Born on a mixed subsistence farm in rural Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia, Canada. Moved to Ontario in 1967 to attend University at what was then Waterloo Lutheran University and moved to Oakville, Ontario in 1971. Without intending to live up to the name became a letter carrier the following January and have worked for Canada Post ever since. I retired in August of 2008.

Thursday, May 31, 2018

On to Yosemite

Getting out of Grand Canyon is easier said than done, they haven't bothered to put up signs labelled exit and the roads have changed since my GPS was loaded.

On the way to the washroom saw ravens picking apart someone's carelessly abandoned garbage and a deer wandering about. Met two more crossing the road on my way and saw at least 4 more browsing alongside the highway in two groups. Sort of concentrates one's attention.

Rejoining I-40 in Williams I drove west into the Mojave. Stopped at a Loves Truck Stop and should have filled up there; rather had a sub at Subway. Surrendered my one orange at Agricultural Inspection—welcome to California. Needles lived up to its rep—hotter than hell and a 40 mph gale blowing. The Campground was a wasteland of blowing dust and the office staff person kept me waiting while she railed away to someone on the phone. This was one of those parks where campers are a nuisance. Campsites were at a considerable distance from the washrooms and the pool beyond that. Temperature approached 100. My A/C worked overtime. 


 

Shook off the dust of the place and headed west on I-40 after getting gas at $4.50/gal. Continued West on I-40 to Barstow. Drove on thirteen miles into town and shopped at a brand new Wal-Mart where staff were present throughout the store and went out of their way to be helpful! Claimed my reservation at KOA and got my onboard propane tank filled. Wagon Wheel Campsite configurations assume the campers like one another and maximize the number of sites. After working on my E-mail and writing more exited my van to find a truck and trailer parked in my site inches from my door. The same yahoo drove a doon buggy past my window at 11:30. Well it was Saturday Night on Memorial Day Weekend—what did I expect?

Driving North on HWY 395 after paying cash to gas up at $3.34 I watched the gauge drop rapidly as I climbed mountains. Entered the High Sierras where the road tracks between two ranges with snow-capped mountains to the west and ridges of lava looking like burnt chunks of coal. Surprising to encounter a small town with green lawns and trees along the highway.



Stopped at the East Sierra Visitors Centre at Lone Pine where the road to Death Valley led to the East. Got some pix while I had lunch and picked up some info and some water.

Finally made the left-hand turn into Mammoth Lake and looking for a gas station missed the Mammoth Mountain Campground on the edge of town. Gas was 4.15/Gal. If Napa had been open I'd have replaced my windshield wipers. Drove up to Mammoth Mountain Resort and found hundreds skiing on several runs with chair lifts and gondolas in motion. The road up was winding and lined with cars that wouldn't fit in the resort parking lot. Stopped to talk to a concierge at the Resort Inn and got set straight. 



 

Mammoth Mountain Campground has campsites packed in a Bristle Pine Forest amid gigantic erratic rocks landscapers would charge thousands to supply. My campsite was on a parking lot with services lining the rear of each hash-marked site.

 

Went for a walk to get above the trees and catch some pix of snow-capped mountains. Brief spot of hale while I was setting up. Quiet night and slow Wi-Fi as shared by a packed campground.

Packed up and returned to HWY 395 and drove up to Lee Vining and turned left for Tioga Pass Road. The Yosemite Gatehouse is at the top of the pass at nearly 10,000 ft. Getting there made the gauge drop again. Yosemite Valley is at 4000 ft and despite the elevation change there are a remarkable number of uphill grades along the way. The road is narrow and guardrails are non-existent so watch the road or become a permanent part of the scenery. Most of the pullouts were on the opposite side of the road and faced the rising sun. I made good use of second gear. I saw only one rock wall memorable of CCC Work along the Blue Ridge. I would not want to attempt the drive in the dark when there would be the additional hazard of wandering wildlife. Getting there seemed to take forever and as always the most spectacular scenery occurred in locations where stopping was not possible.

By the time I reached the visitors centre in the valley the parking lot was filled. I drove on until I found a spot. Walked back to the centre and found the Theatre. In the main the program covered material I'd already seen in the Ken Burns National Parks Series, Americas Best Idea and was in fact produced by Ken Burns. One of the speakers was Sheldon Johnson used extensively in Burn's mini-series, apparently a Park Ranger still working in the system. Toured the bookstore and found a Ranger unattended in the Centre. Toured the art gallery dedicated to Ansell Adams and the museum where an elder was explaining the use of stone and basket weaving with willow and bracken fern roots as well as Redbud tree bark. Black Oak acorns were formerly prime native food.


