Strolling Amok

Pops goes on tour.

Archive for the category “Tourista!”

Medicine Bow National Forest

Life is not particularly hard for an RVer at the Medicine Bow National Forest.

Life is not particularly hard for an RVer at the Medicine Bow National Forest.

This is an overnight stop only, on my way to the Bonneville Salt Flats. I could have pulled over at a rest stop, but I wanted to check out the adaptability of this national forest for future reference. It’s possible to stay here for up to 14 days, and I certainly would, but duty calls. Wow. Despite the severe washboard gravel road that got me up here, this place is big-rig friendly, with ample turn-around spots along the way. Many gigantic boulders are strewn about, and many more form spires. Along with the pine trees, the effect is arresting. The 8,203′ elevation means much cooler temps, too. I hate to think what winter is like up here, since many interchanges have gates, and there are frequent signs with lights saying Read more…

Stromsburg Time Warp

Like the peculiar name spellings, Stromsburg is an unusual town. Even the company that laid in some sidewalk similarly scrawled their name into an end panel.

Like the peculiar name spellings, Stromsburg is an unusual town. Even the company that laid in some sidewalk similarly scrawled their name into an end panel.

Stromsburg today has about the same population it did when it crossed into the big time in 1888 at 1,000 people. It is reportedly the largest of four towns in the county. Want to see what a small town looks like without Walgreens and McDonalds and Wal-Marts? It looks clean, cohesive, and still has people standing about the sidewalks talking. Everyone except the farmers lives right in town and walks to where they need to go. Women walking strollers abound. The postal clerk knows everybody by name.  As a tourist in the stores, you are instantly recognized as such, in kind of a “Oh! That’s odd. I don’t know you!” kind of way. Yes, it loses a lot of its young people, and has trimmed its population slightly in the last decade, but I can tell you, it still has plenty of suds compared to Read more…

Holiday Snaps!

An approaching sunset in Shelby, Michigan. Quite a scene change from the sunsets in the Great Southwest!

An approaching sunset in Shelby, Michigan. Quite a scene change from the sunsets in the Great Southwest!

I took five days off to attend a family reunion in Shelby, Michigan, which is quite a ways up the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. Days off, you ask? Aren’t I already on one big vacation? Not when I’m troubleshooting the refrigerator again, and thrashing with the items in storage. That’s work!

Each wave leaves a sand trail at its edge.

Each wave leaves a sand trail at its edge.

The Point Au Sable lighthouse, now unused, is open for tours.

The Little Point Au Sable lighthouse, now unused, is open for tours.

Read more…

The Forest Road Conundrum

This old limestone kiln for making quicklime is falling apart, and will no doubt come down on its own, sooner or later. This is rugged land, so the labor to use it must have been amazing.

This old limestone kiln for making quicklime is falling apart, and will no doubt come down on its own, sooner or later. This is rugged land, so the labor to use it must have been amazing.

Yesterday was expended on touring a tiny selection of the forest roads in the northeastern section of the huge Prescott National Forest, north of Paulden. That, and having to head for the hardware store in Chino Valley once again in order to get a few mouse traps for the trailer. (I got one of the little buggers and turned him loose across the road in this morning.) The touring was considerably more fun. My goal was to get some idea of just how easy or tough it would be to find a usable camping spot in a National Forest, at least in this area. I had help and guidance finding the one I’m at. How difficult would it be going in blind?

As of this year, most of the National Forest roads have been closed off to motor vehicle access, which includes campers as well as all types of motorized vehicles. This is because four and two-wheelers have basically been tearing up wilderness areas, which causes water runoff problems and erosion. It gets a lot more complex than that, but you get the idea.

This section of FR573 looks great, but was a crawler in the F-250 because the rocky surface tended to toss me and everything else from side to side.

This section of FR573 looks great, but was a crawler in the F-250 because the rocky surface tended to toss me and everything else from side to side.

