Thursday, October 31, 2019

Central US Giraffe Trail

This summer's "new territory" RV season was a tour through Nebraska, a tiny corner of Wyoming, and then following the east edge of the Rockies through Colorado and New Mexico before returning back to central Texas. Though unintended, it also became a giraffe trail of sorts as we aimed to visit every zoo along our route that we could find.

Our first stop was the famous Henry Dorly Zoo in Omaha. It was really spectacular an we picked a perfect day weather-wise. I even found my first giraffe collection of the summer.

Feeding giraffe at the Henry Dorly Zoo
After a quick stop at the Blue Ox factory for a tour and where our car's tow bar was made (also free camping) we then trekked west across Nebraska to Cheyenne, Wyoming. Though it doesn't have a zoo, it was an interesting western town with a big railroad history. As you can imagine, a flatter rail route over the Rocky Mountains built cities where there was nothing before. Union Pacific still has a huge hub there. Cheyenne also hosts one of the largest rodeos in the world at the Frontiers Days grounds with several museums about all the history there.

Turning south, we stopped for two weeks in Denver. One of those weeks was spent flying to Raleigh (more on that later), leaving us a couple days before and after to see the local Denver Zoo and see some other sights. We caught up with an Florida Gator and IBM friend who had moved to Denver many years ago. We also met up with some Austin/volleyball friends who are in the process of moving to the Denver area. We didn't get to explore enough, so add Denver to the list of places to go back to, but we did enjoy the view from Lookout Mountain where Buffalo Bill is buried and eating ice cream, (us, not Bill).

Feeding giraffe at the Denver Zoo
Next up was Colorado Springs just a few hours south. This area turned into one of the highlights of our trip -- not only visiting the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, but also Garden of the Gods, the Air Force Academy, Manitou Springs and Will Roger's Shrine of the Sun. We didn't get up Pikes Peak as the weather at the peak was not good on the days we were free. The road to the top is currently closed to private cars, but there are shuttle buses available. The cog railroad up Pikes Peak is also under repair, so back on the "future" list for this area too. We knew we were crossing paths with some RV friends from last summer's Canadian maritime adventure, so visiting with them was an extra bonus.

It is unusual for a giraffe to like being petted!
Cheyenne Mountain Zoo giraffe keepers doing a training session


Maren getting a special 4-giraffe feeding session 
Jeffrey posing with the rocks in Garden of the Gods

Us at Garden of the Gods

Tasting one of the mineral springs in Manitou Springs
The last "new state" of the summer was New Mexico, giving Jeffrey a new RV height driving record (8000 feet) as we made our way over the Raton Pass to Santa Fe. Of course it is the steepness of the roads that matter. Going up is easy for the diesel as long as it can get rid of the heat it builds up. Going down can be exciting as the speed will build up quickly with all of our weight rolling downhill. Using the diesel's exhaust brake and transmission downshifting helps control the speed, but it can be nerve-wracking trying to manage the speed and the twists and turns of a new road at the same time. That said, LOVE getting great fuel mileage when going downhill!

Santa Fe itself is a very cool town that has really embraced the adobe theme (even the local banks and Walmart). Our first few days were spent on a day trip south to the Albuquerque Zoo, as well as attempting a hike at Tent Rocks. I say "attempting" because one of Jeffrey's old hiking boots blew out its sole and we had to turn around before reaching the top of the trail, but it was still a pretty climb.

Feeding a giraffe at the Albuquerque Zoo
Maren on the trail at Tent Rocks
Us at Pecos National Historic Park
Mom Sheila and Jeffrey's brother David and wife/Maren's-college-friend Mary flew out to enjoy a week in a condo near us and the 5 of us took advantage of the many "flavors" of Santa Fe's dining options, as well as walking the lovely downtown and perusing the many local artist's crafts. The next day Mary and David peeled off to so some serious hiking while we road tripped with Sheila to Bandelier National Park to see ancient petroglyphs and cliff dwellings. We also swung through Los Alamos, one of the US locations where the atomic bombs were developed during WWII.

Jeffrey exploring the cliff dwellings at Bandelier Park
Jeffrey, Maren, and Sheila at the Rio Grande Gorge
Sadly, Mary had to cut her visit short and fly back early to help her parents, so we really missed her company on the trip to Taos (to our dismay the Taos Pueblo was closed for a funeral). Jeffrey filled in as David's hiking buddy to climb up Deception Peak (12300 feet), with new hiking boots of course, while Sheila and I explored the local shops and Georgia O'Keefe museum (neither of us was impressed). We wrapped up our Santa Fe visit by checking out the New Mexico History Museum, but one of the best parts of the week was just visiting around the common area firepit each evening at the condo. Though the days were warm, it cooled off nicely late in the afternoon.

