Tuesday, November 18, 2014

ROUGH NIGHT FOR KELLY & SOLAR MIKE REMOVED OUR INVERTER TODAY

DSC_1787

OUR SPOT AT THE SLABS WITH ONE OF CALIFORNIA’S POWER PLANTS IN THE BACKGROUND, THE SALTON SEA & THE DISTANT VALLECITO MOUNTAIN RANGE

Well I had me a Senior moment Monday night & did myself a boo-boo.  Ever since we have have had this inverter problem we have had a whining sound somewhere in the rig’s dash.  Not loud but it’s there & it bugs me.  Before going to bed last night I decided flip our battery disconnect switch off knowing the whining would stop.  My mind did not register the fact it would also cut off power to our water pump, refrigerator, furnace, & anything else requiring power.  That meant no heat in the coach, no water for flushing the toilet in the night & no refrigeration.  When Kelly was up in the night & found the whole coach dark, cold, & stone dead she didn’t know I had pressed the battery disconnect switch.    She figured something majorly serious had happened with the coach’s electronics & had visions of the slides not coming in, drained batteries, maybe the engine wouldn’t start, having to call CAA to have us towed over to Solar Mikes, no water for washing etc.  It was a big stressful worry & she barely got any sleep therefore having a bad night.  I did not end up being a very popular guy this morning when I told her I had disconnected the batteries before I went to bed……It’s not easy being me:((  If I ever thought I was remotely capable & had the confidence to write a book some day that is what I would write about & entitle it, ‘It’s Not Easy Being Me’.

DSC_1785

LOOKING ACROSS SLAB CITY & THE SALTON SEA TO THE FAR DISTANT MOUNTAINS…RIVERSIDE CALIFORNIA LIES JUST ON THE OTHER SIDE

DSC_0013 DSC_1788

COLORFUL HIPPY BUS & A BURNT OUT 5TH WHEEL NEAR US…SAN BERNARDINO MOUNTAINS IN THE BACKGROUND

DSC_1786 

WE THINK THIS GAGGLE OF RIGS JUST SOUTH OF US MAY BE FELLOW CANADIANS…IT’S AN AREA WE KNOW CANADIANS FREQUENT HERE AT THE SLABS

We were at Solar Mikes right at 8 & explained our problem.  He had a full solar installation to do on a Class C but with a couple helpers working he did manage to remove our troublesome inverter & install a temporary used one for the next little while while ours is sent off to be diagnosed.  All indications are pointing to one of the two software boards inside the inverter itself.  If we were full timers on the road every day we would likely have just simply opted for a new inverter which technology has advanced way beyond the older inverters like we have.  But for only boondocking maybe 4 to 8 weeks out the entire year now we decided for our situation it was best to get our older inverter simply repaired.  A new inverter could run around the $2000.00+ mark while a board repair could come in around 3 or 4 hundred dollars.  We’ll just have to wait & see what the Magnum diagnosis turns out to be. 

DSC_0009

SOLAR MIKE’S OFFICE

DSC_0007 DSC_0010

ONE OF MIKE’S WORKERS REPLACES OUR MAGNUM INVERTER WITH A TEMPORARY USED INVERTER

Sure is nice having all our electrical plugs working properly again.  Just makes everything so much easier.  Neither one of the 75 or 300 watt inverters we have would charge my Toshiba laptop while it was on yet they charged Kelly’s smaller Acer.  By the time I was ready to publish my Monday night post my laptop did not have enough power to do the job.  Had to turn the Motorhome on to get the 75 watt inverter to work & power my laptop while the post published.  This RVing stuff sure can up the stress levels sometimes.  With a poor night’s sleep behind her Kelly ended today very stressed & frazzled.  We’re fortunate to have a quiet boondocking site with no noisy neighbors crowding in on us………………

DSC_0006

THAT’S OUR JEEP & RIG AT THE EXTREME LEFT

DSC_0011 DSC_0014

FRANK, THE FELLOW IN THE BLUE SHIRT IS A NEW RV’ER & WAS IN HAVING MIKE INSTALL SOLAR ON HIS 29’ TIOGA CLASS C…AND THAT’S THE USED INVERTER THEY FINALLY SETTLED ON FOR US TO USE WHILE OURS IS AWAY

IMG_1751

AND BY GOLLY THAT’S SOLAR MIKE HIS VERY SELF

Ever wondered what a heavy song had to do with coal.  Well I wondered too so I read DIZZY DICK'S latest post.  Coal of course always brings back memories of our big old coal fired furnace when I was a kid & I see it brought back memories for Dizzy Dick as well.  The song??  Well when you read what song he has linked to coal you will likely remember it right away & probably spend the rest of your day singing it over & over.  But be careful though….it might get you one day older & deeper in debt:)) (you can find Dizzy on our sidebar as well)

