Here is where we’ve been since the beginning of November.
11/1 – 3/2016 – Army Corps Springhill Campground, Fort
Smith, AR – Great place 11/4 – 5 - Home Sweet Home RV Park, Texarkana, TX - not very sweet and definitely not homey
11/6-7 – Margaritaville Casino, Bossier, LA
11/8-9 – Diamond Jacks Casino RV Resort – so we could have cable television to see election results. What a waste.
11/10-11 – Timberline RV Park, Marshall, TX (another Passport America bust)
11/12 – Walmart Parking Lot in Henderson, TX – so we could go to the Syrup Festival
11/13-17 – Tyler State Park, Tyler, TX a great stay to see the Supermoon
11/18-24 – Rainbow’s End RV Park (Escapee’s Headquarters) in Livingston, TX for Thanksgiving.
11/25-26 – Lazy Longhorn RV Park, Victoria, TX (great stopping place)
11/27-30 – Mustang Island State Park, Mustang Island, TX – beautiful Gulf shore stay. Windy and salty.
12/1/2016 till 3/31/17 (planned) Palmdale RV Resort, Los Fresnos, TX – Good to be home with friends.
It’s good to be back at Palmdale. This is our 3rd
year and it has the feeling of coming home.
I haven’t written since the election. Actually, I did some
writing but didn’t post it and don’t know if I will. I wrote it out of the
anger I felt about the election outcome. My thoughts going forward on that
subject is that our priorities need to be to protect the civil rights of those
who might be vulnerable to the new government and work to take the House and
the Senate in the midterm elections in 2 years. Other than that I don’t want to
spend a lot of time on the subject.
It took almost a month for us to get here to the Valley
since we were in Shreveport the last time that I wrote. We spent a couple of
weeks in the Piney Woods of Eastern Texas on our way here. One of the
highlights was Tyler State Park where we spent a week. The campground consists
of a clearing in the woods with a circle road with campsites on both sides.
There we enjoyed some “real” camping with campfires, walks around the lake and
through the woods. We also had an awesome view of the Super-moon with very
little light pollution.
Making syrup from ribbon cane |
Pressing cane using mule power |
Don standing by the cotton gin
screw that was placed at the
site of the battle of Goliad
|
Mustang Island State Park was great. We walked on the beach and I got my fishing license and we fished off the jetty. Didn’t catch any fish though. It’s beautiful place with huge grass covered dunes between the campground and the Gulf. Then we readied the camper for traveling and hooked up the car and headed south to Palmdale.
Don has a question to which we found the answer.
“How long can you pull a car in first gear at 60 miles an
hour before the engine explodes and it bursts into flames?” The answer, “Somewhere between 1.5 and 2
miles.” Not much more to be said about that. There are excuses… we changed our
normal hook up routine… I was distracted… Don didn’t ask if it was done…. And
the outcome remains the same. We destroyed, or maybe I destroyed our 2014
Toyota Corolla that has been our loyal transportation since August 2014. We
selected it specifically because with a manual transmission it was the
recommended dinghy-tow car for that year.
Don first noticed a lot of smoke coming from behind our
camper and pulled to the shoulder. I had been putting up the floor in front of
the passenger seat and reversed that. He was urgently trying to get me to hurry
that. He was able to get out and I
joined him as he asked finally double checked, “Did you set up the car?” All I
said was, “Oh Shit!” Some nice people had stopped quite a distance behind us
and were walking up to us. The first thing I noticed was plastic parts in
flames under the car. We agreed that we had to get the car unhooked from the RV
so it didn’t get burned up, too so we went to work on that. When our helpers reached
us, they threw some water on the burning parts under the car. They noticed that
the fire was burning under the hood and asked about a fire extinguisher. I told
them where to find the fire extinguisher in the camper. They went to get it and
came back and asked a couple of times to get the hood up. They put the fire out
at about the same time that we got the car unhitched. Our newfound friend looked at the engine and
said, “Look at that. I’ve never seen anything like it. Your pistons are laying
in the rocker panel.” They informed us that they had called the fire
department and as they were leaving and we thanked them, they gave us their
card for Lorelei Brewing Co. in Corpus Christi (www.loreleibrewing.beer) and invited
us for a free beer. They thought we could probably use a beer about then and
that was true but we decided not to take them up because it just wouldn’t be
practical under the circumstances. But we owe them big time and the next time
we get to Corpus we’ll pay for our beer. I highly recommend to everyone who
goes to Corpus Christi to check out this micro-brewery.
The fire department went flying by us in search of smoke as we
stood there in shock for several minutes. We waited, knowing that they would be
back when they figured out that we were the fire. That happened. They helped us
make the car towable by tearing off some of the parts that were dragging on the
ground and improvising a hook that was lost from the tow bar. A fireman bent a
S hook from a bungy with his bare hands so that it wouldn’t come lose. We drug
the car to the Toyota dealer in Harlingen, TX near were we’re staying with some
slight hope that it could be fixed. It was totaled so for the last 18 days we
shopped for a car. Tomorrow we will pick up a 2014 Honda CRV which is another
car that can be flat towed even with an automatic transmission. I still mourn for that little car. Not the best ride but 37 miles to the gallon. Irreplaceable. No one gets a manual transmission any more. I had plans for that car. I figured we would give it to Edie in about 11 years and she would be the only person in her generation to know how to drive a stick. Sorry Edie.
Apparently, we still had more to learn about this lifestyle.
Our Toy Toad |
Judy, glad you're writing again. We all make our mistakes while RV'ing. Some are just more noticeable than others. One thing is sure. You'll never go through the hookup/unhook process the same way, will you. We >> almost << had the same sort of experience in Gallup NM where I started to pull out with the toad still in park. Fortunately another RV'er started screaming at me as soon as the locked wheels began dragging gravel -- but it could have been just as ugly. And ever since, I don't allow any interruptions while I'm hooking/unhooking -- it's all business!
ReplyDeleteThe CR-V is a great tow car! You should have a great time with it. If you haven't already done it, make sure you get a fuse bypass switch installed on the dash -- for the first 6 months of rv'ing I lived with the inconvenience of digging around under the dash to pull out the fuse that needs to come out for an extended tow without dragging down the battery. WE could have put in a battery charging system, but the bypass switch was easier and cheaper.