Walked on to see Yosemite Falls walking up to the base of the falls. Met a park ranger on horseback. Wandered around and got views from various viewpoints in my search for my van. Even took the Shuttle at one point. Drove up to the campground and waited in a lineup that barely moved. Got the bear talk. Found my site and backed in after someone moved a car that made swinging in nearly impossible. Sitting in front of an open window with the roof fan working overtime in 80ยบ heat. No facilies beyond a restroom with sinks and flushing waterclosets, water fill station plus waste water disposal site. Apparently bears are regular visitors here though so far no sign. 

 

Walked over for the evening program touring Half-Dome Village. Saw nothing I needed more than the money in my pocket. A Ranger was giving an animated children's talk that won him my admiration. Talked with him after. In walking about the grounds ran into one of the maintenance staff in his beat up park truck and stopped for a long talk that provided his perspective on the park. He's a member of the teamster's union. The custodial workers are unionized in this park.

Missed the beginning of the hour-long movie that constituted the evening program. As it ended a Full Moon was rising and Jupiter was visible among the trees. Getting back to my van saw me take a long exhausting hike about the park. I got night time views of the falls and wandered in circles it seemed until I used my tablet to navigate home. Enjoyed a couple beers and some ice cream.

Quiet night undisturbed by ursines or other creatures until the garbage compactor truck struck at 7:30 AM. After that my running my generator to make breakfast was immaterial. Even so I took my nearest neighbours camped in a tent a hot coffee.

Walked out to the campground kiosk and got my second campground pass and permission to occupy if the site was vacant, plus an official complaint form. Drove over to the new site and backed in, filled out the form and walked it back to the man. After the long walks I've had in the last few days putting my feet up feels good. This second site is deeper into the campground and well-shaded.

After some writing and some rest walked down to the so-called Nature Centre to discover it
was a volunteer, folding table and an umbrella stand. Oh Well. After communing with the rapids nearby caught the bus up to the Visitors Centre and toured the "Indian Village". Picked up a book on the Sierra Nevada and went to see the Spirit of Yosemite which proved to be far superior to the Park Video by Burns.

Yosemite got rain while I was in the area. By the time I made it home it was time to make supper and go to bed with my reading.

Wednesday Morning decided waiting to operate my generator was moot after hearing the local adolescent female population hoot and holler. Took my time driving out of the park stopping often to admire the vistas and take photographs.

When I reached Lee Vining Mono Vista Campground was willing to take my cash but not let me move in until 1:00 PM. Accordingly I drove up to the Mono Lakes Visitor's Centre where the staff were more accommodating. Got to use free Wi-Fi though I barely skimmed the surface of Four day's E-mail. The building is architecturally beautiful and has a plaza overlooking the lake plus a path through the desert plantings. Water greedy cities to the west have stolen water from the streams supplying the lake causing its level to drop 45 feet. Originally formed by volcanic action the lake has no outlet and its water is 9% salt supporting only brine shrimp and fly larva.




The bookstore had a copy of James Kaizer's Yosemite not available in the park one suspects in support of sales of their own inferior guide. The theatre presented a movie that provided an excellent overview. The service area canopy was covered with solar panels. 

 

Driving back into town Shell Gas was $4.59 in competition with $4.99 at Chevron. After hooking up in camp walked down toward town and at a motel ran into a biker from Half Moon Lane in Oakville. His buddy was from Mount Forest. Talked for quite a while before giving up and coming back home.

My next door neighbour here has a small white airstream like trailer and being of suspicious minds have a Denver Boot attached to one of its tires and use both an electrical and water filter. For the record this may be Mono Vista Campground but from my vantage point there is no view of the lake. Another first for me in eleven years of travels it's the first time I've used a pay shower, though for the record I was supplied with two free tokens. Five minutes was more than I needed so I have a souvenir, the cold water continues here after the hot shuts off. After wandering around Yosemite for three days I needed that.



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Grand Canyon

The drive from Flagstaff up to Grand Canyon rises and falls along steep grades. I opted to take Switzer Canyon Rd out of town passing through pine forest before entering a National Forest that appeared rather stunted. Leaving early ensures the possibility of finding parking when arriving at the park. Mid-morning light lessens the drama of the canyon and crowds of people struggle for room at the railings. A constant haze hangs over the ravine. Talking to a park ranger at the Visitor's Centre entails waiting in a long line-up. Water fountains are located everywhere. I enjoyed the proffered introductory movie and toured the park bookstore before driving over to register for my campsite. A-2 right at the entrance a short stroll from the shuttle bus stop. 




