Category Archives: Other Coaches

Day Three Without Donna

Sunday was day three on my own while Donna is away. My plans for the day would have bored Donna. I spent the morning watching the coverage of the Formula 1 race in Spa, Belgium. The race was full of surprises – I won’t spoil it in case a reader has it recorded for viewing later.

Before I turned on the race, my neighbor was preparing to pull out of the park. I could see he was checking some wiring looms in a rear compartment. I stepped outside to see if I could help. He said the bedroom slide wouldn’t retract. It was a Power Gear system, which operates the slide via an electric motor. The connection on the circuit board was loose. He wiggled the connector while his wife tried operating the slide. It moved about an inch, then stopped again. He tried to unplug the wiring harness and the connector pulled out of the circuit board! The connector should have been soldered in place as it’s essentially part of the board. I suggested disconnecting the front slide harness from its circuit board, which was next to the board for the bedroom slide. Then we plugged the wiring harness for the rear slide into that board. His wife hit the switch and the slide retracted. He’ll have to replace the bedroom slide circuit board.

While I watched TV, I followed the progress of my friend, Allen Hutchinson, with my laptop. He was competing in the Ironman Triathlon in Louisville, Kentucky. I don’t know anything about the course, but the temperature was reported to be 90 degrees with high humidity. It had to be a tough grind.

I didn’t leave the coach until noon. It was warm out. Our temperature reached the low 80s. I rode the scooter to the store and picked up bottled water and beer.

At 1pm, I tuned in the Charger game. They played against the San Francisco 49ers at the new stadium in Santa Clara, California. Yesterday’s earthquake in the bay area was centered near Napa, north of San Francisco. Santa Clara is south of San Francisco, about 80 miles from Napa and didn’t suffer any damage.

The Chargers played their starters on the first three offensive series. They looked sharp and moved the ball well. Other than getting stopped on a fourth and one, they controlled San Francisco and finished the third possession with a touchdown. The defensive starters forced two turnovers, although the officials blew the call on the first one and San Francisco kept the ball. They tackled well and dominated San Francisco’s first team offense.

The second and third string back-ups didn’t fare as well. At the end, the score was 21-7, San Francisco. The pre-season games are all about getting some action for the starting team and then using the remainder of the game to evaluate the rest of the players. I’m encouraged by what I saw and I’m looking forward to a good season. The roster will be cut down from 90 players to 53 before the first regular season game.

After the game, I went out for a walk through the RV park. I needed to get some exercise. The park is large enough to take a 20-minute walk without retracing your steps.

After I returned, I checked my laptop and saw Allen had finished the race. He was out on the course for 12 and a half hours. He’s a 4-time Ironman finisher now.

Today, the forecast calls for a heat wave. We should hit 90 degrees over the next few days. I have no plans.

I forgot to include this photo in my last post – this is my new ScanGauge D mounted on the dash of our Alpine Coach.

ScanGauge D set to read out Oil Pressure, Coolant Temperature, Boost, Transmission Fluid Temperature

ScanGauge D set to read out oil pressure, coolant temperature, boost, transmission fluid temperature

 

Driving Big Al

Saturday was the last day of the “show.” Donna went to Bend with Willi Egg and shopped all day. I noticed my right rear jack was retracting again the night before and called Paul Maddox with HWH to let him know. He came back to our coach and replaced the solenoid. This time he installed a factory-new part rather than a re-manufactured solenoid. He told me he’s only had a few of the re-manufactured units fail, but since I had a problem, he felt better installing a new one.

I hung out with Dave Hobden for awhile, then went to look at more coaches. There was a display of pre-owned, high-end coaches for sale. It was fun to look at the premium level coaches.

Before the show closed, I went to the vendor area to see if I could score any deals before they packed up. I wanted to buy a Scan Gauge D, but couldn’t swing a deal that would beat Amazon Prime. But, I found another great deal.

I went to the Miller RV Insurance booth and got a quote. My current policy with Progressive expires this week on Wednesday. Cheryl Howarth from Miller found a policy for me that’s comparable to the coverage I have. The coach and scooter policies she quoted saved me more than $900 per year! Sign me up! Miller RV Insurance can provide policies in all 50 states. If you’re interested, contact Cheryl at cheryl@millerrvinsurance.com.

At 5pm, we had a potluck dinner for the Alpine group at the sites of Tom and Nancy Polk and Vic and Willi Egg. Donna made a chicken taco salad. The buffet table was filled with scrumptious dishes, including a plum cobbler that Lynda Campbell made with plums from their backyard.

Alpine group potluck dinner

Alpine group potluck dinner

Later, we sat outside our coach and visited with Dave and Stilla Hodben and Dave and Lynda Campbell. Donna and I didn’t turn in until midnight. This was unusually late for us.

