Monthly Archives: July 2022

PB&J . . .

When I posted in yesterday’s blog about how proud we were of our grandson Landon’s great scores on his recent Assessment tests, I forgot to include the obligatory photo.

Landon at BB Diner with Hot Choc

Today was kind of easy, with lunch at Texas Huddle Grille again.

But first we made a quick stop at the Clear Lake Kroger to drop off some prescriptions, and then it was on over for lunch.

Jan got her Keto (No Bun) Cheddar Bacon Mushroom Burger with a Side Salad and Grilled Veggies.

Texas Huddle Cheddar Swiss Keto 20220626

while I got what brought me to Texas Huddle in the first place, the PB&J Bacon Cheeseburger

Texas Huddle PB&J Burger 20220703

And this was the best PB&J Burger I’ve ever had here, mostly I think because it had more PB&J on it than usual.

And even better, it had extra bacon since Jan always gives me her bacon. She doesn’t like bacon unless it’s crispy, crunchy done. In other words, burnt.

Lucky for me.

Then it was off down to WalMart for some stuff. And I was surprised that the place wasn’t busier. Just pretty much a standard Sunday, and not the day before a major holiday.

But nice for us.

Tomorrow, being the 4th, we’re of course have BBQ. But not our own like last year, but at our local favorite, Spring Creek BBQ.

Looking forward to it.


Thought for the Day:

Yes, sometimes I do talk to myself. Even I need expert advice occasionally.


July 3, 2009

Problems and More Problems…

Well, it wasn’t too back last night with no A/C so we lucked out.

I called first thing about the blown EMS and left a message.  It took about an hour for him to call me back, but he told me how to bypass the unit and that he would send me out a new board on Monday.

The bypass only took a few seconds and I could now get power into the coach.  So, except for needing a new board for the EMS, my shore power problem was fixed.  Although I still don’t know what caused my EMS to blow up.  Sometimes it’s just bad luck.

But I still don’t know what the problem is with the generator.  I’ll have to work on it later.

We finally left the park about 12:30 pm heading up I-64 W 110 miles to Louisa, VA,  just southeast of Charlottesville, VA.  We want to visit Monticello, Thomas Jefferson’s home, and Appomattox, site of the end of the Civil War.

We wanted  to stop off in Richmond to eat lunch at Famous Dave’s, one of our favorite BBQ places, and also pick up some Aunt Gussie’s Sugar Free cookies at Whole Foods that we like.

About an hour and a half after we left Richmond, we pulled into our site at Small Country Campground in Louisa.


July 3, 2010

Turkey and Deer

We left the rig about 12:45 pm and headed over to Gina’s. Jan said she wishes that they would hurry up and move the cows back to the other pastures, since now she has to get out and open three cattle gates instead of the normal one.

I worked on getting the light fixtures installed, wired up, and tested. Since the fan is done, all I have left to do is to get the switch box wired up. I could have gotten further but I ran out of wire twist nuts, so I’ll have to restock.

About 4:30 we headed out for dinner at Rockin’ R Steakhouse in Blanco. A very good meal. The steaks were delicious.

We dropped Gina off at her place (3 more cattle gates) and then headed home.

As we were leaving we encountered the turkeys again. And this time I got better photos.

Turkeys 5

Turkeys 6

Turkeys 7

Turkeys 8

We got home a little after 7, and of course, Jan had to feed the deer. But the deer seemed to have left town for the holiday because for the first time there weren’t any around.

Tomorrow we going to pick Gina up around 9 am and drive over to Fredericksberg for the day. We also want to eat at our favorite German restaurant, Der Lindenbaum while we’re there.


July 3, 2012

Thursday, maybe . . .

Well, it looks like we will be moving with our drill rig. And supposedly we will move Thursday. But of course you never know.

Melissa, our Gate Guard Service sales rep, came out to the drill rig this afternoon (Monday) and our Marathon Company Man told her they wanted us to move with them, and that they didn’t want to share a guard with the other rig. They wanted their own, I.e. Us.

Still don’t know yet how they’re going to handle the fact that there’s another gate guard already there for the other drill rig. Guess it will all work out somehow.

The other nice thing is that we have heard unofficially that the rig will be in this new location for 7 to 8 weeks. If that turns out to be true, it means that Thursday will be our last move before we plan to leave in August.

And the other, other nice thing is that this new site has 5 bars of 3G Verizon service so we won’t need our Wilson booster. We’re going to be only about 5 miles east of I-37 so everything will be more accessible.

Brandi sent over the latest Landon pics.

Landon at Sulpher Park 1a

Landon at Sulpher Park 2a

Landon at Sulpher Park 3a

Landon at Sulpher Park 4a

Is this kid cute, or what?

Not that I’m prejudiced or anything.

After being here at this site over six weeks, we finally got our first rain yesterday (Sunday) and it really made up for lost time. The storm that hit us came over Corpus Christi first and dropped 5 inches of rain on them, and it seemed to have plenty left over for us.

20120701StormLuckily the road and our pad are built up pretty high so we didn’t have any actual flooding, But while it was raining there was over an inch of water on the ground under our canopy. The solar screens that we hang from the sides of the canopy kept most of the rain from blowing in so it wasn’t too bad while I was out here. I was glad that no vehicles came thru during that time so I didn’t have to actually get out in it.


July 3, 2015

2708 to Go . . .

I spent the morning mapping out the rest of our travel year, or at least the part that ends up with us back at the Colorado River TT starting the 14th of August. We’ll be there for two weeks around the time of Landon’s birthday party on the 22nd, plus Jan has a follow-up doctor’s appointment on the 21st. No problem, just a regular checkup for her breast cancer last year. Then, after that, we don’t know yet. But we’ve got 2708 miles to go until we get there.

