Entering Louisiana

It’s a windy day on the road today. I am quite certain it is nothing like riding a bucking bronco; nevertheless, that’s the image that came to mind as Dave tried to keep our RV between the lines on the road.

We passed a farm/ranch/whatever-it-was with a very long fence needing the attentions of a Tom Sawyer.

The vet had an amusing sign:

Sit. Stay. Spay.

Good Owner.

In Jasper, Texas, at a Conoco station we bought diesel for $1.79/gallon! It was cheaper than regular gasoline.

Street signs here are red. The first one I saw said “Bevil Loop” so I thought red might mean it was a dead end road. But the next sign was also red. Maybe they just want travelers to be able to actually see them?

The next sign I noted said “Entering Beauregard Parish”. We are definitely in Louisiana now where they have parishes instead of counties.

In Merryville, Louisiana, we stopped at a visitor center to pick up a new highway map and to pack away the Texas one that is getting pretty battered.

The next sign I noted said, “No Driving on Shoulder.” Texans have to be told that. According to my observations, it’s standard procedure in Texas to drive on the shoulder if there’s someone behind you that would probably like to pass you. Dave doesn’t do that. At first, I felt like we should but then realized if we pulled over for someone to pass and it turned out not to be safe for them to do so we could be held liable. No, thanks. Let them take their own risks and hope they don’t injure us doing so.

It appears the last weekend in March is festival time in the small towns along U.S. 190 both sides of the Texas/Louisiana border. Azalea Festival. Crawfish Etoufee Cook-off. Dave doesn’t like festivals so we are trying to visit these places during the week so as to leave them to their crowds on the weekends.

We passed a field full of row after row after row of parked small house trailers. Dave thinks they are FEMA trailers. I wonder what they will do with them? Are these the ones that made people sick? If so, are they planning to reuse them? If not, why store them?

We planned to stop in DeRidder for lunch. Neither of us wanted to stop at the Cajun restaurant. The DQ was on the wrong side of the road. Dave kept driving expecting there to be more. There wasn’t. I raided my emergency stash of food and we kept on going down the road.

Now we are seeing tree trucks that remind me of Oregon except these trees aren’t nearly as fat. We passed a paper mill, too.

As is usually the case with U.S. highways, we have railroad tracks running along side us. Suddenly Dave said, “Truck on the tracks.” It might have been a signal maintainer. He sure was being careful about stepping out of the truck there where the shoulder was steep and the ballast loose under foot.

We passed a pizza place and a Subway that both had signs only along the front of the building. Without having a sign out on the road we don’t know they are there until it is too late to stop. Dave never saw either of them. Finally, in Kinder, Louisiana, we found a McDonalds with signage that warned us to prepare to turn. I feel much better with some Chicken Selects in my stomach.

South of Kinder I saw a place called the “Cobwebs and Dust Flea Market”. Truth in advertising?

Now we are parked for the night at the Quiet Oaks RV park.  More truth in advertising–except for the occasional train whistle, of course.

TTYL,

Linda

A Week in Richmond

Richmond, Texas, that is. Our first night at Shady Oak RV park, we saw two other Views pull into the park. It wasn’t long before there was a knock on our door and a fellow was asking if he knew us. It was one of the View owners coming to see if we’d been to any rallies they’d been to and to invite us over for happy hour. So we met John & Peggy and Larry & Virgina, all from Wisconsin, and talked, among other things, about how glad we are to not be Up North at this time of year.

We spent the weekend doing household chores–like laundry and house cleaning and all that fun stuff.

Monday we went into Houston for a day of errands.

We went to REI and stocked up on freeze dried food.

We had a recall on our Sprinter done. We waited about an hour  for it to be our turn to get a 2o minute fix. Helfman Dodge had a nice waiting room where we got a bunch of computer work done. I like it when they have tables near electrical outlets.

We went to Smitty’s RV and Welding to find out what to do about our hitch. We’ve been told it’s going to fall off. They said, “Yes, it is.” They will put in a bracket to hold it better. They will also put a wheel on the upright part of the Segway lift so it will roll instead of drag when we go through dips at driveways. On Friday they will do these things.

Tuesday we spent cleaning out all our cupboards and shelves to see how many things we aren’t using that we can throw away or ship back to our storeroom to lessen the weight of our stuff. We are trying to get rid of all the “someday we might want to use this stuff” so we have more capacity for the “we use this every day stuff.”

Wednesday we ran local errands. First we went to the Post Office to mail back all the DVD movies we have that belong to NetFlix. We are suspending our account since we never seem to have time to watch movies any more. We have seven days to send back these movies before they charge us $20 apiece for them. If we get the urge to watch other movies, we can rent them for $1 at RedBox which is at most McDonalds and some Wal-Marts now.

Then we took enough stuff over to the UPS store to ship five boxes to the store room. It’s not as much as it sounds like since the piano keyboard gets its own box as does the piano stand and the tire chains which are either too awkward or too heavy to go in with anything else.  

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Then there’s a box of piano sheet music. And this one:

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A lot of that last one would probably have gone into the estate sale if we’d been thinking more clearly. Some day we’ll need to resort stuff in the store room and decide, once again, which to keep and which to dispose of.

