October’s Windshield View – 2022

October 2022: Oh the choices for this October’s windshield view are numerous so picking one has been a real challenge, and while all the choices have a special meaning this one won out over all the rest. This photo was taken on US-101 just a few miles north of Brooking Oregon, the sun was shining on us but we could see the marine layer in front of us.

This October has been a real vacation month with the first of October finding us in Campbell River over looking the Salish Sea and the Alaskan Marine Highway, then started our southern trek on Vancouver Island, as we explored Vancouver Island and then of course our preparation for our departure back to the States on the Coho ferry back into Washington State and then continue our trek south down the western coast. We crossed in to California on the sixteenth of the month to continue our costal trek south as far as San Francisco before turning into the middle of the state and finding Interstate 5 to make a push south and get us back into the desert. Then head east to Arizona and the Yuma area for the meetup with the “Baja Gang“.

We have taken on a different approach to our travel down the western coast of the States with the addition of the “Elks Lodges” to our available camping stops. The weather has been amazing with only a couple of days of moist weather, It would be a tough call as to what area we liked the most, as we only seen the coast of Washington, Oregon, and California. But in all cases it has left us wanting more exploration of each State, for more details of our adventures see my blogs weeks 2-5 of of our 2022 vacation. Below is a just a few of our memory photos of this adventure.

October 2021: is here and yes once again we start the month on site #217 at LHR (Lake Huron Resort) but the windshield sun shade will be removed in a couple of days, the sunshade serves dual purpose for us, with its main task being keeping the coach cooler when the sun shines on our huge windshield and the secondary task is to provide some privacy during the daytime hours. It still puzzles me as to how much heat the shade is actually able to reduce in the coach on a sunny day, but as the days start cooling off, that warming of the coach by the sun becomes very welcome. I removed the shade on the last weekend of the park season, so this photo was taken after the park had closed looking out the windshield over the kayaks on the SportTrac, west toward the lake, as you can see the trees still have most of their leaves, as we have not even received a frost yet. This is actually a screen shot from my dashcam which sits attached to the windshield just a little left of center, notice the GPS readings and although obscured by the white of the kayak, it has the speed of the coach in km/h, as well as exact time, just in case of any incident on the road and the wide-angle lens distorts things, but it is a true view from the windshield. Yes I remember that I said October’s windshield should be shorter that September’s rambling post but it appears to be almost as long or maybe even longer … sorry eh.

Ok so it is the first day of October and Miss Laurie and I were sitting watching the morning news on the television when the front roof air conditioner compressor starts running, the thermostat was turned off, we had touched nothing but it started on its own, but I also noticed the fan did not start with the compressor. So because I had just renewed my BAC (Beaver Ambassador Club) membership I threw this little puzzlement onto the service forum website to see what turns up, and with a google search it was suggested to be a thermostat problem and that seemed to make sense to me, because nothing that I did with the thermostat controls would stop the compressor, so my best guess and also the least expensive part to change was the thermostat, so I have one ordered from Amazon.

After closing the pool and the public washrooms Richard and Bonnie decided to renovate the washroom building, so that work had started, and we were able to winterize about a dozen trailers, on Tuesday the fifth, a great warm sunny day, this task is so much easier on a dry day, as now the rains seem to have become heavier and that has made trying to keep the lawns mowed nearly impossible, and now it just becomes a waiting game to close the park.

Thanksgiving weekend is upon us, the last few days for everyone to get their trailers closed for the season, unfortunately the weather is not being very cooperative, with lots of rain in the weekend forecast. So a number of people have been up during the week to close their units, while the weather was warm and dry, it is just nicer and easier not to have to pull in wet slides. The sun came out on Sunday afternoon and Richard and I were able to knock off a few more trailer closures. The replacement thermostat showed up on Sunday afternoon from Amazon so on Thanksgiving Monday I installed the new thermostat and the air conditioner issue seems to have been corrected.

Closing day can get kind of crazy and I wrote a separate blog on that already Closing Day 2021 here is the link (https://thebuchanansrollingdowntheroad.com/2021/10/12/closing-day-2021/). Because we needed a little time off, we took Tuesday and Wednesday to catch up on some personal items to prepare for our journey to Arizona, cleaning of storage spaces the switching out of some storage containers, as we continue to learn how to make the best use of our limited space and we also keep purging unused items as we can. We also got Mr. Sam to a veterinary clinic (thanks Sandra) to receive his rabies shot to allow him to cross the border with us this fall, it is October the 12th and we are anticipating the next border announcement due by the 21st, and hoping that it will bring good news.