The only question mark for the trip are the two weeks from July 20th to August 2nd. We’re trying to decide on staying at the Cherokee Landing TT or Natchez Trace TT, both in Tennessee. The recommendations seem to lean toward Cherokee Landing, but we’re still thinking about it.

Some people have said to stay a week at both, and we may end up doing this, But part of me just wants to park for two weeks and kick back. So we’ll have to see.

About 6:30 we had our first real rain since we go here two weeks ago. We’ve had a couple of little showers a few nights, but nothing worthwhile. But the storms moved in tonight and it just poured, heavy enough to knock out our DirecTV  for almost an hour

We’re also supposed to more thunderstorms over the next couple of days, and in fact, the high temp of Sunday is only supposed to be 95 degrees

Yeah, right. It gets cool just as we’re ready to leave.

Tomorrow we’re going to have lunch at La Fonda, then go into Cottonwood to Hog Wild BBQ to pick up some to take with us when we leave here on Monday. Sunday we’ll have dinner at Crusty’s Pizza down in Camp Verde, and while we’re there, we’ll pick up a couple of their Baked Spaghettis dinners to take with us. We’ll cut them in half, vacuum-seal them, and freeze them, again for later.

Each one is big enough that half makes a meal for each of us.


July 3, 2016

It Even Works On Bears!

Since today is the first day of our official 1 month stay here at Colorado River Thousand Trails, as soon as I got up I went outside and took a photo of my electric meter. Monthly and Annuals here have to pay their own electric and I like to have my own record..

Electric Meter

I’m not expecting any problems with the meter reading, but it has happened at other parks, so I feel better having my own total.

A little after 1pm Jan and I headed into Columbus to have the Sunday Lunch Buffet at Schobel’s Restaurant. But before we left the park I stopped off at the office to pay the $375 for our month stay here, and also get the windshield card for the rig and the mirror hanger for the truck. One thing I like is that, unlike when we stay here for two weeks and are given three different gates to cover the time, they give you one code for the entire month.

Wonder if they have a yearly code for annuals?

While I was there I mentioned about recording the meter, and as it turned out, they hadn’t done it yet, so they wrote it down from my photo. Guess I missed a chance for a little creative photo editing and a really low electric bill for the month.

Then it was on into town for the buffet, and I guess it was the holiday because we’ve never seen it this busy. In fact we had a wait, ten minutes, for the first time ever.

A week or so ago, I mentioned that I gotten us a couple of pair of EMT scissors, or Trauma Shears from Amazon.

EMT Shears

As I said, EMT’s and ER personnel use them to cut people out of their seat belts, coats, clothes, belts, shoes, etc. In fact, they will even cut metal.

So I wasn’t surprised to see a couple of EMT’s wearing them at breakfast this morning.

EMT's at Schobel's

The buffet here was as delicious as usual, with Fried Chicken, Sausage Links, Ham Slices, Roast Beef, Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans with Bacon, Corn, and Candied Yams. All this, along with a great salad bar and Carrot Cake for dessert.

Schobel's Buffet 3

And really really good.

And this just illustrates my point about Peter’s BBQ’s price increases. At $11.95, it’s only a dollar more than the much smaller buffet at Peter’s. A much better deal.

Game of Thrones recently wrapped up the 6th season on HBO, and although Jan and I have never watched it, we will probably check it out in a few years when it comes to regular TV.

I mean, with magic, intrigue, dragons, and nudity, what’s not to like? But it may be a while since it’s now been renewed for a 7th season.

But I recently came across this video showing the before and after of some of the special effects on the show. It’s really amazing what they can do with computers and video now.

But what caught my eye was in the last few seconds of the clip. Apparently the bear used in the show is real, and not a special effect. And it shows the trainer giving him a pan of whipped cream.

Bear and Whipping Cream 1

Bear and Whipping Cream 2

As I mentioned the other day, Miss Karma the cat loves whipped cream, and will come running when she sees the can. So when she got out the other day, I used whipping cream to lure her out and catch her.

A Close Call

So I guess it works for bears too. I know I’d give the bear as much whipped cream as he wanted.


July 3, 2017

Final Goodbyes . . .

Jan and I did much of nothing today, with, as usual, Jan reading and napping while I worked on website stuff.

But that finally ground to a halt when I got to a point that I need input/photos/content from the client before I can proceed, something that’s pretty standard with website work. I sometimes refer to getting input from a client to pulling teeth.

At least it’s not my teeth.

Earlier today Jan took Landon and Gwen over to the nearby Main Event Entertainment Center to spend the afternoon, ending up at Baskin-Robbins. Sounds good to me.

Landon and Gwen at Baskin-Robbins

At 3:30 we headed into the Katy area for a stop at Sam’s Club for a couple of prescriptions and some other stuff. Then it was on to the nearby Cheddar’s to meet up with Jan’s sister Debbie, her granddaughter Gwen, and husband Jim. And of course, Lowell, Brandi, and Landon.

Family at Cheddar's

Jan calls this Brandi’s ‘pissy’ face.

Everyone else in Debbie’s family has already headed back to Illinois.

We spent about two hours at dinner before finally saying goodbye and getting in our hugs. We’ve already set another reunion, this time up in Illinois, for two years from now. Looking forward to it already.

Tomorrow I going to check out the local hardware store to pick up some plastic sheets. I’m going to extend to the rear the top and the sides of our rig’s front AC cover

Hopefully this will eliminate the dead air space and improve the air flow around the condenser coil. I hope this will fix the problem of our AC working just fine when we’re sitting still, but not when we’re traveling.

If I can’t find plastic that I like I may just leave the cover off for the trip back to Lake Conroe this coming Sunday, assuming the weather looks good.


