May 25, 2014
Today is Sunday of Memorial Day weekend. We have been sitting on
the shores of a stunning lake! Diamond Lake has blue waters that
change with the sunlight, and a snow covered peak, Mt. Bailey, on the
opposite shore. The 238 site campground is strung along almost three
miles of the eastern shoreline, so it provides many lakeside sites,
and we found a doozy! Normally there is a $16 a night fee, but they
have added a $6 a night surcharge if you want lakefront. We sprung
for the $22 a night spot after finding this great campsite.
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Diamond Lake camp |
Today we are heading a short distance south to Crater Lake
National Park. That visit will wait for another post. In the
meantime, we left Ferndale, CA and the Humboldt County Fairground
campground after a two night stay. It was good to rest for a day, and
catch up on walks, and the blog. Wednesday morning the fog from the
day before slowly burned off, and we headed for Eureka, on Humboldt
Bay to find a Walmart, not an easy task on the development adverse
northern California coast. Completing our errands there, we drove a
short distance north to the very green, progressive town of Arcata,
home of Humboldt State University with its well known sustainable
technology programs. We found the Emerald Laundromat, and proceeded
to do almost a month's worth of laundry. This laundromat has its own
website, and was probably the nicest, friendliest, cleanest one we've
ever been to. On the off chance that you will find yourself driving
through Arcata, CA and needing to do laundry, go here!
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View from our Ferndale fairground camp |
We walked across the street to Wildberries Market. Beautiful fresh
food market. I bought scrumptious, luscious local Humboldt County
grown strawberries. Later I would taste them in a beer at the Six
River Brewery with our late lunch (linner)! Two hours later, with the
laundry done and the fog lifted we drove just north to McKinleyville
and visited the aforementioned brewpub. Greg got back on the “Fish
and Chips Trail” he traveled last summer in Atlantic Canada, and we
enjoyed the brews as well. By this time it was 4 pm and we needed a
spot for the night. Just up the road was Clam Beach Campground with
18 spots we thought would be filled. Nope, we were able to snag a
pavement spot along the sand dunes for $15, and walked to the beach
before dinner. The wind was howling and the fog coming in again, so
we didn't stay long. Back to the rig for a cozy night's sleep,
between the crashing ocean wave noise, the close-by highway noise,
and the tsunami warning horns just across the small parking lot. If
they had gone off for a tsunami, we would have passed out from the
loud noise, and been swept away! Luckily, no tsunami that night!
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Halibut and fries is still fish'n'chips! |
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This tsunami siren next to our camp would give us a heart attack before the wave hits! |
The fog was drifting in and out on Thursday morning as we drove
the coast to the visitor center for the Redwoods National and State
Parks. We got a good tip from the ranger for a drive and a hike. The
state and national parks are cooperatively administered and
disconnected and strung out along the coast. They represent the
piecemeal fashion in which lands were purchased, donated, and
preserved during the last century. Before leaving the visitor center,
we walked out to the foggy beach, loaded with wildflowers and
driftwood.
The drive north took us to the turnoff for the Prairie Valley
Scenic Drive. We parked at the visitor center and hiked a few miles
into the dense old growth redwood forest and along a stream. These
redwoods had never been logged and were immense! The Big Tree is 304
feet tall and over 1,500 years old. It was a great hike and
straightened out my stiff neck from all the exercise it got swiveling
around to see the huge trees! We drove to a pull off along the scenic
route and ate lunch looking at more redwoods.
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Kathleen did not put the hole in the redwood tree! |
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The trees are blocking the view of the forest! |
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Big Shelf Fungus on huge tree |
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The easy trail through the Prairie Valley Redwoods gives a great experience of the redwood forest. |
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The Big Tree is kinda big. |
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Banana Slug - escargot without the shell |
From there we traveled to Crescent City and took Route 199
northeast into Oregon. Having no reservations for the Memorial
Holiday weekend, we needed to get off the coast to find a campground.
Climbing up into the Douglas Fir and Redwood-covered mountains we
found a forest service campground, Panther Flat, along the amazingly
blue western branch of the Smith River. We found a great wooded
campsite within hearing distance of the river. The next morning Bill
and Caroline introduced themselves. They were driving a View and had
just come from the rally in Canyonville, OR. Bill was trying to
convince us that we should go to a rally and see lots of other Views,
when I interrupted him to tell him that we were at the rally in
Quartszite in January. Well, it turns out they were there too, but we
never met. There were probably 100 Views there, so, to be honest,
they didn't even look familiar!
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Our Panther Flat campsite |
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Resurrection Ferns on a fir tree |
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The Smith River adjoining our campground |
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Horsetail Weed |
Finally we left for Diamond Lake. With 238 campsites, we thought
we could find one for the weekend. On the way we pulled over to the
Rogue River Gorge Overlook and hiked along the Gorge. The river
funnels into an area of collapsed lava tubes from the Crater Lake
volcanic eruptions.
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The Rogue cuts through a collapsed lava tube forming a gorge 25 feet wide and 45 feet deep! |
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Looking at the narrowest section along the 500-foot long gorge |
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Huge logs jammed in the upper end of the gorge |
We then circled the Crater Lake peaks on the western side until we
arrived at Diamond Lake. The campground was pretty full already, but
we lucked into the aforementioned spot and here we are! Greg has been
biking, and I have been catching up on some long delayed projects,
including sewing projects without a sewing machine. I re-covered the
truly ugly large pillow that graces the storage ottoman we installed
last Fall. It was covered with the same drab upholstery that most of
the RV is covered in. I have been slowly eliminating it. I bought new
foam for the dinette seats and covered them in duck fabric. Big
mistake! Joann Fabric sold me online, the foam, which was supposed to
be for RV's and household upholstery. It is already as mashed down as
the time deteriorated original cushions. The inexpensive duck I
bought is stretching, wrinkling and staining. So when we return next
Fall, I guess we will bite the bullet and order all new
professionally upholstered dinette cushions.
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Road cut in volcanic ash from the big Mount Mazama eruption 7,500 years ago |
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Our Diamond Lake view |
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Mt. Theilson loomed behind us |
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We could bike the complete circumference of the lake on a dedicated bike path |
My other project was to make curtains to hang in the back and
cover the opening to the bunk beds that we use to store our clothes
and other things. I took the Target clearance shelf curtain panel
that I bought to use to stage the condo that we FINALLY sold, and
using hem repair tape, cut it and “hemmed” the raw edges and
found a way to install it on the crazy cable for the bunk lifter that
the rig's previous owner “McGuyvered” in. Well, that was probably
clear as mud, but now we have a sheer curtained off area, that lets
in light and air, but hides the mess. It looks like a closet of sorts
instead of bunks with junk thrown on them! Greg is happy with
whatever things look like. Not me, I need to a least minimally
decorate my nest!
My final big project was to cover all 11 of our state Benchmark
Atlases with clear contact paper to make them hold up better. We use
these every day when we are driving. They help us to find boondocking
sites by delineating the public and private lands. They also list
campgrounds, mostly public, and recreational lands, and highlights.
That's how we found places like Lunar Crater, and Hot Creek
Geological Site. The maps also give us topography and elevations, so
we know what we are looking at and where the mountain passes are
located. Anyway, the ones we have used the most are getting torn and
dog-eared and really needed some reinforcement.
So, I am happy, happy that I finally had a few days to slow down
and do projects! Next up, our rather shortened visit to Crater Lake
National Park. Snow banks, crowds, people parking in the road, bright
sunshine and an awesome blue lake! Stay tuned!
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