Hello again friends and loyal readers. Our last chapter ended on December 7th when we arrived back in the Coachella Valley, our old home turf, at the Desert Pools RV Resort in Desert Hot Springs, California. After arrival we spent the rest of the day getting settled in.
Wednesday, December 8th, our first full day back in the Coachella Valley, or the “Desert” as it is known to the locals (or former locals) like us. After lunch we drove down into Indio, got the car washed, did a little shopping, and made a stop at our old hangout, Cactus Jack’s Bar and Grill. When we lived in Indio we spent a lot of time here. We had one cocktail, said hi to Kevin, the bartender for many years and a guy I used to play golf with from time to time, and George, the owner of the place. Late in the afternoon we drove over to the Motorcoach Country Club (former Outdoor Resorts Indio) where our great friends Barry and Colleen Cohen live. We have written a lot about Barry and Colleen on this blog in the past, so I won’t repeat a lot, but they have been wonderful friends over the years. Barry was my first friend here after I moved to Indio in 1998, and has been my best friend ever since.
We had last seen them back in September when they came up to Pahrump to visit with us. We had a wonderful time catching up. Barry, who is a great Italian cook, made a batch of meatballs that were wonderful. Colleen and Jackie played cards and Barry and I just watched TV and talked. It was a great visit. We didn’t stay too long, only about 8:00 p.m., because Barry still works and gets up early in the morning to take care of his transmission repair shop. We drove back to Desert Hot Springs and home.
Thursday, December 9th was a chores day. I spent some time in the morning paying bills and taking care of stuff that came in our mail delivery on Wednesday. I then spent an hour or so putting up our Christmas decorations. We don’t have too much, a couple of decorations and some light strings for the front of the coach. We also have a cute little Christmas tree for our front table. After lunch we drove into Desert Hot Springs to do our laundry. We were going to do it at the RV park laundry, which is just a few steps from our coach, but the office didn’t have any quarters and we didn’t have enough to do it all. Poor customer service Desert Pools!
Around 5:00 p.m. we made a quick trip to another resort just down the street to visit with Tom and Dorothy Warren, some friends of ours from FMCA rallies. Tom used to be the president of Elks International, one of the Chapters we belong to, and Dorothy is secretary/treasurer of another. I needed to give her a check for next year’s dues for that Chapter. We visited with them for a few minutes, but they were going down to Palm Springs for the street fair, so we didn’t stay long. We went back to our park, had dinner, and then went over to the recreation center to play Texas Hold’em. We ended up playing with the same Canadian friends that we met in Pilot Knob a couple weeks ago and played several times with. They are very nice, friendly and funny folks to play cards with. We had a great time, although we both lost our five dollar stake.
Friday, December 10th we left home after lunch to do some geocaching in Desert Hot Springs. Although we have cached several times here over the last two and a half years, there are a couple of active cachers in the area that keep putting out new caches. We were able to find twelve new caches within a couple of hours and within a couple of miles of our RV park. One of the caches was or 2,000th find! A major milestone in geocaching, and we did it in the same town in which we started. Our first find was March 18, 2008 just about a half mile from where we found our 2,000th cache. Since that first cache we have found caches in three countries, 20 states and four Canadian provinces. This has proven to be a great hobby/sport for us.
After our caching we headed over to the Desert Hot Springs Elks Lodge for a cocktail and to try to meet up with some of our Elk friends in the area. We have been members of the DHS Elks Lodge RV Club, the Desert Roadrunners, since before we sold our house. We used to go on one or two outings a year with them back then. We got to the Lodge about 3:30 and met the bartender going in who told us that they didn’t open until 4:00 p.m. Just to kill some time we went out and found two more caches close by the Elks Lodge. We also looked for a third, but couldn’t find it. This brought our total for the day up to 14 finds. We went back to the Elks, which was now open, and went in to find our friends Jack and Gail Little sitting at the bar. Jackie had called them earlier and left a message on their phone that we were going to the Lodge, but we hadn’t heard back from them. They only live a mile from the Lodge. We had met Jack and Gail when we went on our first outing with the Desert Roadrunners back in 2001 and became good friends, although we no longer see them as much as we would like. We had a nice visit and caught up on things since the last time we saw them, over a year ago. A couple of other acquaintances came into the Lodge while we were there too. Although they were having dinner at the Lodge, there wasn’t anything on the menu we wanted, so we left after a couple drinks and went back to our coach for dinner.
Saturday, December 11th we left the park about 10:00 a.m. and drove down to Palm Desert and the College of the Desert (COD) street fair. The COD street fair has been going on for many years and now has over 300 vendors that set up every weekend. It is a shopping extravaganza and it doesn’t have any “junk” or used stuff. Lots of trinkets, jewelry, art and the usual street fair merchandise. We shopped for about three hours, with a break for lunch at one of the food booths, and managed to view every booth. Jackie bought a sushi maker set and I got a tee shirt, so we didn’t spend much money, but we did have a good time.
After our shopping we drove to Indio and visited the Indio Elks Lodge. This was the Lodge in which both of us were initiated, and was our home Lodge until we moved our residency to Pahrump. We had a drink in the bar and ran into a couple of people we knew, but there were not too many people there this time of the day. About 3:00 we drove over to the Motorcoach Country Club to spend another evening with our friends Barry and Colleen. Barry and I took the electric boat out for a little “cruise” on the lake before the sun went down. The weather was perfect, just a slight breeze and temperatures in the high 70's. We cruised around until sunset and then went back and just listened to music and chatted while the girls played cards. Later we had a brisket dinner that Colleen had cooked, and it was wonderful. About 8:30 we started back for Desert Hot Springs. Its hard to stay late at the Cohen’s when we are in DHS because it’s about a 25 mile drive back to the RV park on some pretty dark roads. Once we move down to Indio, and are only a couple miles away, we will have longer nights with them.
Sunday, December 12th was what we call “a couch day”, meaning we didn’t go anywhere or do anything important. I did try out the hot tubs here at the resort for the first time. They have natural hot springs in this area (hence the name Desert Hot Springs, duh) and the park has three hot tubs fed by the natural water. Lots of sodium and sulphur so it stains the tubs and pool brown, but the water felt good. They had three tubs with three temperatures, mild (98), medium (100), and “caliente” (104). I tried them all. I love hot baths, so the hot one was my favorite, but you can only take about 10 minutes of that heat. Other than that we just watched TV, played games, and relaxed.
Monday we stayed around the coach most of the day again. Late afternoon a mobile service technician came by to give an estimate for replacement of the “topper” awnings on the coach. The toppers are the awnings that come out over the slides when they are extended. They are intended to keep debris off the tops of the slides and help keep water out. After five years the sun has deteriorated the awnings to the point where one has already torn and is nearly off of the side of the coach. Being full timers, our slides are out 99.9% of the time and always in the sun. Five years is about the best you can expect. About 5:00 p.m. we drove over to the DHS Elks Lodge for their Monday Night Football hamburger dinner. We met our friends Jack and Gail Little and had a couple of very good cheeseburgers and watched the first half of the Houston-Baltimore game. Five bucks for a cheeseburger and fries is a pretty good deal. After the first half we headed back home for the rest of the night.
Tuesday, December 14th we did some grocery shopping after lunch. Jackie wanted to get the stuff she needs to do some sushi with the new kit that she bought at the COD street fair. Late afternoon we drove up to the Mission Lakes Country Club in Northwest DHS for dinner at Jack and Gail Little’s house. She had a couple of other dinner guests, other members of the Elks’ RV club. They were both guys who were “bacheloring it” for a while. One’s wife is in the hospital and the other’s was back East visiting her kids. Gail made a great meatloaf and potatoes dinner. We had a couple of drinks, great food and conversation, and had a nice visit. We left around 8:00 and went back to our coach.
Wednesday we woke up to cloudy skies and high winds. We had listened to the wind blow the awnings and flags around all night and it wasn’t any better in the morning. It appears that the warm, calm weather we have enjoyed since our arrival here last Tuesday are history. In the morning Jackie made up a batch of sushi with her new kit. She made some tuna, some crab and some avocado. The sushi was quite good even though it was not yet refrigerated. After lunch we decided to go out and try some geocaching. When we got to the first cache site we could hardly get out of the car because the wind was blowing so hard. We spent a couple minutes trying to look for the cache, but the wind was blowing at least 40 mph and the sand particles hitting your face felt like little pieces of glass. We finally said the Hell with it and went back home where we stayed for the rest of the day. We had the cold sushi as part of dinner, and it was wonderful. I have to admit that the new kit is a good idea. It gives us new choices for pot luck dinners too.
Thursday, December 16th was another grey morning and another decision to stay in for the day. Actually had a slight bit of rain, just enough to get the vehicles dirty. Spent the day on the computers and Jackie watched a couple of movies. After dinner we walked over to the clubhouse for Texas Hold’em. For the first time since we have been here I won a couple bucks. Had some pretty good hands, including four of a kind which got me a nice pot. Our new Canadian friends were there, but they are leaving on Monday. We will cross paths again with them in Quartzsite in January.
Friday, December 17th we left Desert Pools about 11:30 a.m. and drove down to Cathedral City for lunch. Both Jackie and I had worked in Cathedral City prior to our retirement in 2005. I have been craving a good Italian sub sandwich for a while and there is a restaurant in Cathedral City called Nicolino’s where we used to have lunch from time to time back when we worked. Jackie had Eggplant Parmesan, and I had a great Italian sub. Nicolino’s is not a fancy place, and for some weird reason they were playing bluegrass music in the dining room, but the food is good and you get plenty of it for the money. They also have a shop in Palm Springs with the same menu. The Cathedral City location is on Date Palm, about a half mile North of Highway 111.
After lunch we went to Walmart for a few things and then on to Eisenhower Hospital in Rancho Mirage so Jackie could have a followup sonogram on the site of the biopsy she had earlier this year. The doctor had seen something questionable on a mammogram and they did a biopsy of one of the lymph nodes in her armpit. The biopsy was clean, but they wanted to do a six month followup. The followup today was also good. Yea! After the hospital visit we drove East to Indio and stopped to visit with Barry and Colleen at the Motorcoach Country Club. We went with them up to their club for a couple of drinks and chatted with some other people that we have met over the years we have been visiting the Cohen’s. About 7:00 p.m. we headed home because it was a long drive and I didn’t want to drink anymore. We have seen news reports that the local police are starting their holiday DUI enforcement activities, including roadblocks, and I don’t want any problems.
Saturday, December 19th we stayed around the coach under dreary skies yet again. The weather indicates that this current stormy, unsettled weather, will persist through the middle of next week. I guess we will have to get used to it. We didn’t go anywhere until about 5:00 when we headed down to the DHS Elks Lodge for a Christmas party with the Elks RV club. We got there and found about 40 people from the club and we recognized about a third of them from previous outings with the group. Several of the folks we had not seen for a year or more, so we had a nice time catching up. The dinner was a nice steak and baked potato combination that was excellent. The steaks were very tender and cooked perfectly medium rare, despite the fact that the cook was trying to do over 40 at one time. I even took the time to go outside and thank the BBQ cook for his good work. Note the picture of the Elks Lodge's somewhat unique Christmas Tree. The party broke up about 7:30 and we went back to the RV park for the rest of the night.
Sunday brought another dreary grey morning, but still no rain despite the fact that the Los Angeles basin just fifty miles to the West has been deluged over the last few days by one of the “Pineapple Express” storm systems that come out of the warm waters of the mid Pacific. Of course, the Coachella Valley is in the Northwestern-most portion of the Sonoran Desert and is protected by the “rain shadow” formed by the San Jacinto and Little San Bernardino Mountain ranges to the West of the Valley. The mountains keep most of the rain out, but also cause the wind that we seem to have most of the time. Since it had not started raining yet, but the forecasts were showing the possibility for several days, I decided to take advantage of the dry spell and take down all the outside decorations and amenities in preparation for our move down to Indio on Tuesday. Figured it was better to take them down and store them dry than get wet on Monday or Tuesday morning trying to clean everything up. I also spent a little more time in the hot tubs in the afternoon, but other than that, we didn’t do anything except just veg around the house.
Since we are leaving Desert Hot Springs soon and the general lack of substantive activity our part due to bad weather has left me little to write about, I will provide a little history of Desert Hot Springs. DHS is nestled in the foothills of the Little San Bernardino Mountains, almost due North of Palm Springs and is the Northernmost city in the Coachella Valley. In 1913 the first homesteader in the area was Cabot Yerxa, who discovered hot water on Miracle Hill. Due to the San Andreas Fault bisecting the hill, one side has cold water, the other has hot. His large adobe, hand built by Yerxa over 20 years, is now one of the oldest adobe structures in Riverside County, and houses Cabot's Pueblo Museum, designated a state historical site after his death in 1965. The town was founded by L. W. Coffee on July 12, 1941. The original town site was centered at the intersection of Palm Drive and Pierson Boulevard and was only one square mile. Coffee chose the name Desert Hot Springs because of the area's natural hot springs.
Desert Hot Springs became a tourist destination in the 1950s because of its small spa hotels and boutique hotels. By the late 50's relators arrived to speculate, and thousands of lots and streets were laid out over a six square mile area. Some homes were bought by retirees and the area incorporated as a city in 1963, with 1,000 residents. Desert Hot Springs experienced periods of significant growth in the 1980s and 1990s, when most of the vacant lots were filled with new houses and duplex apartments. The city's population doubled in the 1980s and increased to over 16,500 by 2000. The city relies heavily on tourism and retirees with dozens of mobile home and RV parks scattered around the area. It is also one of the more affordable places in the Coachella Valley and has a large Hispanic population.