Coaches started pulling out of here early yesterday. Our power was shut down by 9am. Donna went for a bike ride on the highway between Redmond and Prineville. Our fresh water tank was getting low, so I showered at the public showers. When I finished my shower, I heard my phone ring. It was Donna. She got a flat tire on her rear wheel out on the road.

I rode out on the scooter. After a bit of searching, I found her location and repaired the flat. She had ridden through glass when we were in Portland. A small shard worked its way through the tire. On the way back, I stopped at a bike shop in Redmond and picked up a new inner tube and two CO2 cartridges to replace what I used.

The temperature was in the 80s. I ran the generator from 3pm to 6pm to power the air conditioning units. I watched the Moto GP race I had recorded on the DVR. Then I sat outside in the shade of the awning and read another chapter of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. I’ve read this book before. This time, I’m reading a chapter at a time and really trying to understand what Robert Pirsig is saying.

Last evening, Dave and Stilla joined us for dinner. Donna prepared prosciutto-wrapped shrimp skewers with nectarine slices, marinated in a honey-soy sauce. I grilled them and she served them over a bed of brown rice and grilled zucchini. Delicious!

Prosciutto wrapped shrimp

Prosciutto-wrapped shrimp

Today we’ll move over to the fairgrounds RV park. We’ll have full hook-ups, so we can dump the holding tanks, refill the fresh water and run the air conditioners without burning fuel in the generator.

Before we do that, Donna will practice driving the coach in the fairground parking lots. This is an excellent opportunity for her to learn how to drive this beast. She can practice making turns without fear of traffic or curbs and won’t have to worry about damaging Big Al (our Alpine coach).

 

 

FMCA Fun!

The Family Motor Coach Association (FMCA) Convention went into top gear on Thursday. The schedule was filled with seminars, coaches on display and two buildings full of vendors.

I wasn’t scheduled to work again until Friday morning. After Donna attended the Microwave and Convection Oven Cooking seminar, she spent the rest of the day working at her computer. I went to the big vendor hall at the Bank of the Cascades Center. My credit card got a good workout there!

The first item I bought was a quart of Howes Meaner Power Kleaner. This is a diesel fuel additive that adds lubricity to ultra-low-sulphur diesel fuel. It is also an algaecide and injector cleaner. Diesel fuel can develop a form of algae when excess water is in the fuel. Water can be in diesel fuel from many sources, such as the filling station’s tank or condensation from sitting in the motorhome fuel tank. One way to help prevent excess water is to keep the fuel tank as full as possible. With less air space in the tank, less condensation can form. Once algae forms in the water/fuel emulsion, it can plug fuel filters or damage injectors. One quart of Howes will treat 320 gallons of diesel fuel.

At the next vendor stop, I bought a gallon of The Solution waterless car wash. This product was recommended to me by Lynda Campbell. She and her husband Dave use it exclusively on their Alpine Coach. I wanted a waterless wash product so I can clean the coach when we’re in a park that doesn’t allow washing. One gallon should be enough to wash the coach four times.

After that I stopped at the Redlands Truck and RV Service booth. I had decided to buy the set of new Koni shock absorbers from Vic Egg. He had front and rear shocks, new in the box, that fit the Alpine Coach Western RV Peak chassis. Shock selection is like tires or oil – everyone has a favorite and will defend their choice vigorously. I was leaning toward the Bilstein gas pressure shock, but after checking the products at the various vendor tables and also discussing the matter with RV suspension expert, Robert Henderson (Henderson’s Line-Up, Grants Pass, OR), I went with the Koni shocks. I made arrangements with the guys at Redlands to install the new shocks onsite that afternoon.

Then I stopped at the booth selling products from The RV Water Filter Store. I’ve been using the Camco inline throw away filters for the water supply to our coach. These only last about three months and I’ve had two of them crack at the hose fittings. I wanted a more robust filtration system. I bought a two-stage canister type filter. The first canister contains a cotton filter media designed to mechanically remove sediment and any other particles in the water. The second canister contains activated charcoal and will remove chlorine and other chemical compounds from the water. The cotton cartridge in the first canister should last about six months, depending on water quality. This cartridge is inexpensive at $3.50. The second cartridge should last a full year and costs $13.00. Over time, this system will save money and provide better filtration compared to the inline throwaway filters.

The Redlands Truck and RV Service Center mechanics pulled up to our coach at 2:30pm. They went right to work and had the shocks changed out in about 45 minutes. The original shocks on our coach showed wear and tear. The right rear shock was completely blown out and was leaking fluid. This is most likely what I was feeling as we drove down the road. The fine handling qualities of our Alpine Coach had deteriorated since we left Arizona. No doubt, some of the rough roads we encountered contributed to failure of the original Bilstein shocks.

