Starbucks or Tim Hortons and plan on getting some work done there, you find everyone else in the area had the same idea too. Also, pretty much every free or paid for wifi I've found blocks VPN connections, which is necessary for my work. Add to this that the places we most want to be, such as the National Parks, often have no cell signal and rarely have wifi.
Public Restrooms - This is an example where I really like KOA. Their restrooms are always clean and have soap in them (yes, many public restrooms, especially at camping areas lack soap). Call me crazy, but I like using soap when I wash my hands. However, KOA is the exception here.
Public Showers - Again, this is another example where I like (most) KOA's. You pay more at a KOA, but you (generally) get a clean shower with good water pressure and plenty of hot water. Many camp area showers lack hot and cold water control, but instead just have a single push button allowing a minute of tepid water, or worse require quarters or tokens for 5 minutes of tepid water. As much as I dislike public restrooms, taking a shower in an nasty shower stall where the water is cold and doesn't drain is just not pleasant.
Neighbors - When you're living in your RV in an RV park, your neighbor is often a few feet outside of your window. RV parks are rarely wide open places with tons of space for camping. You can find the wide open spaces in US Forrest Service land or BLM land (which we have used), but then you don't get power, water, or sewer, and it doesn't take long with four people living a tiny camper before these things become an issue. So we have stayed in a lot of RV parks, and we have met a lot of wonderful people, but we've also had a lot of weird interactions. Take the night in St Augustine, where we had recently turned off the lights to sleep. It was hot, so all the windows in the camper were wide open. We hear in the distance someone yelling for help. I grab a flash light, run out into the night, and find in near complete darkness, a one legged man trapped under a GIANT Harley (the one leg was trapped under the motorcycle). With a fair bit of work I free the guy, he thanks me, has me help him load his wheelchair in his pickup, he tells me he is in a hurry to get to his Christmas party so I have to go wake someone up and have them help me stand up his bike, he doesn't have time for this. Then he admits to drinking all day long and drives off. As I say, some people are really nice, some others are RV park people.
Barbers - I really miss my barber! As some of you might have noticed from our more recent pictures I've given up on haircuts and shaving. Around Thanksgiving, I let Kathy give me a haircut. With some clippers set to 5, I thought what could go wrong. Turns out, that as much as I love my wife, she is no hair stylist. After her haircut I looked like I was going through chemotherapy. Luckily my brother-in-law Mike was able to mostly fix it. I made another attempt at a haircut and a clean professional shave on our cruise. It cost a fortune and wasn't very good. So now I've given up on shaving and haircuts until I get home. The problem is that Kathy is starting to like my new Grizzly Adams look.
This is just a sample of a few of the challenges that have been bothering lately. Yet I would gladly put up with them until the end of time if I could to avoid the big challenges that are to come. One challenge in particular is the thought that soon I will have to go back to working a more regular work schedule. Although I really do very much enjoy my job at the University of Washington, it is going to be very difficult going back to a full time job away from my family after spending nearly every hour of every day of the past nine months with my wife and two daughters.
Obviously there are numerous challenges, but in most every way the challenges are smaller than they are back in our house in Seattle, just as our home on the road is smaller. For example, back in our house in Seattle, around the Christmas prior to our trip, our washing machine was found to be leaking. Six months later, numerous calls to our insurance company, our mortgage company, various contractors, and a few thousand dollars spent on our part, our floor finally fixed and we were without use of kitchen for only 4 of those 6 months. Compare this to while traveling, we found our camper toilet to be leaking, six hours later and a couple hundred dollars and the local RV repair guy in Gettysburg fixed us up. I know the example is kind of comparing apples and oranges, but no matter how big your problem is in an RV it is almost always resolved in a week or two (perhaps at the cost of a new RV, but that's still far cheaper than a new house). So now that I've admitted that all of my complaints and problems are small problems, here are the issues I've been thinking about lately.
Small Challenges - There are four of us living in a very small space. Before this trip I naively thought (thanks to misleading blogs on the internet) that if we were limited to such a small space we would limit our belongs to the bare necessary for happy survival and everything would be more simple. Well we did limit our belongs a lot, several times. We carefully limited our belongings before we left. Yet those items we we originally left Seattle with were way too much, and consequently have been left all over the country (Montana, Virginia, New Mexico, Oregon) with friends and family (thanks everyone!). There have been multiple LARGE shipments of stuff back home (big thanks to the moms for allowing us to ship our stuff to you). I am certain we could still downsize a lot more, but at this point why bother. So we continue on with all of the stuff supposedly needed by a family of four and everything is piled into every corner everywhere (as those who have been unfortunate enough to tour our camper will attest to). The problem is when you suddenly need one item that due to the passage of a few days has slowly migrated to the bottom of the pile. You can't find it. From time to time I will climb to the side of the bed where my belongs are stowed and try and organize it, and it will stay organized, but usually only for a few hours at best.
My pile of worldly belongings hasn't been organized in a while. |
Public Restrooms - This is an example where I really like KOA. Their restrooms are always clean and have soap in them (yes, many public restrooms, especially at camping areas lack soap). Call me crazy, but I like using soap when I wash my hands. However, KOA is the exception here.
Public Showers - Again, this is another example where I like (most) KOA's. You pay more at a KOA, but you (generally) get a clean shower with good water pressure and plenty of hot water. Many camp area showers lack hot and cold water control, but instead just have a single push button allowing a minute of tepid water, or worse require quarters or tokens for 5 minutes of tepid water. As much as I dislike public restrooms, taking a shower in an nasty shower stall where the water is cold and doesn't drain is just not pleasant.
