Day 2351

Monday March 11th 2024:

Dear Journal:

Can 6:10 be considered sleeping in? Whether yes or no, this morning I woke up to dawn in the Arizona desert, it was light enough that it just felt like time to get up. I made my way to the galley to get Mister Sam his morning treats, check the coach temperature 61ºF (16ºC), chilly enough to prompt me to start the heater, to just take the chill off. At 6:39 I’m standing on our patio in my housecoat to snap the above photo, well most of you folks have just endured another time shift for daylight saving time, a practice that Arizona has decided not to participate in and it is great, no worrying about being late to events, oh we still get lots of clock adjustments as we travel and we now have three hours to adjust for as we head back to Ontario next month.

Miss Laurie has been recruited to help in the garden this morning as with the wet winter has a surplus of unwanted growth (weeds) in the gardens in front of the Arboretum visitor center. Everyone looks for Miss Laurie to help in so many areas of the Arboretum, she has been taught most tasks around the visitor center and of course she finds weeding to be relaxing, which makes her a hero with the horticulture staff. I on the other hand, I’m not nearly in as much demand, which works out ok for me, I have some projects in the coach today, and a book to read, possibly a beverage or two that I need to consume before heading back north. I know sounds like a tough job but I am up for the task.

With Miss Laurie starting work this morning at eight o’clock, it make me feel a little guilty so I will tackle some of my projects earlier than normal. It is not lost on me that we are heading north in less than a month, and I have so many things that need to be done before we start the trek. And this is going to be a few weeks of so many little updates and repairs.

Miss Laurie didn’t make it back to the coach till after two in the afternoon, as usual she ended up finishing the weeding on her own as the other volunteer had to leave before eleven o’clock. Then she offered to cover for some of the staff lunches in the gift shop.

The afternoon was spent with Mister Sam and Miss Laurie napping on the bed and me ordering some items from Amazon and reading. Mondays are our down day after a weekend of volunteering in the admission booth.

Day 2309

Monday January 29th 2024

Dear Journal:

Monday the 29th and as we enjoy another sunrise with a blessed cup of perked coffee, we are looking forward to today’s adventure. We are leaving our spot at the Arboretum this morning and heading south to visit Tom & Kathleen, at their campground in Casa Grande but first we need to get some breakfast and pack up our coach. Because we are travelling light this trip as we are not taking our towed, which means that we can leave some items at our spot for our return later this week. We are not loading our Napoleon barbeque, or our beaver mascot, we are taking our chairs, the rug from patio and leaving our propane fire pit and propane tank.

We are heading to a boondocking spot so NO HOOK-UPS which is not unusual for our way of travel, but this will give me some insight as to how much the extra draw on our solar system the new DC powered cooling unit on our refrigerator may add. We have no issues on travel days because the system is helped by the chassis alternator. and we have not really just sat for a couple of days disconnected, and we are to have a bright sunny week. And while unlike on BLM land we are not going to get set up for the best harvest and we will not be tilting any panels so we will get some great information for the future.

Breakfast was some biscuits and preserves’, while watching some morning television, my schedule would be to start the preparations by eight o’clock, and I was headed out the door by 8:05. Because of our location, I need to pickup the “rat lights”, dump the black tank, add some water to the freshwater tank, remove the sun shades from the windshield and front windows, check tire pressures, tuck away the rug and chairs, clean the windshield glass (mainly just desert dust), disconnect the sewer, water and power, start the coach, bring in the slide, raise the jacks and get ready to roll out. I’m not aware of what all Miss Laurie does to prepare for the interior but I do know the first travel day involves a lot of work. This short excursion will determine if all the cabinet door latch adjustment last week does the job of keeping the cabinet doors closed and if the new soft close drawers will stay closed during our travel. If it works than Miss Laurie will not need to tie cabinet handles and bungy drawers, not a huge task but still time consuming.

Shortly after ten we were backing Thunder out of our spot, and while getting out of the Arboretum has some tight spots, we maneuver around with out adding any new “Arizona pinstripes”. As we pull onto US-60 westbound toward Phoenix it feels good to be back in the pilot seat, and while it is unusual not to have our towed it is a nice change, we are climbing in elevation as we exit “Gonzales pass” and make our way into the “east valley” area, our first major road is AZ-79 which will take us south toward Florence, this section of State highway has just been resurfaced and is a pleasure to drive along, just as we reach the town limits we turn west on “Hunt Highway” a secondary road that heads us toward Coolidge where we stopped at a Walmart to pick up some supplies for the week. We had visited this Walmart in the spring of 2020 while we were boondocking on State land “Cottonwood Canyon” just north of Florence and I remember thinking it was a terrible Walmart then and I can now report it is still a terrible Walmart almost three years latter.