Original front Bilstein shock - doesn't look too bad

Original front Bilstein shock – doesn’t look too bad

New Koni FSD shock installed on front suspension

New Koni FSD shock installed on front suspension

Blown out rear Bilstein gas pressure shock

Blown out rear Bilstein gas pressure shock

Thursday evening we had a happy hour gathering next to the sites of Tom and Nancy Polk and Vic and Willi Egg. We were getting into the swing of things when it began to rain. We got cozy under an awning and an Easy-Up and carried on.

Braving the elements for happy hour

Braving the elements for happy hour

Yesterday, I was up at 6am for another shift of carting people around the fairgrounds. It was much busier than Wednesday’s shift. The weather was superb with abundant sunshine and the temperature topped out near 80 degrees. I was scheduled to work until 9:30am, but I couldn’t get back to the cart staging area until 10am. People needed rides and I couldn’t turn them down. I finally gave a person a ride to the small vendor building next to the cart area and turned it in.

Donna and I spent the afternoon kicking tires and looking at coaches for sale. We aren’t in the market, but it was fun to see different set-ups. We spent some time in a two-million dollar Prevost Marathon. It was nice, but we liked the 1.7 million dollar Newell better. I was impressed with the Entegra line of coaches also. Entegra came about when Travel Supreme was going out of business. Jayco bought the Travel Supreme business and retooled it into Entegra around 2009.

Last night, we enjoyed another happy hour with with our fellow Alpiners and tons of hors d’oeuvres. Today, Donna is going shopping in Bend with Willi Egg. I’ll check out more of the show and attend a seminar.

The Long Way Home

Yesterday was our first full day at the Lake Goodwin RV Resort in Stanwood, Washington. It was another great day weatherwise with blue skies and temperature above average. The thermometer hit 83 degrees here.

Our granddaughter, Gabi, stayed with us overnight. We all slept in and didn’t get out of bed until 9am. I haven’t slept that late in awhile. It felt good.

After breakfast, Donna and Gabi went for hike through the county park next to the RV park. I unloaded the scooter from our trailer. Donna needed a few fresh vegetables, so I rode the scooter to the Fred Meyer store in Marysville. Donna sent me a text saying they had seen deer near the road and to be careful riding in the area.

Deer on the roadside

Deer on the roadside

The ride to the Fred Meyer store was longer than I thought it would be. The long ride included a section of road construction choking traffic on Smokey Point Boulevard down to one lane. On my way back, I decided to skirt the construction by taking a shortcut across 136th Street to 140th Street NW.

Many of the roads around here are dead ends because of the lakes. As I traveled west on 140th Street, I was trying to remember which avenue would take me to Lake Goodwin Road. I should have turned north at 46th Avenue, but I missed the turn. My shortcut took me all the way out to Kayak Point, then up Marine Drive to Lakewood Road, west of Lake Martha. This was a long loop.

That’s how shortcuts can be sometimes. If it was easy, it wouldn’t be a shortcut. It would just be “the way.”

It was 2pm by the time I returned from my quick run to the store. I had a late lunch and then I joined Donna and Gabi at the end of the swimming dock in the lake.

RV Resort swimming dock

RV resort swimming dock

The dock extends well into the lake, but the water is only about four feet deep at the end of the dock. I lowered myself into the lake to join them, but I was surprised by the lake temperature. The water was cold. I didn’t understand how Donna and Gabi spent hours in the lake. After a few minutes, I had all the fun I could stand and got out.

The lake covers about 535 acres and is popular for swimming, fishing and watercraft. There are several lakes here in the northwest sector of Snohomish County.

Boats on lake Goodwin

Boats near the park dock on Lake Goodwin

Private docks and residences

Private docks and residences

Yesterday, our neighbors pulled out of the park. We had open sites on both sides. That didn’t last long though. New neighbors moved in. Our new neighbors to the west of us told Donna how they are having trouble finding a place to stay for a few weeks. They are from Tucson and own some kind of shop here. The shop flooded and they need to stay for a few weeks to repair it. They will be here in the RV park for a week and then they need to find another place to stay.

I’m still wondering why the park management won’t allow my cargo trailer to be in my site. I guess they think that cargo trailers will be an eyesore and degrade the park. I took a walk around and snapped a couple of photos yesterday. There are a few sites with rigs that have been here for a long time. If the management is concerned about eyesores, they should be looking at these sites and not worrying about a cargo trailer.

I wonder when this rig set up here

I wonder when this rig set up here

This looks scary - propane and extension cords

This looks scary – propane and extension cords

Having the trailer in the storage yard is a minor inconvenience. I’ll get over it.

Last night, Alana and her daughter, Lainey, and their “adopted” friend Andrea joined Donna, Gabi and me for dinner. Donna made her famous blackened tilapia fish tacos. For desert, we had black bean brownies. After dinner, the girls played a few rounds of Scattergories at the picnic table.

