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November 2023 Review:

Arizona or the 48th State as many Arizonians like to refer to themselves as, and I have just switched over our streaming TV service from the Toledo area of Ohio to the Phoenix area of Arizona, and that comes with a flood of the different terms and descriptions all that we just left this spring. The area around Phoenix itself is referred to as the valley, then there the three different areas east & west valley, then of course the high country areas which is basically the rest in Arizona. We have fallen in love with Arizona, one of the reasons are the dramatic changes to the landscape in such a short distance, within a couple of hundred miles you can go from skiing just north of Flagstaff in the morning to swimming in your pool in Phoenix before dinner. but because we are in the desert that 77ºF afternoon temperature will likely plunge to 45ºF moments after the sun sets. Which is another reason we love this area, we can be sitting outside sucking some of the winter sunshine at our campsite all afternoon with the coach windows all open wide to keep the temperature in the coach at a reasonable temperature, to closing all the windows and be wearing a sweatshirt as soon as the sun disappears, which is also excellent for sleeping. And as with any metropolitan area in the United States we try to avoid the greater Phoenix area, as there are at least two or three shootings every night that make it onto the local news channels, I remember coming back from Mexico last fall and all of our American friends saying how dangerous it must have been travelling in Mexico, and me saying that we felt safer there than we would in almost any American city. But that is also why we try to camp and boondock away from the major cities and only make the occasional hour long trip for supplies to restock.

Now I know that the whole gun conversation is a slippery slope here in the States, with everyone referring to their second amendment (the right to bare arms) and of course they usually roll out one my favorite’s “guns don’t kill people, people kill people“, to which I say yes, but they kill people with guns. The whole country has lost touch with the fact that there are on average over two mass shootings per day here in the United States of America, whether it is some nutbar who just got fired and is seeking revenge, or a radical that is out to become a martyr for some cause, or the ever popular ex-military personal that in many cases have a larger arms stashes than a lot of small countries. And now the sudden realization that mental illness is the root of the problem, which is obviously factor number one, but making guns available to the mentally ill seems like a bit of a problem from my view. The biggest concern appears to be the unwillingness to see that this as a major problem, when some ones right to bare arms as more important than some ones right to life. I can offer no solution or even an idea to correct the concern but acknowledging that there is a problem would be a great start.

Ok that little rant is over so back to why we love Arizona, anyone that knows Miss Laurie knows she has three major loves first of which would most likely be “Sea Shells” followed closely by “Rocks & Stones” and while there are not a lot of sea shells here in Arizona there is an abundance of rocks and of course there is that whole green thumb thing with her ability to bring so many plants from the cusp of being compost, back to a thriving plant. And every trek into the desert is filled with rock hunting and the amazement of the ability for plants to take root and thrive in this harsh climate. We left the desert in the spring during the most amazing “spring bloom” in many years following one of the wettest winters in years and we returned to the desert after one of the hottest and driest summers in years with the valley recording over 60 days over 100ºF and a monsoon season that was virtually none existent. And yes there were plants that did not survive because of the summer drought, but the majority did survive and as the forecast is for another wet winter we have only had one storm in November and it provided less than a ¼” of rain. As you watch forecasts around the country and they are speaking of rain in inches per storm, here in Arizona they measure their rain fall in hundreds of an inch.

Of course our American friends just completed the celebration of their Thanksgiving which seems to us to be a bigger celebration than Christmas with the celebration being on a Thursday followed by the crazy day that they refer to as “Black Friday“, a term that has even made its way north of the border, and it is normally the biggest shopping day of the year, and that term originated from when retailers start to turn their ledger entries black (profitable) on this day instead of the usual red (loss) entries until this shopping extravaganza. Again too often we had only seen the bad press on this event north of the border when we would hear of people being trampled to death by the early morning crowds. With many of these same deals now being available online the crowds don’t seem as crazy and of course the retailers have also started these sale events earlier in the week as well. Now “Black Friday” is followed by “Cyber Monday” the online shopping day for bargains and this year we heard about “Travel Tuesday” the day for deals on trips and of course American Express promoted “Shop Small Saturday” which was the day to support small business’ in our communities. So far we have not participated in any of these sales, as we always wait for the “Boxing Day” sales (LOL) which is now making appearances in some of the States along the Canadian border.

