Hi there, welcome back. Our last
chapter concluded on Friday, July 1st, when we traveled
from Santa Maria, California, on the cool Pacific coast, to Fresno,
California, in the HOT San Joaquin Valley. On Saturday we went out
after lunch and drove to the home of Jackie's 2nd cousin,
Stephanie Kopf, and her husband Ron. They also have three kids,
Tyler, Bryce, and Madison. Stephanie's mom, Sue, with whom Jackie
grew up, was up from the Torrance, California area to visit for the
holiday. Shortly after arriving at Stephanie's house we went over to
another home, a friend of Stephanie's, who's house they are taking
care of while the family is on vacation. This house is a very big
place in a gated community, but more important on this 100 plus
weekend, it has a pool! I didn't bring my suit, but Madison and Ron
were enjoying the pool. Everyone just sat around and visited. We
brought some snacks, Stephanie had some, and later in the afternoon
they ordered in some pizza and wings. We had a great time catching
up and didn't leave until about 8:00. We headed back to the coach
and stayed in for the rest of the evening.
Sunday, July 3rd, we enjoyed
the Sunday paper and talk shows before heading back over to see
Stephanie and her family. We again spent the afternoon in the
“borrowed” home, enjoying the pool and spending time with family.
We had picked up some KFC for the group on the way over, so we had a
great dinner. We left around 7:30 and went back to the coach for the
rest of the evening.
Monday, July 4th, Happy 4th of July! We left the coach about 2:30 and drove over to
Stephanie's house for the afternoon. This time we were actually at
her house, not the one they are watching, the reason being that they
are going to BBQ today. We sat around and talked with everyone,
including Stephanie's oldest son Tyler, whom we hadn't yet seen this
trip, and his girlfriend. For dinner Ron BBQed some nice tri-tips
and we had that with beans, potato salad, and corn on the cob. A
real all American meal for the Fourth of July. We stayed and talked
until about 8:00 when we headed back to our place. After we got back
to the coach we could hear a lot of personal fireworks going off in
the surrounding neighborhoods, but when I looked outside I couldn't
see any of the various public fireworks shows. I guess they were all
more out in the suburbs. We watched TV until it was time for bed.
Tuesday we had a day on our own.
Stephanie told us that she and the kids were doing stuff all day and
wouldn't be home until late. It was still pretty hot, but we went
out and did some geocaching anyway. We got five new finds and one
DNF before we decided we were sweaty enough. We did some shopping at
Sam's Club and then Walmart before heading back to the coach. About
6:00 we were craving some Mexican food, so we headed out to a local
place called Toledo's that had good Yelp ratings. The food was very
good and plentiful and the service was excellent. After dinner we
went back to the coach and watched TV the rest of the night.
Wednesday, July 6th was
another travel day. We had the coach all packed up and ready to head
north to Carmichael, California, a suburb of Sacramento. We had
about 180 miles to drive. The electric is always the last thing to
get unplugged and put away before we leave. I did that, got back in
the coach, ready to drive and found that there was no electric in the
coach at all, no 120 VAC and no 12 VDC, nothing. Normally when I
pull the plug from shore power the inverter kicks in and provides 120
VAC to the outlets and the 12 VDC power never goes away. The engine
started and ran fine, so there was nothing wrong with the engine
batteries. I started doing some troubleshooting and one of the first
things I did was take my multimeter and checked the house batteries.
They were fine, right at a little over 12 volts. I then checked on
the other side of the battery cutoff switch for the house batteries,
no voltage at all. I found my culprit. I disconnected the house
batteries and then took the switch off the wall. This is a small
rotary switch that is there to allow you to cut all the 12 volt
power. I have never had to use it in the ten plus years we have had
the coach. Nonetheless, when I took it apart it was burned out.
Some internal screws had worked loose over the years allowing the
internal connector to not make good contact and the heat buildup
burned out one of the contacts. Since the switch is only there if
you want to cut the power, I just connected all the wires from the
switch together on one bolt, put some electrical tape on it and
yippee, we had power again. It's only a workaround fix, I will order
a switch online and get it replaced soon, but I really don't need it
for the short time we will be traveling.
Once that problem was solved we dumped
the tanks, since the Fresno lodge didn't have sewer at the sites, and
were on the road to Carmichael only about an hour later then our
planned departure time. We had no further incidents and arrived at
the Carmichael Elks Lodge about 3:30. There were plenty of open
spots and we got parked and hooked up in short order. We will be
here for a total of six days. After we got settled in we went to In
and Out to pick up a quick dinner, our first meal for the day. We
then watched TV until bedtime.