My daughter, Alana, has today and tomorrow off from work. We’ll get together with her and the girls and enjoy the lake.

 

Looking For Shade

As expected, the temperature reached the 90s yesterday. Around noon, Donna and I rode the scooter down to the lake. We enjoyed a ride along East Coeur d’Alene Lake Drive. We rode all the way to the turnaround at Higgins Point, near the east end of the lake.

View from Higgins Point

View from Higgins Point

We explored and found a couple of boat ramps, but we didn’t linger in the area. We rode back into town and parked near the Visitor Center. We walked to City Park and found a bench. There weren’t any benches available in shady areas – the beach area was crowded. Sitting in the sun wasn’t comfortable and Donna wanted to find a place that wasn’t as crowded so she could go for a swim.

We walked back to the scooter and rode through North Idaho College to River Avenue. We found a beach with shade and fewer people, near the mouth of the Spokane River. Donna went for a swim to cool off. I relaxed in the shade.

Before we left, a tug boat called Kelly Ann pushed a barge loaded with construction equipment down the river. I wonder where it was going?

Tug boat and barge

Tug boat and barge

We had been out for a couple of hours and I was hungry, so we left and headed back. On the way we stopped at a Mexican place called Atilano’s on East Best Avenue. Our friends, Allen and Crystal Hutchinson recommended the place. The strange thing about this is place is their sign. It proclaims to serve San Diego’s best burrito! I meant to ask the guy at the counter about that, but I forgot to. I had the pollo asado burrito. It was tasty and huge! Donna had fish tacos.

Later, in the evening, we had a surprise visit from fellow full-timers and bloggers (Hit N The Road), Joel and Esta Gardberg. We had never met before, just corresponded via comments on this blog. I checked out Joel’s Corvette and we chatted for a while. They’ve been on the road in their Holiday Rambler motorhome for two years now. It’s always interesting to meet fellow RVers. When they’re bloggers that have also read our blog, it seems like we already know each other. We made tentative plans to get together for lunch at some point.

There wasn’t any mention of rain in the forecast, but last night I was awakened by the sound of rain coming down hard. Today is supposed to be another warm day with the temperature reaching the upper 80s. Again, no mention of rain, but we’ll see how it goes.

Traffic Cop

We ran the air conditioners yesterday for the first time in over a week. The temperature topped out near 90 degrees.

Donna went for a bike ride for a couple of hours and put in 30 miles. I sat in the shade and read a book. I made a run to Costco for bottled water. Nothing too exciting.

I’m going to try to track my spending this month. I set up a budget last year, but I’ve been pretty loose with it. I want track my expenditures and see if I need to make any adjustments.

A big rig pulled into the RV park in the late afternoon. It was a 45-foot Country Coach Affinity pulling a car hauler trailer. He had to make a tight 90-degree turn at the end of the park road. When I say tight, I mean tight. There’s an eight-foot privacy fence on the outside of the turn and a wooden rail fence on the inside.

I jogged down to the corner. I knew what he was up against. There were a few people sitting outside their trailers in lawn chairs just watching. I stood where the driver could see me at the fence post on the inside of the turn. He had to swing wide enough for his trailer to clear this post, but his swing was limited by the privacy fence on the outside of the turn.

He moved slowly with the right side of his coach an inch or two away from the privacy fence. I watched his trailer draw closer and closer to the post I was standing next to. I started waving him forward like a traffic cop. His trailer was within an inch of the post when the rear axle of the trailer passed it. Once the rear axle passed, he was in the clear. I gave him a thumbs up and he accelerated down the side road.

He made a complete circuit around the park and turned into a pull-through site on the other side of the laundry room/rest rooms building from us. He had the same issue of turning wide enough to clear his trailer while being limited by trees. There was a post with the site number and night lamp at the corner of his site. I pulled up on the post and it came out of the ground easily.  His trailer wouldn’t have cleared the post and he would have scraped the side of the trailer.

He jockeyed back a forth a couple of times and positioned the coach where he wanted it. He opened his window and asked me if his trailer was hanging out too far. I told him it was fine. He thanked me for the assistance. He told me his overall length with the 45-foot coach and car hauler was about 73 feet!

Tight quarters

Tight quarters

73 feet overall length!

73 feet overall length!

Most of the RVs in the park are fifth-wheel or travel trailers. I don’t think these people realize the challenge of driving a big rig pulling a trailer. A fifth wheel has its pin pivoting over the rear axle of the truck pulling it, making it fairly easy to maneuver. My rig has the trailer pivoting on a ball 11 feet behind the rear axle. This makes maneuvering the trailer more difficult, especially in reverse.

