Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Part 1: Mississippi River Road caravan -- Bedmiji, MN to Hannibal, MO

9/1/23 - 9/3: Bedmiji, Minnesota

We started our 4th Fantasy RV caravan in Bedmiji, Minnesota with 24 other RVs. There are a few other full-time RVers like us, but most have traveled here from all directions in the US. Most were hoping to escape some of the summer heat in their home towns, but our first day out is in the low 90s (certainly not as hot as some areas of the country, but not pleasantly cool either).

Our tour started with a bus trip into Bedmiji town to see the long-standing woolen factory and get a group photo at the gigantic statues of Paul Bunyan and his oxen, Babe. Needless to say that Jeffrey and I didn't need any woolen wear since we generally spend our time in warm climates. Next up was visiting the headwaters of the Mississippi River at Itasca State Park. As is customary, we all shucked our shoes and had a nice wade in the shallow cool waters.

After a filling box lunch we then boarded the Chester Charles III for a lovely cruise on Lake Itasca. This boat was constructed in the late 1940s and had several jobs elsewhere prior to getting to it's current role.


9/4 - 9/7: Minneapolis, Minnesota

After a nice rest day, the caravan moved on to the next stop -- the Minneapolis area. It was a brutal hot high 90s day and the drive was no fun due to everyone else in MN driving home from Labor Day events plus several areas of construction. After arriving there was a "wood turning" demonstration at the campground's open pavilion. It was pretty interesting and at least in the shade! Most of us then melted back into our RVs for the evening (no campfire tonight THANK GOD!).


Getting on a tour bus the next morning for our first full day here, we spent the morning visiting Minnehaha Falls Park and St. Paul's Cathedral. Both were 'self guided" but interesting. The falls (which feed into the Mississippi River) didn't have much water to show off due to the drought, so it was more of a "Minnehaha trickle". Apparently it was also slow when President Johnson visited back in the mid-60s. They actually dammed the stream up-river in order to release it that day and have a decent fall flow during his visit. They also opened numerous fire hydrants nearby to contribute a little more water! The cathedral was grand and lovely and truly amazing in its size, craftsmanship, and history. 

Minnehaha Falls

St. Paul's Cathedral

After lunch downtown on our own, we headed to tour the Wabasha street caves. These caves were originally escavated in the early 1900s and were initially used as a mushroom farm. Regardless of the temperature outside, they remain at a chilly 55 degrees and have to be heated to be comfortable. It has since been many other things, most famously a speakeasy visited by many gangsters. It is still actively used today for private functions and as a weekly social dance hall and bar. We ended the day with a guide on the bus showing us around the twin cities and sharing their fascinating gangster history. 

Outside of the Wabasha Caves

It was during this day that Maren discovered one of the cameras on her cellphone (the most used one) was not auto-focusing properly. We bopped over to the local Verizon store after getting back to the campground hoping to get it fixed and instead walked out 90 minutes later with new phones -- both of us! The bad news is they weren't free but the good news is our pictures for the rest of the trip should be fantastic! 

First picture on new cellphone -- lights from the nearby casino

New cameras (I mean cellphones) in hand, we started the next day on a Mississippi River lunch cruise. It was an appetizer of watermelon followed by hearty meal of BBQ chicken, pulled pork, cornbread, roll, and potato salad, with cookies for dessert. Jeffrey was in heaven and I was thrilled to get his serving of bread and butter pickles. We passed several interesting bridges and saw four bald eagles flying along the riverside.

Our riverboat lunch cruise vessel

Lovely view from the boat

The afternoon was spent getting a collection of specialized tours in the old St. Paul court house, known today as the Landmark Center. It houses a number of historical and artistic collections, including glorious wood turning projects and hundreds of years of keyboard instruments -- from harpsicords to electronic pianos. I was especially excited when a fellow traveler pointed me to a hat in the giftshop that showed giraffe! Out came the credit card!

Interior atrium of the Landmark Center

Lovely large wood turned bowl

Wood bowl with intricate wood carvings


9/8: Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin

Our next driving day took us east back to the Great River Road following the Mississippi's path. It gave us some lovely views of the now-much-wider river. Along the route was a visit to the National Eagle Center where we were able to meet several bald eagles, all of whom have injuries that prevent them from surviving in the wild. We also enjoyed a private education session and another close eagle encounter before reboarding our rigs to continue to our campground-for-1-night just south of Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. It was a long day on small bumpy roads (with ugly construction areas) so we looked forward to a homemade dinner provided by our tour leaders. 