DSC_0003

THIS WHOLE AREA WAS ONCE AN OCEAN BOTTOM WITH MANY SEA SHELLS STILL REMAINING IN THE GROUND

Just finished my latest Kindle read, ‘Whispering Pines: The Northern Roots of American Music from Hank Snow to the Band’.  Enjoyed this book for the musical history it provided.  Filled in a lot of blanks for me as it tracks the lives of fellow Canadians like Wilf Carter, Hank Snow, Leonard Cohen, Ronnie Hawkins, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Gordon Lightfoot, Ann Murray plus all the members of the Band just to name a few of the artists who have contributed so much to the overall music scene so many of us have enjoyed over the years.  I prefer books & movies that deal with real people, real places, & real events.  Always so much to learn & I’m so happy my Kindle has enabled & re-kindled my love of reading after so many years away…………… 

DSC_0001

TONIGHT’S SUNSET TAKEN THROUGH OUR RIG’S TINTED WINDSHIELD

GROANER’S CORNER:(( My pastor friend put sanitary hot air hand dryers in the rest rooms at his church and after two weeks took them out.  I asked him why and he confessed that they worked fine but when he went in there he saw a sign that read:  "For a sample of this week's sermon, push the button."

---

My wife and I were traveling on the Kansas Turnpike, bucking 30 to 45 mph crosswinds. At the tollbooth, I asked the attendant, "What do you people do in Kansas when the wind quits?" The tollbooth attendant didn't miss a beat when she answered, "We take the rocks out of our pockets."

Monday, November 17, 2014

CONGRESS AZ TO SLAB CITY CALIFORNIA….A GOOD DRIVING DAY

DSC_0040

Thankfully Sunday’s cold north wind abated sometime in the night but it was still cool early this morning at 43F when I took Pheebs out about 5:30 a.m.  With that thought in mind it was nice knowing we were heading for warmer weather today.

DSC_0004-003

LOADING A FINAL FEW THINGS INTO THE RIG THIS MORNING

Loaded up a few last items in the rig this morning, backed it out & hooked on the Jeep.  It was 9 a.m. as we rolled the big wheels through our south gate.  After a stop for propane at Congress’s B&B garage we pointed the nose west on highway 71 & we were off & gone on a beautiful sunny windless morning. 

DSC_0001

HARQUAHALA MOUNTAIN STRAIGHT AHEAD

DSC_0002 DSC_0003

I-10 ABOUT 10 MILES EAST OF QUARTZSITE & A LOOK AT A FEW RV’S ALREADY THERE

Always a nice relaxing & scenic drive across the flat desert valley floor all the way to I-10.  Again, very impressed with how nice this rig drives.  And quiet too.  We rolled into Quartzsite just before 11 & headed straight for our traditional stop at McDonald’s for coffee & a couple sweet chicken Chile wraps.  (I’m giving up burgs) Fuel stop beside McDonald’s at the Pilot gas bar.  $2.92 a gallon.  Filled the rig up for $171.00 & what a treat that was compared to what we had to pay for gas coming to the southwest last month.  Twenty miles away in Blythe California gas was $3.62 a gallon.

DSC_0005

ALWAYS INTERESTING THINGS TO BE SEEN IN & AROUND QUARTZSITE ARIZONA

IMG_1750 IMG_1749

DSC_0006 DSC_0007

Didn’t feel like Interstating it today so we hauled ourselves off I-10 just west of Blyth onto highway 78 heading south through Ripley, Palo Verde, Glammis & Brawley.  This was our third time using this route & I’d recommend it to anyone.  Twenty miles of green irrigated farm land borders the Colorado River in a few spots.  Good road & very little traffic plus this is a fun road to drive with it’s smooth roller coaster gulley whomps just east & west of the Ogilbe Road T-intersection.  If you get up enough speed you can leave your stomach behind you:)) 

DSC_0008

VERY MUCH AN AGRICULTURAL AREA SOUTH OF BLYTH

DSC_0014

COTTON FIELDS WITH WHAT I SUSPECT IS A COTTON HARVESTER

DSC_0015

DESERT SCRUB LANDS BETWEEN BLYTHE’S AGRICULTURAL AREA & THE IMPERIAL SAND DUNES AHEAD

DSC_0017 DSC_0020

A NOD TO JEAN & SKIP DOWN OGILBE ROAD THERE & A FEW GULLEY WHOMPS AHEAD ON OUR WAY TO GLAMMIS

But here’s the best part of this drive.  The Imperial Sand Dunes run through this area for about 5 miles west of Glammis & it’s like driving through a Lawrence Of Arabia movie.  Sweeping sand dunes on both sides of the road wander off into a clear blue sky in places.  A few dune buggies today but on the week-ends this is a popular California playground for young & old alike with hundreds if not thousands of ‘Duners’ racing around in their various modes of off road transportation.  We have been through here half a dozen times over the years seeing the dunes criss-crossed in every direction with countless tire tracks in the sand.  Today was nice though because recent winds had already erased many tracks & smoothed out the dunes into a soft blanket covering of undisturbed sand.  How nice to see the dunes in their natural state instead of the usual turfed up state.