Later, I walked down to site with the Country Coach. The driver thanked me again and introduced himself. His name was Larry. He’s from Moses Lake, Washington where he ran a successful construction business. It was licensed in three states – Washington, California and Montana. He told me he did a lot of contract work in the oil fields.

Larry recently sold the business and is semi-retired. He’s only 33 years old and isn’t ready to quit working yet. He and his family are taking an extended vacation in their RV. They plan to see the sights in the western states, eventually going down to Texas. Larry is looking at an investment opportunity there.

While we were talking, he told me his generator wouldn’t run for more than a few minutes. As he described the symptoms, I told him it sounded like a fuel delivery problem. He told me the fuel filter had just been changed that morning. I thought the fittings on the filter might have a leak, allowing air to be drawn into the fuel line.

Right about then, a truck pulled in front of his coach. A man and a boy got out. Larry introduced me to Aaron. Aaron runs a repair business in Moses Lake, repairing autos, trucks and farm equipment. He made the 130-mile drive from Moses Lake to check out Larry’s generator. Aaron and his 11-year-old son went to work.

Aaron suspected a fuel pump problem and brought a new pump with him. After checking fault codes, he was sure the pump was bad. Getting to the fuel pump wasn’t easy. Getting the sheet metal cover off an Onan generator while it’s mounted to the coach is difficult. I was impressed by the way he and his son worked together. For an 11-year-old boy, he had some mechanical skills. He crawled underneath the coach and told his dad he needed a thin, 11mm open-end wrench and a pair of channel locks to get the fuel line off. Aaron didn’t have channel locks with him or a thin enough wrench. I went to my trailer and brought back a thin wrench and channel locks. About an hour later, they had the new pump on and the generator was running fine. I told the kid that it was great to have mechanical skills, but that he should be sure to get an education, too!

I grilled bacon-wrapped filet mignons while Donna made twice-baked potatoes and asparagus. She sauteed mushrooms and onions to put on the grilled filets. Yummy!

Bacon wrapped filet mignon with mushrooms and onions, twice baked potato and asparagus

Bacon wrapped filet mignon with mushrooms and onions, twice-baked potato and asparagus

Today will be another air conditioner day. The forecast calls for a high of 93 and it’s already warm this morning. Donna and I plan to ride the scooter down to the lake.

 

 

 

Dodging Showers

It’s Saturday morning. I’m behind on my posts, so I’ll catch up on the last two days. Not that there’s much to say except that rain really hampers our activities.

It rained on and off on Thursday so Donna and I spent most of the day indoors. We walked in the park during breaks in the showers. Donna decided to make blueberry muffins from scratch. She doesn’t bake very often, but when she does, the results are outstanding. She gave a few of the muffins to the couple that manage the RV park. The guy made a point of stopping by our site to tell us that they were the best blueberry muffins he’s ever had. He said, “The blueberries exploded in my mouth!”

During one dry break in the weather, we walked down the road to the Safeway store. Donna needed some fresh produce and I picked up locally brewed Outlaw IPA. On our walk to the store, we passed an old VW bus that’s set up as a shaved ice kiosk. The windy, rainy weather had pulled the banner off the front. The VW looks to be driveable, but it’s been parked in the lot since we arrived. They were busy on Wednesday when the sun was shining.

Hawaiian Lion Shave Ice

Hawaiian Lion Shave Ice

We had street tacos for dinner on Thursday. Donna reheated some leftover pork tenderloin, sliced and drizzled with mojo garlic sauce and served it with shredded cabbage and avocado on corn tortillas. It really paired well with the Outlaw IPA. After dinner, Donna made her famous black bean brownies.

Taco plate

Taco plate

New neighbors pulled in Thursday evening. Three rigs lined up next to us. It appears to be a family reunion. There are two 5th wheel trailers with Alberta, Canada plates and a smaller travel trailer with Idaho plates sandwiched between them. It seems as though Grandpa and Grandma have the smaller travel trailer. The big 5th wheel trailer next to us is a Raptor triple axle toy hauler pulled by a big Ram 3500 dually truck. The woman who drove it in was supremely confident in her driving skills and jockeyed it through really tight quarters. I was impressed.

The rain returned with a vengeance on Thursday night. I was awakened several times in the night by rain drumming on the roof. We were out of bed by 8am. The rain had let up. I suggested a quick walk to the Broken Egg restaurant down the street for breakfast. I wanted to get out of the coach while we could. Donna was game and we headed out. The  Broken Egg serves breakfast and lunch until 2pm daily. The breakfast portions are huge and very tasty.

It started raining on our walk back. Again, we had a day of variable and unpredictable weather. Actually, it was somewhat predictable. We knew it would rain – we just weren’t sure when or how hard it would rain. It rained off and on throughout the day without really drying out in-between.

