and it has free WIFI. It's a bit slow, but it works!! I've managed in the last hour to add photos and publish what I have written over the last three days. We probably won't be adding anything for a few days for two reasons - 1) too far into town, and 2) probably won't be much of interest to write about. I'll continue to make notes at night and then next time we make a trip to town I'll download them.
I had a nice birthday yesterday - heard from all my kids, grandkids and others! Thank you all for the good wishes.
We found the gym this morning. It's about a block and a half away from the RV park. Large gym, lots of equipment, and at the time we went, only two others using the facility. When we left I mentioned to the attendant that the hand sanitizer was out. "Yes, we know. Budget cuts. We don't have the money to keep it full." Wow! So, we picked up a large bottle of it today and will donate it tomorrow when we go.
Maggs is settling in nicely - and sleeping through the night! Yes! Well, at least she doesn't try to get us up - which is wonderful.
The original reason for this journal (and those that went before it) was to keep family and friends advised of our whereabouts and that we were OK. We have had an email from "Feedspot.com" which is some kind of site that pulls together things you are interested in reading and putting them all in one location for you. Well, it seems that we have some followers other than family! They said that 27 people were regular followers and that we "added value" to their site and gave us a year's free subscription. When I investigated, it seems that people from all over the world have made at least one hit on our site. Amazing! I can't imagine anyone "following" us other than family and friends, but it's kind of neat (and weird) to know that we are "published." Thanks to all of you for reading!!!
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Monday - 18th - The Fun Has Begun - We Think.
Monday - 18th - The Fun Has Begun - We Think.
Slept well and woke to beautiful sunshine. It was warm enough today for short sleeves and short pants and sandals!!! It was even warm enough to buy some ice cream bars when we went to the commissary! Roger had one Mr. Fixit project which he was able to complete satisfactorily. He made me blueberry pancakes for my birthday breakfast and it has been a nice day.
I mentioned that folks have been stopping by to greet us (to check us out). They are friendly enough and ask if we are spending the winter and when we say we are here only two weeks their interest fades. It’s quite a clique of regulars here - many of them have come here every winter for over 10 years. It’s more like the 55+ communities you find in the warmer climates where people come from up north for the winter, stay in the same place, have the same friends and get involved in the same activities to stay busy. This morning I saw a group of 5 ladies out for a walk and they probably do it every day. It’s all retired military in this park right now. I haven’t noticed any active duty. We are right next to base housing and there are several empty homes so I’m guessing the base is not at maximum staffing. The Marines are flying trainer jets all day right now. The Blue Angels and their squadron are not due to come here from Pensacola until January - long after we are gone.
This base is very small and has a small commissary and exchange and a fitness center available. Tomorrow we will start going to the gym. Town is seven miles east. We went out today to check things out and found a mall, Costco, Target, and Wal-mart - all of which were about 8 miles from the main gate.
The town is very Hispanic. We went to the food court in the mall for lunch today and the whole time we were there I heard no English being spoken. The Costco was the same way. We are close to the border and this is an agricultural area with lots of workers. (Lettuce seems to be what we see growing right now.)
I took the laptop up to the rec center this afternoon to try the internet there. I got on but it would fade out after a few minutes. No time to do anything. Oh, so frustrating. When we went to the office to pay for our stay this morning I noticed a sign: “Due to the government shutdown and the budget cuts there is no WIFI available on base.” They don’t have a library here, either. I asked a sailor in the commissary this afternoon if there was one and he said no and he didn’t know where I could find a hotspot. Pretty sad when our troops are having to do without.
Anyway, tomorrow we will go into town in search of a place I can download this journal into the blog, download photos, and get everything posted. Fortunately we can get our email on our cell data plans. Hmmm....could be a very long two weeks. We tried to find something on TV - about 16 Spanish speaking channels and 5 Asian speaking channels. We did find the basics - ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox. I guess we will get a lot of reading done and we will go through our crossword books pretty fast!
