Thursday, December 5, 2013

2 new Birds and another new campsite

I snapped some photos of two new birds for my list.  First:  a Loggerhead Shrike.



And right after I saw the Loggerhead Shrike, I saw this little guy right outside my door.  I got the camera again and clicked these out the kitchen window.  He's a Crissal Thresher.




This is our third year at Quartzsite, but I've never been here for the big tent event.  I decided I want to see it this year.  The first year, 2012, I had to drive to San Diego for emergency surgery the beginning of January, and January of 2013 I was visiting my kids in San Diego and Vacaville.  This year - 2014's big tent - I'll be here.  So I decided to move up to La Posa West so that I could walk to the shopping areas if I wanted to. 

So, here's the campsite - does it look familiar?  What???  You don't remember my campsite from two years ago?  LOL - it even looks different to me and I had to check photos from 2012 to see what it looked like then.  Someone took out the really nice fire pit that was on the side and put in another one that's right in the middle of the site, so I positioned The Palms differently this time, and I still like it a lot.


 Here's a photo of Hazel with Power and Fleur when they came over for a visit:


Remember when my grand daughter, Lauren, had her 5th birthday party - the cupcake/ gymnastics party?  Well, one of the things they did at her party was make bracelets for themselves, and I asked Lauren if she would make me one.  I couldn't believe she remembered - and it arrived in the mail this week along with pictures she made for me and two cards she folded and wrote on and decorated.  Quite a nice surprise.   My grand son, Drew, who is 8, also sent me a letter, very carefully written on paper that he drew lines across so his writing would be straight.  The both did a wonderful job with their writing and I loved what they wrote.


Lots of colorful beads, some are hearts, some are stars, and the large pink one is a seal.  Isn't it beautiful?  And it's a perfect fit, too!  :)

I want to thank all my readers who have used my link through to Amazon.com to wander around, see what's available, check prices, etc., then make your purchases.  I finally figured out why I wasn't getting credit for my daughter's purchases.  I asked her in an e-mail:  "Did you find your item, then go back through my link to make your purchase?"  The answer was yes, and that is why I wasn't getting the credit.  We can't blame Amazon for not giving me or another blogger credit for a purchase that started out on Amazon's site.  Bloggers get a small percentage of sales that start out with our site's links.  I'm not suggesting or advising what you should do, but a little information is a good thing - especially if we are looking for something we saw or read about on a blogger's site.  But now I know and I wanted you to know, too.  :)

Finally, I wanted to show you a HUGE rig that came in the other day to La Posa South - I wonder how many feet total this one is:


We have some new followers to Welcome:

Laurie's blog is called I Love a Cloudy Day.  Laurie lives on the shores of the Great Lakes, loves to create and work with her hands, and loves nature.  Her painting is very important to her, and ever changing. Laurie's vision is failing and is greatly affected by the sunshine so she loves a cloudy day.  Hence the name of her blog.

DearMissMermaid has been blogging since 1994.  She is an author and was a correspondent in the Carribean, posting from sailboats and tiny islands for over 15 years.  She is now traveling in her motor home with her darling little Yorkie, Harley Dog.

S.E.R.E Camper - Gary says in his About Me statement,  "The S.E.R.E. Camper is designed for escaping the cities and surviving off the grid. It was not built for recreation or luxury camping. Essentially the S.E.R.E Camper is just a big bug out bag on steroids."  His is a new blog named These Are The Days Before The Darkness Came.  

Mary-Pat retired in August of 2011 and spent a year and a half in Guatemala, studying Spanish and doing volunteer work.   Now she's adventuring throughout the North American Continent in a 2001 Fleetwood Flair and Smart car toad with her Standard Poodle, Lacy, and rescue kitty, Eleanor.

Thank you ALL for becoming Followers - Katie and I are happy to have you along on our adventures!  :)

From me and Katie, have a great Thursday, everyone!  :)

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Wordless Wednesday - Close Call!