Our plan was to grill chicken kabobs and have the Hutchinson family join us for dinner. I kicked back inside and read a book, keeping an eye on the weather. Donna spent a few hours writing her monthly organizing newsletter which included suggestions for rainy day organizing projects.

Around 3pm, I sent a message to Allen Hutchinson, telling him that we needed a Plan B. The weather wasn’t conducive to grilling and dining outdoors. We decided to meet at the Fish Market on Kathleen Avenue at 5:15pm.

Our timing was impeccable. It wasn’t raining as Donna and I walked to the restaurant. We arrived at the same time as the Hutchinsons. The restaurant wasn’t crowded and we put our orders in. They serve great seafood in sort of a fast-food fashion. You order at one counter and pay. When the meal is ready, you pick it up at another counter. As we placed our orders, a long line of patrons formed behind us. We just beat the dinner crowd. I had the daily special – sushi maki (spider roll) and a poki plate (ahi tuna). Donna had a steamer platter – two pounds of steamed mussels and clams in a garlic beer broth. The food was great. Allen, his wife Crystal, and daughters Gwen and Elsa had a variety of sushi and poki along with steaming bowls of miso soup. For dessert, Donna brought along some black bean brownies for the Hutchinsons to take back to their hotel.

Allen, Crystal, Elsa, Gwen and Donna enjoying dinner at the Fish Market

Allen, Crystal, Elsa, Gwen and Donna enjoying dinner at the Fish Market

Allen and I worked together in Michigan. He and his family are here in Coeur d’Alene for the Ironman Trialthlon this weekend. Allen is an Ironman. This will be his third full-distance triathlon – 2.4 miles swimming, 112 miles bicycling and a 26.2-mile marathon run – all in one day! We saw his first triathlon in Lake Placid, New York where he finished in an astonishing 11 hours and 40 minutes. He finished before I could reach the finish line to congratulate him! I’ll be sure to be at the finish line this time.

One of the beauties of living a nomadic lifestyle is the ability to plan routes and layovers to meet up with friends and family around the country. We’re excited to witness another Ironman event and grateful for the opportunity to cheer for Allen and visit with his family.

Today, the weather looks to be variable again, but much drier than the past two days. Tomorrow should be clear for the race and warmer weather is predicted for the coming week. I want to get out on my bike and ride down to City Park to see how the Ironman course is shaping up.

Freaky Friday

We awoke to the sound of raindrops drumming on the roof yesterday morning. Actually it was the second time the rain woke me. Around 3:30am, I was awakened by wind gusts, heavy rain and lightning.

That’s how our freaky Friday began. Yesterday was the only Friday the 13th on the 2014 calendar. It also happened to be a full moon. It was the first full moon on Friday the 13th in 95 years. It won’t happen again until 2049.

The weather kept us hunkered down indoors for most of the day. It rained off and on with brief periods of sunshine in between. I saw a guy in the park washing his motorhome. When it would start to rain, he would go inside. As soon as the sun came out, he was back at it. I took a walk and asked the guy if he knew it was going to rain every time he started his wash job. He said this was his first opportunity to wash since he left Florida – 2,200 miles ago. Rain or shine, he was determined to remove the road grime.

I’m planning to wash our coach, but I’ll wait for the weather to clear. The weather guessers are calling for rain showers or thunderstorms daily until Thursday. The temperatures will warm and the skies will clear then.

When I wash the coach, I’ll also polish the alloy wheels and replace the lug nut covers. I lost one of the covers on the rough road to Page, Arizona. Some of the covers are pitted and are starting to corrode. I ordered 40 new chrome plated stainless steel lug nut covers from Amazon. The nice thing with Amazon Prime (besides the free shipping) is that my credit card is linked to my Amazon account. When I place an order, it automatically looks up my credit card rewards statement and asks me if I want to pay for the order with rewards points! It’s like getting stuff for free.

I also ordered a tire pressure gauge. I check our tire pressures regularly. I keep hearing how wonderful the Accutire digital gauge is. It’s inexpensive, accurate, lightweight and doesn’t take much space. What more could I ask for? When it arrived with the lug nut covers on Thursday, I checked it against the analog dial gauge I’ve been using. They read within 2% of each other. Most people believe the accuracy of a digital readout – especially one with 0.5 increments. I don’t believe digital is inherently more accurate. But, this site had me believing the Accutire.

Around 5pm, the skies cleared once again. We had an opening in the weather with blue skies and sunshine. Donna and I walked down 13th Avenue SW to the Beacon Icehouse. This is a bar that looks like a real dive from the street. I’d stopped in the other day and knew it wasn’t a dive at all. The place is clean, well-kept and has some history. There’s a framed poster on the wall describing the original bar in the 1930s and all of the ownership changes and significant happenings since then. It was interesting to read the ups and downs of the bar that coincided with the local economy.