MVUM maps (motor vehicle usage maps) have been issued for most National Forests which show which roads are still available for travel and camping. There is a generic caution by experienced campers that forest roads are risky for trailers because of dead ends and lack of space to turn around. I just kind of pictured in my mind that the remaining approved roads would be comparatively trailer-friendly. Still a bit rough, still with dead ends that force backing up long distances, but probably a little less challenging for campers, when compared to the closed-off roads.

Yesterday’s tour unravelled that assumption! I’m on FR573, which actually goes for many miles, right up to the northern state line of Arizona. I took the loop around my area, FR9711D. I had taken FR9711C on my bicycle a few days ago, which looked like an impressively challenging 4WD trail due to severe erosion. I took FR573 northward for many miles, then I doubled back and crossed over Arizona 89 to tour forest roads on that side.

While on that section of rocks, I stopped to shoot the valley below. Pretty!

While on that section of rocks, I stopped to shoot the valley below. Pretty!

In general, there are no generalities about forest roads. As Forrest Gump would say, once you turn into one, you never know what you’re gonna get, and Google Maps gives no indication of roughness. A very few forest roads are broad, smooth gravel connectors. Others are the old, bypassed, gravel versions of current routes, like Arizona 89. The majority of forest roads are barely passable by travel trailer. The great majority are far too rough for a vintage TT. Many are too rugged for even a conventional, top-heavy truck camper. (A lightweight pop-up camper is the only safe option here because of rear overhang and center of gravity issues.) Some forest roads are suitable only for short-wheelbase, high-clearance 4WD vehicles like Jeeps.

Good thing there isn’t much traffic at all. While returning back down my tour of FR573 north, a couple in a newish modified Jeep Wrangler were coming the other way. Since this section of road was cut out of the side of a hill, the road was too narrow to pass. Fortunately for me, he was able to back off the road into a little niche way too small for me to fit into. Saved me having to back up quite a long ways.

The F-250 is simply too wide for many trails, and new branch scrapes on the paint show it. I wouldn’t go down some in the F-250 without my tow strap and a 4WD escort vehicle with a sturdy powertrain. A winch would be nice, but out here, “trees” are really just glorified bushes with no hope of moving 9,000 pounds of iron. As I’ve mentioned in another post, heading down challenging 4WD trails just for funsies is a calculated risk, and the F-250 is a big 4WD work truck, not a nimble off-roading device. Ground out, break, or get stuck, and your sole means of transport for water, food, and towing is unavailable, starting right now. The average tow truck can’t get to where you are. It’s potentially a very big deal, so from today’s tour, I’ve found that even MVUM-approved forest roads need to be approached with caution even in the F-250 alone. Much time was spent listening to the frame and body slowly flexing, a byproduct of the truck’s stiff springs.

That may seem distinctly unadventurous, but racer wannabe’s often find out the hard way why four-wheeling solo with stock equipment is asking for trouble. It’s a whole different scenario than an organized club tour. Get into trouble, and it’s just you, miles from anywhere. I’d actually like participating in a local off-road club event sometime (unloaded), but they all run modified Jeeps on trails much tougher and tighter than my whale can negotiate. It just isn’t in the cards.

This is FR9711D, which had worse areas, but my concern here was high-centering the long-wheelbase Ford. I had to stop and pick my path first.

The truck is directly over a multiple washout on FR9711D. Not the worst area, but my concern here was high-centering the long-wheelbase Ford, which has no protective shielding. I had to stop and pick my path first.

As for finding camping spots on forest roads, ditches running alongside them prevent pulling off the road with the trailer, and the great majority of potentials are unsuitable anyway because of uneven ground clogged with bushes and tall grasses. So, finding a suitable pull-off area for the Innsbruck can be quite a time-consuming challenge. The good news is that many forest roads are passable for some distance in, before a ditch or other obstruction causes a problem. Internet and personal advice are helpful but of limited value, because nearly everyone has better ground clearance than my rig, so their outlook tends to be overly optimistic. With 10.5 inches of ground clearance on a 9-foot overhang, I’m almost in 40-foot motorhome territory. Almost. Not a one would dare come in here.

