March 27, 2015
We’ve enjoyed our winter at Voyager RV Resort in Tucson, but
are feeling better now that we’re on the move.
The following will bring you up to date thru April 25th. (Our internet access here is very slow, so pictures will be limited due to long upload time) We pulled out of the resort Friday, March 27
at 7:00 A.M. and headed just 8 miles to Discount Tire where we had an
appointment to have a couple tires rotated on the trailer. I wanted the spare, which had never been on
the road, moved onto the rear trailer axle and the tire it replaced as the
spare. The tire on the other side of the
rear axle had a leaking metal valve stem that was replaced last year with a
rubber valve. These are high pressure
tires (110 psi) and the rubber stem was high pressure, but I also have a tire
pressure monitoring system that sends a constant signal to my inside dashboard
with tire pressure and temperature. The sending unit is screwed onto the stem
and it’s recommended that they be mounted on the metal stems so they don’t flop
as the tire rotates going down the highway.
Since we were at the tire store, I had them put on the metal stem.
After getting the tires remounted and balanced we were off
to Dead Horse Ranch State Park in Cottonwood Arizona where we spent three
nights. While here we visited the
Tuzigoot National Monument, 1300 year old pueblo dwellings and the history. We also visited Montezuma’s Castle, another
site with the dwellings right in the cliff walls. We’ve visited Mesa Verde Cliff dwellings in
Colorado which are much larger, but the Castle here is pretty impressive. To
imagine how these people lived and built their homes in a cliff wall, climbing
a vertical wall to bring food, water, pizza….. well, it had to be a rough
lifestyle.
Montezuma's Castle |
We also visited Montezuma Well, a natural, spring fed lake
on a hilltop that unless you knew it was there would not likely ever had been
found. On the cliff wall surrounding the
lake was another cliff dwelling.
Montezuma Well |
Another interesting site was the V-V Ranch that for a
hundred years was a privately owned ranch with a wall of Petroglyphs that the
ranch owner protected from vandalism until the family donated the ranch to the
National Park Service several years ago.
Now they are watched daily by a park volunteer.
A V-V Ranch park volunteer pointing to the Petroglyphs |
March 30, 2015
Moving North again, today we go to Page, AZ to the Wahweap
RV Park right on the shore of Lake Powell. We’ve been here before and are
forever in awe of the beauty here. The
lake views are awesome and the weather right now is great.
Lake Powell |
April 1, 2015
We stayed just two nights at Lake Powell and today move a
bit further North to Kodachrome Basin State Park in Southern Utah. The GPS gave
us two alternate routes. The first route, a more direct drive, took us 60 miles
to Kodachrome, about 40 miles on a dirt road.
The second choice was via State Routes and 168 miles. Over a 100 miles longer to stay on blacktop.
We took the blacktop. Kodachrome colors
are beautiful, hence the name which was given by a film crew in the area before
it was named a State Park. This part of
Utah displays colorful formations everywhere.
Nearby is Bryce Canyon National Park, Cedar Breaks National Park,
Capitol Reef National Park, Arches National Park, Zion National Park, and hundreds
of miles of trails and off road beauty in Escalante National Monument.
At Kodachrome State Park. Near Bryce Canyon. About 40 Miles from Escalante, UT |
Kodachrome Basin State Park is drop dead gorgeous, as with
many Utah sites, the mountains and terrain is a red color, blended with browns
and grays. We’ve been here before as well, and really enjoy coming back. The high temps today was 52 degrees and the
low was 30. We had electric hook up so
we stay very comfortable at night with our choice of electric heater or propane
furnace. When temps drop to about 30 and
below, I run both. Our 5th wheel trailer was ordered with dual Pane
windows and extra insulation for cold weather. This also works well in hot
weather.
April 3rd, 2015Kodachrome State Park, Utah |
We arrived today at Escalante Petrified Forrest State Park
where we agreed to host for six weeks thru May 18th. This is a fairly small State Park with 22
camp sites and a small visitor/entry station.
There are a few petrified logs scattered around the parking area and
bath house, but the main area for the petrified trees are along a 1 ¾ mile
trail that begins in the parking lot near our Camp Host site and park
office. The trail winds about ¼ mile
uphill to the top, then down the other side and forms a 1 ½ mile loop that
brings you back to the start. It is
classified as a moderate difficulty hike, which may be true, but getting up
that first ¼ mile I would rate a little harder.