Stage set for karaoke at the Beacon Icehouse

Stage set for karaoke at the Beacon Icehouse

View of Sun River from the deck of the Beacon Icehouse

View of Sun River from the deck of the Beacon Icehouse

When we returned to the coach, Donna made crab cakes for dinner and we ate outside, enjoying the sunshine.

The forecast calls for a high temperature of 58 today! I think I need to find a good book to read. I’m hoping the weather guessers have the next four days wrong.

Get ‘er Done

I was up early yesterday. I would say it was “dark thirty,” but I was surprised to find daylight at 5:30am. I drove Donna to the Flagstaff Pulliam airport and dropped her off for her flight to New York City at 6:00am. On the way home, I drove through McDonald’s and bought two egg and sausage breakfast burritos. I rarely eat food from McDonald’s and this wasn’t the best decision I made all day.

Back at the coach, I had another cup of coffee and ate breakfast. I was feeling tired. I didn’t sleep well the night before. We had strong wind gusts in the night that continued throughout the morning. The wind rocked the coach in the night and woke me several times. Why is it that any time I have to get up early to an alarm clock, I sleep fitfully?

I wrote a short blog post, then kicked back on the sofa read the book, Code Talkers, for awhile. I was thinking I could nap. I didn’t sleep. After a while, I was feeling a little restless so I took a walk around the RV park.

Sunday, an old coach pulled into a site near us. It looked like an old Newell to me. While I was out walking, I saw a guy working in the engine compartment. I stopped at his site and said, “Good morning.” I introduced myself and asked what he was up to. His name was Louis. He’s from Alberta, Canada. He had just bought the coach and was having troubles. He said he’s only covered about 400 miles in the last week since buying the coach because he has electrical problems. He needed to get back to Canada.

The coach turned out to be a 1993 Barth, not a Newell. I hadn’t heard of Barth before, but I learned a few things about them. Back in the day, they were a high-end motorhome manufacturer. This Barth was built on a Gillig bus chassis. The outer skin was all aluminum. In 1993, it was a very exclusive coach. Louis bought it from the original owner.

He told me his batteries weren’t holding a charge. After he bought the coach, he replaced the batteries. I asked if I could help. He wanted all the help he could get. He wasn’t sure if the two chassis batteries and the bank of coach batteries were supposed to charge at the same time. I looked at the chassis batteries in the engine compartment and tried to find a transfer switch. I told Louis how most coaches are wired and how it usually works. He said he had wiring diagrams. Now we were getting somewhere.

I checked the chassis batteries and they were fine. I asked where the coach (house) batteries were. He showed me a compartment with batteries on two levels – six 12-volt batteries in total! They were massive, the biggest 12-volt batteries I’ve seen. He told me that three of them were new and they were the only ones wired into the system. I could see the new Lifeline AGM batteries he’d installed. These are very expensive batteries – around $600 each.

I checked the voltage at these batteries. I asked Louis if he had them wired in parallel. He said he was sure they were. I was sure they weren’t wired correctly. One battery on the lower deck showed completely dead, only registering 1.44 volts. The other two were fully charged. This doesn’t make sense if they are wired in parallel.

The batteries were very large. To follow the cabling, I had to use a flashlight and reach my full arm’s length into the compartment. By following the cables, I found the issue. The cables from the dead battery in the lower compartment went through the bulkhead into the house. Presumably, they went to a fuse panel, buss bar or post to power the various household 12-volt items. However, the battery wasn’t connected in parallel to the other two batteries.

The other two batteries were wired in parallel. However, they didn’t connect to the house. They were connected to the inverter which charges the batteries. So, what he had was a battery powering his house, but not receiving a charge. He had two more batteries, not powering anything, but being maintained at full charge. No wonder he was losing power to everything inside.

As I was explaining this to him, another neighbor, Jerry, came over. Jerry has a Travel Supreme coach across from our site. We made some small talk and then Jerry said he was looking for an electrician. He said the plug on the end of his 50amp power cord was broken. The ground lug pulled out of the molded plastic plug and he couldn’t run his air conditioners. His wife wasn’t happy with no A/C. He had a new replacement plug, but thought he needed an electrician to wire it up.

I loaned a few tools to Louis to rewire his battery bank and told Jerry, “You don’t need to pay an electrician. Let’s get ‘er done.” I thought I could wire up the new connector in 20 or 30 minutes. It never seems to work out that way. Once I was into the project, Jerry told me that the plug came with instructions showing what length to cut each wire. Rather than walk back to my trailer and retrieve a tape measure from my toolbox, I used the TLAR method (That Looks About Right).