So at 5:30 this morning the 13th of October as I’m tossing and turning in bed, trying to avoid answering that daily call of nature. I can’t help but notice a glow from Miss Laurie’s cell phone as Miss Shari has sent Miss Laurie information about the possible border opening in early November. Miss Laurie is not really an early morning person so all this activity is certainly uprooting both Sam’s as well as my morning routine, this is normally my quiet time when I write my blogs as Mr. Sam lays on my lap to give me inspiration.

But on the upside, the opening of the American land border is very good news to us, as well as a few million other snowbirds. Now it just comes down to the actual opening date and see how that will effect our travel plans.

We always say it, kind of kiddingly at times, that we put in 10-2-2 days, which means get on the road by ten and we try to get off the road by two and we stop for lunch and I may even have a short nap. We try to avoid driving on raining days or in any other kind of nasty weather.

So let’s look at what we had hoped to have been able to do, the three week (21 days) from the end of our work at LHR (Lake Huron Resort) to the beginning of our volunteer position at BTA (Boyce Thompson Arboretum). In that period, visiting friends and a leisurely drive across the continent enjoying the travel, exploring the interesting sights, while avoiding the bad weather.

But now depending on the actual date, at the best we have ten days, which is going to force us to reduce our visiting time, it also means longer driving days, and as we cross the American mid-west as we climb in elevation the chance of storms with snow become a reality and not an ideal driving condition for us.

The land border closed in March of 2020 when the pandemic was first taking over the world, we crossed the Blue Water Bridge back into Canada on April the 8th of 2020 and now we are anticipating being in the line up the day it opens on November the 1st 2021 to head south for our winter escape.

Our original travel plans have now been cut short, our shortest distance is 2100 miles (3380 kms) and only nine days to get that done. We have one required stop and that is in Pemberville Ohio to visit with Butch & Betty who have not seen since November 2019, because we will have limited time that will most likely become our first day from the Canadian border to their home which is 220 miles (360 kms). Then we head off to BTA another 1850 miles (2980 kms) down the road, to meet our present commitment if we increase our daily travel to 300 miles we should make the trip in six days. which means no naps for me.

It’s Thursday October the 14th, another warm sunny fall day, and the day we start the process of closing the park, winterizing trailers, wanting to take advantage of the weather we started early and finished late in the afternoon with only one more trailer to winterize left.

Friday morning and the announcement came down that the border would open on November the 8th, while the opening is meet with some happiness the fact that it was a week later that we had hoped will cause us some issues with our next commitment in Arizona, and while it is technically possible to get there in two days it is not something that we are planning on doing, so we will ask for an extra week to allow us to travel with out too much stress. It will shorten some of our plans and won’t allow for any exploration on the way along with moving us one week closer to the chance of winter weather through the American mid-west.

So the last of the trailers were winterized this morning, and some repairs are completed to repair water leaks, before the water system is shut down to start the purging of the water lines to both sides of the park this is done by hooking up air compressors to the water lines and walking to every site to purge the water until just air is escaping from the system, lots of walking as we make our way around the park numerous times, and while not nearly as nice a day as Thursday, Friday was still warm but had a light rain as we worked around the park. So now we have only the washroom building and the pool left to winterize, then we just have the equipment left to clean and prepare for winter, although the forecast is not good for Saturday as more fall rain is in the forecast.

Down pours to start the Saturday morning, but by late morning we were able to finish the purging of the south side of the park, then off to what is left of the washroom and laundry to winterize it, with most of the plumbing having already been removed it was a quick stop this year. The next big task was winterizing the pool which includes the pool solar system on the roof of the washroom building, this is always a time consuming process, but failing here could make for a major repair in the spring. So by days end on Saturday we have completed all the major winterizing, now all that is left is equipment to be cleaned and put away but I took Sunday off because of rain and will start the equipment preparation on Tuesday.

