Sunday, 24 July 2016

Horses sweat, gentlemen perspire, ladies merely glow

But as Maria keeps pointing out, the glow is trickling down the crack of her arse.....sorry if I've said this before, but it is a favourite phrase

It's been hot and humid for the past few weeks, and im getting a tad bored with it. The west last year was technically hotter than this, but the humidity is the killer. We have the bus air-conditioning on full time and are used to it producing a steady drip drip of condensate, but now it's a stream. All the bus windows are fogged up on the outside....

We are now working our way north - ish from inland Virginia back to the north Carolina coast - we'll take toad down to kittyhawk and cape Hatteras for the next couple of days. And a month on from the summer solstice we have a campground with no trees and clear skies for the first time so after a decent ribeye over charcoal I'm enjoying my second bottle of red and watching the bats having breakfast and the stars coming out.....

Tuesday, 19 July 2016

Year 4 - done

I know its getting a bit repetitive now, but another year completed successfully in that she hasn't killed me and buried me out in the woods - yet.

Highlights for me for the past year were California both inland - Yosemite, sequoia - and coastal - whales, pacific coast highway, San Francisco - and meeting up with the  Reynolds. And better snow in the ski season, although the visibility and weather were a bit of a let down, it was still a good 6 months with Knees and Clive, Blair and Kevin visiting.

Year 5 is still a bit up in the air. Since we were told in April by US border patrol that we're sort of playing the system and really need to go home or somewhere else before we are allowed in again, we've been considering options and what to do, and as we really want to see the august 2017 eclipse we figure we have to do what they say. A 3 month visit home after skiing looks by far the most likely option - it solves the problem of what to do with all our winter clothing and ski gear, and we could do with a bit more medical attention - checkups, dental - than we can really get on the road. Our Mycenae tenants have confirmed that they are staying on for a second year so we won't be living at home, and Blackpool tenants have been there over a year now and seem happy, so not sure where we might stay but we definitely need a base of some sort, even if its part time.

Haven't made a firm decision yet but thinking of leaving the car in Calgary at the end of the ski season and getting return flights home from there, then picking the car up in mid -august, driving down through glacier national park to see Pris and Bill in Oregon for the eclipse, then on to central america for the next major segment of the world. Maybe we'll take the car down there, maybe we'll sell it and go to Hawaii first before moving south.

But as part of this thinking we have changed our plans for this summer on the basis of we need to try and do the whole of the east coast US and Canadian maritimes this trip. Consequently we've picked up the pace a bit and skipped Glacier national park on the way over as we would drive through it next august, and we are going to bypass Washington DC - we figured it would take us at least a week to do the Smithsonian and all the other sights, and it would be better done as a city break staying in a hotel in the centre rather than trying to slog in from an RV park on the outskirts every day. Better to use the RV to see countryside while we still have it.

Which leads on to the sad decision that we are going to try and sell Badger at the end of the summer. We'll start advertising him around labor day (early september) while we are in the north east and see if we can sell him privately, but if we don't have a taker by mid october we can then either leave him with a dealer to sell, or if we don't see everything we want on this side then there is still the option of putting him in storage for 10 months, picking him up next august/september after the eclipse and having another couple of months to finish off the east coast, then tour back across the south again with him up for sale as we go through all the snowbird communities. But that would mean covering ground we have already seen, and he'll be another year older so more insurance, tax and storage, and a lower sale price.

So, lots of uncertainty - we'll just have to see what happens in september and take it from there. I'm sure it will all work out somehow. Or to put it another way - just wing it as usual....

Monday, 18 July 2016

Deep South

Aka Georgia and the Carolinas

From Tennessee we crossed the border into Georgia and stayed just west of Atlanta at a place called Stone Mountain, an 825ft monolith with a carving of two Confederate Generals (Robert E Lee and Stonewall Jackson) and President Jefferson Davis. There was a laser show that evening which was very good and included music from southern artists, e.g. Elvis, Willie Nelson, etc



The next day we went to the Atlanta Historic Center. It had an excellent exhibition on the Civil War and gave us a much better understanding of the whys and wherefores surrounding it.
In the grounds was Swann House, completed in 1928 and gave an insight into the servant-based lifestyle of Atlanta’s wealthy during the 1920’s and 1930’s. There was also a working farm and Tullie Smith House that had been relocated from what is now downtown Atlanta and was built c. 1845. It is typical of a southern rural property of that time. Over half the people that lived on the Smith farm in the 1850’s and 60’s were enslaved African American people.

From Atlanta we headed down to Savannah for a week over my birthday weekend J The city was nice and green with huge old oak trees hanging with Spanish moss in 22 leafy, shaded squares which was definitely needed when walking around in the heat and humidity. The movie Forrest Gump was filmed in and around Savannah. When he’s telling his story at the bus stop, it’s at one of these squares




We met a lovely couple from New Zealand (Glenda and Graham) who are travelling around the US in a 5th Wheel. We swapped stories and they joined us for a few drinks and a posh dinner on my birthday. Then we watched the fireworks go off across the river – nice. We spent a couple of days at the beach on Tybee Island in an attempt to cool down. The water was still around 85F so not cool at all. In fact, the shower by the carpark was cooler!
We didn't visit any plantations in the area as rice was grown here, not cotton, so most of them have now gone.

On into South Carolina and while we had Badger serviced, we decided to have a few hours at the closest beach which was Hilton Head Island.




Charleston was our next stop. Not as pretty as Savannah and a visit to Fort Sumter (or rather, what’s left of it) was a must as this is where the first shot in the Civil War was fired.




The U.S.S Yorktown Aircraft Carrier, also known as The Fighting Lady of WWII, is now a museum and moored up in the harbour. It helped sink the Yamato and also recovered the Apollo 8 lunar spacecraft.





We also toured a battleship moored next to the carrier and a submarine



There was also a recreation called Vietnam War Experience. The weather was ideal
i.e. hot, humid and swampy so the exhibit was very authentic!





One of the bridges across the river, Arthur Ravenel Jr Bridge, opened in 2005 and was the third longest cable-stayed bridge in the Western Hemisphere.




The following day we visited the McLeod Plantation where Sea Island cotton was grown which is much finer than ordinary cotton.





These small structures were homes to generations of enslaved African Americans. Now known as Transition Row, these stand as memorials to them and their transition from slavery to freedom.




On up to Charlotte in North Carolina. We met a couple of college students when we were in Yellowstone and one of them, Alyssa, is from around here. She has been acting as our guide and last night, her parents invited us over for dinner (thanks again Annamarie and John). We visited the Levine Museum of the New South which shows how the south has re-invented itself a number of times since 1865 and the end of the civil war. 

Today we visited the Freightliner factory as Mark wanted to see how Badger's chassis is made. It was quite interesting and I enjoyed it too.

Tomorrow we head down to Columbia (back in South Carolina) for some more Civil War history.

Incidentally, it has now been 4 years since we started travelling and what a ride it's been!