Tuesday, January 21, 2013
Wednesday, the 15
th, we said goodbye to the funky rocks
of City of Rocks State Park. One more night on the road before we
reached Quartzsite. Eleven years ago we visited a great food co-op in
Silver City, so we traveled north a short ways to search it out. We
also had a lead on a shop selling grass fed meats. Both were on the
main drag through the old part of town. Silver City is a university
town, and has a nice mix of coffee shops, bike shops, alternative
medicine practitioners and art galleries. We found both stores,
bought some yummy food, and took off west around the Gila Mountains.
Sometime when the weather warms up we will return to explore the Gila
Wilderness.
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We bought local organic meat at River Ranch Market in Silver City |
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Knitted downspout cover - maybe it was too rusty to paint. |
The pavement west took us up a twisty winding road and into
Arizona. Much more fun than another slog across I-10. After crossing
the mountains we reached Safford, and followed the Gila River valley
northwest into the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation. Outside the
reservation at Globe, we headed due west into the Tonto National
Forest south of the Superstition Mountains. We found a small free
national forest campground at Oak Flats just off US 60, and pulled in for the
night. After settling in we noticed cow plops everywhere, and
realized this was a free range area. Hmmm... would we wake to cows
rubbing against the rig?
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Mountains of the Gila Wilderness |
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Nice Basin and Range volcanics. Where does the road go? |
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Our road winding off in the distance. |
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Eroded remnant of a volcanic neck |
Off we go in the morning. No cows, until we get to the main road
to drive out. Then we had to wait until they finished crossing the
road. Come on, move it boys! We had a short drive down into the
Phoenix valley and the smog. Phoenix and the suburbs are sprawling,
so it took quite a while on the freeways to make it across. We picked
a Walmart on the far side to stop and stock up on disposables for
our upcoming boondocking. I found a new pair of cheap jeans Yay!!!
Living in them year round and shrinking them up in commercial dryers,
is wearing my old ones out fast! (Can't decide how much is shrinkage
of them and creeping up weight gain for me!)
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Our fellow campers at Oak Flats |
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The Queen Creek Tunnel heading into Superior, AZ |
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Winding down the Queen Creek canyon |
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Getting into Mesa suburbs near Gold Canyon |
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Saguaros do not seem to mind the Phoenix smog |
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Superstition Mountains |
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REALLY tall palm tree (with cell antennas) |
Time for lunch. Did we want to eat in the rig, or did we see a
sign for El Pollo Loco down the road? Yes, it wasn't a mirage. Our
favorite California fast food restaurant has come to Arizona. A short
time later we were satiated with their yummy goodness, and ready to
finish the last part of our 10 day trek to Quartzsite.
We made it into Quartzsite by mid afternoon. There are traffic
jams everywhere! The rally with the other View (Winnebago)/Navion
(Itasca, but same company) owners was scheduled for one of the four
Long Term Visitor Areas run by the Bureau of Land Management or BLM.
In 1983 BLM began to regulate the use of the desert areas around
Quartzsite. Boondocking in the desert had become so popular that the
desert needed protection. Four areas south of town have registration.
You can sign up for 14 nights for $40, or six months for $180. For
your fee you get to camp anywhere in the large designated areas and
use the dump station and water located in one of them. They all have
dumpsters and vault toilets.
We signed up for 14 nights and can move around among the four. Our
group was in La Posa North, closest to town. The leaders picked out a
large spot in the desert, a half mile walk from the main activities
in Quartzsite. We drove to La Posa South and joined the line to dump
tanks and fill up our water tank and four jugs. We didn't have dump
facilities for the last four nights, so our poor little RV was
crossing its legs!
Back at La Posa North, we called Gerald and riding his scooter, he
escorted us through the maze of dirt roads to our spot. A lot of rigs
were already parked and we found a spot we liked away from the main
group. Our area eventually filled up too. By the end of the weekend
we had about 60 rigs, almost all with two people, so well over 100
View/Navion owners showed up. The first year they were made was 2005,
so we had all years and floor plans up to brand new ones. Most were
from the western states, a few from the mid-west, and a few from the
east coast.
