February 2, 2015
Heard that Puxatawny Phil saw his shadow today. Not a lot of
hoopla about it in Florida. Big news is a freeze warning here for
tonight. We completed our mad dash across the country yesterday
morning. Once we are in traveling mode Greg turns into an automaton
and we push back east. Our longest day this past week was over 500
miles, and that is going 55 mph.
We left Kofa Wildlife Refuge on Monday morning and hit rain as we
drove south to Yuma and then east across I-8 towards Tucson. The long
stretches crossing the Arizona desert need something to break up the
ride, so between Yuma and Tucson we stopped again at Dateland. After
running into Winnie from our Quartzsite rally, who was heading to
Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument to meet up with several other
single women from the rally, we went inside and indulged in our first
date shakes. Yummy, but SO sweet, and the date chunks clogged the
straw! We sampled the dates and made a purchase that included Pecan
Date Pie. Greg's all time favorite desert is pecan pie, so we had to
try it.
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Another Glorious Kofa sunset! |
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Date Shakes count as a vegetable! |
Back on I-8 we pushed on through Tucson and arrived after dark in
Lordsburg, New Mexico. We parked in our customary spot at the visitor
center, (this is our third stop here), and spent the night listening
to the trucks and trains. They have outside water hydrants, so we
filled our jugs before heading out the next morning. Sunny skies
greeted us as we rolled into Deming. With I-10 being the main route
crossing southern New Mexico, we find ourselves in Deming as we
travel both east and west, so we are getting to know the town. Time
to catch up on 36 days worth of laundry! A little hand-washing of our
unmentionables got us through. I think I am carrying way too many
clothes with me. I could have gotten by another two weeks with pants
and tops.
We hit Walmart for food, bought fuel, propane, and found The Patio
open. Yay! Finally good green chili cheeseburgers! We indulged and
then drove to Rockhound State Park and hoped that we would get in.
This is definitely one of our favorite parks, and we are seeing it
fill up quicker than the last two years. Arriving at 3 pm got us an
overflow spot in the group campsite, squeezed in next to a truck
camper. We had water and electric and a view of the valley. This was
our fourth visit, the second consecutive time in the overflow. We may
have to make reservations if we go there in the future.
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Green Chile Cheeseburger and sweet potato fries! |
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Sunset from Rockhound State Park. Never seen a magenta sunset before. |
Wednesday began the long grind to get across Texas. There is no
getting around Texas this time of year. Going north leaves you open
to bad weather, so I-10 across Texas is the route. We stopped in El
Paso to check out El Paso Saddleblankets after seeing their billboards on
several trips through the city. We bought a couple small items, but
passed on the rugs, pillow covers, pottery, saddles, furniture, and
assorted knick-knacks; all Mexican, Western, or Native American
themed.
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Mexican sinks |
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We need a MUCH bigger RV to fit this! |
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Texas-sized bed set |
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Hood Ornament? |
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How to flatter your guests...Bar stools |
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Just about as comfortable as it looks. |
It was getting late in the day before we found a Texas rest stop
east of Van Horn. Texas allows over-nighting in their rest areas since
services are so scare, especially in the western part of the state.
It was the typical noisy night with trucks coming and going. We left
early the next morning for another push. By nightfall we reached a
rest stop east of San Antonio. Big, beautiful new rest area with
lined out areas for RV's and separate ones for trucks. Nice, until a
trucker decided to park in an RV spot right behind us, take his
mandatory overnight, and ran his engine AND generator all night. He
left just before we did in the morning. Can't say anything and we had
nowhere else to move to. (Note from Greg – The truck driver must
have known that the rest area would fill up. By midnight, every truck
slot was filled and trucks were double-parked in every access and exit lane.)
Thursday we finally finished with Texas as we cruised into
Louisiana, but not before stopping for a fuel fill-up at the famous
Buc-ees. We had seen the chain and read about them, so Greg had to
see it for himself. They are spreading all over Texas and seem bent
on world domination! The WalMart of the travel world! They had
literally dozens of fuel pumps, dozens of fancy, clean bathrooms, and
a huge travel store/fast food/souvenir shop. Lots of food, already
prepared or made to order, including BBQ, and plenty of clothing,
home decor and souvenirs to spend money on. Greg settled for fuel,
coffee, and a kaloche pastry. We both sampled their luxurious
restrooms, and we were done. We had been Buc-ee'd.
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One of two Texas-sized fuel islands |
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Bathroom decor |
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Tasteful knickknacks |
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Lunch Stop at the Un-Buc-ees: 4 Corners BBQ in Baytown, TX - Wonderful brisket and chicken! |
Louisiana loomed flat and wet. The rice fields were flooded and
raising crawfish until Spring. We stopped for the night in Rayne, the
Frog Capital of the World. The fairgrounds where the Frog Festival is
held has over 700 campsites! We were one of two campers. The sign
said the fee for hook-ups was $20. We wanted a quiet night after the
last few. There was no office, nowhere to leave the money, and no one
to collect it. We spent the night, and the next morning appreciated
the generosity of the town. Never did pay.
The next day we made the over 500 mile push through the rest of
Louisiana, across Mississippi, and Alabama and into Florida. We found
a Flying J west of Tallahassee where we stayed on our first journey
west in 2013. Greg celebrated by visiting Denny's for breakfast the
next morning. Then we continued on to Jacksonville and made a
bee-line for CarMax.
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Of course, we stopped at the visitor's center for orange juice. |
We needed to buy a towed vehicle, or Toad as they are referred to
in the RVing lingo. This CarMax location looked like it might have
one to meet our specifications. We have to tow something light and
manual, so a small car with a stick shift. They had a Toyota Yaris,
and nothing else, but it was just what we needed and priced right.
So, actually, we didn't need to kiss (test drive) a lot of frogs in
order to find our toad! Now we are positioned to spend periods of
time volunteering or work camping in one spot. The car will give us
the freedom to explore an area on our days off, and run errands
easily. For now we will be using it to travel to Maryland on family
business for the next month or so, while we store the RV in Florida.
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Looks kinda like a toad... |
After our purchase we drove to our “home” of Green Cove
Springs to our mail forwarder to pick up mail, and then south to
Faver-Dykes State Park. Tomorrow we will make arrangements to store
the RV and then in a few days drive north. We are trying to time our
drive to miss the storms that have been hitting the Mid-Atlantic.
We'll probably be out of communication for a while as we tend to
family business, but expect to be back on the road sometime in March,
and have news about where we will be working/volunteering for the
summer. In the meantime, enjoy some of our older posts. I have been
going back and reliving some amazing travels. Don't know if it is age
or overload, but I have already forgotten so much!
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