All this means is that when intend to stay in an unfamiliar area of National Forest, I’m probably going to have to pull in and find a nearby spot to pull over. Then unhitch, and drive to survey the landscape. It’ll be a pain, but necessary until I can work up a list of “safe” spots during my travels.

My first chance to do this will be coming up in a few days. On Tuesday, I’ll be leaving this area and heading for Winslow, Arizona for an overnight in McHood Park. Then, on to Bluewater Lake State Park in New Mexico for an overnight there. That’s a pay site ($10), but since I’m considering wandering between all the New Mexico State Parks starting in the fall (after buying an annual pass), I’d like to check one out. Cibola National Forest near Grants NM will then be my home until May 27, when the Run Straight For Home begins.

Be advised that getting a cellular data signal in each of these locations could be a problem, so an update to this blog may take awhile!

Biking FR9711D

At sunset, the sun came out and, WOW! Beautious.

At sunset, the sun came out and, WOW! Beautious.

A couple of days ago, it was overcast with sporadic rain predicted in the afternoon, so I briefly stopped by the VanDweller’s camp to give them a hard time, and then biked what I thought might be the loop approved for motor vehicle travel and camping, FR 9711D. Well, I was both right and wrong. I turned off FR573 too early, and caught an unapproved shortcut, FR9711C. Wow, it was rough going! It finally intersected FR9711D and I continued on around what was left of the loop.

FR9711C had a few sections that I decided to walk, since rocks and ruts can make the going tricky. Could have biked it, but why?

FR9711C had a few sections that I decided to walk, since rocks and ruts can make the going tricky. Could have biked it, but why?

Interesting that 9711D is approved, because there’s no way the Enterprise would make it down that trail! Then again, forest roads listed for camping and vehicle access don’t Read more…

Town Talk

Wickenburg is packed with remarkable street sculptures. This one is parked outside a jewelry and home decor shop. Every one is perfectly intact, which makes me wonder how that can be. Maybe would-be young vandals are too busy working and saving up for ATVs.

Wickenburg is packed with remarkable street sculptures. This one is parked outside a jewelry and home decor shop. Every one is perfectly intact, which makes me wonder how that can be. Maybe would-be young vandals are too busy working and saving up for ATVs.

Originally posted 4/16/2013

Monday in Wickenburg Arizona was a big day – and I didn’t even know about it! That’s what I get for not checking the town’s event calendar more closely. But, I still saw more than enough to fill my visual gullet.

Project One was to get one of the two 30# propane tanks refilled. I was going to simply do that as part of my town tour and grocery shop, but the 30# tank is tall and easily tipped over in the truck’s bed, so I had second thoughts about parking on a side street with the bed cover open and all the stuff in the bed exposed. So, I made a special trip into town to fill it and minimize the downtime for the refrigerator/freezer.

Uh-oh. Tow vehicle looks low, and there's a tow truck.

Uh-oh. Tow vehicle looks low, and there’s a tow truck.

Approaching one of the two wide washes that Rincon Road passes through, I saw a couple of ATVers in an unhappy situation. Their all-wheel-drive van and cargo trailer were stuck in the soft sand of the smaller wash. See? My paranoia about the nature of the sand here is based on what I’ve observed in my two weeks here, not mere imagination. One guy was taking pictures, while the other was talking to the driver of a towing service’s flatbed tow truck. The tow truck was in the road and, having conventional two-wheel drive, wouldn’t make it far into the wash. I drove past and then remembered I had a  Read more…

4WD Adventure Day!

Why include this in a post about rugged he-man adventure? Because this little bugger was just below my trailer window, peeping loudly and pecking at a dead branch on the ground, looking for bugs. Every day is an adventure for a woodpecker in the low desert.

Why include this in a post about rugged he-man adventure? Because this little bugger was just below my trailer window, peeping loudly and pecking at a dead branch on the ground, looking for bugs. Every day is an adventure for a woodpecker in the low desert.

Originally posted 4/14/2013

For the last couple of days, my sense of accomplishment and rugged individualism has taken a beating. I was so proud to have hauled the Enterprise up a somewhat steep, rough grade to this campsite. Then, two days ago, four or five travel trailers and fifth wheel trailers came up the same path in order to assemble as a group somewhere between a quarter and a half mile away.