As we make our way south now through Coolidge we hook up with AZ-287 which will take us to Interstate I-10 in Casa Grande, we need to turn East on I-1o, it is actually more south than east but we are only travelling a few miles to exit 200. Here we are going to top off Thunders fuel tank, and get Thunder a quick bath at the Blue Beacon truck wash at this location to wash off some of the Arizona dust. There was quite a line up of vehicle but the majority seemed to be RVs, so you may wonder what is the cost of wash on our coach, and for an RV over 30′ long a wash with some citrus shine on our aluminum rims total cost us $51.00 US dollars. One of the reasons I wanted the wash is that they spray off the roof which will clean the solar panels to help with our solar harvest this week, and Thunder looks better all spiffed up. From the fuel stop we are only ten miles to our destination, one of the joys of a motor home is the ability to eat lunch while sitting in line for our wash, Miss Laurie made us a little lunch that involved the operation of the microwave while waiting for our turn.

At 2:05 we pulled in to “Rovers Roost RV Park” and were greeted by Miss Kathleen & Tom as were were guided to our site, a back in site on the south side of the park. As with most campgrounds in Arizona the surface is gravel, the sites are back in at 45º from the main road the sites accommodate vehicles up to 40′ and I would say the lot is 30′ wide plenty of room for our rug, some chairs as well as Mister Sam’s tent. We back up to a small gravel road with a cinder block wall and a Oleander hedge separating us. The cost of our boondocking site is $7.00 US per night, there is water available if needed and a dump station on site for a donation, there are not a lot of amenities in the park no pool or hot tub, there are laundry machines, a club house but not much more. This is a co-op park so the leaseholders self govern. And the park feels old, not the park, as much as the attitude of the leaseholders. You need to be an escapee or excapers member to stay here, and with most of the co-ops there is a waiting list to become an leaseholder.

So after parking , tipping out the slide and putting the jacks down we wandered over to Tom & Kathleen’s site on the north side of the park where we enjoyed a couple of cocktails while waiting for the Monday afternoon “meet & greet” at the clubhouse. Now we have not been to a lot of meet & greets but the one we have usually involved snacks and beverages, this one did not. It was more about introducing new visitors to the park and making announcements about upcoming events, not a bad idea but I think snacks and beverages would bring out more people. Although this was well attended because it involved an auction to sell off front of the line tickets for their next week western themed events and meals, the first in line tickets include bragging rights and a table of honour, and a number of people paid hundreds of dollars for that privilege. The meet & greet was followed by “happy hour” at Tom & Kathleen’s site with Miss Laurie suppling some snacks.

Dinner was Miss Laurie’s lasagna served with a salad, we sat on Tom & Kathleen’s patio as they have a table with chairs under their awning so we had lighting as well. Tom and I enjoyed a couple of bottles of wine, we sampled the wine from Haak Winery in Texas that we had used as a Harvest Host stay. It was a lovely evening giving us a chance to catch up on everyone’s most recent adventures. This park is around 200 sites and is a combination of leaseholders and renters, as I tried to explain before the leaseholders buy their lease which gives them the right to use their site anytime they want it, if they are not going to use it they may place their site it into the rental pool which consists of all the properties for rent either daily, weekly or by the month. The rent collected goes into the rental fund and every site owner that has their property in the rental pool get a piece of the pie. So your site may not be rented all season but you still get some remuneration toward your yearly fees, the annual fees at this co-op run near the thousand dollar mark, any major park projects would be tackled by a special assessment that could be levied for a couple of years until enough funds are raised to complete the project.

If we were still escapees members we could rent a site here for around $450/month plus electric. That amount is around average for the amenities offered and the location, we are on the southern limit of Casa Grande and are near a half hour drive to get supplies. This is not a park that would draw us in if we did not have close friends here, although it would make for a great overnight boondocking spot just two miles north of Interstate I-8 in southern Arizona. After dinner we headed back to Thunder where we watched a little television before turning in for the night.

Blog 507