“Close call!” The Nile Crocodile made this a risky place for a Grey Heron to fish! 
Photo location: Masai Mara NP, Kenya. 
 (Photo and caption by Leslie Anderson/National Geographic Photo Contest)
 
From me and Katie, have a great Wednesday, everyone!  :)

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Happy Thanksgiving Everybody!

It's a beautiful Thanksgiving Day in Quartzsite and I have a lot to be thankful for.


When I first read the quote below, I thought:  That's exactly what's happening for all of us who live in our RVs.  Even when we stop full-timing, we'll always know what it's like to be a traveler, on or off the grid, seeing new places, meeting new people, trying out new things.  Driving our homes down the road to a new place, a new adventure, a new challenge.  Solving problems and helping others solve theirs.  A very simple life, at least for me, but still very full and rich.  We've climbed to the summit.

You cannot stay on the summit forever; you have to come down again. . . .  
So why bother in the first place? 

Just this:  what is above knows what is below, but what is below does not know what is above. 
One climbs, one sees.  One descends, one sees no longer but one has seen

There is an art to conducting oneself in the lower regions by the memory of what one saw higher up.  When one can no longer see, one can at least still know.
--Rene Daumal

A very short quote that says so much about why we should go after our dreams and get out of our comfort zone from time to time, learn new things, and create lots of memories.

Then I thought about my kids and grandkids.  Today I am most thankful for my son, Tom, and my daughter, Kristy.  They are both married, have kids and are doing well.  As married couples they and their spouses spend a lot of time with their kids and allow them to experience all kinds of things.  They allow all five of my grandkiddles to "climb and see."  Those five kids, aged from 4 to 10, have done so many things I've never done and traveled to places I've never been.  They are learning things I'll never know. 

My grandchildren are all living very full, rich lives.  They are happy, intelligent, interesting people. They're expected to do chores around the house, complete their homework, get good grades, and be good citizens.  They all participate in sports they love, and whether they do well or have a bad day, their parents are there supporting them.  They have lots of friends, and are kind, generous young people. 

I'm really proud of them all.  For that - I couldn't be more thankful today.


I was looking back in my blog to my two previous Thanksgivings on the road.  The first one, in 2011, was my FIRST dry camping evening.  I had my solar panel installation completed that day and drove to Buckeye Hills Recreation Center to try them out.  I think I was the ONLY rig in the entire area.  It was so black that night, not a light anywhere in sight - and a little scary. I learned some lessons that Thanksgiving.

The second Thanksgiving on the road was last year, 2012.  I was in Quartzsite for the second year and had my Thanksgiving Dinner with my Quartzsite friends.  We drove to the Bluewater Casino in Parker, AZ for their Thanksgiving Buffet and it was delicious.  That was the post I wrote that included coyote sightings and my photos of the insect screens I installed  over the vent covers outside The Palms.  That was a job I was happy to complete - I was worried about having the vents open and getting insects and their nests inside them. 

This is our third Thanksgiving on the road, and Katie and I are taking it easy today.  We've been invited to a pot luck dinner, but I'm not really a pot luck kind of person so I'll make a frozen turkey dinner and add some trimmings of my own.  It will be delicious!

I don't know why, but it seems each Thanksgiving week I've made improvements to The Palms.  I have to say, it's sure nice to have my "mods" this Thanksgiving week include a butcher block stove top cover instead of a solar panel installation and insect screens.  Much easier, and far less expensive this year... 

From me and Katie, Happy Thanksgiving, everybody!  We hope you have a wonderful day.  :)

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Wordless Wednesday - Hobbit Home


Bonsai Version of the Baggins Hobbit Home By Chris Guise 







From me and Katie, have a great Wednesday, everyone!  :)

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

A couple of small mods

Last Friday when it was raining so much, I decided to drive into town.  I was so overdue with my laundry it was almost criminal.  I was literally running out of clothes, which I've never done before, so we got The Palms ready to roll and drove into town.  It was such a wet, gray day outside, everyone had the same idea and the stores were pretty crowded.  When I was drying my laundry, almost every drier was being used.  And this is a BIG laundromat.