Many RVers like to circle the wagons. I took this from the Enterprise. They look like they're close, but this was shot with a 300mm zoom lens

Many RVers like to circle the wagons. I took this from the Enterprise. They look like they’re close, but this was shot with a 300mm zoom lens

They’ve been buzzing past in an assortment of ATVs along the path I’m camped beside, seemingly every half-hour. Dust! One of them was unmuffled, and could be heard anywhere within a mile. They finally packed up and left today, and I drove over and gave the last trailer’s occupants my  Read more…

The Path Less Traveled

Well, it's a little easier to travel after a road grader has smoothed it out a little.

Well, it’s a little easier to travel after a road grader has smoothed it out a little.

Originally posted 4/12/2013

Today was working on writing, and then touring just a bit, and winding up doing laundry in town. Wickenburg is big enough to have numerous modern strip malls up and down Wickenburg Way. The laundry is a bit pricier than Quartzsite’s, but at the one I went to, all the machines were new front-loaders. It was a bit much to ask that my filthy grease-stained jeans would come clean, but they made a rousing try of it. This is actually my last pair of jeans, as the other three promptly disintegrated long ago, one right after the next. I’m still trying to figure that out. I still gots me some work pants, if it comes to that. The heat is such (90 today) that I’m actually starting to wear shorts.

The trail I’m on winds up a very high hill once you pass my campsite. I’d first planned to move the trailer to a primo spot a couple hundred feet away. With all the other campers gone (except for somebody in a TT like mine that parked a half-mile away this morning), I have my pick of the litter up here. Thing is, when I walked over to an even nicer spot, the drone of bees once again caught my attention. There was a constant whirl of them over by a cactus and they looked pretty preoccupied by swarming around, so I figured it was not meant to be. I can live with that, as it melds nicely into my lazy nature anyway.

From the top of the hill, you can barely see the Enterprise, a tiny cube next to a tree, just to the right of center.

From the top of the hill, you can barely see the Enterprise, a tiny cube next to a tree, just to the right of center.

So I climbed into the Furd and went on up the trail to see what I could see. The answer: plenty. It was a fairly steep climb in one section, and the rear tires were slipping a bit on the  Read more…

The Petrified Forest’s Blue Mesa

The entry walkway to the Blue Mesa has some nice views all by itself. It's a long way down.

The entry walkway to the Blue Mesa has some nice views all by itself. It’s a long way down.

Originally posted 2/17/2013

The Blue Mesa area of the Petrified Forest National Park was actually my favorite section of the entire park. A one-mile walk takes you down between badland hills that vary markedly in color and texture, with a few chunks of petrified logs thrown in. It’s all paved, but it slopes and twists markedly in spots at the entry. Something like a blown heart valve makes for a leisurely, wheezing climb back up at the end, but such a trial is so worth it!

Rather than get into how it was formed, I’ll just show you a few of the many photos I took, and leave at that. I will say that although it’s about an hour to hike around and back, the variety of magnificent views all around each time you stop will properly extend your stay greatly. Two girls in their twenties started behind me, and snapped  Read more…

A Day in Palm Canyon

Palm Canyon is far from being a "One View Wonder". You'll find yourself with an eyeful of something awesome every time you look around.

Palm Canyon is far from being a “One View Wonder”. You’ll find yourself with an eyeful of something awesome every time you look around.

Originally posted 1/29/2013

Recently, I had a special day! Instead of dumping sewage, doing laundry at the laundromat, or wondering why some device appeared to be failing, my visiting sister and her victim husband came by to see something worthwhile in Quartzsite. In order to do that, one needs to leave Quartzsite, of course. In this case, we headed 18 miles south to see the Palm Canyon National Recreation Trail in the Kofa Wildlife Refuge. It has been been rated as “moderately easy”, so I figured it would be a cakewalk. Lemme tell ya, footing was uncertain in bits and pieces here and there, and for safety’s sake, we ditched my sister  Read more…

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