Unfortunately, DHS also has one of the higher per capita crime rates in Southern California and has been plagued by gang violence over the last ten years. Recent efforts on the part of law enforcement and prosecution authorities have begun to reduce overall crime in the area. Our RV park is outside of the city limits of DHS and in an area made up almost exclusively of RV parks and small retirement communities, so there is little crime in the immediate area. Most people in this area tend to avoid central DHS during the night time hours.
Monday, December 20th - another rainy day. Current weather forecasts show rain pretty much for the next week. Boo! After lunch we drove into Desert Hot Springs and did our laundry. That was the extent of our activities for the day.
Tuesday, December 21st, the first day of Winter. Last night was the Winter Solstice, the longest night of the year, and also a full lunar eclipse. Unfortunately, even if I had wanted to stay up until 2:00 a.m. to see it, I wouldn’t have because it rained all night long. No moon to see, eclipsed or otherwise. Today is moving day, we moving from DHS down to Indio, a full 26 mile journey. We managed to get out about 9:45 a.m. in a drizzly rain and drove to Indio with only a quick fuel stop. I was about out of fuel and I always like to have enough on board to at least run the generator for a while in case of power outages. Got to Indian Waters Resort in Indio, one of our Western Horizon parks, and settled into a nice spot just down from the recreation center. Since it was still raining I didn’t do anything other then the absolute necessary outside connections, settled the inside of the coach, and watched the rain for the rest of the day. We will be here for a full month, Normally Western Horizons lets you stay for two weeks (three in the off season) for each stay, but we bought a month here rather than use our free days. It cost us $570, but we don’t have to move for a full month and will be here over the holidays and during the FMCA rally in Indio.
Wednesday, December 22nd we woke up to more rain and, for the first time here in Indio as far as I remember, the weather alert radio going off at 7:30 in the morning! It was a flash flood warning for major parts of Riverside and San Bernardino Counties. Fortunately, we are not in a flood zone and no where near any major washes or rivers, so we should be safe. We did catch a nice rainbow at one point during the storm. We decided we needed to get out of the house despite the rain and went out to lunch at La Casita, which is our favorite Mexican restaurant in the Coachella Valley. They are a local chain and have numerous places in the various cities of the Desert. This time we ate at the one in Indio which is located right on Highway 111, just East of Arabia Street. It is in a building which looks like a medieval castle and has housed a lot of different things over the years. La Casita used to be in an older building closer to downtown Indio, but moved to the “castle” a couple years ago. We have been to most of the other locations, but this was our first visit to this shop. The food was the same and was great. The service, kind of so-so. Part of it was the wait staff didn’t speak English very well and didn’t really listen when you asked for things. Still had a great lunch. After lunch we went shopping at Costco and Walmart, our two “go to” stores. Once we got home we stayed in for the rest of the day.
Thursday, December 23rd we finally woke up to clear skies and bright sun! Yea! In the morning I spent some time outside putting up the Christmas decorations I didn’t want out when it was raining, as well as our normal outside items like the flagpole and the BBQ. Jackie spent some time preparing a pot of Halibut chowder for Christmas day. We are going over to her niece Vickie’s house for Christmas dinner and Jackie is taking chowder and sushi. Around 5:15 we left the coach and went to Cactus Jack’s, our old Indio hangout, to meet Barry and Colleen for dinner. They are leaving Christmas Eve day to drive up to Sacramento for Christmas and New Year’s with their daughter and her family. We wanted to have a nice dinner with them before they left. Jackie was happy it was Thursday because Jack’s always has lamb shanks on the special menu on Thursday. They also had their beef ribs, which are the best, on the menu. We had a couple of drinks and a very nice dinner with our best friends for the holidays. After dinner we went back to the park and stayed in the rest of the night.
Friday, Christmas Eve, we finally took advantage of the nice weather to do some geocaching. We went out after lunch and managed to get ten finds in a couple of hours of searching. It has been the two weeks since we have been caching and we were missing the search. After caching we went home until about 5:00 when we left to go to Christmas Eve mass at our old church, the Pathfinder Church of the Risen Christ. Father Ned Reidy and Reverend Kathy McCarthy were the two who married us back in 2004 and Jackie has been close friends with Kathy and Ned most of the time she lived in the Desert. There were only a couple of other people at the service that we knew, but it was still nice to go back to our old church. After mass we stopped at Cactus Jack’s for a bite to eat before heading back to the coach to wait for Santa to fly over.
Saturday, December 25th, Merry Christmas everyone! Christmas day in Indio dawned bright and clear with temperatures predicted in the high 60's. Not the white Christmas promised in the Eastern states, but a whole lot warmer. In the early afternoon we drove over to Palm Desert to Jackie’s “adopted” niece Vicki’s house for Christmas celebration and dinner. Vicki is the daughter of Nancy, one of Jackie’s oldest and best friends since the 60's. Vicki has a son Shane and Jackie is Shane’s Godmother. Shane just turned 16 and is a sophomore in high school. He is already six feet tall and will probably get bigger. Those who follow the blog may recall that Shane was diagnosed with juvenile diabetes about eight years ago. Vicki was cooking a big Christmas dinner for everyone and we brought the Halibut chowder and sushi that Jackie made. Nancy was there with another friend, also named Jackie, as well as Nancy’s son Larry, who lives in San Clemente, and Shane’s dad, Gary. We spent a very pleasant afternoon talking and catching up with everyone, playing ping pong, and generally having a great time. Later in the afternoon we had a superb dinner with turkey, ham and all the fixings. After dinner we were joined by Gary’s brother Dan and his family who stopped by for a visit. I was acquainted with Dan from my days as a Homeowner Association manger because at the time he was also in the industry here in the Coachella Valley. We finally left around sunset and went back to the coach for the rest of the day. It was a great Christmas with great friends who are like family to us, and we enjoyed it very much.
Sunday, December 26th, the day after Christmas. To read the paper one would be led to believe that one has a social responsibility to go out and shop. We decided to reject that premise and we just stayed home and relaxed, stayed out of way of those who felt the need to shop, and enjoyed our own, more relaxed, social construct. In other words, we were lazy and just stayed home all day.
Monday we decided to do some more geocaching after lunch. This time we went West a little bit to Palm Desert because Jackie had to make a quick stop at her doctor’s office to pick up some paperwork. We had a good afternoon, finding fourteen caches in just a few hours. We then went back to the coach until later in the evening when we went up to the clubhouse for some Texas Hold’em. This would be the first time that played at this park. Their play style here is a little different, they have a five dollar buy in and play for two hours, like most other parks. However, here they use the use the chips regular denomination according to color, nickel, dime and quarter, rather than just assign each chip a five cent value regardless of color. Didn’t change the play any, just had to think a little more when betting. I had an OK night, lost less than a dollar. Jackie could do no wrong. She was winning hand after hand, and usually with pretty good cards. She ended up being eight dollars ahead at the end of the night. That is almost two gallons of fuel for the car! Yea!
Tuesday, December 28th I got up early and drove over to Cathedral City on the other end of the Coachella Valley, to the Jeep dealer to get the car serviced. Unfortunately, with the diesel engine in the car I can’t just go to the local Jiffy Lube to get the oil and filter changed, I have to go to the dealer. A couple hours and a couple hundred dollars later the car was good for another 6,000 miles. I stopped at a lunch restaurant called “Boys” in Cathedral City for lunch. Boys was one of my regular lunch haunts when I worked in Cathedral City and they have the best pastrami sandwich in the valley. I always have to get at least one Boys pastrami sandwiches when we are in the valley.
After lunch I drove back home and found that our friends Vernon and Peggy Bullock had arrived. We knew that they were going to be here today and were looking forward to their arrival. The last time we saw them was in Redmond, Oregon back in August at the FMCA rally. They still have a place in Northern California, near Redding, and they spent most of the fall there. We first met Vernon and Peggy on our Alaska trip in 2009 and we have been fast friends since. They will be traveling with us for the next couple months. We always have a great time with them. We introduced them to geocaching and they are another of our success stories, having gotten really involved in the hobby.
After they got settled in to their site here at Indian Waters they came over for cocktails. We had a great time catching up on the last couple months. We also talked to them about coming to the Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta in October of 2011. We just yesterday got notice that Monaco International was going to sponsor the rally again, and the rally masters wanted our help again. We are planning on going and I think we have Peggy and Vernon talked into it as well. A little later in the evening we went over to the Indio Elks Lodge so we could attend the meeting of the Lodge’s RV club, which we have belonged to since 2001 when I first joined the Elks. Peggy and Vernon also went and attended the meeting as our guests. The meeting was well attended and we saw a lot of our old friends from the days when we had a house here in Indio and this was our “home” Elks Lodge. After the meeting the four of us stopped at Cactus Jacks for a quick dinner. This was the first time that Peggy and Vernon had been to Cactus Jacks and they seemed to like the place. We had a nice dinner with some more great conversation.
With the end of this busy day I am going to close this episode of the blog. It has been three weeks since I published, and we will be here in Indian Waters in Indio for another three weeks, so this seems like a good time to start a new chapter and get this one in print. Until the next time, have a safe and enjoyable New Year’s and be happy.
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
End to End on Interstate 8 in California
Greetings loyal readers. Our last episode ended on Tuesday, November 16th upon our arrival in Winterhaven, California, near Yuma, Arizona. We arrived at the Pilot Knob RV Resort around 2:00 p.m. and got set up in a very nice spot. We have a nice patio with a neat little cactus garden. That evening we drove into Yuma, about 10 miles East, and went to the Outback restaurant to meet with our friends Ray and Suzie Babcock. They are staying in a park on the East end of Yuma and have been here for a couple of weeks. Since they are leaving on Wednesday, we decided to get together with them for a nice dinner before they had to leave. We all like Outback because Jackie and Ray can get lamb and I can get King crab legs. We had a very nice dinner and a couple hours of good conversation. The last time we had seen Ray and Suzie was up in Redmond at the FMCA convention back in August. We will probably cross paths with them again near the end of the year in Indio, California.
Wednesday, November 17th we got up early and headed down to Algodones, Mexico for our dentist appointments. Algodones is only about 15 minutes from Pilot Knob where we are staying and is probably the only place in Mexico right now where I would feel safe. It is almost exclusively a medical community with dentists and eye doctors and 95% of the tourists are seniors down there getting some kind of medical procedure. I just needed my teeth cleaned, but Jackie has to have some veneers replaced on her front teeth. You may remember she broke one a couple months ago when we in Fallon, Nevada. She had the veneers put on by her dentist in Palm Desert about 9 years ago and they are all cracking and failing. We were a little surprised to find that the bill for replacing all the crowns and bridge work is over $2,000. Oh well, it needs to be done, and it would be three or more times that amount at a dentist in the U.S. After our dental visit we had a nice lunch at one of the local Mexican restaurants, then headed back into the U.S. and home. The line getting back into the States was only about 20 minutes today. We have waited for as long as two hours in visits past. We will have to go down there at least three more times in the next two weeks to get all Jackie’s work done.
Thursday, November 18th, we went into Yuma after lunch to take care of some errands. Our first stop was the local Social Security office so Jackie could file for part of her mother’s death benefit. Jackie was not even aware there was a benefit until she got a call from Dennis, her brother, a few days ago. It is not much, just under $300, but it’s still a little unexpected cash, which is always helpful. After that we headed for a Walmart so Jackie could see if there was a Humana insurance representative on site to talk to about the new Medicare prescription plan that Humana and Walmart are offering. Jackie has a Humana plan now, but with the new Obamacare the premiums are going up and the benefits are going down. She wanted to look into the new plan at Walmart to see if she could save money. The Walmart close to the Social Security office did not have a rep. We got the phone numbers for the other two stores in Yuma and found that there is a rep at the store out East of town, but he (or she) is only there in the mornings. We will have to catch them another day.
We then headed over to the Arizona Market Place, a large outdoor swap meet, to walk around for a couple hours. At 4:00 p.m. they closed the Market Place and we headed over to the Foothills area of Yuma, on the far East end of the valley, to go to dinner at our friends John and Rita Ham. They are also full time motorhome travelers with a Monaco coach, but they have a very nice RV lot out in the Foothills area, where they spend the winters. The lot has a big casita on it and a very nice patio. We met John and Rita through our associations with FMCA and the Monaco International Chapter. They are also big geocachers, so we have a lot in common with them. They had some “house guests”, Gary and Shirley, who had their motorhome parked on the Ham’s lot. Their lot has two full hookup areas for motorhomes. We had met Gary and Shirley last year at a party at the Ham’s house. The dinner was a selection of sausages, all made from the meat of an elk that Gary had bagged this past year. The dinner was very nice and we had a great time visiting with our friends. We also got a look at John and Rita’s brand new Monaco Dynasty coach. It was VERY nice. We left the Ham’s about 8:00 p.m. for the 20 mile drive back West to Pilot Knob.
Friday, November 19th we were up early and out of the coach by 8:45 a.m. Jackie was headed for Algodones to start her dental work. They had told us that this first appointment was going to run at least three hours, so I just drove her to the border crossing and dropped her off. I would come back later to get her. I went back to the coach and did some minor repairs and chores. About noon I drove back down, parked the car, and crossed the border to pick her up. She got done about 12:30 and we crossed back over into the U.S. and went home so she could rest for the day. They had to work on eight of her teeth, preparing them for new crowns, and fitting her with temporary crowns. She was quite sore and the Novocain made her a little dizzy, so we just hung around the coach for the rest of the day.