Because I’m an old fart, I scheduled a flu shot with the local pharmacy online and I was able to get in for the shot on Tuesday the 19th and because it was such a warm and beautiful day we went to the beach in the afternoon, while maybe not a swimming kind of warm, the day was warm enough to be of the shirtsleeve variety of day, Miss Laurie wandered the beach looking for sea glass, while I tried out my drone set up, using an iPad instead of my cell phone for the display. This should have been very easy as I was able to purchase a bracket for the iPad, but ran into a complication when I had to order a RC (remote control) cable from China and had been waiting for it to arrive for over a month, I’m pleased to tell you that it makes flying the drone so much easier with the bigger screen. But more importantly the battery in the iPad outlasts the battery in a cell phone for this task, as it was usually the phone battery that grounded the drone before the drone batteries actually did.

On the 20th our last official day of work at LHR (Lake Huron Resort), I did what will most likely become my final pump out, maybe forever, and while I’m certainly not saddened by that fact, I will miss working with Dale, Don and Richard. You learn so much more about a person while doing pump-outs than you ever would over a beer on a warm day. The “Honey Wagon” has now been winterized for the winter so this means that Thunder will be moving in the next ten days or so to drive to the dump station.

I also washed most of the equipment and moved it to the recreation hall for the winter, carefully making sure to shut off the fuel supply at the tank and running the engine to drain all the fuel from the carburetor for the winter, this is done to reduce the gumming deposit in the carburetor when the gasoline evaporates over the winter, and shutting the fuel off at the tank reduces the chance of a leak over the winter, in a perfect world you would drain the fuel tanks as well, but we don’t live in that world.

We just received an email this evening on the 20th of October from BTA (Boyce Thompson Arboretum), and while not pleased that we will arrive late, at least they are understanding. The problem is that the time around Thanksgiving is very busy at the arboretum and they were hoping for our assistance, we reassured them that we were quick learners and would get up to speed quickly. But this all means that the number of travel days are going to be reduced again which means longer driving days and little or no forgiveness for any bad weather, as our new plan is to be in Arizona by the 17th of November, now we are hoping for mother nature to cooperate at least a little.

I have to mention the state of the pandemic as much as we would like it to be over, it is not over yet. Ontario and Canada just brought out the covid vaccine QR code passport as proof of your vaccination status, and of course it has upset some of the special people out there, but it has made the important people like myself feel much better when going out for dinner to support the hard hit restaurants from all the lock downs. And as of today the 25th of October they are allowed to go back to full capacity as long as they are checking vaccine passports. As of this morning 87.9% of the eligible Ontario population have had a shot and 83.9% are fully vaccinated, a vaccine for children 5 to 11 years old is being reviewed by Health Canada for approval hopefully next month, and the covid case count is running below 400 per day on average and only 326 being reported today and the majority (231) are people who are of the unvaccinated. By comparison Arizona’s case counts are 2,550 cases per day on the seven day average, which makes perfect sense when you look closely to see that 41% of Arizona residents remain unvaccinated those are numbers that you would expect from third world countries not from a state in the United States of America supposedly one of the more advanced countries in the world, makes you stop and think.

So now that we are officially done at LHR what are we doing? Well the quick answer is quite a bit, we are packing and purging, and because we seem to be in monsoon season here on the shore of Lake Huron we have a leak that has developed on the slide I have been trying to resolve, and while making progress it is not complete yet. I filled our fresh water tank to find a couple of leaks there, one was a repair that I had made in Florida back in 2019 that has not leaked since, but I have discovered why it is leaking now and I can easily fix it, by adding some support to one area of the tank that when full is sagging causing the area of the leak to buckle allowing the leak to reappear. But I have a new leak at the freshwater tank drain, it seems to be at the point where the drain pipe is attached and I think it just needs to be resealed. Part of the issue is that the fresh water tank is located in the basement and is mounted between the frame rails of the coach, it is a 100 gallon tank so is very heavy and has some flex to it when full, by increasing the support (by adding some plywood to increase the support surface area) it should help reduce the issue of the tank flexing.

Because we are going to be doing a lot of travelling in the SportTrac right now to visit with family and friends I have removed the kayaks and the roof rack to improve the fuel mileage, and with the price of fuel being somewhere between stupid and ridicules right now every little bit helps, but with the price of oil being as high as it is it also drives the value of the Canadian dollar up as well, but today it has rained all day leaving little to do other than catch up on our friends on YouTube friends and to work on this blog.