Then we went across to Beals Outlet, a kind of department store that's like Marshall's.  They have clothing in the front and housewares, etc. in the back.  Whenever I want something special, I go there.  And I found exactly what I was looking for.

I have a black silicone mat that I've been using to protect my cook top cover.  The cover is a black metal bi-fold top that folds back out of the way when cooking, and covers the burners when they aren't being used.  Well, having a black stove/cook top and living in the desert, you can imagine how many times a day I wipe it clean.  The metal cover wouldn't be so bad, but I didn't want it scratched, so the black silicone cover solved that.  But it really collects the dust, and I need a wet sponge to clean the silicone mat, not just a cloth or duster.  I've been wanting a wooden cutting board to put there and I found the perfect size at Beals. 


Perfect fit!  This is the smooth side, the other side is for cutting meat, it has a well around the board to catch juices.  It almost matches the color of my cupboards, too.  And did I forget to mention it was only $14.00?  Now that's a deal!  One of the easiest mods I've done.  Directions:  lay on top of stove cover.  LOL.

The other thing I've been thinking about is a large sturdy box that would fit on the dinette bench seat near the window that could hold my Bose radio. The storage boxes I had it on were a little messy looking and not as steady and secure as I wanted.  It would be better to have just one large box, hopefully with a lid so I could turn the lid upside down and have a lip to keep the radio from sliding off.  When we travel, I could put the Bose IN the box to keep it safe if needed.  I found the exact size I was looking for, the colors weren't bad, and I bought it.  It's covered with a cloth material and the top is padded. 


Not the perfect mod, but it works far better than the three "book boxes" I had there before.  I put them and my Wii console and remote inside the box for now.

But NOW I'm thinking, as much as I LOVE having the wonderful sound of good speakers, I'm worried they might be using too much power.  I've been wanting a small, battery operated speaker with volume control for my Sirius radio, Zen MP3 player, and for the computer, when I need higher volume than the laptop provides sometimes.  I used to have a nice little speaker with volume control, but it finally stopped working and it's hard to find small speakers with that volume control.  And I don't want wireless, just AA batteries.  I've actually been looking for one for some time now, and finally found one on-line that I think will be perfect.  I'll show you when it arrives.  It'll be here in a week or so, and if I like it, I might attach my Sirius radio to the new speaker and put the Bose back in it's storage box under the dinette.  Changes, changes.  Makes life interesting.

I had to get out my printer to print out some documents the other day (more about that in a future post), and as it was sitting on the bench seat next to the new box, I thought - I'll bet it will fit into that box.  It will be close, but I might have a good, easy way to store the printer and have it nearby to use when I need it.  Right now it's in a box at the foot of my mattress in the over-the-cab bunk, and it's a pain to get out.  I have some Birthday cards to make and print, and when they are done, I'll see if the printer fits.  If so, bye-bye Bose.  For now.

There was a cooking frenzy in The Palms on Saturday, and I now have a fridge full of left-overs that will last for three or four days of lunches and dinners.  Every so often that happens.  It was especially fun on Saturday.  It was raining, cloudy, and cold outside.  I put a good audio book on, the Wave heater was throwing out some hot air, and I was super hungry.  All the right elements for a cooking fest.   I boiled eggs for sandwiches, to put in salads, and for deviled eggs, cooked rice, made a huge potato salad, big batch of Spinach Surprise, and roasted chicken breasts.  Nothing fancy, just good food and now a full fridge.

Don't you just love it when the fresh water tank is full, the propane tank is full, the gas tank is full, the black/grey tanks are empty, the freezer is full, the fridge is full, laundry is done, the on-line orders have been placed and there's nothing on the shopping list or wish list, the sun is shining and all is right in your own little world?  That's me today.

This is Thanksgiving week, and Katie and I have a lot to be thankful for.

From me and Katie, have a great Monday, everyone!  :)