July 3, 2018

Mommy and Me . . .

I was up early again (this is getting old) wanting to get back working on my generator problem. After reading the service manual over several times, I had list of questions for the Onan Tech Support guy.

As I mentioned, the original guy I had been talking to up in Elkhart, IN was off all week for the 4th holiday, but I found another support guy in Minnesota who was very helpful.

Except today.

When I called the message said that they were all off Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, and to call back on Friday.

Bummer!

So I ended up spending the rest of the morning and afternoon doing website stuff, and using the Duck Pack & Track system to catalog and store some of my stuff around the rig.

Later in the afternoon we headed over to my Aunt Virginia’s house to have linner/lupper with her. Since we were running a little early I decided to drive through the next subdivision to check out probably the most famous house in Athens, AL.

Designed by renowned architect Paul Rudolph, it was on the cover of Life magazine and reviewed in House & Gardens magazine.

Wallace House 1

Wallace House 2

For obvious reasons, I always called it the ‘Parthenon House’. And I dated the girl who lived here, before I went off to college in 1966.

It still looks pretty good, at least what you can see of it.

Peggy's House

The trees have grown up around it a lot in 50+ years.

We had a great visit with my Aunt Virginia (I’ve always called her ‘Ninny’ because when I was real little kid I couldn’t say ‘Virginia’. It just came out ‘Ninny’.

Jan and Ninny

Honestly, it’s always a little bittersweet coming back here every year to visit. All of my remaining relatives are in their late 80’s to early 90’s, with the youngest being 88 and the oldest being 92.

And it seems there’s always one less each year. Which is why we never miss our yearly visit, even if we make a special trip just to come over here, like we did last year.

After we said our goodbyes, and promised we come back by on Friday, we spent some time just driving around, trying to get my bearings with all the changes.

I spent two summers working for a plumbing, heating and air-conditioning company, and a number of the places I helped build are still here. But a lot are gone, too.

In fact in some cases, things have changed so much that I can’t even tell where they were.

We did drive by the house we lived in here after we moved back from South America, and it still looks pretty good.

36 Sandra Lane

Glad to see that.

With the 4th and all, tomorrow looks to be a stay-a-home day. Kinda looking forward to it.

Wrapping up, earlier this evening our daughter-in-law Linda sent over this photo of me that I’ve never seen before.

Mommy and Me

She said she found it mixed in with some of our son Chris’ old photos. My mother had written on the back, “Gregory the Solemn One’.

But apparently at other times I was a little more cheerful.

Happy Greg

I think both of these were taken in early 1949.


July 3, 2019

Happy 4th of July Eve . . .

Leaving work a little early, I first went by WalMart and then Sam’s Club for our prescriptions, as well as gassing up at Sam’s at $2.15 a gallon. Then it was on the way home.

Though I didn’t come home that way, Jennifer, our Office Manager, says that the I-45/FM646 underpass is now open, a couple of months early. Now if they’d just get the onramp to I-45N from 646 open again.

Though normally we eat at home at Wednesday’s, since it’s a holiday weekend we headed over to FM517 to have dinner at Los Ramirez Mexican Restaurant once again. Great as usual.

I went ahead and ordered seven more ignition coils from Amazon for our truck. I was hoping that O’Reilly’s would match the Amazon price, but no such luck. And that’s probably because there’s a big difference between O’Reilly’s price and Amazon’s.

O’Reilly’s charges $29.99 for the SMP Blue Streak UF270 coils while Amazon has the exact same coils for $16.47 each, a difference of $13.52 each, or over $94 total.

Blue Streak UF270 coil

That’s a big savings.

The coils won’t be here until Monday, so I’ll probably go ahead the install the new plugs this weekend, and then do the coils next week when they come in, since they go pretty quickly.

If the weather holds tomorrow we’re thinking about heading over to Friendswood for their 4th of July Celebration and Fireworks. We used to attend this all the time, but it’s been years now.


July 3, 2020

First The Statues, Now The Bugs . . .

First they came for the statues, then they came for the bugs.

Emory and Henry College in Virginia is rethinking their school mascot, a wasp.

Wasp

Why you might ask?

Well, it seems that the college authorities are worried that people might ignore the all the logos of the aforementioned insect on everything, but might instead think that the school mascot is actually a WASP.

You know, a White Anglo-Saxon Protestant.

Our granddaughter Piper is housesitting up at Brandi’s while they’re up in OK visiting Lowell’s parents, so Jan and I are heading up there tomorrow morning about 10:30 to have brunch with her.

Really looking forward to seeing her again.


July 3, 2021

Baby Got New Shoes . . .

I’ve been wanting to do something about the steel wheels on our Jeep, pretty much the only cosmetic problem with it.

Jeep Steel Wheels 1

And yeah, I could mask them off, sand them, and paint them, but that’s a lot of work.

So I found a set of these ‘wheel skins’ on eBay, made especially for Jeep steel wheels. They’re very heavy, chrome-plated plastic and they snap on very easily, but have to be plied off. And the reviews are really good too.

Jeep New Wheel Rear

So I went from this

Jeep Old Wheels

to this.

Jeep New Wheels

Really nice.

Baby got new shoes.

About 1pm Jan and I headed out to have lunch at Los Ramirez once again, and it was probably the busiest we’ve seen them in the last year or so. At least 3/4’s full.

Then it was on up to the Home Depot for a couple of things for me, and a new plant for Jan. She wanted something in a pot that she could set out on the patio, so this is what she got.

Home Depot Jan New Plant

It’s rated for Partial Sun since it only gets it from about 10 to 3 each day.

And somehow a new addition to our Flamingo population made it back home with us too.