October 26th and it looks like we are getting a little reprieve from the rain, but we are not going to get out of single digits today with 9C (48F) being todays high and rain is forecast again for this afternoon. One of my weather apps which gives a fourteen day forecast so now we can see the weather right up to our crossing date and it is showing typical fall weather with rain and cold temperatures. Our expectation is that we are in for a few weeks of cool fall weather until we get to Arizona.

When we are in the States getting good internet is always an issue, we have in the past had a Verizon hot spot but it was not a cheap option to get very limited at $70 US for 30 Giga bytes of high speed and we used to have Roam Cellular for our cell phones, (which is now defunct (because of the pandemic stopping people from traveling)) that gave us an additional limited amount of mobile data. So this year we were looking at a number of different options but two seem to stand out are “Star Link” which uses satellites for unlimited high speed data, the hooks are you need clear sky, expensive equipment, limited number of accounts in each area, and the required resetting of your location every time we move with the risk of not getting service in a desired area, monthly price $99 US for down load speeds up to 250 mbps, and while available in Canada, it can not be taken across the border yet. We are going with a service called “Nomad Internet” and offers unlimited internet at 4G speed, where ever cellular coverage is available, equipment purchase cost is much less, no contract, the cost is $129 US per month, it will not work in Canada but should give us good coverage where we are heading for the winter. I ordered it today to have it delivered to an American address that we will pick up after crossing on the 8th, I will report on the system when I have it up and running, but it is being used by a number of people we know, who are big YouTubers that use lots of data.

Well it’s official, Miss Laurie is hanging up her office key, with every site at LHR full for the 2022 season as well as every trailer that was for sale now sold to some very nice folks for next year. Many trailers have been brought in, since the park closed to be installed onto their lots for next spring, the ground is saturated but with the tractor installation has been quick and easy with little or no damage.

It is looking like I will avoid the fall tree removal because of how wet the park is, at this point that will happen after the ground freezes, and the forecast is not showing any below freezing temperatures before our departure. We are still preparing for our departure and today was leak fixing day on the fresh water tank, a couple of good products are “FlexSeal” which comes in multiple forms and of course “Eternabond” tape that is used to repair rubber roofs and so much more as it has real sticking power.

October the 28th and the roar of heavy equipment got our attention before 8 o’clock this morning, so the corn field is being harvested which besides being a sign of fall, it means that there will not be a food supply for the rodents over the winter months. I remember two years ago the corn crop was not harvested until February and the whole back row of the park seemed to have a rodent issue, you may notice the photo that I took from the entrance road how many green leaves are still on the trees in the park, we still have not had a hard frost at the park.

But a sunny afternoon made for a great beach day, the water was calm, and fresh tracks in the sand right to the water indicate some deer traffic, the amount of beach is the most we have ever seen, and frost or no frost there is colour change on some trees at the park, there is a strip of land by the lake that the temperature is moderated by the lake so the trees shed their leaves much later than expected.

We are nearing the last few days of October, and planning has started for the trek south when the border opens, we are doing some final visits to as many people as possible, the final packing of the truck and the coach is about a week away, there have been a lot of laughs and more than a few tears as goodbyes are exchanged and as I review this blog it is obviously a rambling mess of my thoughts and memories as they flash into my head. So before anymore verbal diarrhea escapes I’m going to close this blog out, and the good news is that the travel blogs will begin soon.

October 2020: At this point in time it was becoming very apparent that we would not be going south for the winter this year, as the border was still closed to nonessential travel and while it could be deemed essential to us to have a warm place to live, it would most likely not be deemed essential by a border guard. So with the coach still tucked into site 89 at LHR (Lake Huron Resort) now we had to locate a place to live and stay warm for the winter, and had to prepare to winterize the coach for the first time. The park was going to be open later because of opening a couple of weeks late because of the pandemic restrictions, and while a few people took advantage of the park being open later the majority of people were gone by the thanksgiving weekend, it just made closing the park more difficult to prepare the gardens with people still in the park and the park winterization because of cold wet weather that was upon us.