Sunday, 17th - A Pleasant Surprise
Sunday, 17th - A Pleasant Surprise
Our Maggie made herself right at home! |
We have settled in at the RV Park at the Naval Air Facility, El Centro, CA (the winter home of the Blue Angels) and we will be here for two weeks. We expected to be sitting in a kitty litter box with RVs lined up side by side despite the reviews of the place being 4 out of 5. It was awesome to discover the sites have cement pads and are very large, there are trees, and there are grassy common areas. We have a corner lot at an intersection with an especially large open area on both sides. Oleander bushes provide some privacy on the door side and we back up to an agricultural area behind the fence that is the boundary of the base. We are very happy with the site! Every one seems super friendly and the camp host stopped to tell us about all the perks of staying here. Within and hour of arriving we had four people stop to welcome us and to warn us about which sites to avoid walking the dog by because of aggressive dogs. One in particular is a German Shepherd-Coyote mix and not very friendly!
Now, the downside - no TV signal, no WIFI. Both are available down the street in the park recreation lounge so I will probably be going down there to work on this journal during the day. If that signal isn’t strong enough, then I’m sure the base library will work. Shall see how it goes.
We did get up and get moving about our regular time this morning - 9am. We ALL slept like logs last night. I don’t think any of even got up in the night to pee, we were so tired.
We climbed the mountain on CA 58 to Tehachapi Pass. As we climbed out of the valley we started seeing trees next to stream beds whose leaves were just turning gold - something we have already experienced in Sparks where we raked the leaves and bagged them for disposal already! Tehachapi has huge wind turbine fields which tells me the wind blows there all the time and it’s not a place I’d like to live despite the fact it is a nice town.
Dropping down off the mountain into the Mojave Desert is always a downer. We are desert people - we live in the high desert of Nevada - but the Mojave in this part of the country is just plain ugly. The only redeeming features as far as we are concerned are the Joshua Trees. Everything else is brown on brown this time of year and very depressing!
We connected with US395 and headed south at Kramer Junction. No rest areas along the way available for our lunch break. We usually find a shopping center parking lot when that is the case, but today we spotted an even better venue. Next to the town park in Adelanto is the Little League field. Hmmm....empty parking lot big enough to pull into (and get out of), grass for the dog to run in, restrooms, and bleachers for a makeshift table! Voila!
We turned east on I-10 and passed Palm Springs and the other high end towns along the way with street names like “Gene Autry Drive,” “Bob Hope Avenue,” and “Gerald Ford Drive.” There were lots of wind turbines in the valley along with solar arrays that we hadn’t seen last time we were in the area several years ago. It would be a really nice area to live except it is very pricey and it sits on the San Andreas Fault!
Going south from I-10 toward El Centro we drove for fifty miles or so along the west side of the Salton Sea. Now, that area is also pretty ugly for the most part - desert scrub. and dirt. Awful. Then, about half way, the agricultural area started and there were date palm orchards and green fields full of lettuce. The color of the fields matched my face as we bumped along the road as if we were driving on a washboard. At one point and I had to have Roger pull over so I could get some Pepto tablets out of the RV! Between the queasy stomach and the bouncing bladder I almost reached the tipping point and critical mass. Fortunately Rog found a place big enough to pull over before I lost control! I was surprised it didn’t bother Maggie but maybe her meds helped her combat the motion sickness as well as her high anxiety.
I hope to post this and yesterday’s entry tomorrow (Monday) and then be able to get back on schedule. For now we are glad to be done driving for a while and will sit and enjoy the 70 degree weather and sunshine - the reason for coming!!!
Saturday - 16th - Later Than Usual
As you can see by the moon-rise over the mountains, that we got into Bakersfield later than we normally like to arrive. Setting up in the dark is no fun and we always aim to arrive no later than 4pm. It was over 300 miles today and we did get a late start and the days are short, so we ended up arriving at twilight.
If anyone is following us on a map, we left Vacaville, headed east to I-5 through the Sacramento River Delta. We then turned south through the San Joaquin Valley until we turned east again just north of Bakersfield. The roads were rough and bounced us around today. The inside of the RV was a bit disheveled when we finally landed! Things that normally don’t move, did. A couple of rough railroad tracks didn’t help matters much. I just read a book with my book group called “The American Road” about the state of roads in 1917 and the beginning of the highway system. Well, today there were times when I felt as if I were on some of those roads that were described in the book! A new route will be planned for the next time we make the trip through central California! Rog wants to know if we are having fun yet!?!
Our late start this morning was due to a night as equally rough as the roads today. We got to bed late after returning from dinner and had stuff to do which put us in bed around 11pm. At 3am a neighbor’s car alarm went off and the dog decided she needed to go out. We kept trying to ignore her but she was insistent. She did do her business when I took her out so it wasn’t a wasted effort. So, with all that going on, a different bed, different light, different sounds and not quite getting the correct weight of blankets for the temperature, we didn’t get much sleep.