Thursday we went out after lunch to do
some geocaching in the area. We were able to get six new finds, and
on DNF, in a matter of hours. At one of the caches we actually ran
into another cacher who walked up while we were searching. This
happens rarely enough to merit a mention when it does. After caching
we went back to the coach and spent the rest of the evening there.
Friday, July 8th, we went
out after lunch and did a few geocaches before heading to Costco for
some supplies. We were able to get four new finds, and one DNF,
before we stopped at the local Costco. We then headed back to the
coach and put everything away. We relaxed in the coach for a while
and at about 6:00 we walked over to the Carmichael Elks for drinks
and dinner. While we were still having a cocktail our friend Curt
Minard walked in. We met Curt and Sharon Minard about six years ago
through Peggy and Vernon Bullock. Curt and Sharon are members of a
Northern California RV travel club along with Peggy and Vernon. Curt
and Sharon have a Monaco Knight with the same nice floor plan as
ours, theirs is just one year newer. Sharon had gone to the State
Fair with her daughter, so Curt came over to have dinner with us.
They live in Carmichael and are members of this lodge. We had a very
nice steak sandwich for dinner and enjoyed our time talking to Curt.
We haven't seen them in a couple years, although we stay in contact
through social media. We will be with Curt and Sharon again in just
a few days when we all gather at the Bullock house for their fourth
annual 50th anniversary party. After dinner we went back
to the coach and relaxed for the rest of the night.
Saturday, July 9th, we left
the coach about 11:00 and headed for the California State Fair. The
Elks Lodge is only about six or seven miles from the Cal Expo grounds
and the State Fair started yesterday. We first made a quick stop at
the Minard's house to pick up some tickets that Sharon had. She had
called Jackie this morning and told her that she had two entry
tickets and two monorail ride tickets left over from a booklet that
Sharon's daughter had bought. Since entry into the fair was $10 even
for seniors, this was a good savings. We then stopped at Denny's for
a quick lunch. Experience had taught us that all you get at fairs of
any kind is poor quality, yet highly overpriced, food.
We arrived at the fairgrounds about
12:30, paid our $10 to park and joined 50,000 or so other happy
Californians at the State Fair. We have been to a lot of county
fairs in our travels, and even the Arizona State Fair once, but this
was the first here in California. We had a great time, checked out
most of the exhibits and the commercial buildings. We ended up
spending nearly five hours walking around the fairgrounds. We bought
a few little things, but really didn't spend much money thanks to the
free entry tickets. We left the fairgrounds about 5:00, went back
home, bought a pizza and stayed in the rest of the evening resting
our aching feet.
Sunday, July 10th, we left
the coach about 2:30 and went out to do some errands before going to
visit some friends in the area. We went back to a geocache that we
had DNFed a couple days ago to try again. We had gotten a hint from
the cache owner and, sure enough, there was the cache, still in place
after having not been found for over a year. Yea, fixed a DNF! We
then stopped at Costco and picked up another six pack of vodka. We
realized that in less than two weeks we will be going into Oregon for
a couple of months. Oregon liquor laws are very restrictive, which
makes liquor up there very expensive. We wanted to have as big a
supply as we reasonably could.
After our errands we went over to Kathy
Yarbrough's house in nearby Citrus Heights for a visit. Kathy and
Jackie have been friends for decades, having met many years ago at
work. Kathy and her husband Bill have a nice manufactured home in a
55+ community. Kathy was babysitting for her six year old
granddaughter Bella, whom we have watched grow up over the years. We
had a very nice visit and Kathy made dinner for the five of us. We
visited until about 8:30 when we left to go back to the coach, where
we spent the remainder of the evening watching TV.
Monday, July 11th, we went
out after lunch and did our laundry. After laundry we did a Walmart
run, stocking up for our trip to the little mountain town of Mineral
for the Bullock's annual party. Mineral has only 123 people and a
small general store, so we wanted to be sure we had everything we
needed for the six day stay. Once we had all our chores done we went
home and relaxed for the rest of the evening.
Tuesday we were packed up and ready to
travel by about 10:30. Today we are going about 140 miles north to
the town of Red Bluff, California. The trip was uneventful and we
arrived at the Red Bluff Elks Lodge about 2:30. We are only staying
for one night, so we unhooked the car and did the minimal setup
necessary to stay overnight. We did leave the campground briefly to
go get the car washed. It was so dirty we weren't even sure what the
color was anymore. We also did one geocache, just so we could drop
all our travel bugs off in a new location. After our errands we went
back to the coach and stayed in the rest of the evening.