Settled in and got my photos organized and had lunch. Late afternoon walked over and checked out the General Store shaking my head at the prices and visited the Park Lodge where I used their internet signal to check mail. Found the McKee Amphitheatre and learned I didn't have my devices set to Mountain time. I did have reading material but wished for a pillow for the wooden bench.

At 7:40 Mountain Time lanky pony-tailed Ranger Joel arrived and began answering questions from all comers. Creationists might have become uncomfortable. The slide show told the history of Grand Canyon in terms of the idea of the park. Beginning as a useless piece of real estate lacking in resources, moving on to a fascinating historical geological artifact, becoming a tourist trap for money-grabbing entrepreneurs, and finally a National Park. Highlighted was the tension between the twin goals of providing recreational resources for 4 million tourists per year and preserving unique ecosystems for native flora and fauna. The study of the canyon's geological strata goes on to this day and tour groups brave the mighty Colorado.

Arose at 4:30 to discover dawn's early light already upon us. The sky is devoid of cloud though haze hangs constantly over the miles wide canyon. Got to take photographs as the sun rose over the North Rim. Were I ambitious I'd be walking up to see the sun set over the South Rim but alas. I walked the Rim Trail West until my camera ran out of battery power. Walked back past the amphitheatre putting in nearly 5 miles. Took the shuttle bus after a rest to visit the park bookstore and read E-mail at the lodge. Settled in here to catch up with my literary efforts.

Ranger Lance at his evening presentation talked about using your senses to "see" the park. Once more the programme was rather earnest in nature. This 31-year-old was a troglodyte.

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Heading Out for Grand Canyon

Left Austin in the dark of night heading up 183 avoiding Toll Road Perry's money grab. After daylight arrived entering the Texas' Panhandle I ran into three hours of heavy rain that left ponds on parking lots and flooded areas on service roads. The route passes through wind farms, cotton fields where giant bales lie under cover along with loose cotton. Grain is grown here as well and elevators mark small towns. Fields are dotted with pumpjacks. Supposedly Billy the Kid lies buried in Fort Sumner. 



 

I spent a restless night in Lubbock and drove on to Albuquerque. From an aging KOA to the luxury of the American RV Resort where pop corn awaited and breakfast in the morning is complimentary. The sudden hale storm beat off some of the dust I'd collected.

West along old Route 66 on I-40 one climbs to the continental divide West of Gallop, NM at over 8000 ft. Having a kamikaze coyote immolate itself under my tires was just one more passing occurrence. Entering Arizona one learns one is entering the largest Reservation on Earth. Exits are dotted with Indian Trading Posts and Casinos. The Buttes and Mesas create a spectacular panorama but the undulating landscape becomes uniform desert scrub that comes with blowing dust, unstable roadbeds, and sudden gusting crosswinds. Cattle dot fields that hardly seem able to support them.

The aging KOA in Flagstaff is located in a pine forest where campsites are packed in like sardines. At 7000 ft I felt the altitude. It cools off there at night.

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Hanging Out in Austin

Spending time in Austin was a matter of renewing acquaintance with former friends. 
I got to learn the intricacies of Senior's Softball, stay awake for 3 hours of Traditional Jazz, worship at Gethsemane, renew my library card, see trains miniature and full-sized, visit the Moline Cemetery, eat BBQ, see ersatz Elvis perform, shop at HEB, drink Shiner Bock, read the Chronicle, and attend Pflugerville's Deutchenfest where I tried bratwurst and sauerkraut. 

 

Two weeks went by rather quickly.

Wednesday, May 02, 2018

Half Way to Austin

Lost the sun and blue sky today but savouring sweet lemons an overcast sky is easier on the eyes. The wind failed to swing North in time to assist me remaining contrarily crossed to my line of route.

Began the day with a shower so they wouldn’t smell me coming in Memphis. While I sat at breakfast 5 people including 3 adults walked through my campsite close enough to touch my windows. Don’t they know it’s legal here to defend your castle with deadly force? Otherwise extremely bad manners.

Began my day with a slowdown that revealed the grisly site of a collision that separated the cab of whatever vehicle it once was from its frame. Next, the female driver of a small grey Toyota who hogged the left lane for at least 50 miles and probably believes she has the highway bought and paid for.

Arkansas highways retain my previous billing, the joints between concrete blocks remain extremely uneven. On the plus side their Welcome Centre was personed by two gals, the first manned site I’ve encountered. I do not recommend their complimentary coffee. Spent a lot of time passing transport trucks again today.



