Ruby, Ruby, Ruby

So who or what is Ruby?

Well let me introduce Ruby, our new towed. Yes we are saying goodbye to our Ford Explorer Sport-Trac. We have dragged our Ford around since the summer of 2018, it has served us well, for six years, but in true Ontario Canada fashion the many years of salty Canadian winters has taken its toll. Underbody rust has caused many holes and the step-bar on the drivers side seems to no longer be attached as designed.

So Ruby is a 2010 4 dr Jeep Wrangler it is the Unlimited Safari edition, it has a manual transmission, we bought Ruby from the back row of a dealership in Sarnia that Miss Laurie found listed on Facebook marketplace. We were going to look at it as well as another Jeep near London, mileage was similar and the other Jeep had been towed before and still had part of the towbar system still installed. We test drove it and it drove fine, it had lots of rust, but what 14 year old vehicle in Ontario doesn’t have rust? We made it into the office and were in negotiation a purchase price of the Jeep when Miss Laurie got a text from the Sarnia dealer to confirm that we were still coming, coming to a figure that we both liked was not going to well so we decided to make drive to Sarnia.

Well the drive was worth it and when the salesman parked Ruby in front of the showroom, the decision was practically made. But a short test drive latter and we returned to pay the dealers asking price. We had looked at enough Jeeps over the past months to know where they rust, and we had decided that some rust on a Jeep was going to happen no matter what. But Ruby had limited rust we can’t say no rust but very limited rust. The salesman said that it had been well cared for and he was correct, he also said he had other people that had offered to buy Ruby and I did not find that hard to believe considering the condition. So with a deposit put down and some paper work signed we returned to Goderich to get a bank draft and return to Sarnia the next day to rescue Ruby.

Rubies interior was a dirty mess, the seats, carpets stained and covered with dog hair, a small rip on the drivers seat along the seam, she needed tires, a parking brake repair, and was purchased as is, so after bringing Ruby home we made arrangements for her safety inspection. New parking brake cables and parts, new rear axle bearings and seals, an oil change and a radiator replacement and we received Ruby back. She still needed tires and many upgrades before being road ready, I ordered our towbar kit, and Miss Laurie started cleaning, Miss Mary repaired the rip in the drivers seat, Laurie borrowed a carpet & upholstery shampooer and went to town and now Ruby looks pretty respectable.

I removed items from the Sport-Trac and installed them on to Ruby, the new tow bar landed and I had it customized to be the best of many options, upgrading to the most recent system, the wiring, the tow brake cylinder, as well as the safety break-away, neatly tucked under the front bumper. Upgrading headlights, fog lights, tail lights, turn signal and marker light to LEDs were a wonderful addition as well. Miss Laurie found Ruby some new slippers on Facebook Marketplace a set of five tires and rims off of a much newer Jeep Wrangler, so now Ruby has a new set of slippers and is looking pretty fine. The only issue was that the newer rims had tire pressure monitors that were not compatible with Ruby, so to complete the operation we replaced the sensors.

We have been driving Ruby and she has been operating well, we have set a EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculation) code a couple of times and I may have to replace the valve in the future but it seems to be fine now, the only other issue happened when Miss Laurie took Ruby to town and she set a throttle code, some research indicated that cleaning of the throttle body was required, I completed that task and all has been well since, the windshield need to be replaced but the Jeep dealer couldn’t supply or tell me when one would be available, so it will happen down the road.

Day 2388

Wednesday April 17th 2024

Day 9 of out trek north

Dear Journal:

Well if everything comes together correctly our trek north will end today, we are waking up at the Cracker Barrel in Roseville MI and I have a special breakfast planned for today, we are less than an hour from the border and other than one more fuel stop we will be in Ontario late morning. When I first got up this morning at 6:11 the skies were overcast, and now at 7:18 there is light rain falling, almost exactly as forecast, our weather app is showing a few scattered shower this morning with the heavier rain later today. The temperatures have retuned to seasonal as well the temperature this morning is 54ºF (12.2ºC) with a little breeze, the sad part is that this temperature is the forecast high for todays end destination. We ain’t in Arizona anymore!