No matter how many times we go from northern California to southern California we are always amazed at how large the San Joaquin Valley is and how long it takes to get from one end to the other. Orchards of citrus, almonds, and pistachios dotted the landscape. The grape vines were in abundance - table grapes and raisin grapes, not wine grapes. There is one very large and stinky cattle feed lot that always grosses us out when we pass it. We saw what Roger thought was a prairie dog town near the rest area we stopped for lunch, but I think it was ground squirrels because their tails were so long. Are there prairie dogs in California? Late in the day as we were turned east off of the interstate and onto a two lane state route we drove through rose bush farms. It was so pretty and a nice respite after all the nut orchards.
We are settled in and more comfortable tonight hoping for a better night’s sleep. We are in the middle of an orange grove outside of town and it is fairly quiet and there are no street lights. Tomorrow we have abut 350 miles to our destination - Naval Air Facility, El Centro, CA. It will be another long day but we will be up and moving earlier - or so the plan goes! We are having WIFI issues right now - I hope to get this posted tonight, but will have to wait until late and everyone else stops streaming their movies!
I took this on Sunday morning before we left. Unfortunately the oranges aren't ripe yet. When we usually stay here in late Dec they allow the guests to pick all they want. They are very good oranges!! |
Monday, November 18, 2013
No wifi
We are without wifi access here so haven't been able to post. I'm doing this on the phone tonight. I've been writing the journal but unable to upload it. Tomorrow we will go into twin and search for a hotspot strong enough. We saw signs on the base today that read: due to government shutdown and budget cuts there is no WFI on base. Pretty sad. Wish us luck tomorrow.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Easy First Day
I tried to publish this last night (Friday) but it wouldn't go so am trying again this morning.
Last night we enjoyed a long, leisurely, hot shower before going to bed. With a 10 gallon hot water tank in the RV we won't have that luxury again for a long time!
Last night we enjoyed a long, leisurely, hot shower before going to bed. With a 10 gallon hot water tank in the RV we won't have that luxury again for a long time!
It was a pretty easy first day of our trip - only 130 miles or so. Not as much traffic as we expected for a Friday - hardly any going over "the hill (AKA Donner summit over the Sierra mountains)" and Sacramento traffic was heavy but steady going. We made good time after a late start.
We had packed most stuff into the RV yesterday which only left meds, toiletries and food for this morning. Well, there sure seemed to be a lot of food bags being hauled over to the RV this morning! We left Sparks around 10:30am and got to Vacaville, CA around 2:30pm. We figure that if we forgot something we can always find a store, but we did forget to pac ourTilley hiking hats :-( Will have to figure out some way to get them - too expensive to buy again.
Rog spent an hour or so de-winterizing, i.e., draining all the antifreeze and putting water in all the lines while I put stuff in their proper place. One thing about living in 324 square feet - every thing has a place and everything needs to be in its place or it is chaos.
We then went to my sister's for dinner and had a very nice evening visiting with her, her husband and our nephew who stopped by. I was surprised with a birthday gift and cheesecake. The amaryllis is going to be a perfect plant for the RV and will bloom about Christmas. Thanks!! (Sorry, about the dog peeing on your freshly cleaned carpet, though!)
Speaking of Maggie - she did well today on the drive but we don't know weather to attribute it to her finally becoming used to the truck or the medication!
It's late and we still need to put sheets on the bed. Tomorrow we drive south to Bakersfield, CA and sleep in an orange grove!
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Leaving for Warmer Climates!
It's that time of year again when we pack up the RV with a great deal of our earthly possessions and point it south for the winter! We will be back mid-May!!
We decided this year that we wouldn't wait until January to leave and have to dig the RV out of the ice and snow for departure. What a relief it was today to hook up the RV and park it in the Sparks Marina RV Park with the sun shining and the temperatures in the 50s! It was wonderful compared to years' past when we wore coats, gloves, hats, etc. and slipped and slid on the ice and snow.

So, we are off tomorrow for a short day's ride - to Vacaville, CA. We will stop there for the night, flush out the antifreeze and get the plumbing working, and then have a nice dinner with my sister and her family. Maggie has packed her toys and we have meds for her travel anxieties so I think we are all set!
We hope you enjoy the our journal!
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