Sunday, July 11, 2010
Charley K, football star
Pleasant evening last night at Cayuga Lake. Charley managed to slip the leash at one point, ran into the middle of some kids throwing a football on the big grassy quad and spent the next hour chasing the football back and forth between them. It was a riot to watch- she is so fast- and these folks loved trying to chase her around. One of the kids, about high school age, wanted to keep her, saying she would help him get into shape for football season. Just a lot of fun and exercise for her, and she behaved really well. The exercise seemed to relax her, as we all slept in until almost 8..the latest we've slept the whole trip. On the road now, on Route 90, with Paul at the wheel. Stopping in Albany for a visit with our old college friends Bob and Bee and then on to Western Mass to spend the night with other old friends Bill and Sue. Happy to be back on the East Coast and even happier to be seeing old friends. (and family soon!) The sun is out, it's warm and somewhat steamy, and we are happy to have made it across the country in one piece.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
THIS PAULIE TALKIN' NOW

Could not ask for a better day. From the Lake Erie shores in Ohio to Lake Cayuga in New York all in a day! Dogs are appreciating grass more than one might expect. The lake shore was a great site for our daily walk. We sit now at our campsite which has a big quad between all the tents and trailers and RVs where kids are playing ball. The paved roads around the quad provide the ideal place for kinder types to figure out how to ride a bike, some with the aid of training wheels. We are using the little sound unit built into the side of our home-on-wheels to listen to a root blues CD that Pete produced for me, and the setting is making the mix even better than anticipated. Tomorrow morning, I will attend to a few RV problems and then we coast into good old Massachusetts, the exodus being deemed a success!
Writing from the road

Having trouble posting every day..either our connection has not been great or (in the case of last night) we are too tired by the end of the day to write. We've got our routine down pretty well- pull into campground or state park, get the RV set up, take the dogs for a long walk to get them (and us) some exercise, cook and then clean up from dinner, and, finally, sleep. A glass of wine or 2 with dinner knocks us out and we barely have the energy needed to get out the laptop and try and write. (this might also have something to do with the fact that we've just driven anywhere from 400-500 miles, dodging tractor trailers, navigating throuh endless construction projects, etc.) This is a long way of saying that I am trying to blog while we are driving today.
It's Saturday, so Paul's behind the wheel. We just started the journey from Marblehead, Ohio (on the shores of Lake Erie) toward Cayuga Lake Sate Park in upstate NY (near Syracuse, I think). This will be our last night in the RV for awhile (hello, real beds and bathrooms!). We found the Lake Erie area interesting- we don't think we'd ever actually seen the lake- it is enormous. Lots of limestone quarries, a ferry out to a pretty little island, Kelley Island, the usual tourist places with ice cream and fudge. Tourist areas are all pretty much alike, alas..everyone wants fudge! (we used to call them Ye Olde Fudgerie when the kids were little and we traveled).
The dogs have been amazingly good- obviously, plenty of barking at moving objects and Charley can be a little over anxious when meeting strangers (but responds well to commands to sit, and then things go pretty well). Charley is so pretty that poor McKenzie is not getting much attention- we had sme guy yell from an outdoor bar last night "that's a good looking dog" and we let McKenzie think he was talking about her.
OK, I know they're called laptops, but that doesn't mean they're easy to use while actually on your lap (and in an RV going 65...) so I'll sign off for now. It will be my turn to drive soon and I can't wait- I've taken to passing tractor trailers just for sport and to relieve the boredom..this RV starts shaking like a Mexican space shuttle when it gets over about 72, so it makes for lots of fun!
More down the road...
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Grazing in the grass in Illinois

OK, enough for today..I'm making Paul clean up from dinner. The doggies have been great...Charley can get a little anxious when meeting new dogs, but seems to be getting better. McKenzie could care less...she just want to know where is the food?
Off through Illinois tomorrow, landing past Toledo Ohio on Lake Erie somewhere. Wish us luck! We've had some tense moments and I wouldn't want to do this permanently, but it's been fun so far.
The Middle of the Country