Jeffrey & David at the top of Deception Peak
On our way to drop Sheila at the Albuquerque airport we stopped at the Sandia Peak Tramway for the great views and lunch. While we were standing in line outside for the tram ride down, it started to rain and hail on us but we didn't want to give up our spot as we needed to ride the next tram down to get Sheila to her flight. So we stood in the rain and hail, huddled under our thin coats and big brimmed hats, laughing, but we made it on the next tram down. As it turns out we think they closed the tram for a while after our ride down due to lightening at the mountain peak.  Later back in Santa Fe, the hail (thankfully small) caught us and Max at our RV park and the hail scrubbed both vehicles clean, but I wouldn't recommend it for every cleaning!

The route from Santa Fe to Austin was planned to be a few stops, with Zoos and museums, but the wind forecast started to look dangerous. We woke up one morning in Amarillo trying to decide if we could get to Lubbock the next day before the rain/wind hit and east coast Florida Gator game started on TV. After discussing some options, we decided to just get on the road immediately, skip Lubbock entirely, and get to Abilene late in the day. This helped us avoid two days of crappy weather driving plus be well positioned to watch the football game and fit in the zoo. Thankfully the RV parks we were skipping/visiting were all flexible.

Feeding a giraffe at the Abilene Zoo

Giraffe drinking water at the Abilene Zoo
Back in Austin we had a very full first week with scheduled annual dentist and doctor visits. Last year before we left Austin area for Florida we ended up moving our storage unit down the hall to save $25 dollars a month. I know, crazy pricing policy. Well the same place raised the price again, so before the end of the first week back, we moved our storage from Round Rock to Georgetown and to a smaller unit and will save a bunch as we locked in an internet rate for two years. Thank you very, very much to friend Mike Walker for helping us!

Being at higher altitudes most of the summer (6000 feet in Cheyenne, 5000 in Denver, 7000 in Santa Fe) meant we didn't have really bad hot summer temperatures to deal with. Once we started back to Austin; which also meant mostly downhill days, it started getting hotter and hotter. Austin had a very hot summer and September was no exception. Halfway through October it finally started cooling off nicely so we could tackle the list of Max to-do items, mainly washing/waxing/sealing and other general pampering we try to do several times a year. Murphy's Law, we got rained on driving to Houston yesterday and he got dirty again. Sigh.

To wrap up this blog post, I always like to share anything new we've learned to do in our RV full-time travels -- in this case, how to manage more complicated medical issues while on the road. I began having some nerve issues in January and things got a bit worse in May while we were in Raleigh. Thank goodness we have a good PPO insurance plan and can get care almost anywhere in the USA. For now I've been cleared to keep traveling, but we have had to learn how to get monthly lab-work done on the road and even arrange for special medications to get delivered wherever we are. Going forward, we'll also likely need to budget flying back to Raleigh several times a year for followup tests and doc visits, but we are very happy we can keep our travel lifestyle going.

My 2019 Halloween costume, gifted to me by my college roomy Lisa :-)
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Thursday, August 8, 2019

Raleigh to Iowa via Norway

We have been very busy since the last blog posting. [So busy that Jeffrey is the guest writer for this blog post]

We left Raleigh in May dodging the weather fronts. The weather was cooperating and we were generally a day before or a day after the storms until we got close to Iowa for an appointment at HWH to have the motorhome leveling jacks inspected. The winds were projected to be high and would be hitting us at a right angle, so we stayed an extra night in one campground and then drove 2 days distance the next day to keep our appointment. It was only a little less windy that day and 450 miles was alot to drive a motorhome fighting the wind -- our longest day EVER. We were glad that we stopped at HWH as the jack that was replaced in Florida had bent brackets and the valve was leaking. HWH has electric hookups in their parking lot so we can live without running the generator while staying overnight -- even ended up staying an extra night because of the continuing high winds.

Our next destination was an Iowa state park to visit with friends, Jeff and Dawn. We get to see them in Florida every winter and they often get stuck (volunteer) to watch our motorhome while we fly away from Max for a week, but they are very nice and we really enjoy time spent with them.

From there we went to visit my relatives in Rochester, Minnesota. and had a nice visit with my mom's siblings; my aunt Margaret and her husband Merlyn, my aunt Loiuse and cousin Michael. We then ventured on to Minneapolis where we had planned a flight to visit Sheila in Burlington, WA, and also to check out a indoor storage location where we would be leaving Max a month later for our trip to Iceland and Norway. Since the weather can be severe in this area, we hoped to store Max indoors. Over the internet we had found an indoor storage location with electricity so Max could be plugged in while we were gone. We are sure glad we checked the facility out in person as the electricity was not working on the steel post where we were to park. The other option was to put us next to an area with a lot of foot traffic, band saws (and their dust) and sharing an outlet with that equipment plus a big refigerator! Plan B involved leaving Max at a campground that was prone to flooding and had recently damaged our motorhome paint with their lawn mower!