Jeffrey at #4 Lock and Dam along the river in Alma

The ambassador bald eagle we got to meet up close

Showing us part of his wing span

9/9 - 9/12: Davenport, Iowa

We've decided that this particular trip -- like the one we did in 2021 that followed Lewis & Clark's expedition -- is as much about the journey as it is the destination. Our driver's manual with turn by turn instructions has been pages and pages long each day as it tries to keep us on the officially marked "Great River Road". Our trip to Davenport today was the same multi-page setup with numerous detours texted to us by our leaders as they encountered them ahead of "the pack". 

Today also had an enroute stop at the National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium but, being a busy Saturday with events going on, it was especially challenging for our leaders to get us all squeezed into the available parking areas as we arrived. Given how much we like most museums, we took our time viewing the extremely interesting exhibits, eating at the cafe, and browsing the gift shops. New Tshirt for Jeffrey in hand, we were one of the last of the group to return to our rig but had less than 90 miles left to drive to get to the new campground. 

As we got set up to leave, we first noticed that it was taking a little longer to "air up" on our airbags to our normal ride height. Turning off Max so we could hook up the car to be towed, we heard a continuous loud air hiss from near the back axel and Max began to sink back down. A frantic call to a nearby Freightliner truck service center discovered that they closed for the weekend in less than an hour. With the engine running we were able to maintain most of our air pressure and managed to drive the five miles to the service center without issue. The issue was a good sized leak in one of our rear air bags and, though they were willing to work late to install a new one 😀 they didn't have ours in stock ☹️. A new one would arrive Tuesday morning and Max couldn't go anywhere until then, but they thankfully had an electric hookup for him.

We packed what we needed for 2 nights in a hotel and drove the car to Davenport so we can be near our fellow travelers and participate in the tour activities that are scheduled over the next few days. Though we hate having an issue, the timing really was fortunate as the group doesn't move on until next Wednesday. We managed to get to the evening's dinner cruise just in time!

Hole in the $375 airbag

Lovely view of downtown from our boat

After a nice breakfast at the Best Western, we drive the car and park it at the group's campground and jump on the bus with everyone. Our day included a visit to Herbert Hoover's Presidential museum followed by the "Iowa 80 - The World's Largest Truck Stop" and the Iowa 80 Trucking Museum. We capped the day with an early private supper at the Circa Playhouse followed by two hours of outstanding dueling piano playing. I found it humorous that they looked at the silver hair in our group and started playing Sinatra-era music, but once we all started making requests it was Billy Joel, Elton John, and Tina Turner!

Truck Museum

Dueling Pianos

One more night in the hotel for us and we checked out and drove to Amana Colonies where we jumped on the bus filled with our group to get a guided tour. Established in 1855, by 1880 this was the largest communal society in America and it supported it's members in all aspects until 1932 when it transitioned to the Amana Society. Instead of everything being owned by the church, it's members now had greater opportunities, could earn wages, and even own homes. It has been well preserved and still farms, raises cattle, and supports numerous businesses, including Amana Appliances, now owned by Whirlpool.

Lovely Amana colony home

Local shop

Furniture shop

We were served a yummy family style lunch at the The Ronnenburg restaurant and then Jeffrey and I split off from the group to drive back to Max for the night. On the way we stopped in Cedar Rapids and had a nice visit with RV friends, Dawn and Jeff Marlin at their "Iowa" home. We'll see them again in Florida this winter when they transition to their RV, currently parked near Gainesville.

By early afternoon the next day we had two new rear airbags and we're on our way to spend the last night with the group in Davenport, Iowa. Thankfully that was a mostly free day with no organized activities so we didn't miss any big events of the tour. 

9/13 - 9/14: Hannibal, Missouri

In the morning we followed the prescribed driving path down the Mississippi River road to Hannibal, Missouri, most famously known as the birthplace of Mark Twain. Next to the campground is Mark Twain's cave. He spent a lot of time exploring this cave system as a child and it was featured in some of the stories he wrote about Tom Sawyer. 