Home Depot New Spinning Flamingo

Wouldn’t want all the rest to be lonely.

A little before 5pm I started prepping the baby back ribs for the overnight marinating. I had purchased two packs of Smithfield Baby Back Ribs like these last week.

Smithfield Rib Pack

Cut up into 3-4 rib pieces, it looked like this.

Smithfield Ribs Cut Up

Next up, after patting the rib sections dry, I did the Shake N Bake thing with the rub mixture in a plastic bag, ending up with this first batch.

Smithfield Ribs with Rub

Actually the piece on the left is one of those solid meat chunks you sometimes find on the end of a rib. Really good.

After this, I put two rib sections in a vacuum bag, and then added 3 drops of Wright’s Liquid Smoke to each bag right before I vacuumed-sealed the bags. Or at least I mostly did. Some of the bags ended up with no drops because I forgot. So it will be interesting to if we notice any difference between the bags.

Wright's Liquid Smoke

I used the Wright’s based on a number of online reviews, and the fact that it’s actually ‘liquid smoke’.  They burn hardwood in a sealed system, catching the moist smoke and then condensing the liquid down and then bottling it. And it certainly smells that way when you open the bottle.

By the time I got through bagging it all, this is what I had.

Smithfield Ribs Sealed

Tomorrow afternoon I’ll get everything set up in the immersion cooker and start it going for 24 hours.

Looking forward to some good eats on Monday.

Later in the afternoon I put out our flag for the 4th of July weekend.

Patio with Flag


Thought for the Day:

One man alone can be pretty dumb sometimes, but for real bona fide stupidity, there ain’t nothin’ can beat teamwork. – Edward Abbey

  

A Proud Nana and PaPa . . .

Brandi sent over the results of Landon’s 6th grade STAAR (State of Texas Academic Readiness) testing for the Spring 2022 period.

In Reading he scored an 1852 against a state average of 1589, rating him in the 99th Percentile and the Master Grade Level.

And in Math he scored an 1772 against a state average of 1619, rating him in the 88th Percentile, and again at Master Grade Level.

Way to go, Landon!

About 1pm Jan and I headed over to Gator’s Bar & Grill for lunch once again. We were just here last Tuesday, when Jan fell in love with their new Keto Birria Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy Pizza.

Gator's Birrria Pizza

So we were back here just four days later for more.

For me, I went back to a past favorite, the Blackened Chicken Sandwich with Bacon, PepperJack Cheese, and Texas Toothpicks.

Gator's Bar & Grill Blackened Chicken Sandwich

And of course, their delicious Waffle Fries.

And unlike last time, we were both too full to split one of their Keto Blueberry Muffins.

Next up I dropped Jan off to get her hair done, while I went by the local UPS store to send back the wrong window regulator that I got from Amazon the other day. And by coincidence the right one was delivered this afternoon.

So hopefully later this weekend.

Then it was on over to HEB for this next week’s stuff.

Another day, another Amazon gadget.

Universal Sink Stopper

Universal Sink Stopper

Came across this replacement sink stopper and ordered one for our bathroom sink. It replaces the regular insert and works a lot better. And it doesn’t leak down like the old one.

Though this is also posted below, I thought I put it up here too.

Back around 1983 or so, Jan’s sister Debbie, her husband Jim, and the kid’s Jason, Tana, and Christina came down to visit us in Friendswood. While they were there, we got this photo of our kids and Debbie and Jim’s.

Old Family Photo

Left to right: Tana, Chris, Jason, Brandi, Christina

Well, a couple of days ago the kids surprised us with this redo.

New Family Photo

Especially funny is Tana with the same blank expression on her face.

Really neat, and a wonderful surprise.


Thought For The Day:


The government can not give to anyone anything that the government does not first take from somebody else.


July 2, 2009

Jamestown and Yorktown…and Yorktown

Today was our last full day in Williamsburg, VA and we wanted to tour the Jamestown Settlement of 1607, you know, Captain John Smith, Pocahontas and all that.

And we also wanted to tour the Yorktown Battlefield, one of the last big battles of the Revolutionary War.

But first, we had to move our coach.

When we made our reservations we knew we might have to move into an overflow site for our last day, since they were full.  We were hoping they would have a cancellation so we wouldn’t have to move, but no such luck.

The overflow site had 30 amp power and water, but no sewer.   No problem for just one day.

We moved with no problems, until I tried to plug into the power connection.  As soon as my EMS (Electrical Management System) tried to put power to the coach, it shut down because the voltage dropped to 98 volts.  I went to the office and told them about the problem and they said they’d look at it while we were gone.  So we headed out to the Jamestown Settlement about 10 miles down the road.

They have a very nice complex here, consisting of a museum/exhibit building,

Jamestown Settlement Museum

a replica Powhatan Indian village,

Replica Powhatan Indian Village

Powhatan Hut Interior

Powhatan Hut Interior

replicas of the 3 ships that the colonists used to come to Jamestown,

The "Susan Constant"

The “Susan Constant”

The "Godspeed" and the "Discovery"

The “Godspeed” and the “Discovery”

and a replica of the settlement fort itself.

Jamestown Settlement

Jamestown Settlement

Jamestown Settlement Buildings

Jamestown Settlement Buildings

The biggest building in the place was the church, which was also the community meeting area.

Jamestown Church

Jamestown Church

I can only imagine that the pews were so hard and uncomfortable to keep you from falling asleep during the services.

Jamestown Church Pew

Jamestown Dedication

After lunch at the Red City Chinese Buffet we headed out to the Yorktown Battlefield.

And then we discovered a slight problem.  There are two Yorktowns.

One is called Yorktown Victory Center.  This is the one that is advertised everywhere, and that we had bought tickets to when we bought our Williamsburg and Jamestown tickets.

