April 27, 2014
On March 21
st we returned to Maryland to visit and tend
to family matters. What was to be a one to two week visit stretched
into more than a month. We were finally able to head west again on
April 23
rd. The blog went dark for that time and I will
post a few photos, but suffice it to say that like many others who
travel full time, life sometimes requires us to stay put and solve
problems, or hold hands for a while.
The second week of our visit we traveled to the Outer Banks of
North Carolina and checked into the Waves campground where we stayed
for a week last April. We took a break from family matters, walked on
the beach a few days, until the rain came in, and generally
re-grouped.
|
Outer Banks Style soccer mom minivan |
|
Lunch at the Outer Banks Brewing Station |
|
The main road down the Banks. See the houses on the wrong side of the dune? |
|
The path from our camp to the beach |
|
The ocean is not so cold after your feet go numb... |
|
Nice piney campsite |
Back in Maryland, we jumped back in, determined to leave just
after Easter with the family. The following Wednesday at 3:30 we
finally drove away. We are still waiting to have the buyer close on
the rental condo. We went ahead and signed on Monday. He is scheduled
to sign tomorrow. Pop the bubbly! It's been a long haul to get the
condo sold. Thus our last ties to owning real estate will be severed.
|
Visiting Sue and Ken, who generously shared their keg |
|
Hello Kitty car in front of our dentist |
|
Dinner with Steve and Margie at Chef Voltagio's new diner |
|
Burger with fried egg, bacon, and side of duck-fat french fries |
Our first afternoon and evening on the road took us to the
Cabela's in Wheeling, WV. This was our first time dry camping at a
Cabela's. They have a parking area set aside for RV's and trucks. In
fact, all but one entrance is barricaded, so it keeps vehicles from
randomly driving through the area. In the morning we filled up our
water tank next to the dog and horse kennels they provide.
Thursday found us burning up the road across Ohio, Indiana and
into Illinois. That night, before the storm front rolled in, we
pulled into a Flying J truck stop in Effingham and parked in the area
of the parking lot they provide for RV's to stay overnight. We were
surrounded by pick-ups pulling shiny new travel trailers being
transported to RV dealers across the country. The Flying J had a dump
and water spigot, so we were ready for more dry camping.
Back on the road again Friday morning found us crossing Illinois,
over the Mississippi at St. Louis and entering Missouri. Just west of
St. Louis near Wentzville we pulled off I-70 to refuel. Greg went to
the back of the rig and then rushed up into the cab in order to exit
out the driver's door to pump the fuel. Going into the cab he didn't
bend over enough to clear the overcab bed, and hit his head on the
wooden underside. We both do that frequently, tall people in a
confined space, but this time Greg hit a knob on the front of it that
the previous owner had installed. We never knew what it was for, (to
bump heads on?), and it has now been removed. Greg sat down quickly
with blood pouring down his head, and I discovered a three to four
inch gash in his scalp.
|
Crossing the Mississippi into St. Louis |
Home doctoring wasn't going to do for this cut. Once we got the
bleeding to slow down, we looked up an urgent care facility four
miles away. Greg couldn't drive and keep applying pressure to his
head, so I had to drive for the first time since I test drove the
rig. Thankfully the salesman had insisted I do so, in case Greg was
unable to. An hour later Greg had six shiny staples in his scalp, and
we were back on the road. I drove most of the afternoon to give him a
chance to recover. We hit Kansas City and the state line, at rush
hour. Thankfully, Greg felt fine, so he drove through the city. I'm
sure if I had to, I could have done it, but would have been a wreck
with all the rush hour interstate lane changes.
Next problem - where to spend the night. Our information said that
overnighting was allowed in Kansas rest areas. The stretch of I-70
heading out of Kansas City is a toll road with service areas. The
first one we pulled into was a circus. Too much coming and going.
The second one looked better, but as we came down the ramp there were
big signs posted saying that fines would be issued to anyone parking
longer than 90 minutes! Even the truckers were only stopping briefly.
Once I-70 separated from the toll road, as darkness was falling,
we found a friendly truck stop way out in the Kansas countryside in
Maple Hill. They provided a place around the side of a big gravel
parking lot, for trucks and RV's. We pulled up along the far end next
to green fields, a pond, and birds singing. As it got dark, the
peepers started serenading. The nearby truckers turned off their
engines for the night, instead of running them as most do, and the
interstate noise faded away as the wind shifted. We slept peacefully
in the quiet. Greg's head didn't bother him, and were both grateful
to end the day.
|
Maple Hill truck stop, parked next to the pond full of noisy frogs |
Saturday we filled up our water tank at the truck stop and drove
back on the interstate. We decided we were bored to tears with it and
had to find a back road. We had already traveled I-70 all the way
from the Baltimore Beltway and were mostly concerned with getting as
far west as we could, as fast as we could, due to the unpredictable
weather this time of the year. We rode out a small storm front in
Illinois and felt fortunate to only experience some downpours and
strong wind while we slept. The next day was sunny and calm.
We found a local road that paralleled the interstate on the north,
so we spent several hours driving through the Kansas countryside and
small towns. We had lunch in the small town park in Bogue along the
Solomon River valley. Wow! They had crazy, rusted out, dangerous old
play equipment that apparently was still being used. Back East it
would have been torn out years ago and replaced with the extra safe
playgrounds found back home. Actually, it was the first see-saw I've
seen in decades.
|
Bikers on a pretty road with a miserable Kansas crosswind |
|
US 24 |
|
Bogue, Kansas town park |
Rejoining I-70, we crossed into Colorado, and drove towards the
Rockies. The weather report was starting to look bad. Rain showers,
thunderstorms, and 65 mph winds for the next day. We found the
Flagler Reservoir Wildlife Area not far off the interstate and
decided to stay two nights. It's free and there is no one else crazy
enough to be here with us! Last night was peaceful. Today is insane!
Rain, thunderstorms, hail, sleet, snow, and 65 mph winds. We
repositioned the rig so that we are sitting nose into the wind. We
are still rocking and rolling, but not dangerously so. The
temperature was near 90 degrees yesterday and it was sunny. Today it
hasn't gotten above 44 degrees. We have been running the heat on and
off, but mostly are wearing lots of layers.
|
On the road to Flagler Wildlife Area |
|
Our free camp in the wildlife area |
After checking the forecast we have decided to head southwest
tomorrow and abandon the idea of crossing the Rockies on I-70. They
are calling for snow the next several days. We are going to head to
Pueblo and use our new Passport America membership to get half off at
an RV park there. Time for a hookup so we can run the electric space
heater, do some laundry, and take showers! Yay!!! Poor Greg can't
wash his matted head yet, but I am more than ready for a real shower.
Friday I get to take his staples out with the tool the urgent care
gave me. He-he... Then we'll head west across the lower Rockies
through Gunnison and over to Grand Junction to rejoin I-70. Utah,
here we come! Rolling through the states!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments encourage me to keep posting!