Our Host duties here are very casual, 3 to 4 hours/day 5 days/week. June spends her time in the office, about 9:00 A.M. thru 12:30, helping
check in campers and hikers, taking the fees and answering questions about the
park. I actually spend less time than
June, driving the 4WD ATV around the camp loop chatting with campers, cleaning
fire pits, picking up trash and wiping off picnic tables. The actual work is maybe 1 hr per day, and
the chatting another 2 hrs/day. A high
point is: Hosts do no bathroom
duty. There are four part time paid employees,
two of whom share the daily bathroom/shower house cleaning, which leaves us,
Camp Hosts, as the only volunteers – but our activity is a lot of fun and so
far the most enjoyable hosting we’ve done.
This is our fifth State Park and third year as Hosts.
I use this to get around the park. Enjoy each day! |
One day on May we woke up to some snow. It didn't stick around long but was pretty while it lasted |
The view from the trail above the campground at Escalante Petrified Forrest State Park |
The town of Escalante has no traffic lights, and only a few
Stop signs which are on the side streets that enter the Main street. Traffic is straight thru town with no
stops. We have three gas stations, a
post office, five restaurants, a hardware store, small country grocery store, a
medical clinic, a natural foods store, an auto repair garage, and two or three
back county tour businesses. Population
of Escalante is 850; 852 since we arrived.
One of the part time employees, Alan, told me he plays
guitar and sings every Tuesday and Friday nights 6 P.M. to 9 P.M. for tips at
one of the local restaurants, Cowboy Blues. When I told him that I did some of
that, he invited me to stop in and play a few tunes. I did that our first
Friday night and ended up playing half the night. They seemed to like what I did so we went
back Tuesday and played a few more. Last
Tuesday, April 21st, June and
I went to Cowboy Blues for dinner and Alan didn’t show for his gig, so the
owner asked me to fill in. I got my
stuff and was set up about 6:30 and performed until about 8:45. Every table in
the house was full, and were full until about 8:00. When I stopped playing at 8:45, there were 5
people at the bar and one table occupied.
I was pretty tired and my fingers were sore, but I had a great time;
free dinners for June and I plus $66 in tips.
Actually my first paid performance and it was a ball.
So far, I've performed three times here at Cowboy Blues Restaurant |
Being a small town, when we stop for a meal in one of the
restaurants, they ask where we’re from. When we tell them about our Camp
Hosting at the State Park 2 miles away, most everyone knows Kendall, the Park
Manager and in our three weeks here, we are becoming recognized when we stop in
and word is already around town about my performance at the Cowboy Blues.
About 10 days ago, we were asked to consider staying longer
than our original May 19 departure date, as Alan gave his three week notice. He
is renovating his house and doesn’t care to do his three, 3 hour days at the park
any more. I said we would think about it
and then told Kendall no, as we were going to stick with our original
plan. Kendall then said he would hire us
both to work three days/week, 4 hours on each of those days. We’ve really
enjoyed being here more than any other place so after contemplating a couple
days, we finally said yes. We are now going to be here until September 1st,
when another Host couple will be arriving.
A little extra cash doesn’t hurt, free camp site and utilities., and the
most gorgeous part of the country surrounding us. We’re excited about this and we’re having a
great time.
We’ve been picking up food and such at the local grocery,
but we were out of a few favorite brands, so today we drove to the closest
WalMart just over the mountain in Cedar City, 135 miles one way, but beautiful drive. June also got a haircut and
we picked up some new hiking shoes. We
took the cooler along to pack the cold items due to the 3 hr drive home.
WalMart here sells dry ice, so I bought a block. That stuff is amazing. Our
meat was frozen by the time we got home which we were putting into our freezer
anyway.
Cell service here is weak, internet access is very slow, so
this blog post won’t have many pics due to the long download time, but I’ll try
to get as much as I can. If you’re out
this way, stop and see us while seeing some fantastic scenery.
By the way, Escalante, UT is on Utah Hwy 12, which was voted
as the second most scenic hwy in the world.
First was someplace in Switzerland, I think, but number two in the world
means it’s a great drive. We’ve done it a couple times and would vote number
one.
When we leave here, we’re going to travel a couple months,
then spend next winter in Apache Junction, AZ at Lost Dutchman RV Resort by the
Superstition Mountains where the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine is supposed to be
located. It hasn’t been found, but we’ll look around and let you know when we find
it; well, maybe not.