Saturday Jackie woke up feeling pretty well considering what they did to her mouth the day before. After lunch we headed over to the Arizona Market Place again to finish what we started on Thursday. We got done early there because it was not as big as it was last year. Since we had time, we went to the new indoor swap meet which is inside of what used to be the Mervyn’s store in the old shopping mall area on 32nd street. It was a nice mall, but the prices were very high. There were no bargains to be had that we could see. They must charge the vendors quite a bit for the ambiance of an indoor venue. In between the two swap meets we stopped and did one geocache near the Yuma County fairgrounds. We had sort of looked for this one on Thursday when Jackie saw it on her phone geocaching app, but we didn’t find it. John and Rita gave us a hint when we were there Thursday night, so we went and looked again and found it. Yea! Sunday was a relaxation day since Jackie’s mouth was a little sore from all the work.
Monday, November 22nd, we went into Yuma for lunch with our friend’s Charlie and Sharon Anderson. We met them several years ago at a Monaco International rally and have crossed paths with them many times over the years. They are from Illinois and still have a farm back there that their kids run, however, they have a home here in Yuma too where they spend their winters. We met them at Chretins, a Mexican restaurant that used to be top notch when it was in an old building down in the barrio in South Yuma. A couple years ago they built a new place up near the new shopping just off of the freeway and the quality of the food starting going downhill. Today we found that they had changed the menu again. They don’t have any lunch menu or specials, except for a buffet, and they don’t have any Mexican combo meals (the staple of every Mexican restaurant) on the menu. They used to have the best red chilli I every ate. Now it is not even on the menu. This may be the last time we eat there and I will no longer recommend it to anyone. And to think I even bought their tee shirt!
After lunch we went out and did some geocaching. We were able to find six caches in a couple of hours. One of the caches was one that we had to DNF last December when we couldn’t find it. Today we found it! Yea! We hate DNF’s and really enjoy it when we are able to “fix” one. After caching we headed home for the rest of the day.
Tuesday, November 23rd, we once again went out after lunch to do some geocaching. We concentrated on a couple of series sets located in the desert, just South of I-8 in the Eastern part of the valley. Series caches are groups of caches with a similar theme, placed by a single cacher, and usually in a specific area. We had a total of about 15 caches from two different cachers, all within a one square mile area of desert. Because they were all fairly close together, and relatively easy to find, we were able to do 17 caches in a couple of hours. The desert area we were in was mostly sand with some creosote bushes scattered around. The caches were all hidden under the bushes because there really wasn’t anywhere else to hide them. The sand ranged from pretty hard to very soft, and the entire area was riddled with ground squirrel or prairie dog, or whatever the local desert rodent is, holes and dens. At one point we were walking across the desert to a cache and kept falling into collapsing dens. Once Jackie put both feet through the surface and I thought she was going to disappear into the ground. Reminded me of the old campy sci fi movie, “Tremors” where the giant worms were digging around the desert chasing people. After caching we did some quick shopping and then headed home.
Wednesday, November 24th we headed back into Algodones, Mexico before lunch for another of Jackie’s dental appointments. Today’s work was checking the fit of the new crowns before they finished them by putting on the porcelin covering. She was only in the office for about an hour this time. After the dental work we walked around Algodones for a little while, then headed back to the coach by early afternoon, where we spent the rest of the day.
Thursday, November 25th, Happy Thanksgiving! About 2:00 p.m. we headed over to the clubhouse here at Pilot Knob RV Resort for dinner. The park provided the basics, Turkey, dressing, potatoes, and veggies for $7.50 a person, and then each couple had to provide either a salad or dessert. Jackie made some Wasabi coleslaw, which was really good. We sat with some very nice folks we had never met before, who were from Minnesota. The meal was excellent and despite no seconds I went away satisfied. Later on that evening we went back to the clubhouse to play some Texas Hold’em. We have not played at this park before, but it was a very similar format - $5 buy-in for nickle chips. They played for three hours and we didn’t do too well, losing all but $2.25 of our $10 stake. We did have fun though, it was a good group.
Friday, November 26th - Black Friday. We originally were going to avoid the stores and the insanity, but Jackie got an email from Penny’s and found that they had a pair of boots on sale that she wanted. After lunch we drove into Yuma and the mall. What a madhouse! Way too many people in the parking lot and the stores. We only went to Penny’s and Best Buy, that was enough for me. We then headed back to the RV park and did our laundry while the rest of the world shopped. The picture is an old golf cart at the RV park that they use to advertise their speed limit in the park. Larry the speed cop.
Saturday we left the park after lunch and went to the swap meet on the South side of Yuma. We had already been to the other two big swap meets in town. We spent several hours there wandering around, but only ended up buying a couple small things, including some tools for geocaching. After shopping we decided to stop on the way home and pick up a pizza since Yuma has a Roundtable Pizza store, our favorite national chain. We also picked up one geocache which was near the pizza place. We went back to the coach, had some pizza, and then went down to the clubhouse in the evening for some more Texas Hold’em. I had another tough night, losing my five bucks in the two hours. Actually, I was two hands short of the end, but didn’t want to buy more chips for just a couple of hands. Bummer! Jackie did alright, only a couple bucks down.
Sunday, November 28th, we didn’t do much until late afternoon when we went over to visit our friends Doug and Linda Stoudt, who had just come into Pilot Knob yesterday. We first met Doug and Linda on our Alaska trip back in 2009. They were part of the Fantasy RV Tours staff for our caravan and were the “tail gunners”, the staff who leave last on each day to ensure no one gets left behind. We have crossed paths with them a couple of times since the caravan and enjoy spending time with them. They are going to be here at Pilot Knob for about six weeks as the representatives for Fantasy RV Tours. We went over to their coach, which is the same model as ours, just a year newer, about 4:00 p.m. for cocktails and conversation. Linda had gastric bypass surgery this past year and lost a lot of weight - she really looked slim, and completely different.
After an hour or so of catching up the four of us drove over to the nearby Quechuan Casino for dinner. They have a great buffet there. Jackie and I ate way too much, but I got my money’s worth! We then went back to the RV park and headed over to the clubhouse for some more Texas Hold’em. Doug and Linda were tired and didn’t want to play, so they just went back to their coach. For the first time at this RV park we didn’t lose our shirts at poker. Between the two of us we lost sixty-five cents over a two hour period. At one time we were both up a couple of bucks. Finally had some good hands to play.
Monday, November 29th we left the coach early, about 8:30 a.m., and went back down to Algodones, Mexico, so Jackie could get her final crowns put in. She was in there for about an hour and the new crowns on her front teeth look great. Afterwards we shopped for a little while, then headed back across the border. This time we had no wait to get back into the U.S. When we got back to the coach I did some preparation for our departure from Pilot Knob tomorrow. About 4:30 Doug and Linda came over to our coach for dinner. We had cocktails first and chatted for a while and then had one of Jackie’s great chili rellenos casseroles. After dinner we sat around and talked until they left about 8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, November 30th we left Pilot Knob about 10:00 a.m. and drove West on I-8 towards San Diego, about 170 miles. Although the wind was blowing pretty hard for most of the trip, everything went well and we checked into the Sante Fe RV Resort by early afternoon. We will be here for a week exploring San Diego and visiting with Jackie’s brother, Dennis, who lives here. We have been to this resort several times before. It is very centrally located just off Interstate 5, just North of Mission Bay. Downtown San Diego is only a ten minute drive. After getting set up at the park we rested for the remainder of the day and evening.
Wednesday, December 1st. Happy Hanukkah to our Hebrew friends. Early afternoon Dennis, Jackie’s brother, came over to the coach to visit. Although they talk frequently, we had not seen Dennis since April at Jackie’s mom’s memorial celebration. We had a nice visit and caught up on a lot of family and friends stuff. Dennis left about 6:00 p.m. and we just relaxed the rest of the night.
Thursday we left the coach mid-morning and drove to a nearby Walmart. Jackie is in the Medicare open enrollment period and is considering changing her prescription drug program. Walmart is advertising that they have teamed up with Humana insurance to offer a relatively inexpensive program for prescriptions. Problem is, the information on the web site and the literature is confusing and doesn’t answer all of her questions. The ads also state that Humana representatives are in “selected” Walmart stores for in-person consultation. While in the Yuma area the only representative was in a store 25 miles from our park, and only available in the morning, so we were not able to get there. When we got to San Diego Jackie contacted the closest Walmart and learned that the representative was supposed to be there from 9:00 to 1:00 on Thursdays, among other times, so we headed over there. When we got there we found the booth, but no person. Bummer. There were some business cards there so Jackie called and left a voice mail for the representative.
Following our Walmart experience we drove around for a while looking for a lunch place. We ended up at Hob Nob Hill, a restaurant near the retirement home where Jackie’s mother lived for a number of years. It is up on the hill East of the airport, between the harbor and Balboa Park. We have been to this place a number of times and the food is always great. Although it is a little more expensive than the average lunch place, you get a lot of food. It also happens to be one of the “Triple D” places that we like to frequent, restaurants that have been featured on the Food Channel’s “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” show. We were actually familiar with, and had eaten at, this place before we started watching Triple D.
After lunch we met Jackie’s brother at the Whole Foods grocery store in the Hillcrest area of San Diego. Dennis is a vegetarian so Whole Foods, which is a national chain, is one of his favorite places to shop. We had told Dennis the day before that we would take him out for a little geocaching to let him know what the hobby is all about. I had mapped out a few caches right in the Hillcrest area. Wouldn’t you know it, the first one we went to was a DNF! We couldn’t figure out how to get where the GPS was telling us the cache was supposed to be. After that we were able to find four caches, which was enough to let Dennis know how we did it. We then dropped Dennis off and did a quick shopping trip at Costco before heading home for the rest of the evening.
Friday, December 3rd, we hit the road after lunch for some local geocaching. We were able to log ten finds in a couple of hours before heading back home. All of the caches we found were within a few miles of our RV park, despite the fact that we have cached in this area a couple times over the past couple of year. The biggest problem was finding parking at a lot of the caches in residential areas. San Diego has major parking issues in some areas of town. We noticed it yesterday in the Hillcrest area when we were caching with Dennis. Miles of residential streets just lined with cars and no open spaces.
Saturday we spent the early part of the day at the coach relaxing. Late in the afternoon we drove to Lemon Grove, a suburb of San Diego, East of downtown, to a party at the house where Jackie’s brother Dennis lives. Dennis, who is single, rents a room in a home owned by a lady named Helen, who Dennis had described as delightful, if slightly eccentric. We arrived and found a house in an older neighborhood that, although not appearing to be isolated, was on a large wooded lot that gave one a sense of isolation once you entered the yard. The front yard was configured as a large patio area and the house appeared to have been added on to a number of times. There were about a dozen other guests at the party when we arrived, most of them in the large living room dancing, or watching dancing and talking. Taking in the entire scene, the house, the decor, and the people present, the effect was distinctly Bohemian. Dennis had told us that Helen was a dancer and many of her friends were also dancers at the various dance clubs around San Diego. The people who were on the dance floor when we arrived were certainly excellent dancers.
Dennis showed us around the house, including his very large, comfortable bedroom. He certainly has everything he would need in his living area. Since he is a vegetarian with a very strict dietary regimen, he says he rarely uses the kitchen facilities at the house. We wandered around the party, meeting the other guests and chatting. We very much enjoyed the atmosphere and enjoyed watching the dancers. At one point one of the guests, who had told us he was 70 and had been dancing all his life, did a routine from the musical “Chicago” with one of the other older ladies and it was spectacular. I found myself thoroughly enjoying sitting in this quirky, eclectic old house, surrounded by a group of folks who were somewhat quirky and eclectic in dress and lifestyle. At one point I told Jackie that I felt as if I had drifted into a Federico Fellini movie, and that I found the whole experience entertaining and interesting. At one point later in the evening I even found myself dancing to a 40's swing tune with our hostess Helen. We stayed until about 8:00 p.m. and left when the party broke up. We had a wonderful time, enjoyed seeing where Dennis lived and meeting some of his friends and acquaintances.
Sunday, December 5th we left the park late morning and went down to the weekend swap meet near the sports arena. This part of San Diego is adjacent to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot where I spent the longest 13 weeks of my life back in 1966 and driving along the road, looking into the base, never fails to bring back memories. The swap meet was in the parking lot of the arena and it was huge. About half and half between new stuff and old junk. I bought a couple of little things, a hat and a new wallet, but most of the stuff was the same crap they sell at the swap meets in Yuma. While we were walking around Dennis joined us for a little while. He quickly tired of the shopping experience and left while we finished the aisles.
When we parked we had noticed a place called “Phil’s BBQ” in the parking lot next to the swap meet area, and while shopping we had been smelling this great BBQ. When we were done shopping we decided to head over and try Phil’s. We found a huge line, going out the door and almost around the building. We have never been here, but the window was covered with stickers from various “City Best” type contests showing that they had a good rep. Once we got in we ordered full dinners which would serve as lunch and dinner for us. I had the beef ribs and Jackie had the pork ribs. Both were excellent - they deserved the awards. The portions were huge, including the onion rings and fries. We ate our fill and took enough out in containers to serve as a full meal at a later time. We can highly recommend Phil’s BBQ on Sports Arena Drive in San Diego.