We have been volunteering at the arboretum and enjoying the beauty of the park, fall colour is something that we grew up with back in Ontario with the brilliant colours, but here in Arizona where there are a limited amount of deciduous trees fall colour is very popular with many visiting the arboretum hunting for colour. The cottonwood trees (which are a close relative to our popular trees) turn a brilliant yellow and while we have trees at the Arboretum from around the world the colours are very limited as compared to the east and west coasts, but there are weekly reports as to what area has the best colours similar to leaf peeper reports back in Ontario. And of course many trees here in the desert never drop their leaves in the fall, and many plants in the desert drop their leaves in the extreme heat times and regrow their leaves in the fall when the sun is less severe. The ability for desert plants to survive has always amazed me from the ability to drop and grow leaves many times per year, or the small size of the leaves that are often waxy feeling, unlike the maple leaves that we grew up with. And because of the elevation and temperature changes Arizona has a huge variety of native trees from the stunted appearing Southern Arizona Mesquite trees to the towering Ponderosa pines of Northern Arizona.

And of course here in the desert most people don’t consider Arizona being a popular kayaking area, but they would be wrong with a surprising number of excellent kayaking areas. There are a number of major rivers that cut through the State, such as the Colorado, Salt, and Gila rivers with Colorado most likely being the most famous having created the Grand Canyon, and being the source water for Lake Powell, Lake Mead, Lake Havasu and Lake Mohave. Within an hour of our location we have Lake Roosevelt, Canyon Lake, Saguaro Lake and the San Carlos Reservoir, and we have kayaked some of the area rivers as well.

The sunrises and sunsets in Arizona are some of the best in the world, whether it is the traditional saguaro cactus silhouette sunset or the mountain backdrop sunset or the reverse sunset painting the mountain faces. Then there are the Arizonan night skies with unlimited stars, made for those stargazers out there, with what is referred to as “dark skies” with no light pollution.

Then there is the yelp of the coyotes on the evenings that we have our windows open, or the chatter of the Gila woodpeckers when they are not tapping on a tree, or the quail that run along the ground in flocks that remind us of the old partridge family show from many years ago. We even occasionally see the elusive roadrunner which surprisingly has so many of the movements and characteristics’ that we had seen from those old cartoons, and it would be an unusual day if we don’t get buzzed by a humming bird or two fighting over their territory. And we have a plethora of bunnies around the arboretum this year, as I’m sitting here typing I can see a bunny out both side windows of the coach and a walk to the visitor center will involve passing at least four every morning. Mister Sam has an endless stream of birds all day long at our birdbath every day, cardinals, finches, thrashers, sparrows, woodpeckers, humming birds about the only bird we don’t see here are the Blue Jays that are so common back home.

We made it to Superior Arizona which will be our home for this winter on the 10th day of November, we have set up camp in the same site as last year. And we are looking forward to volunteering at the arboretum again this year. We are the first visitor center host volunteers to arrive and we landed on Friday and we are working this weekend, which was ok with us, we enjoy our time at the arboretum, and as frustrating as the management seems at times it cannot dampen the beauty of the arboretum. Lynnea our supervisor greeted us and then turned us loose to over the admissions booth, there is new pricing, but other than the price change it’s the same as before.

So lets start with some photos of our first walk through the Arboretum:

After a busy first weekend in the admissions booth we needed some time to unwind and get settled in, we briefly met the other host volunteers, three couples that are working for the education department. We will get a chance to sit and chat with them soon, in the immediate future we are getting a chance to say hello to the staff members that survived the summer, it wasn’t that the summer was so bad, it was just who would survive the now departed director.

Yes there have been many changes in the management structure of the Arboretum, and while most are for the better, while some will leave a large gap to fill, so what has happened? Lets start with the good items, the head of the education has left, a loss that should have been seen as a bonus. The head of maintenance has also left, again a good thing for the Arboretum, hopefully there will more cooperation between departments now. Another major departure was the departure of the director, I think this was the biggest and possibly the best news, in our opinion the director was not an asset to the operation of the Arboretum. On the sad side the huge set of shoes to fill will be the loss of Emily, who wore many hats and wore them all well, she was the volunteer coordinator and the events manager, a wonderful soul that will be missed.

A replacement director has not been selected yet, and there has been some moves within the organization that don’t seem to make sense yet to us but the fallout will show up soon I’m sure. So since the previous director was involved the Arboretum is short a director of horticulture, now we are missing the director of education, a new maintenance manager is in place, and the board of director has turned down most likely the most knowledgeable candidate for the open director position. But other than that everything is well, two of the gardeners are sharing the director of horticulture duties, the education department seem to be in some turmoil yet, and the assistant director seems to be holding the operation together right now. But Lynnea our direct manager is still in charge of the visitor center operations.