Neighbors - When you're living in your RV in an RV park, your neighbor is often a few feet outside of your window. RV parks are rarely wide open places with tons of space for camping. You can find the wide open spaces in US Forrest Service land or BLM land (which we have used), but then you don't get power, water, or sewer, and it doesn't take long with four people living a tiny camper before these things become an issue. So we have stayed in a lot of RV parks, and we have met a lot of wonderful people, but we've also had a lot of weird interactions. Take the night in St Augustine, where we had recently turned off the lights to sleep. It was hot, so all the windows in the camper were wide open. We hear in the distance someone yelling for help. I grab a flash light, run out into the night, and find in near complete darkness, a one legged man trapped under a GIANT Harley (the one leg was trapped under the motorcycle). With a fair bit of work I free the guy, he thanks me, has me help him load his wheelchair in his pickup, he tells me he is in a hurry to get to his Christmas party so I have to go wake someone up and have them help me stand up his bike, he doesn't have time for this. Then he admits to drinking all day long and drives off. As I say, some people are really nice, some others are RV park people.
Barbers - I really miss my barber! As some of you might have noticed from our more recent pictures I've given up on haircuts and shaving. Around Thanksgiving, I let Kathy give me a haircut. With some clippers set to 5, I thought what could go wrong. Turns out, that as much as I love my wife, she is no hair stylist. After her haircut I looked like I was going through chemotherapy. Luckily my brother-in-law Mike was able to mostly fix it. I made another attempt at a haircut and a clean professional shave on our cruise. It cost a fortune and wasn't very good. So now I've given up on shaving and haircuts until I get home. The problem is that Kathy is starting to like my new Grizzly Adams look.
Me on Dec 26, 2015 |
Me today. |
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Change of Perspective - KOAs
We just left Yosemite National Park and as I have been saying to anyone that will listen, it really was one of my favorite spots. The lush greenery all around, the multiple waterfalls throughout the park and the majestic views from every spot made it an amazing park to visit. I knew from the beginning I wanted to visit Yosemite on this trip, but we did not have very clear plans for the second half of the trip so we waited to make reservations. I knew it would be hard to find spots in the park, but I was hoping we would get lucky. When we finally made some plans for the tail end of our trip, we were about 2-3 weeks out and Andrew started searching spots to stay, everything in the park was booked, but what we did find was a lovely KOA on the West side of the park in Mariposa. It was about 30 miles from the park entrance, but the drive into the park followed the Merced River, as a passenger it was a lovely drive. As the driver, the road was narrow and curvy making it a little stressful. Even though the KOA was far from the park it was as close as we could get, with services. We could have found some BLM land to camp on, but we were also in need of showering and doing laundry, so for us, it worked perfectly. Because we drove in the first day, we got to meander around the park at our own pace, stop and take photos and explore crazy roads, like the journey up to Glacier Point. The second day we utilized the public transportation system. The YARTS (Yosemite Area Regional Transportation System) picked us up right in front of the KOA and dropped us off at the Visitor Center, then we were able to take the Yosemite Shuttle to get to the trail head for our hike up to Vernal Fall. Then, after a long day of hiking we were able to get back on the YARTS for the drive home and rest, read or just stare out the window, making the ride home very relaxing for everyone, which is one of the beauties of public transportation.
KOA Midpines/Mariposa outside of Yosemite National Park |
When we started this trip, I did not know much about KOAs, I had my narrow minded judgements about them, assuming it wasn’t really camping and it was a little cheesy. But this trip has changed my mind completely. When I can stay so close to amazing parks like Yosemite, and get great services, including public transportation, I became a fan. We have stayed at some really great KOAs on the this trip, Yosemite was beautiful, Healdsburg/Cloverdale, was another one of my favorites, with its lake and gorgeous trees and covered forest.
We also really enjoyed the KOA in San Diego, just a 10 minute drive from the San Diego Zoo, the KOA had a huge pool, climbing wall, giant bouncy pillows and fun bikes for the girls to rent. The great thing that we have found about the KOAs is that they are very comfortable and consistent. On this trip, they have been a great place for us to stay when we want to explore a city as well (like the KOA in Vegas, next to a casino and a short Uber trip to the strip!), the spots are cheaper than a hotel room and in most cases they are centrally located, making it easy to get where we want to go.
I will always prefer nature and forest over city and concrete, but in most cases the KOA will usually provide a little piece of nature, close to a fun city. We have done our share of boon docking, national and state park camping and after being away from a real home for almost 9 months, as silly as it sounds, KOAs have started to feel like home. We know we can get clean showers and bathrooms, most have pools and fun playgrounds and we are able to plug in and refill water, it always feels like a little reboot after being away for a bit. Plus, they have a really easy to use app for the iPhone which makes it super easy to find a KOA near by and has tons of info to determine if it will work. The girls now ask if we get to go to a KOA, when we are heading out to a new place. Now that we are KOA members (or VIPs) we will likely renew our membership and explore KOAs closer to home. I don’t want to sound too cheesy or like a KOA ad (probably too late), but the bottom line with so many things on this trip, our perspective has definitely shifted on this subject and it's important to share that. Everything might not be exactly what you think and trying out something new might be a very rewarding experience.
Lake at Healdsburg KOA |
Our camper nestled among the trees at the KOA in San Diego |
We also really enjoyed the KOA in San Diego, just a 10 minute drive from the San Diego Zoo, the KOA had a huge pool, climbing wall, giant bouncy pillows and fun bikes for the girls to rent. The great thing that we have found about the KOAs is that they are very comfortable and consistent. On this trip, they have been a great place for us to stay when we want to explore a city as well (like the KOA in Vegas, next to a casino and a short Uber trip to the strip!), the spots are cheaper than a hotel room and in most cases they are centrally located, making it easy to get where we want to go.
KOA Las Vegas |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)