But when we got to the area we found that the actual Yorktown Battlefield was not the Victory Center, but was a National Park run by the National Park Service.  And of course, had a separate admission fee.

But it was really worth it, walking the grounds, climbing the earthworks, and looking out over the actual battlefield.

Yorktown Battlefield

Yorktown Battlefield 2

Here Washington, Lafayette, and the French Navy offshore surrounded the British Army under Gen. Cornwallis, and pounded them to pieces with cannons and mortars, and then attacked the British lines until Cornwallis surrendered his 8,000 troops on Oct. 19, 1781.

This was the last big battle of the Revolutionary War, although the War itself dragged on for another 2 years.

We did have an interesting talk from a guide about living and dying during the Revolutionary War.  He talked about the clothing the soldiers wore, the food they are, the weapons they use, and the medical care they got, but probably wished they hadn’t.

Yorktown Seminar

While we listened to the guide, a small, furry visitor came out of the bushes beside us.  The large groundhog looked around and then started grazing on the grasses.  He didn’t seem too worried until about a dozen screaming kids went running for him, then he skedaddled back into the thick bushes.

Yorktown Groundhog

Groundhog 2

And finally, we drove the 7 mile loop that circles all the different positions and battle areas.

After this we headed over the Yorktown Victory Center, which turned out to be basically a museum complex about the Battle of Yorktown, but not really near the battleground.

They did have a interesting timeline display covering the leadup to the Revolutionary War.  The other thing they had was a replica of the town of Yorktown.

Yorktown 1

Yorktown 2

Yorktown 3

After we finished up at the 2nd Yorktown, we headed back to the coach, stopping off at Hooters for another hot wing fix.

Arriving back at the coach we found we still had power problems.  They apparently hadn’t sent anyone to look at the problem. After I talked with the office, they said they’d send someone.

In the meantime I started to try to improvise something by pulling power thru an extension cord from a nearby empty site.

But while I was doing that, I started up the generator to run the A/C’s because the coach was pretty hot.  I hadn’t done it earlier because the people in the next site were in a tent and my generator exhaust was pointed right into their tent.  But they had gone out for the evening so it was OK.

The first plug I tried wouldn’t work because it had a reversed hot/neutral and my EMS wouldn’t accept it.

The 2nd plug I tried seemed to work, for a few minutes, and then suddenly my EMS unit went ‘WHOOOMP”! and just died.

Great!  Now I couldn’t get any power to the coach from the shore power.

And now the generator sounded different.  In checking I found that I had lost half the feed from the generator, so some outlets wouldn’t work, and only the front A/C was getting power.   This just gets better and better!

I had heard there was a way to easily bypass the EMS, but I didn’t know how and it was too late (10 pm) to call anyone.  And of course the neighbors next door showed up, so I had to shut down the generator.

So we would have to try to make it thru the night using just the vent fans to keep us cool.  Luckily it was supposed to fairly nice so hopefully it wouldn’t be a problem.

I still don’t know what happened to the EMS, but I’ll try to find out more tomorrow.

Lake Pointe RV Park in the Texas Hill Country


July 2, 2010

Wet, wet wet…

Well, we really lucked out. When I went down the the park office this morning, they said that with all the rain we’ve had and are supposed to have, we didn’t have to stay on day to day, but could go ahead and sign up thru next Wednesday. Yeah!

With the 4-5 inches of rain we’ve had the last few days, I’m really glad we’re parked on gravel, rather than grass or dirt. The way the ground is soaked it might be fun trying to get out of here.

We had put out our ‘Honey Wagon’ placard on the windshield so we were happy to see them show up early this morning. We’re allowed to run our grey water out on the ground, but our black tank was starting to get kind of full.

We picked up our friend Gina Ellis about 1 pm and drove into San Marcos for lunch and shopping. Lunch was at Furr’s Buffet. Furr’s used to be a cafeteria, but is now a buffet, even though you still go through a line, You can go back through the line as many times as you want, though.

Next we went to Sam’s Club for our prescriptions and some other stuff. Leaving there I ran into Lowe’s to pick up a few more electrical box connectors,

Then it was on to Walmart for more shopping.

Coming back to Gina’s about 5:30 pm we came across the large flock of turkeys we saw the other day. This cellphone photo isn’t the best, but  it does show how large the flock is. I counted over 30 before they disappeared into the tall grass. There appears to be 4 or 5 adults with the rest being young ones.

Turkeys1

We finally got back to the rig about 6.

Bremerton, WA


July 2, 2011

I’ve got Good News and Bad News . . .

The operation was a success, but the patient died.

I related yesterday about my electrical problem. Everything was still pointing to my Automatic Transfer Switch (ATS).

Power in an RV can come from 3 different places: Shore Power, the onboard diesel generator, or the battery/inverter system.

The ATS is the unit that decides where the power is coming from, and then switches to that source to power things in the coach. The generator takes precedence. Even if we’re plugged into shore power, if the generator starts, the ATS will switch to it.

Research last night said the goto guy on these units is Kevin Mallory with CruisingAmericaRV in Celina, OH. As it turns out, I know Kevin. We met at a rally several years ago.

Called him and he answered on a 4th of July weekend Saturday. Great!

He led me thru taking the unit apart and checking the 5 fuses down at the bottom of the unit.

Here’s the rats nest I was working in. The panel with all the relays is hinged on the left side and lifts up. The 5 fuses are underneath there.

Transfer Switch

But as I was threading my hand down thru the cables, I noticed that one of the two 2″ x 2″ transformers on the circuit was sitting sideways hanging off the edge of the board.

I picked it up and it was loose. It was a fairly heavy transformer only held on the board by the 4 small leads soldered to the board.