So I have to mention the new admission price at the Arboretum, $24.95. My first question was who the hell decided on that price? And of course I was told the previous director and that came as no real surprise. The Arboretum is worth that price or probably more, but $25 would cause far less difficulty at the admission booth. And the web site was deigned for even dollar amounts, so the new pricing on the website looks terrible. I know the reason for this pricing style, which in the olden days was used, and the rational was that $9.99 sounded less expensive than $10. And when a penny actually had value that may have been true, but today its just a one more idea who’s day has passed. It is just one more example of a leader who was not in touch with the world today. So will the previous director be missed? Let me put it this way, not by anyone that really cares about the Arboretum, there may be a few pet supporters but not many.

Our first few weeks of November were a whirlwind of little adventures, like the first Grocery run, the first Costco run (Aw I now have a wee Irish blessing for my coffee each morning), and now we are preparing for the onslaught of Black Friday attendance at the Arboretum usually one of the busiest day of the year. So one of our first real adventures was a trip Casa Grande and visit with Tom, Kathleen and of course their puppy Miss Lucy, we had a a lovely lunch, a couple of beverages and we also got a tour of their co-op. I have never spoke about co-ops in our blog but they are an option for full-timers, Tom & Kathleen are members of Escapees an organization designed for full time RVers that share this lifestyle, and the organization offer many services, like mail forwarding, legal addresses, and also some campgrounds and a number of co-ops around the country where you purchase a “pad” (what we know as a campsite) that you can park your rig on for a season or full time, the pad can be rented to other members of the organization when it is vacant and the income generated is used toward the yearly charges. There are boondocking spots as well in their co-op that members can rent for only $5 per night. Their co-op is located south of Casa Grande near interstate I-8 between Tucson and Gila Bend, what makes the co-op idea interesting is that you get back what you paid plus most site improvements that you have been done if you decide to sell and move on.

Meanwhile back to the Black Friday preparation at the Arboretum, the second visitor center couple has made it to the garden and we are tasked with training them, the problem is that working the Black Friday crowd can be a wee bit intimidating. So the weekend before Black Friday we spent time going over the admission booth procedures, and Tony & Cindy seem to be picking up the process well. I think that management should have had them do some more weekday work before putting all four of us in the booth for one of the busiest admissions days of the whole year. But at the end of the day we had processed over 1800 visitors, an unconfirmed all time record number. You must have heard of the saying “trial by fire“, well by the end of the day we all survived and were still speaking civil to each other. I would call that a success!

So we have made it to the last week of November and I think although there is just two host couples covering the admission booth, I think we have a pretty good team, Laurie and I will be covering a few more hours a week, but we will also cover the busiest weekend days and help out where needed. We have heard that the search for a new director for the Arboretum is down to three candidates. and we also understand that a choice will be made soon. The Arboretum is in excellent shape considering the heat and lack of water over the summer, back in the spring the decision was made to drain the reservoir here at the Arboretum to remove some invasive species and to reseal the concrete dam that forms Ayer Lake. So there was a lack of irrigation water at times during the summer, causing some major damage. The project is nearing conclusion and the reservoir is being refilled now, it is situations like this that prove the disconnect between the horticulture staff and the director on planning and timing on projects that are so essential to the welfare of the Arboretum.

As I close out this blog, we have settled into our winter routine and are enjoying the Arizona sunshine, and yes Miss Laurie is working diligently on increasing her rock collection. There is an abundance of bunnies in the Arboretum and we are hearing of more bobcat sightings in the area. We attempted to get all the volunteers together for a beverage and some conversation but got rained out to early to learn much about our new neighbours. Although there is a potluck dinner has been planned for December.

Arizona Sunshine!

Blog 495

Day2249

Week 3 Fall Adventure 2023

Monday November 6th and we have made it back to dry land, the rest of today will just be a down day as we will be pulling out of this campground tomorrow morning. Miss Laurie is planning on catching up on most of our laundry before we get back on the road, thank goodness for our onboard washer, which allows us to catch up on laundry when ever we have full hook-ups, our unit is actually a washer / dryer combination but we usually just hang our laundry to dry. I’m working on our cruise blog while everything is reasonably fresh in my memory banks, we are also catching up on some of the world news as the cruise lines like it better when you don’t know what is happening anywhere off the ship. It is also nice to be able to just grab a snack and a drink from the fridge as opposed to going up 4 decks and fighting the crowd at the buffet.

So if you haven’t read it yet catch our “Anchors Away” blog.