The heavy-gauge wire in a 50amp cable is very stiff. In hindsight, measuring first and cutting once would have been the way to go. I made three attempts at wiring the plug before I could get all of the wire to fit properly. An hour and half later, a 30-minute job was done.

I enjoyed helping the guys out. That’s RV life. With Donna away, I had nothing better to do.

The wind remained gusty all day. Today, they are calling for higher winds. I’ll hunker down and wait for Donna to return tonight.

Expedition

Yesterday, Donna finished packing her bag while I posted to the blog. She managed to pack eight days of clothing (bear in mind, she’s traveling to cold climates) in one small suitcase. I don’t know how she does it.

Her driver picked her up at 11:15am for her flight to Chicago. I’ll be on my own for the next eight days. Other than the night she stayed at her sister’s house to watch her nephew, Connor, this is the first time we’ve been apart since we hit the road on July 23, 2013.

After Donna left, I went out for a ride on my new mountain bike. I looked at a map and thought I’d found a good route. It looked like I could get on a trail a couple of miles from here that would take me down to the Salt River and make a nice loop.

I rode out of the RV park, up Recker Road to Thomas. I found a trail into the desert and got off of the road. I haven’t ridden off road in a long, long time. When I lived in Arlington, Washington, I would ride my mountain bike up forest service roads into the mountains and find trails to loop back down. I really enjoyed mountain biking there. I also liked riding the single track trails at Sun River, Oregon.

When I moved to Mesa, Arizona, in 2005, I mostly rode my road bike. I took the mountain bike out occasionally, but it seemed like I always picked up a thorn and had flat tires. I got tired of fixing the tires and sold my mountain bike. The bike I have now has a fluid in the tires that prevents punctures. The tire can still go flat, if it’s cut by glass or some sharp object, or if the sidewall is torn. But, a small puncture from a thorn or cactus spine will not hurt it.

When I purchased the bike, I looked at the small 22 tooth chain wheel and the 36 tooth rear cog and thought I’d never use that short gearing. Ted, the guy that sold me the bike said he often uses that  gear ratio for short, steep, rocky climbs. I found out that he was right.

On the steep, rocky stuff, you need to maintain forward progress, even if you are just crawling along. If you stop, it’s difficult if not impossible, to get going again. The rear wheel will not have any traction from a standing start. You can’t sit and start pedaling. When you stand on the pedal to get going, the rear wheel will just spin. I learned that the hard way yesterday.

Once I learned to get into the appropriate gear before I started a steep climb, I was amazed at the terrain I could ride. The photos I took don’t convey how steep the terrain actually was.

This was a steep, slippery climb

This was a steep, slippery climb

Coming down some of slopes was a challenge. The trail I followed had some technical sections. I took my time and rode slowly to get into the groove of mountain biking. After I climbed the hill in the photo above, the trail dropped down into a dry creek bed. The creek bed was deep sand. Once again, I was surprised at how well the tires coped with the terrain. In the deep sand, I needed to maintain forward momentum. I tried to avoid the softest areas, but couldn’t always do that.

The trail took me through this sandy arroyo

The trail took me through this sandy arroyo

The next climb was very technical. The upper third of the hill was steep, with loose rock. I really enjoyed the challenge.

A rocky hill, it's steeper than it looks

A rocky hill, it’s steeper than it looks

After I crossed that hill, I found that the trail wasn’t taking me down to the river. It crossed private property near a storage yard and ended at Higley Road. I rode along the road and came upon an orange grove. I followed a trail next to the grove that took me to another trail that followed a canal. I knew the canal trail would loop me back to a point near the RV park. I had been riding for one and a half hours and I was feeling it. I was ready to stop.

When I came back to our site, I saw a new neighbor had moved in behind us. As I was putting my bike away, he approached me and asked about bicycling routes in the area. His rig was very interesting, I told him I’d seen one like on TV before. It’s a four wheel drive expedition mobile coach.

His name was Peter Zaug, he and his wife, Ruth, are from Switzerland. They are touring the USA and have a website at www.traveljoy.chBut, you have to be able to read German.

Expedition coach

Expedition coach

Peter and Ruth dining al fresco

Peter and Ruth dining al fresco

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You can get more information about the expedition coach at Actionmobile.

Peter wanted to take a 20 to 30 mile ride on his road bike. I gave him directions for riding the Usery Loop. I told him it was about a 20 mile loop with a long, three mile climb. I found a map of the area in our coach and gave it to him, since he seemed a little unsure of my directions.

When I saw him later, he said he liked the route and it was 20 miles, just as I told him.

Last night I found information on mountain biking trails in the area. Some of the best mountain bike trails are nearby. It’s called the Hawes Trail. It has several loops, some of them climb all the way up Usery Mountain. I’ll have to ride three or four miles on the road to get there, but I might check it out today.