Very bad design. Something this heavy should have been ziptied to the board.

At this point I didn’t bother checking the fuses.

Here’s the culprit.

The Culprit

Kevin had already told me that the only way to bypass the transfer switch to get power to the coach was to undo the shore power coming in and the transfer switch output to the breaker panel and splice them together.

And that worked!

Now that we have power again, I’m probably going to rewire things using plugs and receptacles so that I can manually switch between shore power and generator when I need to just unplugging one cable and plugging in another.

So instead of having an ATS, I will have an MTS (Manual Transfer Switch).

That’s the Good News!  We have power back.

The bad news is that now my Inverter has died. Since it’s part of the same unit as the ATS, I don’t know if it’s part of the same problem or what.

As I said yesterday, It’s always something.

Once again, kudos to Kevin Mallory of CruisingAmericaRV for helping me out on a Holiday Weekend.

Last Days In Elkhart, IN


July 2, 2014

Back Home . . .

As great as sleeping in late in our own bed for the first time in 5 days was, Jan still woke up with a migraine. Of course, taking her Sumatriptan damps the migraine down fairly quickly, but she’ll still feel kind of washed out the rest of the day.

And then of course, there may be the 2nd and 3rd day rebound headaches. We’ll see how it goes.

In the latest example of extreme global warming, the high here in Elkhart today was 74 with an expected low tonight of 53, and tomorrow, 71/47. And that goes on for next several days.

Because it was so nice, Mister spent most of the afternoon outside sitting in one our chairs. He’ll stay out for several hours and then come and bang on the screen door. When we let him in, he’ll visit the litter box, grab a snack and some water, and then bang on the screen to be let out again.

Smart Cat.

About 4:30 we headed out for one last visit to Flipping Cow, our new favorite burger place here in Elkhart.

I debated having the Hunka Hunka Burger Love this time. It has two steak burger patties, peanut butter, jalapeno jelly, smoked bacon, and pepper jack cheese on a toasted pretzel bun, but I  ended up going with the same one I got last time, The Stella Moo.

It has two steak burger patties topped with smoked beef brisket, jalapeno bacon, onion straws, pepper jack cheese, and Alehouse BBQ sauce on a toasted wheat brioche bun. Then I added tomatoes, jalapenos, spicy mayo, and sweet heat pickles, And this time I got the ‘Cow Chips’ instead of Fries.

Flippin' Cow 2

It’s easy to see (and taste) why this burger was voted the best burger in Elkhart County, and is one of two finalist for the best burger in the Michiana area. I know which one got my vote.

We had talked about making a DQ run after dinner, but we were too full of burgers, so we put it off for another time.

Better Coffee


July 2, 2015

K-Cups and Colorado River . . .

I think I’ve finally got a handle on the whole Arizona CCW thing. Looks like all I have to submit the paperwork with a photo, two fingerprint cards, a copy of my Utah CCW, and some money, and then just wait a while. Almost easy, peazy.

Yesterday morning when I was making coffee, I accidently broke a chunk out of the bottom of the carafe of our Hamilton Beach Flexbrew coffee maker.

Hamiliton Beach FlexBrew

We got this 2 or 3 years ago when we needed a new coffee maker, and since we wanted to also try the whole K-Cup thing, this one seemed a good choice. But using it for the next several months, confirmed what I had already thought.

At least as far as I’m concerned (Jan too, for that matter) it is impossible to make a good cup of coffee using a K-Cup. It’s always too bitter. I tried a bunch of different brands of coffee in the K-Cups, all with no luck. But it turns out it wasn’t just the K-Cups.

The Flexbrew has an option so that you can put your own coffee grounds in a K-Cup replacement so you can make a single cup of your own coffee. But what I found was, using the same amount of coffee and water, if I used the K-Cup side, it was bitter and not very good.

But if I ran that same amount of coffee and water through the regular brewing mechanism, it came out tasting as good as usual. So for that reason, I haven’t even used the K-Cup side in over a year.

So after I cleaned up the glass, I checked Amazon to see how much a new carafe would cost. And it was about $30. Wow!  So since we were going to Wal-Mart this afternoon, I thought I’d wait to see what they had.

And what I quickly found out is that I could buy a whole new coffee maker for a lot less than a new carafe. In fact, they had this Mr. Coffee 12 Cup Programmable, normally $28, for less than $20 on a 4th of July Rollback.

MrCoffeeMaker

And this one also had the brew strength selector that we liked on the Flexbrew. So we came home with a new coffee maker that made us great coffee this morning.

It seems like I’m always being surprised how Wal-Mart takes care of their customers. Back last Friday when we got home from a Wal-Mart run, I found that we were missing a couple of items. Since they were the last two items rung up and they weren’t really big, I figured they were just left at the bottom of a bag and didn’t make it into our cart.

We didn’t get back to WM until yesterday so I took the receipt to Customer Service to see if I could get my $9 back. When I told the guy what had happened, he turned around, grabbed a large file card box, and then flipping through it, found a copy of my receipt.

When a customer leaves any items at the checkout, the receipt for them is turned over to Customer Service to wait for them to come back. When I asked, he did say that even without the receipt, they would refund the money, unless it was a big screen TV or something. Nice service.

Later in the morning, I spent time on the phone making reservations for our next couple of weeks after we leave here this coming Monday. Our first night will be in Sun Valley, AZ, then 2 nights in Albuquerque and 2 nights in Amarillo, and then 4 nights in Pauls Valley, OK.

After that  we don’t have a hard date until August 14th at the Colorado River TT for Landon’s birthday, so the in-between time is still up in the air.

Wrapping up for today, my great-niece Stahlie has put up a new website for kids who don’t really like history. Called Adventurous History, it looks like she’s off to a great start with a very nice looking site.