We decided to stay in the coach until November the fifteenth, before moving into Goderich to a small two bedroom house that we had rented till April the fifteenth when we could return to the park and our coach. Our fall was very busy, trying to get all the trailers winterized before the first freeze, putting all the gardens to bed, and cleaning up after the tree removal.

Here are a few of the photos from October 2020.

October 2019: As our first year as managers at LHR (Lake Huron Resort) is coming to a close and as we are preparing to head south for the winter October was a whole ball of mixed emotions, as our cat Mr. Divot whom had been with us since he was six weeks old was going downhill. He was twenty three years old, the equivalent to one hundred and ten in human years, he was losing weight, because he was barely eating and a trip to the vet confirmed our suspicions that age was not on Divots side, but as with any family pet, he was loved, but his future was not bright.

The park closed on the Thanksgiving weekend, and we were soon to learn how much work it takes to winterize a two hundred site campground, the week after closing was pretty much a blur with the winterizing of trailers, the purging of the water lines and taps with compressed air, winterizing the washrooms and laundry, and of course the winterizing of the swimming pool. a very physical week with us having to purge each tap in the park numerous times, crawling under bunks in trailers to find the water heater bypasses, We left LHR on the twentieth of October, and stopped in Woodstock to visit with my family, as it was my brother Scott’s birthday, we then found a spot mooch-docking at Rob & Dianne’s where we enjoyed a meal and a visit before heading to Rich & Bonnie’s other park Maple Grove, it was here that Mr. Divot passed away and we took a few days to mourn the loss of our twenty three year companion.

Mr. Divot 1996 – 2019

After a couple of days we said good bye to Richard & Bonnie at Maple Grove and moved onto the Niagara area where we mooch-dock at Bob & Irena’s for a few days while we visited with family and friends, I had made arrangements to have the bottom of the door on the coach repaired at Gino’s body shop so we spent an evening in the body shop parking lot during the repair, our plan was to cross the border on the thirty first of the month, when you spend as much time as we do in the States, we have watch our days very close to avoid having to filing a 8840 form with the American IRS although the filing of the tax forms is in our near future, because of the day count.

We crossed the border late in the afternoon on October 31st, and because of the restrictions at the border on so many grocery items, we had planned on stopping at the Walmart in Niagara Falls New York to restock our supplies for the trip west. The weather was stormy so we decided just to stay in the Walmart parking lot for the night, this turned out to be a bad decision as the wind blew a shopping cart into the side of the coach so hard I thought someone had actually ran into the coach, but it was just a shopping cart and we still have the dent to prove it.

Here are a few photos from October 2019, notice the windshield view overlooking the lake, after the park closed we moved to a lakefront site just to see how the lakefront folks live …

October 2018: Was a continuation of a year of learning, we had rushed around so much in September and now were just kind of kicking around putting in time, the first of October found us at a Walmart parking lot in Stoney Creek for a couple of days as we did some visiting. We then moved to Beamsville and Bob & Irena’s driveway where we spend the best part of three weeks mooch-docking there before moving to Fifty Point Conservation Area to close out the month.

Now just to clarify we did not just sit around doing nothing for the whole month, I helped Bob at his shop, Miss Laurie was learning some water colour painting technic from Irena, we were visiting family and friends, while we were still closing down our business and selling off many assets.

If September 2018 taught us any thing it was to slow our pace down, while we were trying to do so many thing they were all too condensed, and now we were putting off crossing the border until November for some reason but I’ll be damned if I can remember why as I write this blog, and looking back we should have been kicking around the mid American states as we worked our way south to Florida for the winter. But I’m going to assume that it was to allow us to delay our return in the spring, hoping to avoid the cold wet spring temperatures of Ontario.

October 2017: Well this was the month that we officially moved into our coach as full-timers, so on the 3rd of October after our house deal finally closed, the house sale closed a day later than scheduled because of some sort of lawyer issue. We had been sleeping in the coach and parking at the Fonthill Lions hall parking lot for over a week, or at least since our bed was sold and gone, we were moving the coach to the house location each day to load items during the daytime and spending the evenings back in the parking lot at the Lions hall.