Tuesday November 7th, and we are getting back on the road again today, our plan is to be at our winter home in Superior Arizona by this Friday. So we have over 1000 miles (1600 kilometers) to cover in just four days, which means that our driving days will be a little longer than usual, and today will most likely be our worst driving day of the upcoming week as we head north on I-45 right into downtown Houston traffic and then catch I-10 west toward El Paso. Texas is such a big damn State and when we merge onto I-10 we will be at interchange number seven hundred and something, which means that we are still over seven hundred miles from the New Mexico State line which is just a few miles north of El Paso. Because our next big city to transverse will be San Antonio, my objective is to get through both Houston and San Antonio today, then we can just boondock anywhere. In fact I have scoped out a Walmart parking lot just 25 miles northwest of San Antonio on I-10.

It was good to be back in our bed last night and to be back on solid ground, I’m hoping to get on the road early today, this areas forecast temperature is for 85ºF (29.5ºC) so an early start would be a good idea both because of the warmth of the day, as well as having the sun behind us to start the day, in fact that will be part of our plan all week to avoid driving into the sunshine in the afternoons. By 8:00 am I was disconnecting the hookups, dumping the holding tanks and readying the coach for our early start, we will hook up the toad right here in the campground, as there are nice wide concrete roads through out the park. By the time we were ready to go we were pulling onto the road before 9:00, there was a lot of construction on I-45 as we trek north toward Houston, there are lots of speed restrictions because of the road work, we pass on the “Sam Houston Toll Road” exit, we made the mistake a few years ago of taking the “Sam Houston Toll Road” and without a Texas toll tag there seemed to be a toll booth every few miles, so today we are going to take the downtown Houston route.

The closer we get to the I-10 junction the more stop and go traffic we are experiencing, so with six miles to go, the overhead signs are suggesting that we still have 18 minuets of travel time to I-10. When we finally get to I-10 interchange and get Thunder west bound the traffic is still quite heavy but at least it is moving along just below the posted speed limit. And for a guy who used to drive in Toronto’s rush hour traffic all the time, Houston traffic was a piece of cake. Oh it takes some work to keep enough braking space in front of the coach with idiots cutting us off as they try to save a minute on their commute time. I have planned a fuel stop just east of San Antonio to top off the coach fuel tank, the fuel price is good and Thunder should be just under half tank by then, so now we just need to find a rest stop for a break and some lunch. Miss Laurie had located us a rest stop but as we get there it is closed because of road construction, so the next one will have to do, and as luck will have it, it turns out to be only about thirty miles east of our fuel stop.

When we finally get stopped for lunch I decided that we should try and push on a little farther than the 250 miles that I had originally planned for today, as we are trying to make up some ground early on this four day push to Arizona so another fifty miles up the road today there is a Cracker Barrel as well as another RV friendly Walmart parking lot. After lunch we headed west to a T/A (Truck stop of America) where we took on 58 gallons of diesel fuel before rolling back onto Interstate 10, to make our way through downtown San Antonio. Now because of some very poor engineering and planning way back when they originally designed the interstate network of highways we actually have to jump off of I-10 onto the I-410 bypass before catching I-35 just to connect back up with I-10 westbound just past the downtown area. By now we are just after 2:00 pm and we have decided that we are going to push further west toward Kerrville TX and as we exit off of I-10 the Cracker Barrel parking lot is just to our right and has a large parking area so we will not to have to disconnect the toad tonight, can you say bonus? We started this morning in La Marque Texas at an elevation of 17 feet and a flat flood plain area and now we have climbed into the rolling hills of Texas on our push westward and we are now at over 2000 feet of elevation, tomorrow will see even more changes in the scenery as we move west.

Tonight we just kicked back, watched some television while I tried to plan out tomorrows route, the disadvantage to covering the extra fifty miles on day one is having to rearranging our next afternoon’s stop as my previously destination is now only 200 miles down the highway this wouldn’t be an issue normally, but here in western Texas the amount of possible overnight spots just keep getting further apart and harder to find. So the RV friendly Walmart parking lot in Fort Stockton will no longer be Wednesday’s destination, We turned in after watching the Voice and the night was quiet, until the dumping of the trash dumpsters at 5:00 am, but still a small price to pay for a nights accommodations.