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Camper dumping his "Blue Boy" at the sewer dump. External tank so you don't need to bring your rig to the dump. Just pull it behind your truck or ATV. |
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Filling up with clear cold drinking water. BLM shuts the well down at night to recover from the hard daytime withdrawals. |
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Gerald leading us a mile to the rally site. |
The weekend brought potlucks and campfires, wine and appetizers,
tours of the rigs to see the modifications the owners have done, and
on the last day a pancake breakfast and tech talk to answer questions
about the rigs. Byron was the informal tech guru of the group and was
a big help to everyone. Greg and I are not big joiners and as this
was the first rally for us, we weren't sure what to expect. I have to
say that we enjoyed getting to know people, yakking, sharing stories
and tips. We made fast friends with Tim and Sylvia and their dogs
Teddy and Bear, from Huntington Beach, California and hope to meet up
with them again. (Hi guys!) We met Harry and Marge from Oregon, who
had lived in Alaska, then sailed the South Pacific for 17 years. A
small world story involved a fellow owner, who went to my high school
in Maryland 10 years before me, and had been hauled into my Dad the
vice-principal's office! The Allstays people were here in their View,
who run a great phone and tablet app for finding campgrounds, that we
use every day we are on the road. Gary and Kay and their dog Paco,
from Texas, were next door to us and had recently been to Antarctica,
not in their RV! Bob from the San Diego area was our neighbor on the
other side, and gave us some great tips for the next part of our
journey. We got to listen to a lot of Neil Young tunes coming out of
his rig! Everyone had great stories to share. We only met one other
fulltimer, John, who is a professional photographer. He climbed on
top of a rig and took a group shot on Saturday night.
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Our rally site with 64 Views and Navions |
During the day we made treks over to the circus that is Quartzsite
in January and February. There is a huge tent with the pricier, more
sophisticated vendors, and then surrounding that are RV dealers from
other areas, who have brought in dozens of rigs to sell here. Then
there are all the smaller metal buildings and temporary set-ups in
rows and rows nearby. RV supplies, hardware, food, clothing,
motorcycle stuff, pet stuff, lots of rocks and gems, jewelry, beads,
hardware, rugs, the list goes on and on. It reminds me in some ways
of a state fair or boardwalk, but without the games or rides. The
only ones riding are some of the dogs. Doggy strollers are in vogue
as well as chest carriers.
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Really nice sinks carved from fossil-bearing marble |
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Fossils in a coffee table |
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Hood ornaments |
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3 Poodles wearing visors and sunglasses |
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Seeing where your BBQ came from! |
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Ask the price before you lick the cone - $10 |
The majority of people in the BLM areas and at the vendor area are
older than we are. Business has been down in recent years, but as the
Baby Boomers retire and start RVing, business is beginning to pick up
again. We surveyed all the booths and decided what we wanted to buy
before we went back yesterday. Too many great RV gadgets to spend
money on! We vetoed the extra wifi antenna and the wind shelter for
the grill. I vetoed the black t-shirt with the rhinestones with the
cute sayings about women and wine. Really, I'm not the rhinestone
type, but I almost got sucked in! Such is the power of Quartzsite! I
did give in to the great priced, funky Indian sundress and shirt
after a fun conversation with Linda who ran the booth. (Shout out to
you, Linda!)
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New Indian hippie top! |
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Greg shopping for the last few LEDs for the RV |
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Tacky visors with hair on top |
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One of our fellow Views stuck in the traffic madness |
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Cheap hardware is irresistible to one of us |
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Dogs everywhere! In snugglys, baby carriages, and cargo carriers, as well as on their own feet. |
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Cool folding tent trailer for jeep camping |
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The big tent with the premier vendors |
Back at La Posa North, a lot of the rigs pulled out Monday morning
for either home or further travels. Some are headed to Florida for
another rally. Sorry, we just left there, not in the cards for us.
More left this morning. There is a small group of us still hanging
out in the desert enjoying the warmth (70's). Today's plan was to go
to another area closer to the mountains, since we are finished with
our purchases. We dumped and got water again yesterday afternoon,
after a 25 minute wait. Not bad, most people waited an hour.
Today Greg decided to tackle a repair that has been on hold the
last few weeks until we were camped somewhere we could get it fixed,
if he couldn't. Our water heater cold water supply has been leaking
into the outside bin it sits over. The water drains out the hole in
the bottom of the bin, but needed to be taken care of. So all water
was turned off today and he hoped he could just replace the plastic
elbow himself. He discovered the elbow was cracked and was unable to
get it out, so that started a couple hours of calls to find someone
to help. There are a lot of businesses around here doing repairs, but
with so many RV'ers here now, they are busy. The dealer in Yuma, an
hour and a half from here, couldn't give us an appointment for two
weeks!
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Beautifully converted old bus joining the dump line |
Finally Greg drove up to the office at the entrance and they gave
him a list of mobile repairmen approved to come on BLM land. Greg
called and the first one said he would be at the entrance in 15
minutes. So, Greg rode his bike up there to lead him back to our
site. The work is progressing, the sun is setting, the water tank had
to be completely removed, but now we have water and everything works!
Tomorrow we may head down to La Posa South. Bob, our neighbor,
told us that we can drive four miles way back into the area and have
some solitude and be close to the mountains. We have nine more nights
on our pass, and for $2.86 a night, with water and dumping
privileges, great weather and desert and mountains, an amazing almost
full moon, it's worth it to stay longer! We might go back into town.
Greg wants another tri-tip BBQ sandwich, but maybe not another $10
ice cream cone!
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Selfie coming back through La Posa North after hiking to do my shopping. Lots of rigs! |
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The end of a perfect day at Quartzsite! |
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