Our NorCold refrigerator is now repaired and working well, now trying to find the perfect temperature to keep things cold enough but not frozen was taken some time, the house batteries are still proving to be a problem, well actually let me rephrase that, the batteries were still an issue but the problem was my inability to get them fully charged and keep them fully charged. I was learning just how long it takes to fully charge our four golf cart (lead-acid) batteries, and running the coach generator would involve many hours of run time. The carbon monoxide detector was proving to be a little bit of an issue as well as research indicated that the sensor needs to be replaced every five years, so when I checked the date on the unit and it was only a couple of years old, suggesting to me that the battery issue had been going on for some time with the previous owner as well.

It was our plan to cross the border on October the 30th to start our first winter away as “snowbirds” but there was a whole bunch of things that had to be accomplished. You may remember my little oh oh that happened in Chicago, it needed to be repaired, and the packing and repacking (kind of like Tetris) of the coach basement, discussions about what to take and what not to take, I was still working and because of our short time frame before our departure date, we had decided to just tow my work van on a dolly until we could purchase a more suitable tow vehicle, the problem was we didn’t even own a dolly, we had just borrowed one for our shake down trip in July. We had to pickup the new right rear fender that I had damaged from our U.S. parcel receiver in New York, and it was big enough that taking the coach over the border looked like the best way to transport it, so an appointment at the body shop was arranged, a new dolly was ordered from the manufacture in North Carolina to be shipped to our New York receiver, the trip to over the border was planned and during all this commotion we were now living fulltime in the coach and having to make regular runs to dump and to refill our fresh water.

So by the end of October we had retrieved the fender from the states, spent about four days living in Gino’s body shop, had been visiting everyone in preparation for our departure, had the coach packed to the hilt, had received notification the dolly had been delivered in New York, and had been making weekly runs to a local dump station, and refilling with fresh water with ever improving efficiency. My research on the dolly, had indicated that some assembly would be required before it could even be towed, so I enlisted help from our friend Bob who would cross the border and meet us at the Walmart parking lot in Niagara Falls New York to help me assemble and retrieve the dolly from the warehouse and then tow it to the Walmart parking lot. So after a little abuse at the border from the customs people, because Miss Laurie was following the coach in a very commercial looking van, we made it to the parking lot, and Bob pulled in shortly afterwards to pick me up to go and retrieve the dolly, the assembly was minimal and we had it hitched to Bob’s truck for a trip across Niagara Falls to the Walmart lot, where we completed the final assembly and loaded the van onto the dolly in preparation for our journey south.

So on the 31st of October we headed west on Interstate 90 and 187 miles (300 Kilometers) later we settled into a rest stop in Ohio to spend the night, the trips first day had seen some snow flurries through Erie PA and while it was not accumulating yet, there most certainly was a chill in the air that reminded us that winter was not far off.

Travel if you can, But stay safe and well!

Mid March 2023 Update

Well we have made it to the middle of March, and yes March has roared in like a Lion with a winter storm that dumped another couple of inches of snow on us here at the Arboretum. But I have quit complaining as the the warm sunny weather is literally just a few days away, and the desert is already coming to life despite the cold weather, blooms are starting and the overnight temperatures are now up into the 50’sF (10’sC)

The Arboretum is in a near state of kayos as we prepare for the spring plant sale!

The spring plant sale is a real money making event that keeps so much of this arboretum funded, so it being successful is very important to everyone here. Plants are brought in for the sale by the tractor trailer load, so when one of these big trucks pulls in, it is all hands on deck to unload three or four levels of plants, all by hand. Plus there are many plant that are propagated and grown right here at the arboretum in their green houses, they all have to be moved, labeled and prepared for the sale as well, this is all happening with the help of even less staff than was on site last year. So Miss Laurie and myself have been working a few extra hours to help out where needed.

We are starting into a couple of real busy months as we are now rolling into the peak tourist season, as the temperature warms up, and the desert starts to bloom and the creature come to life. We have never seen a greener Arizona, in all of our visits, and all of this rain should make for one of the most beautiful spring blooms we have ever seen, which should make for some nice blog photos.

Another trip around the main trail of the Arboretum, but today I decided to venture up onto the “high trail“. The high trail is not one of the Arboretum’s best features, and while the hiking trail is certainly more rugged a then the rest of the arboretum paths, it is just too far away from the beauty of the actual park. But here are a few photos from the high trail, I even a long distant shot of Thunder.