Besides being a real history buff, she’s also a great artist.

Stahlie - More Art

Stahlie's Art

Keep checking back to her site as she adds new material.


July 2, 2016

Summer is Here in Texas!

Well, the high here today was 95°, with a 97 forecast  for tomorrow. And then it’s 8 straight days of 99° or above.

More likely ‘above’, knowing Texas in the summertime.

One thing I’ve noticed here at the Colorado River TT this weekend is that it’s not nearly as full as I expected for a long holiday weekend. Of course I haven’t checked down along the river, but up here at the top of the hill, it’s not near as busy as I’ve seen it on a normal weekend during the last couple of months.

Of course, since we’re usually not here during this part of the summer, I don’t know what’s actually normal for now anyway.

After yesterday’s post about the new The Momentum Machines Autonomous Grill Master that makes 400 burgers an hour, blog reader Richard Schell wondered if I thought this might be a solution to all my problems with our orders at the Whataburger up in Carthage while we were gate guarding last year.

momentum-machines

I said it certainly came to mind especially since we’ve had mistakes at both the Whataburger in Columbus and La Grange. At some point you might begin to think that the common factor here might be us.

But when we’re in Conroe we eat at Culver’s a lot, and they’ve never messed up our order. Not once. So it’s not us.

Landon and his family  are up in OK spending the holiday weekend with Lowell’s parents, so Landon’s getting his fill of ‘Granny’ time, his name for Lowell’s mother. (Jan’s ‘Landon name’ is ‘Nana’)

So today Landon and Granny got to spend some time together at Chuck E. Cheese.

Landon at Chuck E Cheese3

Looks like fun.


Photo Fun


July 2, 2017

What A Difference 34? Years Makes .

Jan was still a little under the weather so we bowed out on watching Landon play Hockey down in the Sugarland area, but we did get this photo of Landon and his cousin Gwen.

Hockey Landon and Gwen

Then afterwards they saw the new Despicable Me 3 movie. Jan and I are hoping to see it soon, too.

Landon and Gwen at DM3

Friday, when everyone went to San Antonio, they had a great time doing the Riverwalk and, of course, the Alamo.

Robinson's at the Alamo

Otherwise we didn’t do much at all today, with Jan mostly reading while I worked on a new website.

Back around 1983 or so, Jan’s sister Debbie, her husband Jim, and the kid’s Jason, Tana, and Christina came down to visit us in Friendswood. While they were there, we got this photo of our kids and Debbie and Jim’s.

Old Family Photo

Left to right: Tana, Chris, Jason, Brandi, Christina

Well, a couple of days ago the kids surprised us with this redo.

New Family Photo

Especially funny is Tana with the same blank expression on her face.

Really neat, and a wonderful surprise.

Not sure about tomorrow yet. We may go into the Katy to have breakfast with everyone before they head for home. But we’ll have to see how the timing works out.

Old Hometown in Athens, AL


July 2, 2018

Hotwiring . . .

I was up kind of early this morning, especially the morning after a long trip day, but I had a lot to do.

First up was a call to the Onan Tech Support guy to follow up with some more questions, only to find out that he was out all week for the 4th holiday. Bummer!  But Google being my friend I found another Tech Support number and gave it a call

The new guy was a lot of help, answered my all my questions, wasn’t talking on a crappy speakerphone that kept cutting in and out, and wasn’t nearly as curmudgeonly as the first guy.

He confirmed that I should be seeing 12vdc on the line coming from the controller box to the governor actuator, and that if I didn’t it would keep the genset from starting and/or running.

So getting off the phone, I went outside to unbutton the generator and find out what I had on that line. And it turned out to be no voltage at all.

Well, this brightened my day, since I thought I had a workaround for this possibility. One that might get me running. Since the actuator needed 12 volts, I’d just give it 12 volts directly.

So using a couple of heavy-duty alligator clip leads, I hotwired it with 12volts coming from the power connection on the back of the solenoid and left the other lead loose so I could touch it to ground to energize the actuator box.

Onan Generator Hotwiring Actuator

And a trial run produced a loud ‘clunk’ from the box that I hadn’t been hearing on previous tests. Things were looking up.

But not for long. When I had Jan crank it over, nothing had changed. Just ru-ru-ru.

Oh well. It’s back to the drawing board, or the phone, as it were.

By now it was about 2pm so I got cleaned up and Jan and I drove next door to visit my Aunt Janis, who owns this RV park, along with her son Wes

Aunt Janis

We were happy to hear that another of her sons, Jimmy and his wife Beth, were visiting from Florida.

Jan Calvin -Jimmy

I didn’t get a good photo of Beth. It came out too dark to use.

In one of those strange coincidences, we found out several years ago that Jimmy had gone to school in the 70’s with my client back in Houston, and told me to say “Hi”. Small world.

Finally about 5:30 we said our goodbyes and headed over to Huntsville to have dinner at Rosie’s Cantina, a place we always eat at at least once when we’re here.

We were kind of surprised to find the place so busy on a Monday night, but then realized this is essentially a holiday week with the 4th being on Wednesday.

I had the Beef Fajitas for One and had leftovers. Really good with the meat tender and flavorful.

Rosie's Cantina - Fajitas

Jan had her usual Pollo Loco.

Rosie's Cantina Pollo Loco

Also very good.

Tomorrow it’s back on the phone with Onan, and more relative visits.

Taking A Snooze


July 2, 2019

So That’s What It Is . . .

Today would have been a good day to stay at home, since it poured down all night, and into this morning, and afternoon. But we needed groceries, and of course wanted lunch at Snooze as usual.