Us with Uncle Merlyn and Aunt Margaret
Time for Plan C. I got on the web and found another indoor storage location but they only do in-once/out-once storage during the winter. When I explained the situtation, they made an exception could even do electricity. They just needed us to arrive after hours to drop Max off and pick him up very early on our return because they work during the summer months. It seemed too good to be true, but after a quick inspection we had our new plan and the price was much less too. Crisis averted.

With the new plan in place, back to our busy schedule.  We flew to the northwest to visit Sheila and her cat Tay. My allergy shots seem to be working well (and Tay isn't allowed in "our" bedroom or bathroom). Sheila had made plans to have close friends and family on a boat ride in Puget Sound to scatter Rick's ashes. The weather was a big concern but it turned out to be absolutely beautiful for the ceremony. Afterwards, Rick's cousins had everyone over to their house with good food and fond memories for all.
Our memorial service for Rick near Deception Pass, Washington (L to R: Rick's sister, Pat, Sheila, and Maren)
On our return to Minneapolis, we hustled down to Forest City, IA for a service appointment at Winnebago's factory service center. A short list of things were fixed under our new extended warranty (the last extended warranty paid for itself many times over) and then we offhandedly asked Winnebago to look at the back of our water heater.  We have had an ongoing issue of a slow, persistent leak which years ago had even shorted the water heater's electriral wiring. While it had seemed to be stable for many years, we were with the experts, so we asked them to double check things. It turned out our tank was actually cracked. Then the new extended warranty company got very quiet! Luckily after a day and a half they said, yes, they'll cover replacing the water heater. We are just glad our tiny leak hadn't turned into a basement flood. We then went down the street to have some paint work done at the company that does much of Winnebago's full body painting. We had used them a couple of years ago and they were great then. Several small touchups plus a medium-sized dent from some construction debris kicked up by a passing truck was repaired and one big noise nuisance with a awning topper was resolved. We are very happy and looking good too.

Back up to Minneapolis we went and into our new indoor storage facility for our big overseas trip. We dropped off Max, now all alone in a big empty horse barn with electrcity for his battery charger and we flew to Iceland. Iceland airlines will let you stop over in Iceland for up to a week for the same ticket price, so we planned a 3-day stop over to explore before heading to London for the Norway cruise. Sheila met us in Rejkavik, Iceland, and it is an interesting place. We explored around town on foot and also took the Golden Circle tour. We saw waterfalls, geysers, historical sites and beautifui landscapes. Sheila even fullfilled a dream of riding an Icelandic horse. Everything is very expensive in Iceland as much has to be imported. The sun doesn't go down for long during the summer and little darkness and some jetlag made sleep interesting. When we got up at 4am to go to the airport the streets were still crowded with young people. Turns out they were all just coming home from the bars, but in any other town all of this would just be covered by the darkness of the night.
A very friendly Icelandic horse with great hair

The 3 of us at Faxafoss (Faxi Falls)
The three of us then flew to London and bus transferred to our cruise ship, the Pacific Princess. This is the smallest ship in their fleet and with only 600 or so passengers it is very much less crowded. We had planned to do this cruise back in 2016 with Dad and Sheila but it got cancelled when he got sick. We decided to go this year in his memory. After a lumpy night/day/night at sea we got our sea legs back and arrived in our first stop in Norway.

Our cruise itinerary
Sheila and Maren all dressy on a cruise formal night
 Norway is a very beautiful country and every stop going up and then back down the coast was amazing. The days kept getting longer and longer until the captain announced that sunset was cancelled. We had reached the arctic circle, also known as the place of the midnight sun and 24 hour daylight. The sun didn't set until 7 days later on our way back south. We traveled north all the way up the coast to the northern most point in Europe and then even further north to Svalbard, Norway. The town of Longyearbyen on the island of Spitsbergen is at 78 degrees north latitude. I don't know how much further north the ice cap was, but there isn't much earth north of where we were. We were expecting temps in the 30s, but it was 54F that day and I think everyone was overdressed except a few locals who took advantage of the day and were out in shorts.

Sheila adding even more color to the Trondheim waterfront

Me dipping my feet in very cold fjord water in Skjolden

Two Gators in Longyearben, Svalbard
The fjords of Norway are amazing. Tall cliffs, many waterfalls, scenic views of adjacent valleys and farms. The Creator really had fun with the norwegian coastline. At one point, we were over 100 miles inland from the ocean and still in a deep fjord.