After our great lunch we did a little caching right in the same area. It was getting kind of late in the afternoon by the time we started, so we only got five finds, along with one DNF. Still had a good time though and increased our numbers. We are within twenty finds of breaking the two thousand finds mark. Once we were through caching we headed back to the coach for the rest of the day. Monday was a stay at home day. Dennis came over late in the afternoon for a last visit before we leave San Diego. After Dennis left I did a few chores in preparation for tomorrow’s departure.
Tuesday, December 7th - a day that shall live in infamy. Pearl Harbor day, well before my time, but still a date most every American remembers. We left San Diego about 10:00 for the 140 mile drive Northeast to Desert Hot Springs, California. The drive was uneventful and we arrived at the Western Horizons park, Desert Pools, about 12:45. We got checked into a nice spot right near the recreation center and I spent the next few hours getting everything set up for our two week stay. We are now pretty much “home” in as much as we are only 25 miles from where we lived before we bought the coach and left to travel full time. We are looking forward to visiting all our friends in the Coachella Valley. We will be here at Desert Pools for two weeks and then another four weeks at Indian Waters in Indio, only a few blocks from our old house.
With our arrival here I will close this episode. I will publish again sometime just before the holidays. Until then, don’t worry, be happy!
Wednesday, November 17th we got up early and headed down to Algodones, Mexico for our dentist appointments. Algodones is only about 15 minutes from Pilot Knob where we are staying and is probably the only place in Mexico right now where I would feel safe. It is almost exclusively a medical community with dentists and eye doctors and 95% of the tourists are seniors down there getting some kind of medical procedure. I just needed my teeth cleaned, but Jackie has to have some veneers replaced on her front teeth. You may remember she broke one a couple months ago when we in Fallon, Nevada. She had the veneers put on by her dentist in Palm Desert about 9 years ago and they are all cracking and failing. We were a little surprised to find that the bill for replacing all the crowns and bridge work is over $2,000. Oh well, it needs to be done, and it would be three or more times that amount at a dentist in the U.S. After our dental visit we had a nice lunch at one of the local Mexican restaurants, then headed back into the U.S. and home. The line getting back into the States was only about 20 minutes today. We have waited for as long as two hours in visits past. We will have to go down there at least three more times in the next two weeks to get all Jackie’s work done.
Thursday, November 18th, we went into Yuma after lunch to take care of some errands. Our first stop was the local Social Security office so Jackie could file for part of her mother’s death benefit. Jackie was not even aware there was a benefit until she got a call from Dennis, her brother, a few days ago. It is not much, just under $300, but it’s still a little unexpected cash, which is always helpful. After that we headed for a Walmart so Jackie could see if there was a Humana insurance representative on site to talk to about the new Medicare prescription plan that Humana and Walmart are offering. Jackie has a Humana plan now, but with the new Obamacare the premiums are going up and the benefits are going down. She wanted to look into the new plan at Walmart to see if she could save money. The Walmart close to the Social Security office did not have a rep. We got the phone numbers for the other two stores in Yuma and found that there is a rep at the store out East of town, but he (or she) is only there in the mornings. We will have to catch them another day.
We then headed over to the Arizona Market Place, a large outdoor swap meet, to walk around for a couple hours. At 4:00 p.m. they closed the Market Place and we headed over to the Foothills area of Yuma, on the far East end of the valley, to go to dinner at our friends John and Rita Ham. They are also full time motorhome travelers with a Monaco coach, but they have a very nice RV lot out in the Foothills area, where they spend the winters. The lot has a big casita on it and a very nice patio. We met John and Rita through our associations with FMCA and the Monaco International Chapter. They are also big geocachers, so we have a lot in common with them. They had some “house guests”, Gary and Shirley, who had their motorhome parked on the Ham’s lot. Their lot has two full hookup areas for motorhomes. We had met Gary and Shirley last year at a party at the Ham’s house. The dinner was a selection of sausages, all made from the meat of an elk that Gary had bagged this past year. The dinner was very nice and we had a great time visiting with our friends. We also got a look at John and Rita’s brand new Monaco Dynasty coach. It was VERY nice. We left the Ham’s about 8:00 p.m. for the 20 mile drive back West to Pilot Knob.
Friday, November 19th we were up early and out of the coach by 8:45 a.m. Jackie was headed for Algodones to start her dental work. They had told us that this first appointment was going to run at least three hours, so I just drove her to the border crossing and dropped her off. I would come back later to get her. I went back to the coach and did some minor repairs and chores. About noon I drove back down, parked the car, and crossed the border to pick her up. She got done about 12:30 and we crossed back over into the U.S. and went home so she could rest for the day. They had to work on eight of her teeth, preparing them for new crowns, and fitting her with temporary crowns. She was quite sore and the Novocain made her a little dizzy, so we just hung around the coach for the rest of the day.
Saturday Jackie woke up feeling pretty well considering what they did to her mouth the day before. After lunch we headed over to the Arizona Market Place again to finish what we started on Thursday. We got done early there because it was not as big as it was last year. Since we had time, we went to the new indoor swap meet which is inside of what used to be the Mervyn’s store in the old shopping mall area on 32nd street. It was a nice mall, but the prices were very high. There were no bargains to be had that we could see. They must charge the vendors quite a bit for the ambiance of an indoor venue. In between the two swap meets we stopped and did one geocache near the Yuma County fairgrounds. We had sort of looked for this one on Thursday when Jackie saw it on her phone geocaching app, but we didn’t find it. John and Rita gave us a hint when we were there Thursday night, so we went and looked again and found it. Yea! Sunday was a relaxation day since Jackie’s mouth was a little sore from all the work.
Monday, November 22nd, we went into Yuma for lunch with our friend’s Charlie and Sharon Anderson. We met them several years ago at a Monaco International rally and have crossed paths with them many times over the years. They are from Illinois and still have a farm back there that their kids run, however, they have a home here in Yuma too where they spend their winters. We met them at Chretins, a Mexican restaurant that used to be top notch when it was in an old building down in the barrio in South Yuma. A couple years ago they built a new place up near the new shopping just off of the freeway and the quality of the food starting going downhill. Today we found that they had changed the menu again. They don’t have any lunch menu or specials, except for a buffet, and they don’t have any Mexican combo meals (the staple of every Mexican restaurant) on the menu. They used to have the best red chilli I every ate. Now it is not even on the menu. This may be the last time we eat there and I will no longer recommend it to anyone. And to think I even bought their tee shirt!
After lunch we went out and did some geocaching. We were able to find six caches in a couple of hours. One of the caches was one that we had to DNF last December when we couldn’t find it. Today we found it! Yea! We hate DNF’s and really enjoy it when we are able to “fix” one. After caching we headed home for the rest of the day.
Tuesday, November 23rd, we once again went out after lunch to do some geocaching. We concentrated on a couple of series sets located in the desert, just South of I-8 in the Eastern part of the valley. Series caches are groups of caches with a similar theme, placed by a single cacher, and usually in a specific area. We had a total of about 15 caches from two different cachers, all within a one square mile area of desert. Because they were all fairly close together, and relatively easy to find, we were able to do 17 caches in a couple of hours. The desert area we were in was mostly sand with some creosote bushes scattered around. The caches were all hidden under the bushes because there really wasn’t anywhere else to hide them. The sand ranged from pretty hard to very soft, and the entire area was riddled with ground squirrel or prairie dog, or whatever the local desert rodent is, holes and dens. At one point we were walking across the desert to a cache and kept falling into collapsing dens. Once Jackie put both feet through the surface and I thought she was going to disappear into the ground. Reminded me of the old campy sci fi movie, “Tremors” where the giant worms were digging around the desert chasing people. After caching we did some quick shopping and then headed home.
Wednesday, November 24th we headed back into Algodones, Mexico before lunch for another of Jackie’s dental appointments. Today’s work was checking the fit of the new crowns before they finished them by putting on the porcelin covering. She was only in the office for about an hour this time. After the dental work we walked around Algodones for a little while, then headed back to the coach by early afternoon, where we spent the rest of the day.
Thursday, November 25th, Happy Thanksgiving! About 2:00 p.m. we headed over to the clubhouse here at Pilot Knob RV Resort for dinner. The park provided the basics, Turkey, dressing, potatoes, and veggies for $7.50 a person, and then each couple had to provide either a salad or dessert. Jackie made some Wasabi coleslaw, which was really good. We sat with some very nice folks we had never met before, who were from Minnesota. The meal was excellent and despite no seconds I went away satisfied. Later on that evening we went back to the clubhouse to play some Texas Hold’em. We have not played at this park before, but it was a very similar format - $5 buy-in for nickle chips. They played for three hours and we didn’t do too well, losing all but $2.25 of our $10 stake. We did have fun though, it was a good group.
Friday, November 26th - Black Friday. We originally were going to avoid the stores and the insanity, but Jackie got an email from Penny’s and found that they had a pair of boots on sale that she wanted. After lunch we drove into Yuma and the mall. What a madhouse! Way too many people in the parking lot and the stores. We only went to Penny’s and Best Buy, that was enough for me. We then headed back to the RV park and did our laundry while the rest of the world shopped. The picture is an old golf cart at the RV park that they use to advertise their speed limit in the park. Larry the speed cop.
Saturday we left the park after lunch and went to the swap meet on the South side of Yuma. We had already been to the other two big swap meets in town. We spent several hours there wandering around, but only ended up buying a couple small things, including some tools for geocaching. After shopping we decided to stop on the way home and pick up a pizza since Yuma has a Roundtable Pizza store, our favorite national chain. We also picked up one geocache which was near the pizza place. We went back to the coach, had some pizza, and then went down to the clubhouse in the evening for some more Texas Hold’em. I had another tough night, losing my five bucks in the two hours. Actually, I was two hands short of the end, but didn’t want to buy more chips for just a couple of hands. Bummer! Jackie did alright, only a couple bucks down.
Sunday, November 28th, we didn’t do much until late afternoon when we went over to visit our friends Doug and Linda Stoudt, who had just come into Pilot Knob yesterday. We first met Doug and Linda on our Alaska trip back in 2009. They were part of the Fantasy RV Tours staff for our caravan and were the “tail gunners”, the staff who leave last on each day to ensure no one gets left behind. We have crossed paths with them a couple of times since the caravan and enjoy spending time with them. They are going to be here at Pilot Knob for about six weeks as the representatives for Fantasy RV Tours. We went over to their coach, which is the same model as ours, just a year newer, about 4:00 p.m. for cocktails and conversation. Linda had gastric bypass surgery this past year and lost a lot of weight - she really looked slim, and completely different.
After an hour or so of catching up the four of us drove over to the nearby Quechuan Casino for dinner. They have a great buffet there. Jackie and I ate way too much, but I got my money’s worth! We then went back to the RV park and headed over to the clubhouse for some more Texas Hold’em. Doug and Linda were tired and didn’t want to play, so they just went back to their coach. For the first time at this RV park we didn’t lose our shirts at poker. Between the two of us we lost sixty-five cents over a two hour period. At one time we were both up a couple of bucks. Finally had some good hands to play.
Monday, November 29th we left the coach early, about 8:30 a.m., and went back down to Algodones, Mexico, so Jackie could get her final crowns put in. She was in there for about an hour and the new crowns on her front teeth look great. Afterwards we shopped for a little while, then headed back across the border. This time we had no wait to get back into the U.S. When we got back to the coach I did some preparation for our departure from Pilot Knob tomorrow. About 4:30 Doug and Linda came over to our coach for dinner. We had cocktails first and chatted for a while and then had one of Jackie’s great chili rellenos casseroles. After dinner we sat around and talked until they left about 8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, November 30th we left Pilot Knob about 10:00 a.m. and drove West on I-8 towards San Diego, about 170 miles. Although the wind was blowing pretty hard for most of the trip, everything went well and we checked into the Sante Fe RV Resort by early afternoon. We will be here for a week exploring San Diego and visiting with Jackie’s brother, Dennis, who lives here. We have been to this resort several times before. It is very centrally located just off Interstate 5, just North of Mission Bay. Downtown San Diego is only a ten minute drive. After getting set up at the park we rested for the remainder of the day and evening.
Wednesday, December 1st. Happy Hanukkah to our Hebrew friends. Early afternoon Dennis, Jackie’s brother, came over to the coach to visit. Although they talk frequently, we had not seen Dennis since April at Jackie’s mom’s memorial celebration. We had a nice visit and caught up on a lot of family and friends stuff. Dennis left about 6:00 p.m. and we just relaxed the rest of the night.
Thursday we left the coach mid-morning and drove to a nearby Walmart. Jackie is in the Medicare open enrollment period and is considering changing her prescription drug program. Walmart is advertising that they have teamed up with Humana insurance to offer a relatively inexpensive program for prescriptions. Problem is, the information on the web site and the literature is confusing and doesn’t answer all of her questions. The ads also state that Humana representatives are in “selected” Walmart stores for in-person consultation. While in the Yuma area the only representative was in a store 25 miles from our park, and only available in the morning, so we were not able to get there. When we got to San Diego Jackie contacted the closest Walmart and learned that the representative was supposed to be there from 9:00 to 1:00 on Thursdays, among other times, so we headed over there. When we got there we found the booth, but no person. Bummer. There were some business cards there so Jackie called and left a voice mail for the representative.
Following our Walmart experience we drove around for a while looking for a lunch place. We ended up at Hob Nob Hill, a restaurant near the retirement home where Jackie’s mother lived for a number of years. It is up on the hill East of the airport, between the harbor and Balboa Park. We have been to this place a number of times and the food is always great. Although it is a little more expensive than the average lunch place, you get a lot of food. It also happens to be one of the “Triple D” places that we like to frequent, restaurants that have been featured on the Food Channel’s “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” show. We were actually familiar with, and had eaten at, this place before we started watching Triple D.
