Strolling Amok

Pops goes on tour.

Spending My Days How?

This "deer tooth box" and sign were at the entrance to the bad road to Queen Canyon. What's up with that????

This “deer tooth box” and sign were at the entrance to the bad road to Queen Canyon. What’s up with that????

Originally posted 11/7/2012

I was asked a fair question, as in: “What’re you doing right now? How do you spend your days?”

The answer to what I’m doing these days is quite a bit different than it will be a couple of weeks from now. Basically, I’m getting the travel trailer’s basic systems up and running, and checking on how well they’re doing. I’m merely continuing the modification process that I started in September and didn’t have the good fortune to complete by the time I left Algonquin, Illinois for Quartzsite, Arizona. This is doing it the hard way.

My day is spent poring over installation manuals, calling vendors with questions, doing Internet research, and making to-do lists as well as shopping lists for bits and pieces of hardware. Making a mistake now in selection or installation out here costs significant time and money. You pay more for problems.

Today specifically? I checked out the feasibility of Read more…

Palm Canyon

Originally posted 11/6/2012

Palm Canyon is part of the same Kofa National Wildlife Refuge that Queen Canyon is. It’s a whole lot easier to get to, I can tell you that.

 

IMGP3852wtrmkd

 

Actually, I visited Palm Canyon but did not take the walking trail to the center of the canyon where the palm trees are. The trail is purported to be rough and take an hour to get in and out of. That trail puts you within sight of the palms. It’s another 40 minutes to actually reach them over “a very rugged climb”. It was about an hour and a half from sunset when I arrived, and I would have preferred to have my trusty walking stick on such a trail, not to mention needing it to beat away the autograph seekers who frequently beleaguer me. Another time.

The palm trees are considered to be the only ones native to Arizona, as they do not do well in summer’s oven-like heat. They have survived here only because Read more…

We Have Achieved… Chargeness

Originally posted 11/5/2012

Yep, the Quartzsite Post Office came through for me at 11 o’clock today, taking 1 full business day (plus a weekend) to push the same package the last twenty feet over the counter that UPS took two days to deliver from Massachusetts.

You can hardly imagine the tension of hooking up the new Morningstar SunSaver MPPT 15L, a small black box that charges batteries from solar panel energy. I was almost afraid to insert the final inline fuse and let ‘er rip for fear it’d fail and all the solar panels would have to be changed out or something. But lo, it did its little startup diagnostic and started charging the two house batteries like they were old friends. I could almost hear it say, “Relax, this is nothin’. I got this.” Whew! Me thankful.

Less than half a day’s charge won’t make the batteries sit up and bark, but we’ll see Read more…

Kofa Queen Canyon

IMGP3833wtrmkd

Originally posted 11/4/2012

The Kofa Queen Canyon is about 19 miles south of Quartzsite, and about 8 miles east. Why did I pick it? Read the Quartzsite Chamber of Commerce brochure: “4-wheel drive, rough road, unmaintained roads, only foot and horseback travel is permitted in areas bordering this trail.” I went. I saw. I conquered. But, not before wetting my pants. Several times.

To say that it is rough and unmaintained is to say that comedian Jonathan Winters had a slightly unorthodox style. It’s a rock-strewn trail, not a road, that slowly and arduously leads upward nearly a thousand feet over four miles of alarmingly bad passage. It contains many small dry washes that are abrupt and nasty, much like that kid you sat next to Read more…

Bureaucracy: 1, Customer: 0

Originally posted 11/2/2012

The new solar controller that I had sent to me via 2-day delivery was delivered to the local post office at 11:23AM, giving me plenty of time to wire it up before sunset to see if it works. Since I suddenly recalled at 12:48PM that the post office limits General Delivery pickups to 11AM-1PM, I hustled on down there with just minutes to spare. My son Tom would have almost been proud to see his decrepit old Dad push that 7,000-pound Ford down the very rough dirt road through the desert, brazenly ignoring the 15 MPH speed limit. Probably looked like a slightly smoother version of the Baja 1000. Cloud trail of dust. Oh yeah.

Made it! The lone employee produced a mail forwarding package that Tom sent to me, but no UPS shipment with the controller. “If it’s here, it has to be scanned in first, and all UPS deliveries are done at once. You won’t be able to pick that up until Monday.” With half a dozen people behind me, I gave up all  Read more…

Apologies to Bronson!

Originally posted 11/2/2012

While I was finding a place to stow the water filter assembly under the rear seat of the Ford, I came across this horrifying discovery: My 1-year-old grandson's tub toys! Oh, noooo!

While I was finding a place to stow the water filter assembly under the rear seat of the Ford, I came across this horrifying discovery: My 1-year-old grandson’s tub toys! Oh, noooo!

Getting Lucky… This Time

Whew! Lucked out on that one! After I looked over the manual and looked for dreaded water leaks under and inside the trailer, the water pump suddenly started working normally and holding pressure, indicating “a valve held open by a foreign particle” or in other words, water that I should have run through my filter set when filling the fresh water tank. Didn’t think that’d be necessary. So far, I haven’t seen anyone sporting water filters out here. Including the filters each time I refill will complicate and slow down the process of setting up to take on fresh water, but hey, I’d just as soon deal with a slower fill rate than replace a $150 water pump because of sand in the water screwing up its valves. Learning curve adjusted! As the Grinch says in the movie The Grinch Who Stole Christmas says, “That’s what these tests are for!”