Waterfall in the fjord on the way to Geiranger

Viewpoint overlooking Geiranger and the cruise ships

Jostedal Glacier near Skjolden
With the cruise finished we returned to London and flew back to Minneapolis. Sheila flew with us to Iceland where we all changed planes to our final destinations. After we picked up Max (all safe and secure) from storage, we headed back south to Forest City, IA for Winnebago's annual Grand National Rally. The rally grounds at the factory filled up over the next few days with over 900 RVs. There was great entertainment, education and social opportunities and many vendors were there to help people with issues. We saw some old friends and made some new friends too. We arrived early for a few pre-rally days and experienced several rainy days and some stormy and windy weather, again reenforcing why we opted for indoor storage while we were gone. For the actual rally week, the weather was perfect. Though it was a very hectic week, we had some time to relax and get back on our US timezone.
We are where the red arrow is pointing
We are now heading towards Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico, but first a stop in Omaha, Nebraska, so Maren could see some giraffe...

Friday, May 24, 2019

Quite a winter

Yeah, I know it has been quite awhile since I've posted. I've been putting it off and putting it off because it will be difficult this time.

In prior years our fall and winter months have been a comfortable pattern of visits through Texas and Florida seeing family and friends and doing a checklist of annual visits to doctors and dentists that we know and like. We generally also squeeze in a few week-long "fly-away" trips to hang out with my Dad and his "bride" Sheila in some interesting neutral touristy destination.

While this year was a similar itinerary, it was also goodbye to my wonderful father. Our fun trips together to new places were replaced with frequent flights directly to him so we could squeeze as much time in with him as we could, knowing his time with us was getting shorter. With the hope that we could continue these visits well into the new year we were busy planning our 2019 travels when our time with him suddenly ran out. We will greatly miss our adventures with him -- but our lives will forever be enriched by the "wanderlust" lifestyle he shared and passed on to all of us. The four us had to cancel a "bucket list" trip to Norway a few years ago when he had a health emergency and he always hoped we would get another chance to do it together. That will finally happen this summer -- with only the three of us now -- but he will definitely be with us in spirit as we explore the beautiful Norway coastline.
One of my favorite pictures of my Dad taken by dear friends of his
Having time with Jeffrey's father in Gainesville felt extra special this year. The three of us always manage to cover lots of activities together, though a bit fewer as I was dealing with a nerve issue in my neck that sidelined me from the epic puzzle projects I usually manage to drag the boys into. It also kept us from catching as many Gator sports competitions as I just wasn't up to perching on bleacher seats. Hopefully we'll make up for it next year!

Our encounters with animals also continued to lift our spirits. Once we got back to Florida in the fall, we tried a new campground for the month of December -- Lion Country Safari KOA. Good RV friends, Dawn and Jeff Marlin, had tried it out the year before and liked it quite a bit, so we decided to join them there. It was of course a HUGE bonus that there was a zoo right next door. You could even hear the lions roaring from the campground every day. Sounds a bit odd maybe, but we got used to listening to them and really missed it when we left at the end of the month.

Tower of giraffe at Lion Country Safari
Though not a BIG cat, a feline was also added as a permanent addition to our family by stepmom, Sheila. Tay (pronounced "tie") is a very sweet boy who is being a wonderful companion to her as well as providing the daily entertainment that only cats can. In addition to romping around her apartment with great abandon, he loves laying on Dad's chair, Sheila's lap, and unfortunately Sheila's open laptop computer whenever he can sneak on. We worry a little about the future tech phone calls he makes to us!
"Glamour Shot" of Tay
As we started to make our way out of Florida, we also got to tour the zoo in Jacksonville, Florida. It was a real treat, beautifully landscaped and staffed with volunteers at all of the big exhibits who did a wonderful job talking about each of the animals.

Alligator hiding in the leaf covered pond at the Jacksonville Zoo

Me feeding a giraffe a the Jacksonville Zoo
Of course, all of the wonderful family and friends we get to visit during these months in Texas, Florida, and North Carolina are big highlights too -- and we can't imagine changing our annual fall-winter plan to be a different itinerary. We feel blessed to have the time to see them and so far they haven't punted us away so they are stuck with us!

Me with nephew Isaac -- plus a giraffe statue at a local Raleigh eatery

Me with doggee cousin, Toby
Us wearing shirts I ordered from Animal Adventure -- the park where giraffe "April" lives in NY.
We got to visit her in person last summer. Jeffrey is a good sport to wear it with me!

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