Mark Twain cave system -- our tour followed the red line

Entering the cave

Hearing stories about the cave as our guide led us through it

The next day we did tours of the Mark Twain Interpretive Center, his museum, his boyhood home, the "Huckleberry Finn House" (a reconstruction of his friend, Thomas Blankenship's house), his father's law office, and the actual home of childhood friend Laura Hawkins (who was the inspiration for character Becky Thatcher). We had lunch at the Mark Twain Diner where we indulged in homemade rootbeer. Our final stop of the day was at Mark Twain's Winery where we enjoyed watching a Mark Twain impersonator tell a number of stories from Mark Twain's life. 

Our impersonator

Mark Twain's boyhood home

Our next driving day was supposed to be to St. Charles Missouri which is right next to St Louis. We only got about 7 mi down the road before getting a low coolant alarm in Max and having to pull over. After 12 years of living full-time, we had our first experience calling our RV roadside assistance plan for help. Assuming we would need to be towed to a shop for some type of repair we waited patiently along with the "tail- gunner" couple of the tour until they were sure that we were going to be taken care of. We even had a local Hannibal police officer watching over us with lights on to ensure the very-little-traffic road we were on didn't pose any danger.

A tow truck finally showed up and the technician crawled under Max and saw that the problem was simply a coolant hose leak. He attempted a repair right there but the old clamp wouldn't hold sufficiently under pressure and we ended up driving to his shop where he was able to install a brand new hose and clamp. We were thrilled we didn't have to get towed as this is complicated for a long RV like ours and can be problematic if not done properly. We finally pulled into the new campground where the tour is staying for the next three days, just in time to join in the group potluck dinner. It was a long and stressful day and we were glad it was over!

The tow truck, us, and the police officer. Happy we didn't have to get towed!

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This concludes Part 1 of our Mississippi River Road caravan, September 1 through 14, 2023. The story continues in Part 2 here: http://marenandjeffrey.blogspot.com/2023/09/part-2-mississippi-river-road-caravan.html 

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Sunday, August 27, 2023

Minnesota to Minnesota - the long way!

After spending the July 4th holiday in Duluth, Minnesota, we started a 10-day trek west to Minot, North Dakota via Fargo and Bismarck. Between these 3 cities we stocked up at Costco, visited the Dakota and Roosevelt Zoos, and got our last Blaze Pizza fix, visited an allergist for Jeffrey's "every 6 weeks" shots, and filled up the tanks of fuel for the car (Moby) and the RV (Max). The allergist was especially interesting as he was a new doctor for us BUT he knew Jeffrey's "home" allergist in Austin and supplied us with a fun story to torture him with when we see him in October!

For the 2nd time since we started full-timing, we drove Max into Canada, crossing the border south of Estevan. The crossing was uneventful and we were the only vehicle there. We were treated to lovely fields of bright yellow canola along our route. The distant wildfire smoke definitely caught up to us later that day, but we ventured out to McDonalds for lunch, and to a liquor store and grocery to restock our wine and fresh fruit and vegetables having had to consume them before we left the US. 

Jeffrey and the canola

Next up was further west for a few nights in Regina, which has the distinction of being the only training center for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. There is a nice Heritage Center as well which shows their history and several fun films. We were lucky to catch the one about their dog program as it was an anniversary of its institution. More about them later ;-)

Our next few nights were in Medicine Hat, part of Canada's "badland" area - very dry and hotter than most of the country. As we were setting up we hit it off with our neighbors who extended an invitation to join them for a "meat draw" at the local Legion. Deciding that we couldn't miss this unusual experience, we followed them over and friends of theirs let us in as it is a member's-only event. Thankfully we still had some Canadian dollars from a prior trip and were able to participate in the "draw" by buying raffle tickets for a looney each (~$0.75 US) for each the 10 different drawings. The winner of each drawing could go up and choose from healthy-portion packages of store-bought meat (e.g. several racks of ribs, a six-pack of sirloins, etc.). Though we didn't win, it was good fun chatting and drinking with a dozen Canadians. We were even invited and attended a daughter's 50th birthday party set for the next evening at a local pub. Medicine Hat was also a great place to visit the local equivalent of AAA (CAA) and purchase an annual National Park Pass which we'll need for Banff.