This trail has been closed for much of this year as it has been open. The trail is located on the north side of the ridge, so is usually is shadowed allowing for sections to remain icy, muddy, and very slippery. And in a “litigious” society like America, the risk of someone that is ill prepared or equipped for this hike, slipping and getting injured, is just way too high. The arboretum should not be a destination for hiking, while we have a couple of short more rugged hiking areas, the majority of the paths are more designed for walking and viewing the plants.

Well the Arizona desert is starting to warm up!

And while we may not get to eighty degree mark before this blog is published, we are getting closer, and while we are warming up we are also hearing about and watching all the storms now pushing through the area north of us (like they normally do) and then heading to my friends in the northeast.

It has been a wacky winter season, with all this moisture in the desert. But the drought reports are changing on a weekly basis, and Arizona’s report has improved drastically this winter, with northern Arizona having near record snow fall. And now northern California has been dumped on with huge snow falls and unfathomable amounts of rain, which has led to people being trapped by snow, roofs collapsing because of the wet snow load, and then all the flooding that is doing so much damage.

Today we are headed to San Carlos, now San Carlos is a small village on the Native American reservation which is located about 30 minutes east of Globe on US-70. We are being guided today by Lynnea & Chris, you will remember that Lynnea is our supervisor at the Arboretum, and Chris is her husband, they have lived in the Globe area for a number of years, and offered to guide us to some of the best areas for the poppy bloom in Arizona. The area has become so popular that there is now a charge of $10/couple to explore the native lands. And while visible from the highway, being smack dab in the middle of them, offered up some amazing photos, here are a few I snapped with my iPhone.

After an excellent afternoon, admiring the beauty of the California poppies (the official flower for the State of California), we went back to Globe where we enjoyed dinner at one of Lynnea’s favorite restaurants, am authentic Mexican restaurant in down town Globe.

Well last Friday was the members first crack at all the plants that the arboretum has be able to propagate, or purchase in preparation for this spring plant sale. And I guess the crowd of members that were lined up at the gate on Friday morning, approved because the stall and volunteers were kept busy cashing out all the members. We were told that the sales numbers were as good or better than management had anticipated. During this sale members receive a 20% discount on plants and get a days head start on everyone else, just one of the perks of being a member of the arboretum.

Well it was a busy weekend at the arboretum, with the weather making it warm and more like the Arizona we know, the plant sale lasts for around ten days and there were lots of plants heading to new homes. But by Sunday afternoon, I had got all my hours in so I headed back to the coach to watch the golf tournament at TPC at Sawgrass in Florida. And I would be amiss if I didn’t take a few lines to tell about our latest update on our internet streaming issues.

So since we got to the arboretum at the end of December last year, we have had difficulty streaming our YouTube TV television programming. And at first it seemed easy just to blame our internet provider. Because we were streaming with T-Mobile last year, but we are on the AT&T network this year, so it seemed easy just to blame our new internet provider. But having struggled through a number of weeks, we had just resolved to watching movies on the bedroom television on the really bad streaming nights. So when I finally got around to checking out what I could do to improve the internet service, such as adding and external antenna for the hotspot and while doing my research on which one, and then for some reason I thought I would just switch the bedroom television over to our American streaming service and found that it streaming much better than our main television. Now let’s start by saying that both of our television are from our sticks & bricks house, and were both old when we started on the road, our main television in the coach was from Canadian Tire, a 32″ RCA, that we had used in our bedroom at the house. We had purchased it new and that was before “Smart” TVs even existed. And the television in the coach bedroom was a 20” Samsung that I had used as a monitor in my office, again not a “Smart” TV, but when we were using the “Dish satellite” service as our program provider and they both worked just fine. But we have progressed to streaming our programming over the internet which meant either replacing the televisions with “Smart” TVs or adding a device to allow us to stream. So because we already used Amazon, and they just happened to have their “Firestick” on sale, that was where we started, so for around $30 Canadian during an Amazon days sale, we now were able to stream our programming to our dumb television, and it worked well, or at least as good as what was allowed by the internet providers. So during COVID when Amazon days came around again, I purchased a “Fire Box” which is a major step up from the “Firestick” and we then moved the “Firestick” to the bedroom television and added the “Fire Box” to the main television and both had been working well.