Wednesday, July 13th, we
left the Elks about 10:30 and started the 42 mile trip east to the
town of Mineral. Although it is only 42 miles, the elevation goes
from only 300 feet in Red Bluff to nearly 5,000 in Mineral. Because
of the climb we didn't tow the car. The first time we came up here,
four years ago, we towed the car and the coach overheated badly. I
had to stop several times to let it cool down. Since then we drive
the coach and car separately. The coach still got hot on today's
trip, but only for short periods before cooling down again. We
arrived in Mineral about noon and got settled into the only RV park
in the area.
It is a very rustic park, but does have
full hookup sites, although with only 30 amp electric. The site we
have is nice, but like all the sites, there is no way to get
satellite reception with the coach roof mounted antenna. After we
got everything else done I set up our spare outside dish so we would
have some TV. It took me almost two hours to get everything working
and find a signal, but we now have TV. It isn't HD because our
little spare antenna doesn't do HD, but we get TV and can record our
shows, so we can get by. While I was working on the TV Dave and
Karen VanEgdon moved into the site two down from us. They are also
here for the festivities this weekend.
About 5:00 we went over to Peggy and
Vernon's “cabin” for dinner. I say cabin in quotes because it is
actually about 4,000 square feet of two story house now. When they
bought it years ago it actually was an old forest service cabin of
less than 1,000 square feet, but they have really improved it into a
very nice property. The reason we are here is that four years ago
Peggy and Vernon had a 50th Wedding Anniversary party here
and it was so much fun their kids decided they needed to do it every
year. This is the fourth annual 50th party. In addition,
on Saturday, Peggy and Vernon's son Larry is getting married at the
house, so it is a wedding party too. We last saw Peggy and Vernon in
April when we parted company in Apache Junction, Arizona after
spending three months traveling with them. The group at the house
was small today. In addition to us and the Bullock's there were
Karen and Dave, and their 7 year old granddaughter Cherish, and Larry
and his bride to be Dawn. Peggy cooked a ham and we brought some
salad. There were also scalloped potatoes and cake. We had a great
meal and sat and talked until almost 9:00 before we headed back to
our coach for the evening.
Thursday, July 14th, we went
over to Peggy's house in the early afternoon. I brought in all the
musical equipment I would need for the party and the wedding and
started to get set up. We spent most of the afternoon at the house,
talking and enjoying the great mountain weather. Another of our
RVing friends, Curt and Sharon Minard came in today and parked right
across from us in the RV park. Tonight we had a cook your own meat
night and we had some nice steaks. Tonight there were probably 20
people who were at the house for dinner. We had another great
evening and went back to the RV park about 8:30 or so where we
relaxed the rest of the night.
Friday we were up early and over at
Peggy's house by 9:00 for breakfast sandwiches. We had bacon and egg
sandwiches, fruit and some sweet rolls and it was good. After
breakfast we went back to the coach for a while, returning to Peggy's
place about 4:00. Tonight was a heavy snack night with most people
bringing some snack dish to share. Jackie made her taquito casserole
which is always a big hit. After dinner I started doing some
karaoke. We only had three other singers beside myself, Sharon, Pat,
and Tara, but we had a great time and sang until about 8:30 or so
when everyone started packing up to head to their own places. There
were probably 30 people tonight. Some are in the RV park, some are
in the only motel in town, some are locals, and some even pitched
tents in the backyard. It is a busy place.
Saturday July 16th, I was up early to finish up
preparations for the wedding music. Dawn, the bride, had some very
specific requests for music before and during the ceremony. Normally
that is not an issue with Amazon streaming music, but the internet at
the house is terrible, so I am having to download hard copies of the
songs and storing them on my tablet. If I had to rely on the
internet at the house we wouldn't have much music. I finally did get
everything setup and working right and we went over to the house
about 1:00 or so to visit. Today they are expecting about 70 people,
many of whom we have met over the years at the house, others that we
have not. We had a fun time visiting with people. Most of the
Bullock family was there. Their other son Matt and his wife Roxanne
were there, as well as their daughter Trinity and son Troy. Troy is
the Marine stationed in Yuma. He is on leave so he and his wife
Makayla were also able to come. Peggy and Vernon's daughter Katie,
the professional chef, was also there helping with the cooking for
the party. Larry's daughter Tara was also in attendance for the weekend.