We finally got to a campground where Max will spend almost a month just north of Calgary. We were surrounded by prairie dogs and had to closely manage our electricity usage, but it served the purpose of getting us close to family on my dad's side -- one of his cousin's, her daughter (my 2nd cousin), and her two wonderful daughters. They showed us a good time, including visiting the Calgary Zoo, a tour of downtown Calgary and a side trip to Innisfail to see the Police Dog Service Training Center! They put on a demonstration once a week that shows the dogs in action and even the newer recruits (puppies!). Sadly, Sheila wasn't able to fly into Canada and meet with us and she was really missed by everyone!

Duluth to Calgary

Visiting Calgary Zoo with my 2nd cousin Wendy

Cousin Alison giving us a great tour of downtown Calgary

Leaving Max behind, we drove a little over an hour in the car to stay in the Canmore WorldMark resort for 10 days. Brother David and his wife, Mary, flew over with Raleigh friends, Sherrie and Don, to fill their resort unit and their son, Isaac, joined them partway through. Sometimes together and sometimes in different groups, there was an abundance of hiking, sightseeing, gondola riding, food indulging, hot tub soaking, and socializing to easily fill the time and we really needed more. My cousin and one of her daughters even stopped by for a few nights on their way west to visit her son who is working on a pipeline in British Columbia. The wildfire smoke made some days hazy but some were so crystal clear that is was striking to see the mountains that surrounded us. Everything was so lovely, with the only negative being the abundance of other tourists sharing the area. It is impossible to say in words how beautiful this area is, so I'll say it in pictures instead.

Downtown Banff mid-morning before the big crowds

Sherrie and the two of us on our Open Top tour

View looking at Banff from the top of Sulfur Mountain (via Banff Gondola on a very smoky day)

Bighorn sheep on the top of Sulfur mountain

The mountains in the mist from downtown Canmore

Maren, Mary, and Isaac in downtown Canmore

Herd of elk that visited the Cave and Basin Historical Site

The famous Lake Louise

The equally famous Lake Moraine

Very cool mountains in the sunlight on the way back from Lake Louise

Jeffrey with a death grip on the open Lake Louise Resort gondola

The view from Kicking Horse viewpoint -- Lake Louise behind us left of Jeffrey's hat

A picture of Jeffrey taking a picture of this breathtaking view

Five Martins and one Nelson enjoying a final dinner out in Canmore

Turning east now, we swung through Medicine Hat once more (sadly no meat draw this time) and turned south to enter the U.S. enroute to Havre, Montana. Again we were the only vehicle(s) at the border crossing and weren't even asked this time about alcohol and fresh vegetables or fruit, though we had worked hard to consume them all (okay, maybe missed an avocado) and even left a few things behind with my family. We used Havre to refill our fuel tanks, restock, and enjoy BBQ, but had already seen the local sights there when we traveled through two years ago as part of our Lewis and Clark caravan. 

Turning east again, we stopped at Wolf Point, Montana, for a few nights and started to catch up on some laundry. That process continued at the next stop, Minot again! Jeffrey got his allergy shots at the same doctor, we celebrated a delayed Maren birthday dinner at a local japanese steakhouse, and made a second visit to the local Roosevelt Zoo so we could see their brand new baby giraffe! Only 2 weeks old and the youngest we've ever seen.

Roosevelt Zoo's two week old baby boy with his aunt

Maren feeding the aunt

A quick swing next through Fargo (Blaze pizza fix!) plus a Redbox rental so Maren could see Kandahar (Gerard Butler!) and a quick stop through a Walgreens pharmacy for a prescription. Honestly we can't imagine what our insurance company thinks as our claims are from all over the country. Thank goodness for a PPO plan! Maren's goal is to make things simpler and get us set up with online pharmacy providers for next year. Tomorrow we will drive to Bedmiji, the official starting point of our Mississippi River Run RV caravan. This will be our 4th Fantasy tour and we are looking forward to the sights and having someone else handle the travel plans for 34 days!

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Saturday, July 8, 2023

Ack! 2023 is half over already!

Maren and I had a busy first half of the year. So much of our winter/spring adventure is a tried-and-true routine that we don't think about updating the blog as often. Here are some highlights of the usual stuff and some of the UNUSUAL stuff from the last 6 months.