After lunch we met Jackie’s brother at the Whole Foods grocery store in the Hillcrest area of San Diego. Dennis is a vegetarian so Whole Foods, which is a national chain, is one of his favorite places to shop. We had told Dennis the day before that we would take him out for a little geocaching to let him know what the hobby is all about. I had mapped out a few caches right in the Hillcrest area. Wouldn’t you know it, the first one we went to was a DNF! We couldn’t figure out how to get where the GPS was telling us the cache was supposed to be. After that we were able to find four caches, which was enough to let Dennis know how we did it. We then dropped Dennis off and did a quick shopping trip at Costco before heading home for the rest of the evening.
Friday, December 3rd, we hit the road after lunch for some local geocaching. We were able to log ten finds in a couple of hours before heading back home. All of the caches we found were within a few miles of our RV park, despite the fact that we have cached in this area a couple times over the past couple of year. The biggest problem was finding parking at a lot of the caches in residential areas. San Diego has major parking issues in some areas of town. We noticed it yesterday in the Hillcrest area when we were caching with Dennis. Miles of residential streets just lined with cars and no open spaces.
Saturday we spent the early part of the day at the coach relaxing. Late in the afternoon we drove to Lemon Grove, a suburb of San Diego, East of downtown, to a party at the house where Jackie’s brother Dennis lives. Dennis, who is single, rents a room in a home owned by a lady named Helen, who Dennis had described as delightful, if slightly eccentric. We arrived and found a house in an older neighborhood that, although not appearing to be isolated, was on a large wooded lot that gave one a sense of isolation once you entered the yard. The front yard was configured as a large patio area and the house appeared to have been added on to a number of times. There were about a dozen other guests at the party when we arrived, most of them in the large living room dancing, or watching dancing and talking. Taking in the entire scene, the house, the decor, and the people present, the effect was distinctly Bohemian. Dennis had told us that Helen was a dancer and many of her friends were also dancers at the various dance clubs around San Diego. The people who were on the dance floor when we arrived were certainly excellent dancers.
Dennis showed us around the house, including his very large, comfortable bedroom. He certainly has everything he would need in his living area. Since he is a vegetarian with a very strict dietary regimen, he says he rarely uses the kitchen facilities at the house. We wandered around the party, meeting the other guests and chatting. We very much enjoyed the atmosphere and enjoyed watching the dancers. At one point one of the guests, who had told us he was 70 and had been dancing all his life, did a routine from the musical “Chicago” with one of the other older ladies and it was spectacular. I found myself thoroughly enjoying sitting in this quirky, eclectic old house, surrounded by a group of folks who were somewhat quirky and eclectic in dress and lifestyle. At one point I told Jackie that I felt as if I had drifted into a Federico Fellini movie, and that I found the whole experience entertaining and interesting. At one point later in the evening I even found myself dancing to a 40's swing tune with our hostess Helen. We stayed until about 8:00 p.m. and left when the party broke up. We had a wonderful time, enjoyed seeing where Dennis lived and meeting some of his friends and acquaintances.
Sunday, December 5th we left the park late morning and went down to the weekend swap meet near the sports arena. This part of San Diego is adjacent to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot where I spent the longest 13 weeks of my life back in 1966 and driving along the road, looking into the base, never fails to bring back memories. The swap meet was in the parking lot of the arena and it was huge. About half and half between new stuff and old junk. I bought a couple of little things, a hat and a new wallet, but most of the stuff was the same crap they sell at the swap meets in Yuma. While we were walking around Dennis joined us for a little while. He quickly tired of the shopping experience and left while we finished the aisles.
When we parked we had noticed a place called “Phil’s BBQ” in the parking lot next to the swap meet area, and while shopping we had been smelling this great BBQ. When we were done shopping we decided to head over and try Phil’s. We found a huge line, going out the door and almost around the building. We have never been here, but the window was covered with stickers from various “City Best” type contests showing that they had a good rep. Once we got in we ordered full dinners which would serve as lunch and dinner for us. I had the beef ribs and Jackie had the pork ribs. Both were excellent - they deserved the awards. The portions were huge, including the onion rings and fries. We ate our fill and took enough out in containers to serve as a full meal at a later time. We can highly recommend Phil’s BBQ on Sports Arena Drive in San Diego.
After our great lunch we did a little caching right in the same area. It was getting kind of late in the afternoon by the time we started, so we only got five finds, along with one DNF. Still had a good time though and increased our numbers. We are within twenty finds of breaking the two thousand finds mark. Once we were through caching we headed back to the coach for the rest of the day. Monday was a stay at home day. Dennis came over late in the afternoon for a last visit before we leave San Diego. After Dennis left I did a few chores in preparation for tomorrow’s departure.
Tuesday, December 7th - a day that shall live in infamy. Pearl Harbor day, well before my time, but still a date most every American remembers. We left San Diego about 10:00 for the 140 mile drive Northeast to Desert Hot Springs, California. The drive was uneventful and we arrived at the Western Horizons park, Desert Pools, about 12:45. We got checked into a nice spot right near the recreation center and I spent the next few hours getting everything set up for our two week stay. We are now pretty much “home” in as much as we are only 25 miles from where we lived before we bought the coach and left to travel full time. We are looking forward to visiting all our friends in the Coachella Valley. We will be here at Desert Pools for two weeks and then another four weeks at Indian Waters in Indio, only a few blocks from our old house.
With our arrival here I will close this episode. I will publish again sometime just before the holidays. Until then, don’t worry, be happy!
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
The Center of Arizona
Hello again friends, welcome back to our travels. Our last episode concluded with our arrival on Tuesday, November 2nd at the Western Horizons park in Casa Grande, Arizona. Since we are going to be at this park for two weeks, we had a lot of stuff to set up and it took most of the afternoon. As a result, we stayed at the coach for the entire day.
Wednesday, November 3rd, we went out after lunch to the movies. This time we went to see “Social Network”, the movie that chronicles the start of Facebook. Since I just recently started using Facebook myself, I thought this would be an interesting movie. The movie was quite good, with few well known stars, and told a very interesting story of a super techno-nerd with zero social skills dealing with the real world of money, power and the legal system. After the movie we stopped by the local Best Buy to look at computers. My desktop system, the one in my office in the back of the coach, has died and I am looking to get a replacement. Right now I am using our old Dell laptop that we normally use for navigation and systems monitoring when driving the coach. After a little window shopping we headed back to the coach for the rest of the day.
Thursday we met our friends Ken and Bonnie Woepke for lunch at a place in Casa Grande called Tom’s BBQ. Ken and Bonnie are also full timers and we frequently cross paths with them in the winters when we are both in the Southwest part of the country. We had last seen Ken up in Pahrump back in September, but Bonnie had gone out of town, so we really didn’t have much of a visit. Last year they bought into a lot at the Escapee’s co-op park here in Casa Grande, so they will be spending a lot more time here. The BBQ was pretty good and the visit was great. We had a good time catching up and talking about our travel adventures. We also talked a bit about our friends Bob and Bette Thomas. Regular readers may recall that Bob and Bette were the Secretary and Treasurer of the 100%ers Chapter of FMCA, of which I was the President. We had last seen Bob and Bette at the Western Horizons park in Pahrump as well. Shortly after we left Pahrump Bette had a stroke and was in the hospital for several weeks. She is now doing better and is in a rehab facility in Pahrump. After lunch we went back to the RV park and did our laundry and spent the rest of the day at the coach.
Friday we decided to have a stay at home day. Got a few small chores done around the coach and just relaxed for the most part. I did try to line up a mobile repair service to come out and fix our slide topper awnings. The thread on the edges has deteriorated and they need to be taken down and resewn. One of the living room toppers has actually come loose from the coach and I fear it may tear worse than it already is unless I get it fixed soon. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get anyone that had the time and the resources to come out before we left here. I’ll have to try again in Yuma when we get there.
Saturday, November 6th we left the coach about 10:30 a.m. and headed North on I-10 to the Southeastern part of the Valley of the Sun, as the metropolitan Phoenix area is known, to do some geocaching. We were headed to the cities of Chandler and Gilbert. These two cities were among the top ten fastest growing cities in the nation for several years back in the nineties. I recall from back in my Sheriff’s Office days in the 70's when both towns were about two square miles in size and basically farming communities. Now they are huge bedroom communities for the Phoenix area. Chandler is only about 30 miles North of Casa Grande, so it was an easy drive.
Our first stop was lunch at Joe’s Farm Grill in Gilbert, Arizona. This restaurant was featured on an episode of the Food Network’s “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” with Guy Fieri. Regular readers will remember that we are big fans of that show and try to find “Triple D” places to eat as we travel around the country. Joe’s is an
interesting place. The restaurant is the family’s 1960's vintage home which was converted into a restaurant that has a distinctly 60's drive-in look. One must go up to a window and order the food, then pick up the order at another window. There is quite a bit of indoor seating, but the real charm of the place is the large grass picnic area in the back. It is shaded with huge old Tamarisk trees with picnic tables scattered about. We ate out there because the weather was perfect. Joe’s has a large, eclectic menu, and they use a lot of ingredients grown right on the family’s own farm. I had the Ahi Tuna sandwich, which was phenomenal.
Jackie had their special grilled pizza, which she said was equally good. Since it had bleu cheese on it, which I despise, I didn’t try it. We also had the onion rings that Fieri had raved about and found them to be excellent as well. All in all, an excellent place to eat and enjoy a casual lunch or dinner, especially when the weather is nice. We would highly recommend this place, located at 3000 East Ray Road, Gilbert, Arizona. Here is a link to their web site. www.joesfarmgrill.com. Check it out.
After lunch we did some geocaching in the area, mostly in the city of Chandler. One of the caches required us to visit the Chandler City Museum which we found to be very interesting. The city can trace its roots back to the Goodyear Tire and Rubber company in the 1920's which had thousands of acres of cotton on company farms. The company also had thousands of acres of cotton farms on the far Western part of the Valley which was responsible for the present town of Goodyear, Arizona. Goodyear Tire required the cotton for their tires in order to supply the emerging automobile market and found Arizona to be the ideal place to grow cotton. At that time cotton was used in the internal belts of an auto tire. One can still find remnants of the old company buildings and labor camps around the far Western valley. Chandler has expanded so much it has obliterated most of its farming heritage.
During our caching in the area we managed to score a dozen finds. After caching we headed over to the local Costco to stock up on our Absolute vodka. Hard to find a cheaper place to buy booze. We then headed back to Casa Grande for the rest of the day.
Sunday, November 7th, we got ready early to prepare for the arrival of my brother Ken and his wife Susan. Ken and Susan live in Goodyear, Arizona, which is only about a 90 minute drive from Casa Grande. We had talked to them earlier in the week about meeting them somewhere, and they said they would like to drive down to Casa Grande to see us and do some caching. We had introduced them to geocaching less than a year ago and they have become big fans of the hobby. They just went over 1,000 finds, a great first year! We have been doing this two and a half years and are just now approaching the 2,000 find mark. If Ken and Susan keep up at their current pace they will be passing us soon.
They arrived at the coach at 10:00 a.m. and after some catch-up conversation we headed out to start our caching day. Because we have been to Casa Grande several times since we started caching, we have pretty much exhausted the caches right around town. However, Ken and Susan had never been here, so we worked off of their list. This meant that we were going to some caches that we had already visited. There were a number of them where I recognized the name of the cache, and even remembered the area, but I didn’t remember exactly where the cache was or what it looked like. There were also a couple that I remembered clearly, so I let Ken and Susan take the lead in finding those.
After finding a couple of caches we stopped for lunch at one of our favorite Mexican restaurants, Eva’s Cantina. We make an effort to eat there at least once each time we visit Casa Grande. It is located on Pinal Road, just a mile or so South of the
Western Horizons park. Ken and Susan also loved the food and we all overate a little. After lunch we went back out to cache and didn’t quit until just after 4:00 p.m. Our little four person team managed to get 20 finds for the day, including two that were rated as a 4.0 difficulty, which is pretty hard. The max difficulty is 5.0 and we normally don’t look for many over a 2.0 rating. The 20 finds was just one short of our all time daily record of 21 and the best part is we had no DNF’s, caches we looked for but couldn’t find. Yippee!!
After caching we came back to the coach and sat around and talked until about 7:30 when Ken and Susan left to head for home. We had suggested they spend the night, but they had stuff to do on Monday and wanted to get an early start. We had a wonderful day with Ken and Susan. We enjoy their company and love to have them visit. We talked about having them come over later this winter when we are in the Indio area.
Monday, November 8th, we decided to just stay home for the day. I got some little maintenance and repair tasks done, but we mostly just chilled. Tuesday morning we went over to Palm Valley RV Resort for their crafts fair. Palm Valley is a very nice resort where we stayed a few years back for a month. We had gotten a great deal on a coupon from one of the rallies we attended that year that let us stay there for $200 for the month, about 25% of the normal rate. We did some shopping there, bought some new sheets for the bed and a couple of little items. After the crafts fair we went to Denny’s for lunch and then did our grocery shopping at Walmart and Frys. That was the extent of our activities for the day. Tuesday we just stayed in for the whole day.