Paper or Plastic?

Originally Posted 11/2/2012

In my case, the conundrum is paper & plastic, or water? RVers who boondock in remote areas typically need to minimize their use of water because using up fresh water and filling their waste tanks means packing up and hauling the RV to a dump station many miles away. They usually then have to pay for the privilege, too. To avoid this, they typically use considerable amounts of paper towels, plates, and drinking cups that need to be disposed of somewhere, which becomes a different problem.

I’ve been trying this for awhile and will likely continue at least until I can get the primary solar panel up and charging. Why? The onboard water pump uses a fair amount of electrical energy, so washing dishes and yes, taking full showers can run me into an electrical dead end. At the moment, the only way I have to recharge the house (or any other) batteries is to hook up to the truck and run its engine to slowly recharge them. It’s not like a jump start, as if the trailer can then take over battery charging on its own. It’s a leisurely and expensive way to Read more…

Ahhhh, Da Bee-udy a Nature

Now I know where they got the concept for the "mother" critter in the movie "Alien".

Now I know where they got the concept for the “mother” critter in the movie “Alien”.

Originally posted 10/31/2012

Well, my Innsbruck travel trailer appears to be a hit with the local denizens – witness the large tan spider residing on the refrigerator temperature control. I got up this morning and walked through an unusually stiff single spider web strand on the way forward, not thinking much of it. Didn’t see the spider yet, though. Just now, this afternoon, I even unpacked the mass of groceries I’d stored away in the back seat of the truck, including a few items I put in the fridge and freezer sections. Since the fridge has trouble cooling off new items, I thought I’d better kick down the temp control button to minimize its tendency to get warmer. Whoa!! Nice camouflage effect. Notice that it picked a tan surface to settle on.

This thing was large enough (1-1/2 inches) that I really, really didn’t want to knock it off and take my shoe to it. Would you? I’d be twenty minutes cleaning up the mess. Plus, the large “industrial” spiders that I’m familiar with, the ones that sometimes live above ceiling tiles in offices, are very aggressive and can jump a considerable distance. Hmmm. Never saw one of these, but it appeared to react quicker than its size would indicate. So, I drew upon my minimal resources of courage and held a large glass pasta storage jar under it while I knocked it off with the 18-inch grill fork my daughter had given me. I just knew I’d be using that here! Clink! It fell into the jar and I walked it 50 yards away near a bush, hoping it won’t find its way home again. I wonder how it got in. I guess the underside of the trailer isn’t as well-sealed as I thought.

I rode my bike to town today to get a few items at the hardware store, mainly fasteners, vinyl tubing and cork pads to modify the part of the bike rack that actually contacts the bike. The existing system wore through its padding and protective covers to expose the bike frame to steel, which chewed through paint and tried to get through gearshift control wires. The damage is done, but at least it’s an aluminum frame bike, so it won’t rust there. I suspect that its designers didn’t actually try it out for a very long distance before they put it into production, or more likely, management was in a rush and nixed any further work. Judging by the instructions, they’d had some problems with bikes slipping out of it completely. It’s now difficult and slow to use. Good enough for who it’s for, I guess. This is the kind of thing I had to clean up in my last product design job, but the clients would come in having already shot through their entire budget. Not very profitable for us, compared to the firms that initially screwed it up.

Still working at jamming five pounds into a three-pound sack. “Hmm, now where could this go? Oooh, boy.”

One Down, One to Go

I was going to lie down and wait a bit before I broke out the camera for a sunset shot, but fell asleep and then had to break out the tripod, too. It was that dark! Couldn't even see the controls on the camera, but I played with them anyway. Not the shot I was hoping for, but the nap was nice. Time to make dinner!

I was going to lie down and wait a bit before I broke out the camera for a sunset shot, but fell asleep and then had to break out the tripod, too. It was that dark! Couldn’t even see the controls on the camera, but I played with them anyway. Not the shot I was hoping for, but the nap was nice. Time to make dinner!

Originally posted 10/30/2012

The night at the local RV repair place went well, and by early afternoon today, five hundred dollars later, I gots me a shiny new hub, drum, backing plate, all brake internals, both bearings, and retaining hardware. They also removed, looked over, and lubed all the other wheel bearings, for what that’s worth. The wizened codger who did the hard part volunteered that if I’d gone much further, I’d have been in for the spindle or stub axle, too.

This may not mean much to you, but a gigantic motor home showed up at the repair place, apparently having some kind of minor electrical issue. It was impressed that it had air brakes. Sounded like a semi when it slowly maneuvered around.

On the way back to the LTVA, since I had the trailer on the road anyway, I made for the nearby dump station to empty and fill. Because I antied up for the seasonal pass, there’s no $5-$10 fee typical of other places like truck stops or campgrounds where you’re not staying the night. You’re limited only by how often you like to deal with poo.

There was a guy with a converted box van there who told me his own Bad Trailer Bearing Story, only his was Read more…

Post Navigation