Wednesday November 8th, and for the record I was awake before the garbage truck arrived at the Cracker Barrel, I was working on a fuel stop and an end destination for todays adventures. My thinking is that today will be our easiest driving day of the week as we continue west on interstate I-10 we will not encounter any large cities today, and the highway will be reasonably flat and straight so today is the day to tick off some serious miles. But that will all happen after our Cracker Barrel breakfast, first things first, so we place an order on the Cracker Barrel mobile app and fifteen minuets later we are enjoying breakfast in the comfort of our coach. Bacon, eggs, hash browns, biscuits & gravy for me and pecan pancakes for Miss Laurie, a good start to what will turn out to be a very long day. It is overcast this morning as Texas is experiencing some light scattered showers and we would like to try to stay ahead of the next oncoming cold front that is moving south. So this morning we are planning on being on the road by nine o’clock.

We will have another hour of rolling hills as we climb up onto the high plains of western Texas, the big lush trees of eastern Texas turn into the scrub trees of western Texas and now huge patches of prickly pear cactus take over as some of the highway median main foliage. Of course no road trip would be complete without some proverbial “road construction” and today was no exception, I have to admit Texas highways are usually some of the best that we have travelled, but they are not without their rough spots. One of the bonuses to travelling late in the fall season is that a lot of the bigger highway construction projects are nearing their completion, as opposed to the heavy construction time associated with summer. So today we experienced mainly completed sections of highway construction, and we experienced something new today, today we encountered something called a “work convoy” and it would be best described as a way of doing some minor highway repairs without having to set up an actual road construction area with all the required construction warning signs.

So a “work convoy” consists of a rolling signal crash truck with the big arrow announcing a lane closure, then a couple of hundred feet ahead of the first truck there is a second rolling crash truck with another big arrow protecting the actual workers that could be doing any number of tasks from small asphalt patches, to repainting highway lines, or replacing the missing “cat eyes” that so many of the southern States use to mark the highway lines, These are reflectors that they adhere to the southern highways that certainly would not stand up to a Canadian snowplow operator, and that’s why the northern States they recess them into the highway center line area. It has always been neat to see the differences in highway construction as you move from the snow States to the sunshine States and the reflectors to mark the lines is one that is very obvious, exit and entry ramps onto the highways have also always amazed me from State to State and the ones here in Texas often feature “service roads” that run either side of the main highway that can be a wee bit confusing at times but generally work well.

Well we have seen a lot of highway construction and work convoys today and other than a couple of rest stops for Mister Sam and myself to have a break, we have been ticking off lots of miles today and now we have stopped to refuel at a Loves Truck stop in Van Horn Texas and we hope to find a overnight spot shortly after the fuel stop, with four hundred miles under our belt today, Mister Sam and I are both ready to call it a day. Our first hopeful parking area past Van Horn was to small and uneven to be acceptable for us to overnight, so we pushed on and settled into the next “picnic area” and I knew as soon as we pulled in that it would be a noisy night, but decided it would just have to do for tonight.

As we tried watched a bit of television but it was obvious that the AT&T cellular service was very poor in this part of Texas. Cellular service becomes a real problem the further west you travel in Texas as the population density reduces, so does the cellular service, and when you stream your entertainment, that shows the weakness of the cellular network very quickly, so tonight our Maple Wi-Fi has been poor. Texas has a number of areas that have virtually no population and in return have no cell coverage and as we are just a little more than an hour south of El Paso and are soon turning north along the Mexican border, this is an rest area that we will try to avoid on future trips across I-10. One of the issues with flying by the seat of our pants, we covered a lot of miles but ended in a bad area for creature comforts, anyone that has transversed Texas has experienced these areas.

Thursday November 9th, and we woke this morning after a very noisy night at this rest stop on west bound I-10. We are still in Texas, but today we are aiming to make it to Arizona by the time we shut down for the night. The interchange of I10 & I-20 is just a few miles up the road, and then we will start the turn north toward El Paso and up to the New Mexico State line. We had a little rain overnight but it seems to have let up as Miss Laurie prepares a quick breakfast, before we move out of this picnic area. It served a purpose but was not a great overnight location, but as of this morning we are now just over 300 miles to our final destination. As we head further west on I-10 we find a couple of spots that would have been better overnight options but when you are tired you just settle for what is available. But we will remember them for the next trip, this life style means having to adapt to what ever happens, but as we find better spots we make notes for the next trip, and some of these hardships are caused by the speed of our travel on this trip

El Paso is a large busy border town on the Rio Grand river as we drive along within site of the Mexican border, traffic is getting heavier and the major construction that greeted us on the south side of El Paso on our last trip through this area is complete, and has produced stretches’ of new smooth roadway. But now that heavy construction with it’s road restrictions is located on the north side of the city and the highway lane restrictions made for a slow hard go as we edge closer to the New Mexico State line, and hopefully some better highway.

