Saturday, May 12, 2018

On The Way To Alabama

Tuesday, May 1 - Dark skies and rain in the forecast made our decision easy. We packed up and headed east. A 1.25-hour drive all the way to Exit 2 in Colorado. We parked in a BLM area that Ed Daniels told us about. There is green grass!  Will do a little exploring in the morning before we go to Grand Junction and head south into the Colorado backwoods.

Grand Junction is the headquarters for City Market and they also have a Sprouts which always has great produce. We leave Whole Wallets and the like to others.

Wednesday, May 2 - Cooler and overcast with rain in the forecast for today and tomorrow. We got out early to drive the canyon south of us. Not bad scenery and we wound up overlooking the Colorado.

We decided to move 30 minutes east to the Colorado National Monument. This will put us conveniently close to Rattlesnake Canyon. We are going to try to hike some of it. It has the second largest concentration of arches in the world.

Thursday, May 3 - Fog, overcast and chilly this morning. The weather this trip has been as unsettled as the DOW. We wanted to do something, so we went into town and lucked into a great dining experience. It was a Chinese buffet. Yeah, I know but it looked good, perhaps the best buffet of our lives. I needed veggies! The sky changed to blue for a few hours, then back to overcast.

Friday, May 4 - Great weather. We headed to Rattlesnake Canyon to see some arches. Route finding is problematic. Many roads, few signs. We made it and started our first serious, for us, hike of the trip. We hoped to go two miles round turn. We only made it one mile, but had some nice views of the canyon and of one arch across the canyon. I might have made it in cooler weather, but there were too many obstacles for Dorothy. It's an easy hike for anyone in reasonable shape. There is a Jeep trail all the way into the canyon. It has not been closed too many years.


 The Arch We Saw

 The Arch We Did Not See


Saturday, May 5 - Down the mountain to dump at the rest stop. Water problems, site closed. Grumble! Found a Maverick with a dump.

We headed south on CO141 through a green canyon at 7,000 feet then descends through red rock to Gateway at 5,000. We stopped at the fire station to ask about camping options. They directed us to three canyons and we picked a spot under some Cottonwoods. From there we drove west into Utah. The ascent from the canyon was scenic, but once we topped the mesa it was not much too look at endless mesquite. We did have a view of the east side of the La Sal's. 

Worthless Information: Abandoned Uranium mines cover this area. The material for the first four nuclear bombs was extracted from the tailings of Vanadium mines. The government wanted "tons" of it, so this area, like Moab, this area is dotted with former mines. Cleanup continues.

More Worthless Information: The John Brown Road was smooth hardpan. There were several unofficial signs that pointed to Moab. I checked the map and there are four ways to get to Moab. The shortest/fastest route would be to intersect La Sal Loop Road (Castle Valley) which is blacktop. The others are Onion Creek, La Sal Pass, and Geyser Pass. Garmin routes back you back to I70 for 128 miles in three hours. I think I would take the dirt road the 31 air miles.

Yet More Worthless Information: Many cities in Utah name their streets 400 East NE, 800 South SW. Which seems helpful, but it confuses me. Colorado has their own scheme. Streets named B, C, and D are common. They really like streets named for the mileage from some common point. For instance, 4 2/10, four and two-tenths miles from some point. They are referred to 4.2, but the street signs and maps have them 4 2/10 or get this one 15/100.  

Sunday, May 6 - We continued south on CO 141 through what must be the worlds longest red rock canyon. Wingate formation I think. It changes to Entrada/Navado as you get close to Gateway. South of there it becomes part of the Great Gravel Pit that starts in West Texas and extends to the Pacific. Nothing to see here, move along.

In need of water to work it's Dolores Canyon gold claims the Montrose Placer Mining Company built a 13-mile canal and flume to deliver water from the Delores River.  The last 5 miles of the flume clung to the wall of the canyon itself running along the cliff face. It was constructed between 1888 in 1891 The 4-foot deep 5-foot wide hanging flume that carried 24,000,000 gallons of water a day - enough for three teenage girls to shower. It's construction dazzled mining pros with this sheer ingenuity.  The placer claim, unfortunately, dazzled no one and after three years the company folded and abandoned to the flume to the ravages of weather and time. It is now listed in the national register of historic places. This engineering marvel symbolizes the twist of fate for all in the pursuit of Rocky Mountain gold.

A short day turned into a long day. I had guessed we would be staying at one of the numerous campsites along the Delores River. I had not read the fine print, they are all boat in. We wound up at McPhee Reservoir just north of Cortez. 

We stopped for lunch at a pull out in Dove Creek. Dorothy was making sandwiches and the door was open for a breeze. 1PM on Sunday is when they test the air raid siren. It was right outside our door. We both had heart attacks.

Dove Creek must the bean capital of the world. The fields literally go to the horizon for a dozen or so miles along 481.

 The Back Side (eastern) of The La Sal's

 What You See When You Arrive In the Unincorporated Berg of Gateway

 See It Closer - It Would Look Great In Our Backyard



 A 5-star Resort Was Built

 The Back Side (eastern) of The La Sal's (Again)

 The Butte Seen From A Distant Butte

 The Delores River

Can You See What's Left of the Flume? - on the wall

Monday, May 7 - Made it all the way to Bloomfield, NM. This section of Crossing America is never scenic and is problematic finding a place to park. We settled into a private park and enjoyed sitting on their patio listening to Youtube tunes with their super high-speed wi-fi.