Don’t know if a lot of people were taking this week off, but Snooze wasn’t near as busy as is normal on a Tuesday, but the better for us. Snooze is one of those places that texts your cellphone when your table is ready, and I left my phone back at the rig.

And of course Jan seldom carries her phone with her anyway.

When we had breakfast at Chip and Joanna Gaines’ Magnolia Table, Jan got her usual Avocado Toast, but she was kind of disappointed in Magnolia Table’s version vs. the version she gets at Snooze.

Here’s Joanna’s version,

Magnolia Table Avocado Toast

and here’s what she gets at Snooze.

Snooze Bravocaod Toast 3

And yes, at $9.50, Joanna’s is about $3 cheaper, but Jan thought it didn’t really measure up to their other dishes.

Next up was a quick stop by the office, and then across the street to the H.E.B for more of that delicious Lola Savannah Texas Pecan Coffee.

Then it was off to WalMart for the majority of our groceries. I had hoped that the prescriptions I had put in to refill would be ready, but No.

Both WalMart and Sam’s Club recently updated their apps, including their prescription renewals. But in doing so they seemed to have really screwed up our accounts.

Jan and I had separate accounts with both stores, but now our accounts have been combined in some cases, and other past prescriptions no longer appear in our histories.

It worked fine before, so why do they keep having to ‘improve’ it.

Just leave well enough alone. Please.

Then our last stop was at Kroger’s for some of Jan’s favorite Sugar-Free Bread and Butter pickles.

And of course, once we were on our way home, it started pouring down once again. But luckily by the time we got back to the rig, it had tapered off to a light drizzle.

So That’s What It Is.

For the last couple of weeks I’ve been under the weather with a lot of back/leg pain. I had attributed it to lifting our truck’s wheel/tire combos back into place after doing the brake job on the front wheels a couple of weeks ago.

But the more I thought about it, I realized that I’ve actually  had this same problem for years. And it’s probably due to one of my many misadventures during my wild and misspent youth.

And according to my ophthalmologist, that same misadventures are probably also behind the Fuch’s Dystrophy problem with my left eye.

But a little Googling told me it sounded like Sciatica.

And looking over the 10 Symptoms of Sciatica online, I have approximately 8.5 of them. Luckily I don’t suffer from #10, which is the complete loss of bladder and bowel control.

Jan’s also happy about this, too.

So now I’ll try  to get an appointment  with my doctor for next week.

Sous Vide On The Grill


July 2, 2021

Nobody . . .

I’ve now got a timeline laid out for our Rib Fiesta this weekend, starting Saturday with cutting up the rib racks into 4 rib sections, powdering them in the rub/brown sugar/salt mixture, placing them in vacuum bags, adding 3 drops of Wright’s Applewood Smoke, and then sealing them up.

Then I’ll marinate them in the fridge overnight before setting them up in the cooker Sunday afternoon for the 24 hour cooking cycle. To speed things up I’ll start off using hot water from the faucet, which at 130°, will give it a big jumpstart up to our 150° cooking temp, rather than starting at the normal 80°.

Then about 30 minutes before the 24 hours is up on Monday afternoon, I’ll fire up our Weber out on the patio, and the ribs will go on the grill for basting with sauce for a final char.

Hopefully they’ll look somewhat like this.

BBQ Ribs Sous Vide

Going into work this morning, I saw a bumper sticker on a car talking about stopping crime. Which made me think about Crimestoppers.

Now days, they’re pretty much known for offering rewards for tips that lead to the arrest and conviction of criminals whose crimes are selected and highlighted in their online pages.

But back in the 1990-2000’s they were also known for the crime reenactments that showed all over television. They used actors from local colleges and theater groups for the criminal stand-ins, but they finally shut this down due to a problem.

People would recognize the actors on the street and report THEM to the police, getting them arrested, not the real criminals.

But anyway, back in about 2002, I had left Tech Services at the University of Houston-Clear Lake (UHCL) and was now WebMaster for the School of Business there. And somehow I got roped into doing one of these.

Hopefully it wasn’t typecasting, but I was the guy picking up young girl hitchhikers and then raping and killing them. My victim du jour was a cute redheaded student that I had worked with on several projects before so I knew her pretty well.

The premise was that I would be driving along and pick her. I then would reach over, lock the doors, put my hand on her leg, and say, “Nobody rides for free”. (And no, I didn’t write this script).

Then the camera would cut to her terrified face.

We ran over this a couple of times, working on camera angles, etc., before we did a take for real.

When we were rehearsing, I had always put my hand on her knee since she was wearing shorts. But when we did the take and I put my hand on her knee, and before the camera cut to her leg, I guess she wanted to make things a little more realistic, so she reached down and slid my hand up her bare leg almost to her crotch.

Startled, but trying to keep going, I leaned over, and in my best menacing voice, said my lines.

But it came out as, “Nobodwy Wides Fowr Fewre”, said in my best Elmer Fudd squeak.

And the laughter went on for almost 10 minutes. Every time it tapered off, someone would look at my bright red face and it would all start over again.

It wasn’t too long after this, and maybe because of this, that all these video reenactments went away.

Unfortunately I was never able to get a copy of this, so I’m hoping it’s lost forever.

I mentioned a couple of months ago how the magnolia trees around here were blooming like crazy, more so than I remember in the past. And I wondered if the big freeze back in February had anything to do with it.

And now it seems that maybe the same thing is happening with the crepe myrtle around here.

Crepe Myrtle 2

Crepe Myrtle 1

Again, I don’t know if the freeze had anything to do with it, but I don’t remember them being like this before.


Thought for the Day:

Last year, sixteen people were killed by ostriches – twice the number killed by sharks.

Maybe the Discovery Channel should be running Ostrich Week right now instead.