January, February and March were the usual Florida locations. We still enjoy volunteering at the Tampa RV Show in January but spend the rest of our time on the east coast in state, federal, county parks depending on what reservations we were able to get so many months in advance. It continues to be harder to get reservations and, like purchasing concert tickets online, others often get there first. Somehow it works out. Next winter's state park reservations were made months ago. The federal parks reserve 6 months out, so we try to fill the state park gaps then. We recently rebooked our December plan as the rent went way up! Sometimes we hold on to overlapping reservations just to make the cancellation decision later. You never know what a summer hurricane might do to your plans (like last year when hurricane Ian closed numerous campgrounds for months!).

Maren used the winter months to do some personal maintenance -- starting with her tooth implant saga. Step 1 was a sinus lift procedure and post implanted in late January. The 2nd, 3rd and 4th steps will wait until we return to Florida this fall and hopefully she'll leave next spring with a new tooth! She also had a surgical procedure during our March visit near Gainesville. The surgery was scheduled last November around our travel schedule, so non-emergency, but our careful planning almost blew up when the hospital called the day before to cancel due to odd pre-op EKG results. We immediately drove back to the pre-op center to plead her case and they finally agreed to proceed after vetting her lack of any cardiac symptoms, yet active lifestyle. Getting a robotically assisted surgical suite and doctor aligned with our RV schedule took a lot of work and we would not be denied! 

The surgery was successful with no issues and, after we moved up to Raleigh, Maren saw a cardiologist and even his EKG machine showed a different odd result, as did several years of EKGs from her annual physicals. Software! One cardiac echo later, he said everything looked fine and that this was apparently just her "normal" and she is apparently proficient at confusing EKG machines. 

On our way to Raleigh we stop in South Carolina to get the yearly maintenance for Max the motorhome's Freightliner chassis. This year was a big $$$ maintenance year as the "do it every" 2,3,4 year cycles all coincided, plus we had 4 new tires for the rear at $600 + installation, each!  Yes, the motorhome is 12 years old now and we've just started our 12th year full-timing! We purchased Max in November of 2011 and moved in June of 2012 -- the years have just flown by.

This year's big plan is to get to Calgary/Banff Canada for an August meet up with Sheila and some of Maren's Canadian relatives that still live in that area. Our route there has, so far, included the Harpursville area of New York to visit one of Maren's favorite zoos again. Animal Adventure Park has changed a lot since our last visit 5 years ago and they now have a drive thru park too. Being a member, Maren gets us in for free, several times before we moved on.

Maren with AAP's sweet giraffe bull, Oliver

AAP's 3 little girl lion cubs

Our next stop was Niagara Falls with a stop enroute at the Syracuse Zoo (twin baby elephants!). The smoke from Canada was very bad for several of the days but we got to see the incredible falls and check out the Buffalo zoo.

Very rare twin elephants -- only ones in the U.S.!


Niagara from the U.S. side

Next up was the Erie and Toledo zoos, followed by a stop in Indiana for a refrigerator repair. We had the cooling unit part upgraded last year, but were having a little trouble with it. They elected just to replace the cooling unit again and this year's model is a big improvement from last year's version. Let's hope we are now good for many years, although we do like visiting this area. The Potawatomi Zoo in South Bend was the next stop and then we were on our way to Winnebago in Iowa.

We had a few intermittent problems for Winnebago Service to look at, but Murphy's Law, they all refused to act up  while we were there, so it was a quick, inexpensive, frustrating stop.

Our next stop was to Rochester, Minnesota to visit my mom's two sisters. We had a quick visit with both and helped aunt Margaret empty out an under-stair storage area that she wanted to clean out. It was a quick task with all three of us handling it. Aunt Louise's health has been deteriorating since we saw her last year. We were really glad we stopped by as she passed away only a few days later. She was an amazing woman, a long time teacher who touched many lives and will be missed by all that knew her.

We next moved on to Duluth for a week around the busy 4th of July travel period. We usually try to get off the roads around holidays to avoid the road craziness, but campgrounds will always be crowded/crazy around holidays too. Of course we couldn't pass up seeing the Lake Superior Zoo and also do some shopping at Duluth Trading company. We closed our Duluth visit with a BBQ dinner ride on the Lake Superior Train. We are now continuing our march west at a pretty good clip.

Us with the famous Duluth aerial lift bridge

Google maps kindly tracks our progress. Here is June!