Heavens to Betsy, this has turned into whole very long, very sad, mess of my ramblings, so to shorten an obvious long story up, lets just say we now have a new 43″ 4K, “Smart Fire TV” from Amazon and the picture is great and there is no longer a streaming issue while watching our favorite television shows. Because there is nothing worse then trying to watch golf on a buffering streaming service.

We finished the weekend off with a happy hour with Tom & Kathleen and were joined by Lynnea & Chris, which allowed us to learn some history of the Arboretum. While Lynnea is our supervisor, she is actually the visitor center manager and has been at the arboretum for close to thirty years, and when the State of Arizona was involved with the arboretum, her husband Chris did a lot of maintenance at the arboretum, so we learned some unknown arboretum history, as well as heard some entertaining stories about happenings at the arboretum as well as with years of “Work Campers“, We will leave it at that and lets just say I’m glad I did not have to drive home that night.

So its Monday and we are going kayaking with Ray & Karen, we had originally planned to kayak on Canyon Lake, but because of the day being a bit windy, we settled on a run down the Salt River. Now last year this run down the Salt river was a slow meandering voyage, but this year Arizona has had rain, and a fair bit of snow at elevation so most of the dams designed to control the flow of water are near the full mark and with the weather warming up, water is being released to make room for the expected snow melt. our normal entrance point was well back from where we normally got in and while we had checked upstream further the Salt river was not flowing very fast, but right at our point of entry the Verde River dumps into the Salt River and it was flowing fast. So as I made my way to our normal route where I was turned around by a 20 foot long log heading down the river, but by now I was also caught up in the current and forced in a different direction, and that direction took me through some rapid water and pushed me against a boulder which turned the kayak upside down dumping me and all my contents into the fast moving water. So as I’m scrambling to collect belongings and trying to keep hold of my kayak, I’m sure it was quite a site to be seen. I eventually got to shore so that I could empty the water from the kayak and assess the damages.

So I lost my new prescription glasses, my five year old water bottle, I managed to catch my “Tilley” hat, my dry bag with my snacks and my “GoPro” camera, I was soaked from being in the water, my iPhone was in my pocket (thank goodness the i12 phone is water resistant), I was muddy, but everything other then my ego was in good shape. This is normally a couple of hour kayaking journey, with a fair bit of paddling, but today it was much quicker with just enough paddling to keep the kayak straight with the current. It was a tough trip for me, unable to see, no sunglasses, and wet enough to get chilled by the breeze. But I held in there, finished the journey, even went for dinner with Ray & Karen (where someone had to read me the menu), then off to Costco to order up some new glasses (which Miss Laurie tells me look OK), pick up some supplies, then back to the coach to hunt up an old prescription pair of glasses to watch the “Voice” on my new television.

That brings us today π day or 3.14 or March 14th, which is all well and good, but I don’t think I’m getting any pie today, but it certainly has me graving a big old chunk of blueberry or maybe a piece my buddy Jake’s favorite chocolate pie. But so far I have had a fried cheese omelet for breakfast with a wee touch of the Irish blessing in my coffee, then an Arnold Palmer for lunch with a plate of veggies, crackers and cheese, and I’m pretty sure I seen some porkchops thawing in the galley sink that may be dinner, but I haven’t seen or smelt any pie. or at least not yet. So today was spent unload the kayaks, drying out the life jackets (that I was wearing), Laurie has done laundry, vacuumed the coach, and I have charged the weedwhacker battery and trimmed all the spring growth of weeds at around our site. Normally the heat would have kept them under control but with all the rain this year, it has the desert looking really green

Well it is the 15th of March, and it is a cloudy start to the day in Arizona this morning, as odd as it will sound the nights are much warmer when it is cloudy, as it traps in the ground heat, so today we have already seen the days high temperature and as the rain pushes in from the west the temperatures will drop throughout the day. It is obvious that spring break has started in as the arboretum is much busier than it has been, with the parking requiring some supervision to get people in and out.

You may have noticed that I made no comment about daylight saving time, and there is a simple reason for that, it’s because Arizona has opted out of this foolishness some years ago. So there is no need for drama here twice a year, and I for one think it is the best solution for the rest of the continent.

It’s Spring next week!

Blog 474

Day 1990