It’s not long until we see the New Mexico state sign, we are still on I-10 and at Las Cruses I-10 swings back to the west as we are now pushing toward the Arizona state line. We have taken I-10 all the way into Arizona a couple of times and the drive is reasonably good, but on this trip we are planning on taking US-70 into Arizona, it is a more direct route to our destination and will take us through areas that we have not seen before. So after refueling near Deeming New Mexico, we venture onto some secondary highways as we head toward Safford Arizona, we have never been this route before which is always interesting but there appears to be a Walmart in Safford that is RV friendly and just a couple of blocks off of US-70.

Today was a much shorter driving day as we only covered a couple of hundred miles, which will leave us an even easier day tomorrow as we coast down from the highlands into the Superior area, but it will be an enjoyable early night with some good cell service in a nice quiet, clean Walmart parking lot with trees along the lot edges. Miss Laurie went in to pick up some supplies and said it was nice neat & clean store as well. This will be a quiet relief after last nights spot we will have some dinner followed by some television (good AT&T service here) and a reasonably early evening as we have covered close to 900 miles in just three days, a pace well higher than our usual.

Friday November 10th, and we had much quieter night at the Walmart parking lot in Safford Arizona and as we have our morning coffee and catch up on the world news we already have a much more laid back feeling as we are so close to our winter destination. Our plan is to arrive in Superior just before noon today, giving us enough time to get settled into our winter home. We should be meeting this years host volunteers as well as catching up with some staff members today, and as with every year we are sad that some of last years team members have not returned but we are also looking forward to making new friends.

After some fried eggs and a bagel we prepared to get on the road by nine o’clock we are only around 100 miles from our final destination but Navi our GPS is showing nearly two hours of travel time. We are heading westbound on US-70 toward Globe Arizona where we will join up with US-60 which will take through the mountain pass to our destination at The Boyce Thompson Arboretum in Superior. As we leave the Walmart parking lot and slip back on to US-70 we are surrounded by farms many that are harvesting cotton along the banks of the Gila River, tucked in between two mountain ranges, just another example of the diversity of Arizona, about fifteen miles down the road we leave the farm land back into the rolling hills that are part of the Apache Indian Reservation. As the hills become more larger we are looking out over the horizon the mountain ranges start to poke up on either side of US-70, we can see the river canyon now on our left side and traffic is light.

We are well into the San Carlos Apache reservation and we start to recognize spots from this spring and the supper bloom, so we know that we are closing in on Globe, the traffic is heavier now and a few people have started to pass us. As US-70 turns into four lanes we pas the Globe sign and see the signs for US-60 that has weaved its way south from Show Low through the Salt river canyon. Speed restrictions as we enter Globe and wind our way through familiar territory. We are just one mountain pass from Superior as we make our way past the working copper mines along US-60, up through Top of the World the down through the tunnel, past the truck run away ramp, the big turn over Queen Creek then the village of Superior and as we continue west the Arboretum and our winter home. It is 11:45 and we ease into the lot and work our way to our site.

Because it is the same site as last year, I pull the coach into the site without even unhooking the toad, as I will need to fine tune the exact spot I detach and I jockey Thunder into the right location for the hookups as well as the cocreate patio. Now we can shut Thunder down and settle into the site, water, power, sewer, extend the slide, camping mat on the patio, install the rat lights, find our camping chairs, crack a beer and suck in some sunshine. Today will be a day of just settling in, I will unpack most of the toad, kayaks and roof rack removed, the propane fire pit, propane tanks, set up the barbeque, make sure there is cold beer for todays visitors, as there will be visitors.

Damn it is great to be back.

Saturday November 11th and we have woke up to another amazing Arizona sunrise here in Superior, but before I get into todays adventures lets take a moment to remember our veterans who have sacrificed so much to allow us to live in these amazing countries with all of our freedoms. So a huge THANK YOU to our VETERANS!

This morning it is like Mister Sam is now aware that we have settled in for a while, he spent most of the night in his own bed on the coach dashboard and he even graced me this morning with a little lap time. An honour that is certainly not given out on travel days.

So it seems that our fall travel has come to an abrupt end, as we are both volunteering today at the Arboretum, Miss Laurie is back in her happy place surrounded by all of the arid plant life & rocks, Miss Laurie will start in the gift shop this morning and I move into the admissions booth at eight o’clock.

Arizona! Our winter home!

Blog 494

Day 2229