But first things first, breakfast and a cup of fresh perked coffee and yes this morning there was a wee Irish blessing in my cup (the end of the bottle). This morning I ordered the “Country Fried Steak” along with scrambles eggs, hash browns, biscuits and gravy, Miss Laurie ordered French toast with “Country Fried Chicken”, maybe a wee bit extravagant but just a typical American breakfast. Along with breakfast I also got to experience the worst customer service that I have ever experienced at a Cracker Barrel, which just go to prove that even an American standard like Cracker Barrel can have issues at times.

Today is our push for the border so we have to prepare for Canada Customs, always a fun experience, trying to remember all the purchases that we are bring back into Canada. My laptop time is 5:58 so I’m thinking is is really 8:58 if it ever catches up, we will be hitting the road in the next few minutes where we will head (east?) on Interstate I-94 that will dump us in to Port Huron at the Bluewater Bridge and our border crossing point. But first one last fuel stop and as bad as the fuel pricing is in Michigan it is still better than Ontario. It is also where I will update Navi to metric so the speed limits in Ontario will be easier as the speedometer on Thunder only reads in miles per hour, and the speed limits just over the bridge are all over the map.

After our fuel stop we are only 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the bridge, and as we approach the bridge the fare to cross the Bluewater bridge is always a mystery, but todays rate was $9.00 American ($12.45 Canadian) compared to last years rate of $18.75 Canadian of back in spring of 2020 at $12.75 Canadian, the receipt today was RV-4 a rate for RVs I assume while often they charge us as a truck, I guess it just depends who is in the booth that day.

Canada Customs was a breeze, of course it helps when I pulled into the wrong lane and the poor agent had to walk over to us to check us through, just the regular questions, how long away, goods or services purchased, and of course the alcohol or tobacco question. That last question is such a silly question because we have a few bottle of alcohol that have crossed the border probably a dozen times so now we just reply we received two bottles as gifts and we have a few part bottles, which is kind of true, along with beer from three different cases, and a few other odds and ends that migrated with us.

Shortly after crossing into Ontario the rain started, not heavy enough to be worth stopping for, but heavy enough to make driving difficult, and as we head further north there are hardly any buds on the trees and temperature just keep dropping. Welcome to Canada EH!

Navi is showing our arrival in Goderich (our summer home) by around noon, and as we take Hwy-21 north along the Lake Huron coast line the winds are buffeting the coach, this old coach doesn’t get pushed around very easily by a little wind, but I can feel the attempt. We made it into Goderich at 12:10 according to my iPad which now seems to have caught up to all the time zones, and we stop at a grocery store to pick up some item that we could not bring across the border.

While Miss Laurie is shopping I decided to exercised the generator, it has been month since I last operated it and as the solar panel harvest today is not strong, so it can replace some battery power as it warms up. Miss Laurie has returned and is putting the groceries away, and we restart Thunder and drive the last ten kilometers (six miles) to Lake Huron Resort. I have to admit this does feel like coming home as this will be the fifth year of six that we have worked here.

Welcome to spring in Ontario or as I refer to it as rain and mud, don’t get me wrong I love seeing all the plants springing to life but as much as everyone was excited by the mild winter, there will be issues because the ground never froze to all the rain had to soak into the soil as opposed to running off. The result is a very wet campground this spring, we were hopping for a couple of days to get our site prepared, but everything is too wet, and the damp cold air is not real welcoming, but a month from now all the wet will be forgotten and life will move on.

Day 9 Stats: 215.6 kilometers (134 miles) solar harvest 84 amp / hours (solar can suck when it rains) $0.00 camping, 21.68 gallons (82.05 liters) of diesel fuel.

And this ends our spring 2024 northern trek 2130 miles (3428 kilometers)