At 4:00 the wedding took place in the
backyard and it was very nice. The weather was gorgeous, the setting
very nice, and the music came off without a hitch. I played sound
man for the rest of the evening, with some easy listening music
during the photo shoot and dinner, which was also served outside. It
was a very Western wedding and the food was BBQ chicken and tri-tip,
along with a lot of side dishes brought by guests. After dinner we
did some dancing and everyone seemed to have a great time. I finally
had to shut down the music about 9:15 when I couldn't see the
computer keyboard or mixer controls any more. The backyard gets very
dark when the sun goes down. We helped do a little cleanup and then
headed back to our place.
Sunday, July 17th, we were
again up early, this time cooking biscuits at 8:00 for the breakfast.
Peggy distributed the biscuit cooking among a number of the guests
and we had 40 to make. We then went down to the house at 9:00 for a
biscuits and gravy breakfast. Sharon Minard had made about three
gallons of great sausage gravy and we had a great time. There were
probably 30 people at breakfast, but today will be the day most of
them leave. After breakfast I took Jackie home and then went back to
the house to disassemble the audio equipment and bring it back to the
coach to get packed up. No more music duties.
After I got everything put back in it's
place in the coach we relaxed for the rest of the afternoon. About
4:00 we went down to the house to have a leftovers dinner. Tonight
it was only nine people and we had another good dinner, snacking on
all the little bits of things left over from previous dinners. We
had plenty to eat and had a great time. We left about 8:00 and went
back to the coach where we watched TV the rest of the evening.
Monday, July 18th, we left
the coach about 11:30 and drove down to the house. It is now just us
and the Bullock's, so they got in our car and we drove to the town of
Chester, about 35 miles east. Chester is one of the towns that sits
on the shores of Lake Almanor, a pretty large mountain reservoir. We
went to one of the local restaurants that sits on the lake shore and
had a nice lunch out on the back patio. After lunch we drove around
through town for a few minutes and then headed back to the hours. We
did manage to pick up a couple of geocaches while we were out.
We dropped Peggy and Vernon off at the
house and we went back to the coach and relaxed for an hour or so.
About 3:30 we went back to the house and I helped Vernon load his
pickup with a dozen bags of trash to take to the dump. We dropped
off the trash and then came back and the four of us just sat around
and talked. Later in the evening Jackie and Peggy made a chili
relleno casserole and the four of us had dinner. We talked for a
while longer and finally headed back to the coach about 7:30 where we
watched TV the rest of the night.
Tuesday was another moving day. Today
we are only going to Redding, about 75 miles northwest. We had
everything packed up and ready to go by about 10:30. Peggy and
Vernon came by to say goodbye, but also told us that they told us
that they too were going to Redding sometime today to take Vernon to
the doctor. He was complaining of chest pain yesterday and it was
still bothering him this morning. He has had heart attacks in the
past and just had a shunt put in a month or two ago. We were only on
the road for a half hour or so when Peggy called and said that the
doctor wanted him in the ER in Redding to be checked out ASAP. They
were heading down the hill and wanted to ask us to stop so they could
drop their dog Belle off with us while they went to the hospital.
Peggy wasn't sure if Vernon would have to stay overnight, so she
didn't want to leave Belle at home in case they didn't get back up
there today. Belle and our cats get along fine, so we said sure and
stopped at the bottom of the hill, before getting on the freeway, and
waited for them.
They arrived in about ten minutes,
dropped off Belle and we continued our trip to Redding. We arrived
at the Redding Elks Lodge about 1:30 and quickly settled in for our
one night stay here. Within a half hour the animals settled in too
and just wandered around the coach ignoring each other. We spent the
rest of the evening in the coach, except when we had the pleasure of
walking the dog. Reminds me why we have cats. We heard from Peggy
about 9:30 that they had given Vernon a whole bunch of tests and
finally determined that it was not a heart issue, but was rather some
sort of muscle strain in his chest. Weird, but good news. They came
by about 10:00 and picked up Belle and we went to bed.
Wednesday, July 20th, we
were packed up and on the road about 9:30, heading north and leaving
the People's Republic of Kalifornia, heading for southern Oregon.
After a fuel stop, and a lunch stop we arrived at the Valley of the
Rogue State Park about 2:30. This park is located about halfway
between Medford and Grants Pass, Oregon. It is right off of I-5 and
on the shore of the Rogue River. We had reservations so we were able
to check in and get set up quickly. We did the basic set up and then
relaxed for the rest of the day. We will be here for seven days.
Although there are a lot of trees I was able to get a spot that we
had used before on other trips and I was able to get a good satellite
signal. We have full hookup, 50 amp and good wifi. All is good.
Our arrival in Oregon makes a good
closing for this episode. We will be traveling in Oregon for about a
month, then up to Washington for a while. Until next time, remember
the words of Mae West. “You only live once, but if you do it
right, once is enough.” See ya soon.