Tuesday, May 8 - Stayed at our usual Albuquerque place, Enchanted Trails. A decent park for $19. Albuquerque almost set a record yesterday, 93 degrees. Finally a Costco, so we could get some Angus hamburgers and 87 octane for $2.63, 50 cents less than in Moab. Got the Jeep tires rotated.

Wednesday, May 7 - Three hours east brought us to Tucumcari. Never stayed here before. An old park dating to the 1930's for a discounted price made us stop. We parked in the shade of a cottonwood tree.


 Our Home For A Night - Tucumcari, NM

The Old Cabins



Thursday, May 9 - A long day for us. 4.5 hours from Tucumcari to Elk City, OK. From the desert to green. I can always tell when we cross the magic 100th parallel to green pastures. By staying on the northern route, I40, trying for cooler temps, we missed good BBQ and still have 95 plus temps. We overnighted at a city park on a lake. Last year there was a goose that honked like a pig. Did not see any water foul this year. Blown away I suppose.

Friday, May 10 - East 3.5 hours to a COE park on Lake Eufaula. The trees are now tall and glow brightly in spring green.

Having abundant water and no reason to conserve it, after a week, I washed the cow shit off the Jeep.

Saturday, May 11 - A shorter driving day, about 2.5 hours to Lake Dardanelle near Russellville, AR. Another COE facility with hookups for $10. The wind was much lower today. The three days in OK it BLEW.

Sunday, May 12 - Got four hours more toward home. Parked at another COE cg, This one is south of Memphis. Almost full on Sunday. Long Mother's Day weekend? Nice lake, great breeze.


Monday, May 13 - Our last night on the road. And our most expensive. We wanted to stop in Birmingham and stock up on pita bread from a great baker. Birmingham is not camper friendly. There is only one private campground and it costs $40. The city of Hoover has a parking lot that charges $50. Regrettablynone of our friends have 20amp service. We will get to the bread store in the morning and then head home. 

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Last Days In Moab


Two-Thirds of Millennials Don't Know What Auschwitz Was.

One-Third of Millennials are not sure Earth is round.

Conclusion: Our education system is not doing any educating.


Tuesday, April 24 - Two Jeeps went back to do the Courthouse, Monitor, Merrimack "rocks" and Determination Towers at a slow pace. On the way back we went to Tusher Tunnel. It's like a slot canyon but completely closed at the top. They call it an underground arch. It goes about 60 yards and opens on a canyon.

There were 21 rigs here Sunday, but today only six remain and they are all at a distance from us.

Wednesday, April 25 - Chores, lunch in town and shopping. Keith helped me replace the fuel filter on the generator. No, Kieth did it. Perhaps this will cure the intermittent problem we have had with it the last year. What a pain it was to get the new filter threaded. Poor design by Onan. It did not cure the problem.

Thursday, April 26 - We did a new trail called Jackson Hole which can only be reached via Hurrah Pass. It was not very scenic, but we found that bikers carry their bikes up a tall near vertical cliff and ride out over Cliff Hanger Trail. See the pipeline running up the hill? See the 'X' at the top. That's the top Jacob's Ladder the way bikers carry their bikes. And runners too! A 25k run this weekend features descending and then ascending Jacob's Ladder. We could not see a defined trail, only markers indicating where the runners should go.

Friday, April 27 - Keith and Sandy left this morning. An illness in the family and they felt they needed to be there. They plan on driving the 1,100 miles in two days. I about fainted at the thought. We are going to miss them, having spent six weeks together.

We went back into town to pick up a long-awaited part. It's a hot one today. We have no interest in installing the part or doing more than sitting under a fan.

Saturday, April 28 - Months before we left, I had no idea where we would go after Moab. Still, don't. We have both been thinking about returning to Alabama. Yesterday we talked about it and decided to head east in a few days. It will be our shortest trip ever - just over two months. Colorado and Wyoming would not be acceptable to us weather wise until late June. So we will just head home and endure the humid South. I can work on the toad braking and the generator in the early mornings before it gets too hot.

We went to a car show in town yesterday. Always enjoyable. It wore Dorothy out. Two hours of walking and standing. I always see lots of big block Chevrolet 396's, but never a 409/427. Wonder why?

Her quesadilla lunch did not agree with her. I had the same thing with no ill effects.

Sunday, April 29 - We lazed.

Monday, April 30 - 13 days of laundry were done. Picked up a few groceries and dumped. Cooler and windy. My allergies have never been worse than today.



Stopping at the Halfway Stage Station which was four hours from Moab, now 20 minutes

My best guess of how John Ford would have wanted to show Determination Towers. I like it. Hope he would.


 More swirly rock at Tusher Tunnell



Believe It Or Not - See the propane pipeline running up the hill? See the 'X' at the top. That's the top Jacob's Ladder the way bikers carry up their bikes. And runners too! A 25k run this weekend will feature descending and then ascending Jacob's Ladder. We could not see a defined trail, only markers indicating where the runners should go.

I keep a monthly log of our camping fees. In March, we averaged $5.57 a night. In April, we averaged $0.75 per day. The average for our trip is $3.15.  I love boondock camping.


 I always wanted something, anything, with a supercharger

One of three Cobras at the show. The first I have seen buffed.

 This JK was getting a lot of attention. It was built for the 2017 SEMA. I want it.

Something Dorothy wanted when she was a young lassie