DSC_0021

IMPERIAL SAND DUNES DEAD AHEAD

DSC_0036 DSC_0029DSC_0038 DSC_0039DSC_0046

DSC_0051 DSC_0043DSC_0050 DSC_0022DSC_0033DSC_0042DSC_0048DSC_0053

DSC_0047 DSC_0041DSC_0049

We used Brawley’s new by-pass for the first time today & wound our way around Brawleys northeast end catching highway 111 north.  We knew there was a rest area just south of Calipatria so stopped in there to top up our fresh water tank.  There is a dump facility here as well & we have used this stop half a dozen times over the past 8 years.  Unfortunately California is closing this nice big rig friendly rest area in 2015.  Is it another California cut back or is it one of the first steps in a planned shut-down of Slab City just 12 miles to the north.

DSC_0054

AT A STOP SIGN WE CAUGHT OUR REFLECTION IN THE REAR WINDOW OF 5TH WHEEL >>>

We are always amazed at the amount of smog we see in this area of California every year.  It is mainly farm land here so figure all that smog has to be riding the prevailing westerly winds blowing over the mountains from the coast where Los Angels, San Diego, San Francisco & a whole host of cities, towns & suburbs lay densely packed between the ocean & the mountains.

DSC_0056

AT A REST AREA SOUTH OF CALIPATRIA TOPPING UP OUR FRESH WATER TANK

We’re very familiar with the Slabs so knew exactly where to go & un-hook the Jeep.  Same place as last year right in front of the little blue building church just a few hundred yards west of Solar Mikes.  A quick ride around in the Jeep looking for an applicable boondocking site saw us once again pull into the very same site we had the second last time we were here back in 2012.  Nobody near us & we are far from where the bulk of Slabbers live.  Lots of room for Pheebs to run.

DSC_0058 DSC_0062DSC_0060

SALVATION MOUNTAIN

DSC_0061

Slab City has a strong ‘Eeeeeek’ factor.  Depending on what you know about the Slabs & your level of open mindedness & understanding you just may drive in here, have a look around & quickly go ‘Eeeeeek’ & hightail it right back out of here again.  That’s understandable for many folks.  But if you have an ingrained sense of adventure, a happy hippy background, a left over streak of rebellious nature & a twist of the bizarre you will understand the Slabs & all it’s Slabbers.  Lots of colorful characters scratching out an existence here in an almost uninhabitable scrub filled desert surrounding.  It’s just one of those phenomenal places like no other.

DSC_0064

FOUND US THE SAME SPOT WE WERE AT BACK IN 2012

We’ll be up early & over to Solar Mikes Sunworks  sometime around 8 a.m.  I imagine by Tuesday night at this time we might have some kind of idea what has gone amiss with our inverter & other electrical anomalies in our coach.  We’ll see how it goes.  We are expecting to be here a week if not more.  It will all depend on what Mike can find out tomorrow.          

DSC_0001-001

I wonder how many folks know RV boondocking pioneer Tioga George is a cancer survivor & came very close to losing his life to that insidious disease nearly a dozen years ago.  George talks about that in his latest post entitled, ‘THE TRAIL’.

DSC_0004

And here’s a must read from a fellow Canadian blog poster entitled, ‘DIARY OF A HEART PATIENT -  PART 1.  This fellows heart surgery just occurred a couple weeks ago & he has a well written post about what led up to the surgery, the surgery itself & how he feels about it now that it’s over.  And how did he feel about the medical care he received.  In summing up his thoughts I particularly liked this line he wrote…’I think managing your own attitude is a big part of it’.  Read this fellow’s post to the end.  He has some good advice for the rest of us regardless of what our medical problems may be.  You can also find this fellow’s blog on our sidebar entitled, ‘Seasons In The Valley’.

DSC_0003-001

GROANER’S CORNER:((  Trying to control my dry hair, I treated my scalp with olive oil before washing it. Worried that the oil might leave an odor, I washed my hair several times.  That night when I went to bed, I leaned over to my husband and asked, "Do I smell like olive oil?"  "No," he said, sniffing me. "Do I smell like Popeye?"