After a night in a beautiful state recreation facility in Lincoln, Nebraska, we set out to conquer Iowa and to taste the sweet waters of the Mighty Mississippi. Kathy, confrontational person that she is, found a way to attract the attention of a deputy near Council Bluffs, who was concerned to Constitutional levels about the tint level on our glass. We were pulled to the side of the highway, bt he missed all of the contraband because we were so nice to him. (Let's not even get into the Lincoln dude with TV quality road rage that differed with Kathy's way of using the road with a 24.5 foot vehicle.) We found a beautiful park just a few lot from our intended park in East Moline. For $15 we got a $1 million view, directly on the Big Muddy, watching the barges slip by a big hydro and flood control dam. Park was funded by a HUD block grant in 1974 (the bottom of another Depression for those old enough to remember) and was providing riverfront access to anyone who wanted it-- sounds suspiciously like socialism to me but I will sleep on it and see if my attitude changes! Adios for now.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
New Mexico to Colorado
Hello blog followers-
Had hoped to post every day but our location in New Mexico last night was so remote that we could not pick up any signal..tried to post through the iPhone to no avail. So...here's the first posting since pulling out on Monday am. Highlights and lowlights? Let's start with the "lowlights"..
P-man here. She did great through some very challenging driving-- think of Storrow Drive with a 5% grade. Northern New Mexico is a very interesting piece of geography. It is the high desert, (7200 feet for a lot of it) quite green, but the stream beds are still dry. There are roughly 114 million little green bushes all over it, a scrub pine of some kind. My little Virgin Mobile Broadband card did very well, creating for the other fools the impression that I was in the office! When we got near the Colorado line though, no signal of any kind other than Verizon wireless-- put that in your "which broadband to buy" review. Dogs settle down at my feet as we drive at 68 mph and I pretend to be working. This is a lot of fun, and one can easily imagine what the McMurtry characters were seeing every day. Adios amigos, meatloaf needs scorching.
Had hoped to post every day but our location in New Mexico last night was so remote that we could not pick up any signal..tried to post through the iPhone to no avail. So...here's the first posting since pulling out on Monday am. Highlights and lowlights? Let's start with the "lowlights"..
- Just as we pulled onto the highway (Route 19!) the closet opened up and dumped all our clothes everywhere. Lesson learned- everything must be secured and double secured, and be careful when opening up any cabinet or closet.
- Tonight we are at Garden of the Gods Campground in Colorado Springs, CO. We are here because Paul had a nostalgic memory of the G of the G from his childhood, visiting his brother at the Air Force Academy. Memory is a dangerous thing. This place has neither gardens nor Gods, but many, many people squeezed into an overgrown parking lot- men in wife beaters, ladies with bad tats, etc. That is ALL I am allowed to say- Paul insists on being positive (remember this, Rachel and Pete?) The best part- we are leaving tomorrow at 7 am.
- Northern New Mexico is beautiful. Rolling hills of pinon, green, beautiful little churches with tin roofs. Last night's digs, the Manzano Mts State Park, was lovely and quiet, with gorgeous hiking trails all around- juniper and ponderosa pine. Nice dinner of chicken chili, a lovely Spanish red, and we were happy.
P-man here. She did great through some very challenging driving-- think of Storrow Drive with a 5% grade. Northern New Mexico is a very interesting piece of geography. It is the high desert, (7200 feet for a lot of it) quite green, but the stream beds are still dry. There are roughly 114 million little green bushes all over it, a scrub pine of some kind. My little Virgin Mobile Broadband card did very well, creating for the other fools the impression that I was in the office! When we got near the Colorado line though, no signal of any kind other than Verizon wireless-- put that in your "which broadband to buy" review. Dogs settle down at my feet as we drive at 68 mph and I pretend to be working. This is a lot of fun, and one can easily imagine what the McMurtry characters were seeing every day. Adios amigos, meatloaf needs scorching.
Monday, July 5, 2010
On our way
Up at 6, some coffee and toast and about to hit the road. McKenzie chooses this morning to throw up some red bile in various corners of the AZ room...whose idea was it to travel with 2 dogs? Oh well, pack the stain remover. We'll miss our mountain views, pool and our monsoon storms, but looking at lots of fun down the road.
Sunday, July 4, 2010
cripple post
This is the P-man talkin' now, listen up. I may be bruised, but I have helped get us ready to go. Washed and waxed the vinyl flooring in the RoVer, packed the cubbies, did the last minute details. There is an amazing amount of room in the RV, even after we packed our military-style kits for the road. We have electronics, we have Internet, we have tools, we have guitar, we have "I" this and "I" that, we have salsa, we have chips. Nomadic life was not this good for the Inuit. Tomorrow night we will be under the big skies of high desert New Mexico. Hard to believe that there is a bigger sky than ours, but New Mexico only has 1235 people in the whole state, and they keep their lights off so that we can see heaven and whatever is beyond. Buy petro stocks-- the wallet is open, the pumps are willin'.
Heading Out
Heading out tomorrow morning, first stop New Mexico. Everything is packed (who knew we could fit everything we needed into this tiny space?), meals are made, dog toys and food packed, reservations made at parks and campgrounds along the route. We'll share the driving the first day, as Paul is not working.
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