In the meantime we keep doing chores here. Such as going to Hobby Lobby and buying a piece of strip wood to put in the silverware drawer so the holder slides instead of falls. The sharp knives are in a holder under the silverware holder and it can’t be good for the tray to keep falling on them.

We also went to KFC/Taco Bell for lunch. The last time we drove by it was still under construction but today it is open for business. It turned out to be the first day they are open so the employees are practicing their new jobs. And the food is free! From 12-2 and from 5-7 Wednesday and Thursday each person who comes in gets one free meal. Friday is the Grand Opening and you get to pay for your food. We repaid them for our free food by helping them learn what else they need to do–for us they need to get knives and butter which they said they will do. We like KFC’s original flavored chicken strips but we eat them with a knife and fork. No knives meant we couldn’t cut them up. We also like butter on our biscuits. Today they gave us some clarified butter they use for cooking and promised to order packets of butter. Good people;  I hope their place is a success.

Then we went to J.C. Penney for Dave to buy new underwear. I made him throw his out. I asked him if he didn’t put his fingers through the holes trying to put them on and he said, “Yes.”!

Then we went to Kroger to buy groceries. They have Mocha Mix! I can have cereal for breakfast again! Which I think I’ll go do now.  We have another two busy days planned here.

TTYL,

Linda

Hitches

Today we traveled east on I-10 between Quartzsite and Phoenix, Arizona.  For some reason I was aware of vehicles with trailer hitches on this route.

Several years ago someone passed a law that allowed semi tractors to pull a second trailer if the first one used a 5th wheel type hitch. That apparently has been expanded to other types of hitches. I’m not sure they realized all the implications of doing that. Today we saw a motorhome pulling a car that was pulling a flatbed trailer holding an ATV. As far as I know, there is no special driver’s license required to do that as long as the combination does not weigh more than 26,000 pounds. Most RVers never give a thought to weight limits so I wonder how many of these double tows are over the limit for their driver’s license and/or their tow vehicle rating. And how do they park anywhere?

I saw the left half of a double wide mobile home being towed down the highway so I was watching for the right half when a second left half went by. So I started speculating. Maybe they put a hitch on opposite ends of the two halves so the roof lines would clear curved underpasses. But most mobile homes get backed into the parking sites. How would they place one with the hitch on the wrong end? Then the two right halves went by. Oh, well. That’s not nearly as much fun.

Then we saw a sailboat on a flat bed semi trailer. It was longer than the trailer. Dave estimated the length of the boat at 60 feet.

Then we saw a trailer that was a combination RV and horse trailer with several stalls for the horses. I wonder if the trainer lives in the RV and takes the horses from race track to race track? Maybe they were headed to Santa Anita on Route 66.

Then we saw a big pickup truck pulling a small travel trailer.

Then what looked like a small pickup truck about to be devoured by the big fifth wheel chasing it. Probably the second pickup was as big as the first one but it was dwarfed by the tall bedroom hanging over the truck’s bed.

We also saw a vehicle with it’s tow bar folded up in front of it looking like a gun sight.  

And we saw some semi-trailers parked by the side of the road being used as billboards.

And a semi tractor pulling an empty flatbed which made us want to warn him he’d lost his load.

And a green tractor pulling a red container which made me think of Christmas.

We saw a car pulling a small U-Haul trailer, then a pickup pulling a small flat bed trailer of household goods, then a pickup with it’s tailgate down to make room for the couch it carried, then a full-sized moving van. Lot’s of people moving in the middle of the month.

Some semi-trailers advertised companies, some advertised products, and some traveled anonymously down the road.

We saw a semi tractor with no tailer, his hitch exposed for all to see.

We saw an RV pulling a U-Haul car dolly with no car on it. It was wagging down the road like a puppy’s tail. I hope the car is parked someplace safe and not also wagging down the road with no driver.

We saw a truck hauling another truck on it’s flatbed.

All those hitches and not a picture of one of them. Sorry, Robert, you’ll have to pretend this is radio instead of TV and see them all in your mind.

TTYL,

Linda

We

Because I have read a lot of books and watched a lot of television programs set in Great Britain I’ve known for years about the royal “we”.  It is traditional that a king or queen refers to him/herself as “we” when expressing desires.  

And , of course, everyone knows about the plural “we” when expressing desires that two or more people, including yourself, should do something.

Yesterday I learned about the singular “we”.  I’ve used it many times but I didn’t think much about it until last night’s campfire discussion by the Escapees Class of ’08 members.  The singular “we” is when you say, “We should do such and such,”  when what you mean is, “Would you, please, do that dear?”  One of the wives said something about, “We should…” and the husband answered, “Is that the singular ‘we’?”  I like it.

TTYL,

Linda

Anniversary

 

We’ve been six months on the road today.  Here’s where we’ve been so far.

Our major trips have been:

Wyoming for Escapade 

Idaho for family reunion

Minnesota for annual physicals

Ohio for Gypsy Gathering

Route 66 Chicago to Santa Monica for fun

Oregon for RV upgrades

Pacific Coast south to get warm

and now Southern States to evaluate potential wintering sites.

We’ve covered 14,358 miles in 20 states. Some of those miles have been fast ones and some have been slow ones but most of them have been fun ones.

TTYL,

Linda