Wednesday, November 10th - Happy 235th Birthday United States Marine Corps! We went out after lunch to do some local geocaching. We started our looking at a nice local desert park, North Mountain Park, about five miles Northeast of Casa Grande. The park has great desert views, good gravel roads and nice ramadas, but it is kind of remote. There was only one other vehicle in the park when we were there. There was a cluster of caches in the park, so our first six caches were all inside the park boundaries. We then went South and found a couple, including one in the parking lot of the outlet mall on I-10. This mall is just about closed up, there were only about eight stores still open, and most of those were having closing sales. Once big new shopping mall a mile North was opened, the outlet mall started to go under. We hit a couple of the stores that were still open, but didn’t get anything.
After the outlet mall we went up to the Best Buy store to check and see if they had any computers on sale, or any computers to match the value of the one that I had seen in Walmart on Monday. They did not, so we then went over to Walmart and bought the Acer computer they had. It is a great computer with an Intel processor, 6 GB of RAM, a huge 1 TB hard drive and built in WiFi. I was all excited to get home and start getting it set up. I spent the rest of the day, and most of the evening, getting the computer set up and installing all my software. New computer - Yea!
Thursday, November 11th - Veteran’s Day - thanks to all who served! We went out for lunch to Eva’s Mexican restaurant again, this time to meet Ken and Bonnie Woepke. We had a very nice lunch and a couple hours of nice conversation. We probably won’t cross paths with Ken and Bonnie again until January in Quartzsite. After lunch we went back to the coach so I could finish work on my new computer.
Friday we went out after lunch to the movies. We saw “Unstoppable” with Denzel Washington. This was opening day for this film and it has been a while since we saw a movie on it’s opening day. This was a great action movie about a runaway freight train in Pennsylvania. It was based on a true story from back in 2001. I would give this movie four out of five stars. The biggest filming flaw was that although the plot had the runaway traveling at 60 to 70 MPH, in some of the scenes it appeared to be moving more like 20 MPH. After the movie we went to Penny’s in the same mall, but didn’t end up getting anything. We spent the rest of the evening at the coach.
Saturday, November 13th we left after lunch and drove up to Chandler again to do some more caching. For those places that we visit fairly often, like Casa Grande, we have to venture further afield to find caches that we haven’t found before. We were able to find seven caches for the afternoon, but horror of horrors - we had not one, but TWO DNF’s! We have not had a cache we couldn’t find for several months, and then in one day we have two. Eek. After caching we made a quick stop at the Chandler Sam’s Club for some things we needed and then headed back to Casa Grande for the rest of the night.
Sunday was a quiet day around the coach. Jackie made up a batch of her wonderful Halibut chowder for Monday. She always likes it to set up for one day before we eat it. Looking forward to it.
Monday, November 15th was a chores day getting ready for our departure from Casa Grande on Tuesday. I spent a couple hours putting stuff away outside and then we went and did our laundry. We had the Halibut chowder for dinner and it was wonderful.
Tuesday, November 16th we left Casa Grande about 9:30 a.m. and headed West on Interstate 8 on a 200 mile journey to Winterhaven, California and the Pilot Knob RV Resort. Regular readers of our travel blog may recall that Winterhaven is jus
t across the state line from Yuma, Arizona. Although we are in California, this little corner of the state stays on Arizona time, which at this time is Mountain Standard time. We are planning on being here for two weeks. During this time we will visit Algadones, Sonora, Mexico to get some dental work done and I need new glasses.
With our arrival in Winterhaven I will close this chapter of the blog. I will publish again in a couple of weeks. Until our next chapter, stay safe and be happy.
Wednesday, November 3rd, we went out after lunch to the movies. This time we went to see “Social Network”, the movie that chronicles the start of Facebook. Since I just recently started using Facebook myself, I thought this would be an interesting movie. The movie was quite good, with few well known stars, and told a very interesting story of a super techno-nerd with zero social skills dealing with the real world of money, power and the legal system. After the movie we stopped by the local Best Buy to look at computers. My desktop system, the one in my office in the back of the coach, has died and I am looking to get a replacement. Right now I am using our old Dell laptop that we normally use for navigation and systems monitoring when driving the coach. After a little window shopping we headed back to the coach for the rest of the day.
Thursday we met our friends Ken and Bonnie Woepke for lunch at a place in Casa Grande called Tom’s BBQ. Ken and Bonnie are also full timers and we frequently cross paths with them in the winters when we are both in the Southwest part of the country. We had last seen Ken up in Pahrump back in September, but Bonnie had gone out of town, so we really didn’t have much of a visit. Last year they bought into a lot at the Escapee’s co-op park here in Casa Grande, so they will be spending a lot more time here. The BBQ was pretty good and the visit was great. We had a good time catching up and talking about our travel adventures. We also talked a bit about our friends Bob and Bette Thomas. Regular readers may recall that Bob and Bette were the Secretary and Treasurer of the 100%ers Chapter of FMCA, of which I was the President. We had last seen Bob and Bette at the Western Horizons park in Pahrump as well. Shortly after we left Pahrump Bette had a stroke and was in the hospital for several weeks. She is now doing better and is in a rehab facility in Pahrump. After lunch we went back to the RV park and did our laundry and spent the rest of the day at the coach.
Friday we decided to have a stay at home day. Got a few small chores done around the coach and just relaxed for the most part. I did try to line up a mobile repair service to come out and fix our slide topper awnings. The thread on the edges has deteriorated and they need to be taken down and resewn. One of the living room toppers has actually come loose from the coach and I fear it may tear worse than it already is unless I get it fixed soon. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get anyone that had the time and the resources to come out before we left here. I’ll have to try again in Yuma when we get there.
Saturday, November 6th we left the coach about 10:30 a.m. and headed North on I-10 to the Southeastern part of the Valley of the Sun, as the metropolitan Phoenix area is known, to do some geocaching. We were headed to the cities of Chandler and Gilbert. These two cities were among the top ten fastest growing cities in the nation for several years back in the nineties. I recall from back in my Sheriff’s Office days in the 70's when both towns were about two square miles in size and basically farming communities. Now they are huge bedroom communities for the Phoenix area. Chandler is only about 30 miles North of Casa Grande, so it was an easy drive.
Our first stop was lunch at Joe’s Farm Grill in Gilbert, Arizona. This restaurant was featured on an episode of the Food Network’s “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” with Guy Fieri. Regular readers will remember that we are big fans of that show and try to find “Triple D” places to eat as we travel around the country. Joe’s is an
interesting place. The restaurant is the family’s 1960's vintage home which was converted into a restaurant that has a distinctly 60's drive-in look. One must go up to a window and order the food, then pick up the order at another window. There is quite a bit of indoor seating, but the real charm of the place is the large grass picnic area in the back. It is shaded with huge old Tamarisk trees with picnic tables scattered about. We ate out there because the weather was perfect. Joe’s has a large, eclectic menu, and they use a lot of ingredients grown right on the family’s own farm. I had the Ahi Tuna sandwich, which was phenomenal.
Jackie had their special grilled pizza, which she said was equally good. Since it had bleu cheese on it, which I despise, I didn’t try it. We also had the onion rings that Fieri had raved about and found them to be excellent as well. All in all, an excellent place to eat and enjoy a casual lunch or dinner, especially when the weather is nice. We would highly recommend this place, located at 3000 East Ray Road, Gilbert, Arizona. Here is a link to their web site. www.joesfarmgrill.com. Check it out.
After lunch we did some geocaching in the area, mostly in the city of Chandler. One of the caches required us to visit the Chandler City Museum which we found to be very interesting. The city can trace its roots back to the Goodyear Tire and Rubber company in the 1920's which had thousands of acres of cotton on company farms. The company also had thousands of acres of cotton farms on the far Western part of the Valley which was responsible for the present town of Goodyear, Arizona. Goodyear Tire required the cotton for their tires in order to supply the emerging automobile market and found Arizona to be the ideal place to grow cotton. At that time cotton was used in the internal belts of an auto tire. One can still find remnants of the old company buildings and labor camps around the far Western valley. Chandler has expanded so much it has obliterated most of its farming heritage.
During our caching in the area we managed to score a dozen finds. After caching we headed over to the local Costco to stock up on our Absolute vodka. Hard to find a cheaper place to buy booze. We then headed back to Casa Grande for the rest of the day.
Sunday, November 7th, we got ready early to prepare for the arrival of my brother Ken and his wife Susan. Ken and Susan live in Goodyear, Arizona, which is only about a 90 minute drive from Casa Grande. We had talked to them earlier in the week about meeting them somewhere, and they said they would like to drive down to Casa Grande to see us and do some caching. We had introduced them to geocaching less than a year ago and they have become big fans of the hobby. They just went over 1,000 finds, a great first year! We have been doing this two and a half years and are just now approaching the 2,000 find mark. If Ken and Susan keep up at their current pace they will be passing us soon.
They arrived at the coach at 10:00 a.m. and after some catch-up conversation we headed out to start our caching day. Because we have been to Casa Grande several times since we started caching, we have pretty much exhausted the caches right around town. However, Ken and Susan had never been here, so we worked off of their list. This meant that we were going to some caches that we had already visited. There were a number of them where I recognized the name of the cache, and even remembered the area, but I didn’t remember exactly where the cache was or what it looked like. There were also a couple that I remembered clearly, so I let Ken and Susan take the lead in finding those.
After finding a couple of caches we stopped for lunch at one of our favorite Mexican restaurants, Eva’s Cantina. We make an effort to eat there at least once each time we visit Casa Grande. It is located on Pinal Road, just a mile or so South of the
Western Horizons park. Ken and Susan also loved the food and we all overate a little. After lunch we went back out to cache and didn’t quit until just after 4:00 p.m. Our little four person team managed to get 20 finds for the day, including two that were rated as a 4.0 difficulty, which is pretty hard. The max difficulty is 5.0 and we normally don’t look for many over a 2.0 rating. The 20 finds was just one short of our all time daily record of 21 and the best part is we had no DNF’s, caches we looked for but couldn’t find. Yippee!!
After caching we came back to the coach and sat around and talked until about 7:30 when Ken and Susan left to head for home. We had suggested they spend the night, but they had stuff to do on Monday and wanted to get an early start. We had a wonderful day with Ken and Susan. We enjoy their company and love to have them visit. We talked about having them come over later this winter when we are in the Indio area.
Monday, November 8th, we decided to just stay home for the day. I got some little maintenance and repair tasks done, but we mostly just chilled. Tuesday morning we went over to Palm Valley RV Resort for their crafts fair. Palm Valley is a very nice resort where we stayed a few years back for a month. We had gotten a great deal on a coupon from one of the rallies we attended that year that let us stay there for $200 for the month, about 25% of the normal rate. We did some shopping there, bought some new sheets for the bed and a couple of little items. After the crafts fair we went to Denny’s for lunch and then did our grocery shopping at Walmart and Frys. That was the extent of our activities for the day. Tuesday we just stayed in for the whole day.
Wednesday, November 10th - Happy 235th Birthday United States Marine Corps! We went out after lunch to do some local geocaching. We started our looking at a nice local desert park, North Mountain Park, about five miles Northeast of Casa Grande. The park has great desert views, good gravel roads and nice ramadas, but it is kind of remote. There was only one other vehicle in the park when we were there. There was a cluster of caches in the park, so our first six caches were all inside the park boundaries. We then went South and found a couple, including one in the parking lot of the outlet mall on I-10. This mall is just about closed up, there were only about eight stores still open, and most of those were having closing sales. Once big new shopping mall a mile North was opened, the outlet mall started to go under. We hit a couple of the stores that were still open, but didn’t get anything.
After the outlet mall we went up to the Best Buy store to check and see if they had any computers on sale, or any computers to match the value of the one that I had seen in Walmart on Monday. They did not, so we then went over to Walmart and bought the Acer computer they had. It is a great computer with an Intel processor, 6 GB of RAM, a huge 1 TB hard drive and built in WiFi. I was all excited to get home and start getting it set up. I spent the rest of the day, and most of the evening, getting the computer set up and installing all my software. New computer - Yea!
Thursday, November 11th - Veteran’s Day - thanks to all who served! We went out for lunch to Eva’s Mexican restaurant again, this time to meet Ken and Bonnie Woepke. We had a very nice lunch and a couple hours of nice conversation. We probably won’t cross paths with Ken and Bonnie again until January in Quartzsite. After lunch we went back to the coach so I could finish work on my new computer.
Friday we went out after lunch to the movies. We saw “Unstoppable” with Denzel Washington. This was opening day for this film and it has been a while since we saw a movie on it’s opening day. This was a great action movie about a runaway freight train in Pennsylvania. It was based on a true story from back in 2001. I would give this movie four out of five stars. The biggest filming flaw was that although the plot had the runaway traveling at 60 to 70 MPH, in some of the scenes it appeared to be moving more like 20 MPH. After the movie we went to Penny’s in the same mall, but didn’t end up getting anything. We spent the rest of the evening at the coach.
Saturday, November 13th we left after lunch and drove up to Chandler again to do some more caching. For those places that we visit fairly often, like Casa Grande, we have to venture further afield to find caches that we haven’t found before. We were able to find seven caches for the afternoon, but horror of horrors - we had not one, but TWO DNF’s! We have not had a cache we couldn’t find for several months, and then in one day we have two. Eek. After caching we made a quick stop at the Chandler Sam’s Club for some things we needed and then headed back to Casa Grande for the rest of the night.
Sunday was a quiet day around the coach. Jackie made up a batch of her wonderful Halibut chowder for Monday. She always likes it to set up for one day before we eat it. Looking forward to it.