Tom Sawyers RV Park proved to be fully open though recently partially flooded as the Mississippi recedes.



They found a site for me though the gal tried to upsell me on a more expensive paved site. As the billing states Wi-Fi free but not guaranteed; it is slow.



Washroom on wheels

Tuesday, May 01, 2018

Spring 2018 Travels

Sunday April 29, 2018

After slogging 18 loads over three days down to the RV amid locked doors, the elevator and Saturday’s rain finally had a soak and went to bed last night. Was up again at 4 and off after carefully backing out of the parking lot at 5 AM. First stop half a mile to gas up at $1.37.9/L at Petrocan where I was greeted by a local cop. This station is 24/7. Traffic was light at this hour on a Sunday but the gusting wind blowing snow flurries was not welcome though it wasn’t strong enough to be a bother on the two Skyways.

Getting my new camera registered at Canada Customs was a pain, even getting there a challenge. When I finally reached US Customs the middle—aged agent smiled and welcomed me to the US. After 10 years an agent with a sense of humour. Not all Trump’s Minions take their lead from the boss. This one winked at the idea of Trump getting a Nobel Prize. Was there ever a border crossing not under construction? The Peace Bridge is reduced to 2 tight poorly marked lanes.

At the Pennsylvania Welcome Centre the agent was in her office on the phone and never appeared. Along the way was surprised to see daffodils in bloom. The Ohio Welcome Centre was open but no one showed up. Outside a Phoebe was announcing his name and Red-Winged Blackbirds were busy setting up housekeeping in the marsh. Vineyards adjoined the area.

Astabula had escaped my notice until today. Stopped at a very busy Dennys in Austinburg for Brunch. The background noise covered most of the squeals from a table of 10 unruly imps accompanied by a Junior woman who lived in a shoe. W. C. Fields would have found them vastly underdone. I did not linger over coffee.

[I did linger over the letter k while I had a 3 hour restorative nap there.]

When I looked outside a large full moon was rising just over the horizon.

Realized when I reached my campground that I should have topped up my tank at the Pilot beside Dennys. Got a low fuel warning as I arrived, I’d been more concerned with whether the GPS would find the place than looking at my Fuel Gauge. Somehow feels like deja vue all over again. Fuel in New York State was $3.09.9/USGal. In Ohio around $2.65.9.

Trees are in flower in the park.





Monday, April 30, 2018

Made it to the gas station without having to walk. After driving around Columbus, Ohio set out along I-70 amid heavy truck traffic. The saving grace is the fact that on flat prairies one doesn’t get caught behind two transport trucks trying to pass one another on a grade.

Stopped at a Loves Truckstop in Knightstown for Lunch at Subway before braving Indianapolis. Seems the place was the filming location for the Gene Hackman movie Hoosiers. Rest of the day was mile after tedious mile. The Indiana Welcome Centre was unmanned and simply a rest stop with coin operated bandits and a rack of advertising.

Every time I stop at Terre Haute the interchange seems to have been changed and the route to the KOA is different. Getting there was a nightmare that saw me driving around in circles. The young people at the counter didn’t know how to handle the KOA system and bungled my sign-in. However I can forgive a lot when I get a good Wi-Fi signal.


After supper I ran into Dan, a Chippewa from Bermidji, Mn whose parents own the park. He lives in a tent on site. Sat at his picnic table in front of a fire and talked, well I talked. I enjoyed his perspective but it didn’t get my e-mail read. Tomorrow I gain an hour as I enter the central time zone. 

 

Tuesday, May 01, 2018



First thing this morning downloaded and installed Windows latest Feature Update, a massive file that took considerable time to download and install. While I was waiting took advantage of the pleasant sky-blue morning to visit the donkeys and take some pix. It was warm enough last night that my own hot air kept the RV Warm. Discovered the hard way that the entrance to I-70 Westbound has changed since I last traveled these parts and has moved to the opposite side of the road. Drove up and filled my tank at Pilot for $2.54.9.


Heavy truck traffic until I headed South on I-57. Didn’t bother to stop at the Illinois Welcome Centre and drove through to Whittington. Stopped at a Restaurant/Gas station at the corner and found a walk in beer fridge, a wall of pop coolers, aisles of chips in the gas station store front. The Restaurant has “entertainment”, a games/party room, and a family restaurant so marked.


Whittington Woods RV Park is in a hardwood forest as advertised and the trees are just beginning to bud out. The place is quiet. 



 

Went for a walk in the woods before settling in. 

 

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