Monday, November 15th was a chores day getting ready for our departure from Casa Grande on Tuesday. I spent a couple hours putting stuff away outside and then we went and did our laundry. We had the Halibut chowder for dinner and it was wonderful.
Tuesday, November 16th we left Casa Grande about 9:30 a.m. and headed West on Interstate 8 on a 200 mile journey to Winterhaven, California and the Pilot Knob RV Resort. Regular readers of our travel blog may recall that Winterhaven is jus
t across the state line from Yuma, Arizona. Although we are in California, this little corner of the state stays on Arizona time, which at this time is Mountain Standard time. We are planning on being here for two weeks. During this time we will visit Algadones, Sonora, Mexico to get some dental work done and I need new glasses.
With our arrival in Winterhaven I will close this chapter of the blog. I will publish again in a couple of weeks. Until our next chapter, stay safe and be happy.
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
A Week In Tucson, Arizona
Welcome back friends. The last chapter concluded on October 26th, upon our arrival just South of Tucson at the Cactus Country RV Park. Once we got set up we made a quick run into Tucson to Costco for supplies. OK, mostly vodka, but we did buy pretzels and olives too! After that we just stayed in for the rest of the day.
Wednesday, October 27th we were up at 5:00 a.m. and had the coach on the road by 6:40 a.m. headed to the shop in Tucson. As I said in a previous post, I had discovered that we had an exhaust leak on the coach engine and we needed to get it fixed. Our friend Ray Babcock had recommended a diesel shop in Tucson called W. W. Williams so that’s where we took it. We arrived there about 7:30 a.m. and checked in with our service writer, Saul. I have to say that Ray was correct when he told me that Williams had a very nice, clean shop. It was very big, is part of a national system with shops all over the country, and they were very helpful. He did a quick visual confirmation of my diagnosis of a blown exhaust manifold gasket, contacted our extended warranty company, and got the coach into the shop to start work. By 11:00 a.m. they had the manifold off and determined that the manifold itself was warped and also needed to be replaced. We were worried for a while that we would have to wait for parts and end up in a motel for the night. However, the parts guy was able to locate a manifold locally and Saul said we should still be done by the end of the day. Once we knew the parts were available and the warranty company had authorized the repairs, we headed out to get lunch and do some caching.
We had lunch at a place called My Big Fat Greek Restaurant. We had eaten here the last time we were in Tucson in the Spring and enjoyed it very much. Jackie loves Greek food, especially the lamb dishes like the Gyro. She had a Gyro and I had a steak and cheese wrap that was delicious. We can highly recommend this place, which is located on Broadway and Kolb in Tucson. After lunch we made a quick stop at an upholstery shop to drop off one of our window shade screens from the coach. The sun had deteriorated the stitching holding the border trim on the screen and I wanted to get it fixed. They told us it would be a couple hours, so we went caching. We were able to find five in about an hour and a half. Although it was urban caching, several of the caches were in places where it was hard to park and it took us a while to get from cache to cache. We also made a stop at the Tucson Mall to visit Penny’s just to check the sale racks. I ended up with a couple of real bargains in tee shirts and shorts.
We then picked up our repaired screen, which only cost us $15, and headed back to the shop to check on the coach. We got there at 4:00 p.m., which was when Saul told us to come back, and the coach was finished. The total bill was almost $1,000, but they managed to get it done in one day. Yea! Unfortunately, it was after business hours for the warranty company, so we couldn’t get them to pay their portion of the bill. Williams couldn’t let us leave without payment so we had two choices, we could spend the night in their parking lot, where they did have 50 amp electric, or we could write them a check for the full amount of the bill. Fortunately, Saul worked with us again and told us that he would hold the check and the paperwork until the morning when we could come back (in the car this time) and finish the transaction with the warranty company. We will have to pay our $500 deductible and the warranty company will pay Williams the rest. With that we drove the coach back to the RV park and got set up again, this time for the rest of the week.
Thursday, October 28th we had planned to go to a movie after lunch, but we needed to wait for Saul to call to let us know that Good Sam had paid Williams their portion of the bill. Once they got paid we would run by the shop, take our check back and give them a check for our portion of the total and be done. We still hadn’t heard anything by 1:00 so we decided to get in the car and start driving towards the shop, which was 20 miles away on the other side of Tucson. On the way Saul called and told us that Good Sam had called him and said they were way behind on processing claims and he had no idea when they might get ours done. With that we headed for the mall and just spent a couple hours shopping. Just before 4:00 we ran by Williams to see if they had heard anything and they told us that Saul had left on an emergency, but Sam, the night service advisor, told us that he had talked to Good Sam and they wouldn’t get to us until Friday. Oh well, they were still working with us and holding our check, so nothing lost except our plans for the day. We headed back to the coach for the rest of the day.
Friday, October 29th we left the coach after lunch and headed to Williams to settle up. I had called Sam and learned that he had just got off the phone with Good Sam and they had received their payment. We got to Williams, traded checks and we were finally finished. I will say that W.W. Williams is a great place to get work done if you have a diesel coach and need engine or transmission work done. Highly recommended! After settling up with Sam we went out and did some more geocaching in Northwest Tucson. We found five before we decided it was getting too hot. It was in the high nineties - two days before Halloween. Go figure. After caching we stopped at Walmart for some quick shopping and then headed back to the coach.
After we got the groceries put away we decided to go out to dinner. We have seen a place called Chuy’s at several locations around Tucson over the last couple of days and there was one just a couple of miles from the RV park. We decided to give them a try. It was an interesting place, sort of taqueria meets Mexican beach bar. Lots of wild paint and doodads hanging around. It was like a taqueria in that you had to go up the counter to place your order, but then they brought the food to your table. The food was OK, but not fantastic. We were not completely disappointed, but I don’t’ think we would go back again. The place was a big empty space, so it was noisy and with the ala carte menu it was a pain to order. We’ll stick to conventional Mexican restaurants.
Saturday, October 30th we finally got to go to the movies. We wanted to go in St. David, but there were no theaters. We wanted to go up here in Tucson, but the repair issue was holding us up. After lunch we went out to see “Hereafter”, a film directed by Clint Eastwood. The basic premise of the film was that there really is a hereafter, or heaven, or afterlife or whatever you want to call it, and the proof is that everyone who has a near death experience “sees” the same thing. The bright light, the peace, etc. etc. The movie has three distinct plot threads, a woman who has a near death experience in the Malaysian tsunami, a young boy who loses his brother in an auto accident, and a psychic who can talk with the dead. The movie alternates between these three plots until the last 20 minutes, when they all come together. (No further spoilers) I think the movie was elegantly filmed and it was a good character film, even if you don’t fully accept the premise. Jackie loved the film. I thought it was good, but not the best Eastwood has done. As a character film I liked “Grand Torino” much better. In my opinion Eastwood spent a little too much time on the details of the three plot lines, almost to the point of becoming tedious, and when the ending finally came is was abrupt and, to me, unsatisfying and incomplete. This is an excellent film to see if you have a strong belief in life after death and the ability to contact the dead.
After the movie we spent a little time shopping at the mall where the theater was located. We were going to walk the mall for a while, however, they had opened it to trick or treating kids and there were hundreds of little kids and their parents walking around the mall in costume, going from store to store. A cute idea and there were some very cute kids, but it made walking around the mall a little hard. After shopping we just went home for the rest of the day.
Sunday, October 31st - Happy Halloween! We left right after lunch and headed South of Tucson about 18 miles on Interstate 19 towards the retirement community of Green
Valley. What we were headed for was certainly old and retired, but not a person, a place - the Titan Missile Museum. The museum is located just about a mile West of the freeway, near exit 69, and is a deactivated ICBM silo that has been turned into a museum. The site was once known as Titan II ICBM Site 571-7, and was one of eighteen such silos ringing the Tucson metropolitan area. There was an additional eighteen silos near Wichita, Kansas, and another eighteen near Little Rock, Arkansas. Each site housed a single Titan II missile, armed with a single 9 megaton W-53 hydrogen bomb warhead.
The W-53 warhead, in addition to being the first nuclear weapon to be “mass produced”, was the largest-yield nuclear weapon ever fitted to an ICBM. The W-53 was a city destroyer class weapon which produced a fireball 2.5 to 3 miles in
diameter, producing radiant heat capable of causing fatal burns up to 18 miles from ground zero, irrespective of attendant blast damage. The blast effects would totally destroy any above ground structure in a nine mile radius. One of the maps on the wall of the visitor’s center showed the blast radius of the warhead superimposed over a map of Tucson, with ground zero at downtown, and the blast radius covered the entire city.
The tour of the site started with a short film and then a tour guide took us outside for a tour around the exterior of the site. Display items included an old Security Police Jeep, a number of equipment trailers, and the fueling trailers. Although the
Titan II was a liquid fuel rocket, the standard for the day, it used extremely stable fuel and oxidizer compounds which allowed the missile to be fueled upon installation in the silo and then left fueled. Other liquid fuel rockets had to be fueled just before launch, which meant that it could take up to four hours to launch a missile. The Titan II could be launched in less than one minute from receiving a launch order.
The cover for the silo is locked half open and the open half is covered with clear windows. This is to enable Russian spy satellites to see that the silo remains inactive. Although there is a real (unfueled) Titan II missile in the silo, there is a large hole cut in the nose cone, where the nuclear device would reside, to enable a satellite to see that there is nothing inside. This site was built in 1963 and decommissioned in 1982 as part of the START treaty. All of the other sites in the country were decommissioned and blown up, however, this one was saved as a museum.
After touring the outside we were led into the entrance hatch and went down about 100 feet to the launch facilities. The control center has two three ton blast doors and eight foot thick concrete and steel walls. The entire center is mounted on huge
springs to protect it from the shock of any nearby explosions. The entire launch room is smaller than the average hotel room and is very clearly vintage technology. The tour guide points out the various work stations and equipment and then conducts a mock launch sequence to demonstrate just how quickly the crews could have gotten their missile in the air. After the tour of the control room we were taken down a
long steel tunnel, also mounted on springs, to the other end of the complex where the silo is. There are windows cut in the silo so you can see the missile sitting in there. We then went back to the surface. The whole tour took about an hour and is very interesting. The cost of the museum is very reasonable, and I think anyone who lived through the cold war should visit if in the area.
We also learned that the same Titan II missiles used at these ICBM sites were used in the Gemini space program to launch our astronauts into space. After the ICBM sites were decommissioned in the 1980's, a lot of the missiles taken out of the ICBM sites were later used to launch satellites for the Air Force and for NASA. About half of the missiles that sat for years with huge nuclear weapons in their noses were later shot into space with satellites and other payloads. Talk about recycling!
After leaving the missile museum we headed North on Interstate 19 and stopped at the St. Xavier Mission. St. Xavier was founded in 1692 by the Spanish missionary Father Kino. The current structure was completed in 1797 and has been in continuous use since. It is still an active Catholic church. Its actual name is Mission San
Xavier Del Bac, but its nickname among Arizonans is “The White Dove of the Desert.” This mission was the northern-most mission in what is now Arizona, however, the Spanish missionaries had dozens of missions in Mexico and along the coast of California. The interior of the sanctuary is breathtaking with intricate
sculptured walls and frescos on the ceilings. The actual sanctuary is very long and narrow with the standard short naves on the alter end. This makes the floor plan of the sanctuary the shape of a cross with the alter area at the top. We also walked around the museum which had a lot of artifacts from the friars that have run the compound for the last 200 plus years.
After visiting the mission we headed home for the rest of the day. We got home just as the sun was going down and there were a few kids going through the RV park doing trick or treat. The park management had given out black and orange streamers for people to hang outside their RV or park model to designate who was giving out candy. We were not sure we were going to be home, so we didn’t put out any streamers. We also didn’t have any candy to give out. I did try to fix a leaking drain plug on our water heater and ended up breaking it off. I couldn’t get it fixed because the local Camping World RV store closed at 5:00 on Sunday. Had to shut the water heater off for the night.
Monday, November 1st, I was up early out getting parts at Camping World and Home Depot to fix the water heater. Took me a couple of hours to get the thing fixed, but now all is well. No more leak and we have hot water again. Yea! After lunch we went out and did some geocaching on the East end of Tucson. We were able to find fourteen caches during the afternoon, and one of them put us over the 1,900 finds
mark! Yea us! A number of the caches were along the edges of the Davis Monthan Air Force Base 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group, the real long name for what is generally called the “Bone Yard”. The history of the Bone Yard starts immediately after World War II, when what was then the Army Air Corps established a storage facility for B-29 and C-47 aircraft at Davis-Monthan AFB. Today, the Bone Yard has grown to include more than 4,400 aircraft and 13 aerospace vehicles (missiles) from the all branches of the armed forces, the Coast Guard, and several federal agencies including NASA. Some of the aircraft are kept in a mothballed state for possible use if necessary. Most are kept for spare parts or eventually broken up for scrap.
Two years ago the portion of the base visible from Kolb Avenue contained hundreds of Navy and Marine Corps F-14 “Tomcats” which were taken out of service. Today that same area is home to dozens of old C-130 “Hercules” cargo aircraft. I don’t know where they moved the F-14's to since the base is huge. Davis Monthan AFB is also
the home base for the last squadron of the infamous A-10 “Warthog” tank killer. These are attack aircraft famous for their “low and slow” abilities and their deadly 30 mm cannon in the nose. During the first Gulf War the A-10 was responsible for eliminating entire divisions of Iraqi tanks. Our RV park is right under the flight path for the main runway at Davis Monthan, so we watch A-10's and C-130's flying around all day and night. After our caching we settled in for the night, getting ready for our move in the morning from Tucson to Casa Grande.
Tuesday, October 2nd, we packed up the coach and hit the road about 10:00 a.m., headed for Casa Grande, about 90 Miles North on Interstate 10. After a quick stop for fuel in Coolidge, we arrived at the Western Horizon resort about noon. We got checked in and set up for a nice two week stay here in Casa Grande.
With our arrival here in Casa Grande I will close this chapter of our travel blog. I will post again when we leave here in two weeks. Until then, be happy, be alive, be safe!
Wednesday, October 27th we were up at 5:00 a.m. and had the coach on the road by 6:40 a.m. headed to the shop in Tucson. As I said in a previous post, I had discovered that we had an exhaust leak on the coach engine and we needed to get it fixed. Our friend Ray Babcock had recommended a diesel shop in Tucson called W. W. Williams so that’s where we took it. We arrived there about 7:30 a.m. and checked in with our service writer, Saul. I have to say that Ray was correct when he told me that Williams had a very nice, clean shop. It was very big, is part of a national system with shops all over the country, and they were very helpful. He did a quick visual confirmation of my diagnosis of a blown exhaust manifold gasket, contacted our extended warranty company, and got the coach into the shop to start work. By 11:00 a.m. they had the manifold off and determined that the manifold itself was warped and also needed to be replaced. We were worried for a while that we would have to wait for parts and end up in a motel for the night. However, the parts guy was able to locate a manifold locally and Saul said we should still be done by the end of the day. Once we knew the parts were available and the warranty company had authorized the repairs, we headed out to get lunch and do some caching.
We had lunch at a place called My Big Fat Greek Restaurant. We had eaten here the last time we were in Tucson in the Spring and enjoyed it very much. Jackie loves Greek food, especially the lamb dishes like the Gyro. She had a Gyro and I had a steak and cheese wrap that was delicious. We can highly recommend this place, which is located on Broadway and Kolb in Tucson. After lunch we made a quick stop at an upholstery shop to drop off one of our window shade screens from the coach. The sun had deteriorated the stitching holding the border trim on the screen and I wanted to get it fixed. They told us it would be a couple hours, so we went caching. We were able to find five in about an hour and a half. Although it was urban caching, several of the caches were in places where it was hard to park and it took us a while to get from cache to cache. We also made a stop at the Tucson Mall to visit Penny’s just to check the sale racks. I ended up with a couple of real bargains in tee shirts and shorts.
We then picked up our repaired screen, which only cost us $15, and headed back to the shop to check on the coach. We got there at 4:00 p.m., which was when Saul told us to come back, and the coach was finished. The total bill was almost $1,000, but they managed to get it done in one day. Yea! Unfortunately, it was after business hours for the warranty company, so we couldn’t get them to pay their portion of the bill. Williams couldn’t let us leave without payment so we had two choices, we could spend the night in their parking lot, where they did have 50 amp electric, or we could write them a check for the full amount of the bill. Fortunately, Saul worked with us again and told us that he would hold the check and the paperwork until the morning when we could come back (in the car this time) and finish the transaction with the warranty company. We will have to pay our $500 deductible and the warranty company will pay Williams the rest. With that we drove the coach back to the RV park and got set up again, this time for the rest of the week.
Thursday, October 28th we had planned to go to a movie after lunch, but we needed to wait for Saul to call to let us know that Good Sam had paid Williams their portion of the bill. Once they got paid we would run by the shop, take our check back and give them a check for our portion of the total and be done. We still hadn’t heard anything by 1:00 so we decided to get in the car and start driving towards the shop, which was 20 miles away on the other side of Tucson. On the way Saul called and told us that Good Sam had called him and said they were way behind on processing claims and he had no idea when they might get ours done. With that we headed for the mall and just spent a couple hours shopping. Just before 4:00 we ran by Williams to see if they had heard anything and they told us that Saul had left on an emergency, but Sam, the night service advisor, told us that he had talked to Good Sam and they wouldn’t get to us until Friday. Oh well, they were still working with us and holding our check, so nothing lost except our plans for the day. We headed back to the coach for the rest of the day.
Friday, October 29th we left the coach after lunch and headed to Williams to settle up. I had called Sam and learned that he had just got off the phone with Good Sam and they had received their payment. We got to Williams, traded checks and we were finally finished. I will say that W.W. Williams is a great place to get work done if you have a diesel coach and need engine or transmission work done. Highly recommended! After settling up with Sam we went out and did some more geocaching in Northwest Tucson. We found five before we decided it was getting too hot. It was in the high nineties - two days before Halloween. Go figure. After caching we stopped at Walmart for some quick shopping and then headed back to the coach.
After we got the groceries put away we decided to go out to dinner. We have seen a place called Chuy’s at several locations around Tucson over the last couple of days and there was one just a couple of miles from the RV park. We decided to give them a try. It was an interesting place, sort of taqueria meets Mexican beach bar. Lots of wild paint and doodads hanging around. It was like a taqueria in that you had to go up the counter to place your order, but then they brought the food to your table. The food was OK, but not fantastic. We were not completely disappointed, but I don’t’ think we would go back again. The place was a big empty space, so it was noisy and with the ala carte menu it was a pain to order. We’ll stick to conventional Mexican restaurants.
Saturday, October 30th we finally got to go to the movies. We wanted to go in St. David, but there were no theaters. We wanted to go up here in Tucson, but the repair issue was holding us up. After lunch we went out to see “Hereafter”, a film directed by Clint Eastwood. The basic premise of the film was that there really is a hereafter, or heaven, or afterlife or whatever you want to call it, and the proof is that everyone who has a near death experience “sees” the same thing. The bright light, the peace, etc. etc. The movie has three distinct plot threads, a woman who has a near death experience in the Malaysian tsunami, a young boy who loses his brother in an auto accident, and a psychic who can talk with the dead. The movie alternates between these three plots until the last 20 minutes, when they all come together. (No further spoilers) I think the movie was elegantly filmed and it was a good character film, even if you don’t fully accept the premise. Jackie loved the film. I thought it was good, but not the best Eastwood has done. As a character film I liked “Grand Torino” much better. In my opinion Eastwood spent a little too much time on the details of the three plot lines, almost to the point of becoming tedious, and when the ending finally came is was abrupt and, to me, unsatisfying and incomplete. This is an excellent film to see if you have a strong belief in life after death and the ability to contact the dead.
After the movie we spent a little time shopping at the mall where the theater was located. We were going to walk the mall for a while, however, they had opened it to trick or treating kids and there were hundreds of little kids and their parents walking around the mall in costume, going from store to store. A cute idea and there were some very cute kids, but it made walking around the mall a little hard. After shopping we just went home for the rest of the day.
Sunday, October 31st - Happy Halloween! We left right after lunch and headed South of Tucson about 18 miles on Interstate 19 towards the retirement community of Green
Valley. What we were headed for was certainly old and retired, but not a person, a place - the Titan Missile Museum. The museum is located just about a mile West of the freeway, near exit 69, and is a deactivated ICBM silo that has been turned into a museum. The site was once known as Titan II ICBM Site 571-7, and was one of eighteen such silos ringing the Tucson metropolitan area. There was an additional eighteen silos near Wichita, Kansas, and another eighteen near Little Rock, Arkansas. Each site housed a single Titan II missile, armed with a single 9 megaton W-53 hydrogen bomb warhead.
The W-53 warhead, in addition to being the first nuclear weapon to be “mass produced”, was the largest-yield nuclear weapon ever fitted to an ICBM. The W-53 was a city destroyer class weapon which produced a fireball 2.5 to 3 miles in
diameter, producing radiant heat capable of causing fatal burns up to 18 miles from ground zero, irrespective of attendant blast damage. The blast effects would totally destroy any above ground structure in a nine mile radius. One of the maps on the wall of the visitor’s center showed the blast radius of the warhead superimposed over a map of Tucson, with ground zero at downtown, and the blast radius covered the entire city.
The tour of the site started with a short film and then a tour guide took us outside for a tour around the exterior of the site. Display items included an old Security Police Jeep, a number of equipment trailers, and the fueling trailers. Although the
Titan II was a liquid fuel rocket, the standard for the day, it used extremely stable fuel and oxidizer compounds which allowed the missile to be fueled upon installation in the silo and then left fueled. Other liquid fuel rockets had to be fueled just before launch, which meant that it could take up to four hours to launch a missile. The Titan II could be launched in less than one minute from receiving a launch order.
The cover for the silo is locked half open and the open half is covered with clear windows. This is to enable Russian spy satellites to see that the silo remains inactive. Although there is a real (unfueled) Titan II missile in the silo, there is a large hole cut in the nose cone, where the nuclear device would reside, to enable a satellite to see that there is nothing inside. This site was built in 1963 and decommissioned in 1982 as part of the START treaty. All of the other sites in the country were decommissioned and blown up, however, this one was saved as a museum.
After touring the outside we were led into the entrance hatch and went down about 100 feet to the launch facilities. The control center has two three ton blast doors and eight foot thick concrete and steel walls. The entire center is mounted on huge
springs to protect it from the shock of any nearby explosions. The entire launch room is smaller than the average hotel room and is very clearly vintage technology. The tour guide points out the various work stations and equipment and then conducts a mock launch sequence to demonstrate just how quickly the crews could have gotten their missile in the air. After the tour of the control room we were taken down a
long steel tunnel, also mounted on springs, to the other end of the complex where the silo is. There are windows cut in the silo so you can see the missile sitting in there. We then went back to the surface. The whole tour took about an hour and is very interesting. The cost of the museum is very reasonable, and I think anyone who lived through the cold war should visit if in the area.
We also learned that the same Titan II missiles used at these ICBM sites were used in the Gemini space program to launch our astronauts into space. After the ICBM sites were decommissioned in the 1980's, a lot of the missiles taken out of the ICBM sites were later used to launch satellites for the Air Force and for NASA. About half of the missiles that sat for years with huge nuclear weapons in their noses were later shot into space with satellites and other payloads. Talk about recycling!
After leaving the missile museum we headed North on Interstate 19 and stopped at the St. Xavier Mission. St. Xavier was founded in 1692 by the Spanish missionary Father Kino. The current structure was completed in 1797 and has been in continuous use since. It is still an active Catholic church. Its actual name is Mission San
Xavier Del Bac, but its nickname among Arizonans is “The White Dove of the Desert.” This mission was the northern-most mission in what is now Arizona, however, the Spanish missionaries had dozens of missions in Mexico and along the coast of California. The interior of the sanctuary is breathtaking with intricate
sculptured walls and frescos on the ceilings. The actual sanctuary is very long and narrow with the standard short naves on the alter end. This makes the floor plan of the sanctuary the shape of a cross with the alter area at the top. We also walked around the museum which had a lot of artifacts from the friars that have run the compound for the last 200 plus years.
After visiting the mission we headed home for the rest of the day. We got home just as the sun was going down and there were a few kids going through the RV park doing trick or treat. The park management had given out black and orange streamers for people to hang outside their RV or park model to designate who was giving out candy. We were not sure we were going to be home, so we didn’t put out any streamers. We also didn’t have any candy to give out. I did try to fix a leaking drain plug on our water heater and ended up breaking it off. I couldn’t get it fixed because the local Camping World RV store closed at 5:00 on Sunday. Had to shut the water heater off for the night.
Monday, November 1st, I was up early out getting parts at Camping World and Home Depot to fix the water heater. Took me a couple of hours to get the thing fixed, but now all is well. No more leak and we have hot water again. Yea! After lunch we went out and did some geocaching on the East end of Tucson. We were able to find fourteen caches during the afternoon, and one of them put us over the 1,900 finds
mark! Yea us! A number of the caches were along the edges of the Davis Monthan Air Force Base 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group, the real long name for what is generally called the “Bone Yard”. The history of the Bone Yard starts immediately after World War II, when what was then the Army Air Corps established a storage facility for B-29 and C-47 aircraft at Davis-Monthan AFB. Today, the Bone Yard has grown to include more than 4,400 aircraft and 13 aerospace vehicles (missiles) from the all branches of the armed forces, the Coast Guard, and several federal agencies including NASA. Some of the aircraft are kept in a mothballed state for possible use if necessary. Most are kept for spare parts or eventually broken up for scrap.
Two years ago the portion of the base visible from Kolb Avenue contained hundreds of Navy and Marine Corps F-14 “Tomcats” which were taken out of service. Today that same area is home to dozens of old C-130 “Hercules” cargo aircraft. I don’t know where they moved the F-14's to since the base is huge. Davis Monthan AFB is also
the home base for the last squadron of the infamous A-10 “Warthog” tank killer. These are attack aircraft famous for their “low and slow” abilities and their deadly 30 mm cannon in the nose. During the first Gulf War the A-10 was responsible for eliminating entire divisions of Iraqi tanks. Our RV park is right under the flight path for the main runway at Davis Monthan, so we watch A-10's and C-130's flying around all day and night. After our caching we settled in for the night, getting ready for our move in the morning from Tucson to Casa Grande.
Tuesday, October 2nd, we packed up the coach and hit the road about 10:00 a.m., headed for Casa Grande, about 90 Miles North on Interstate 10. After a quick stop for fuel in Coolidge, we arrived at the Western Horizon resort about noon. We got checked in and set up for a nice two week stay here in Casa Grande.
With our arrival here in Casa Grande I will close this chapter of our travel blog. I will post again when we leave here in two weeks. Until then, be happy, be alive, be safe!
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