Saturday, November 18, 2017

Getting rid of the shakes the new way

Over the last couple of years, the motorhome has shown increasing shakes or vibrations while underway. The shakes start at about 42 mph and disappear in the high 40s. So...enough is enough.

The crew arrives...
Scott and his crew arrive at our site at the agreed time. The truck is equipped with an industrial air compressor and the biggest impact gun I've ever seen. It zips off the lug nuts like they were only finger tight.

The crew breaks the edge of the tire off the rim using a tire hammer and breaker bar.

Scott Matthews of Scott's Tire Center, Mission Texas (956-369-5121) slips in a pre-measured package of beads of Magnum Plus tire balancing compound into each tire. Surprise surprise. This stuff is made in Canada by  M & R Tire Products Inc.  and the head office is in Simcoe Ontario!

The final step is to swap the left and right tires to even out the tire wear.

Once the tire starts rolling down the road, the bag breaks and the beads distribute themselves around the tire to cancel out the imbalance. Magic.

Bonus.
We did not have to pack up the MH and disconnect the water, sewer, and electrical connections. We stayed put right where we were.

Risk.
Will it work? We won't know until we leave the campground and head into Mexico.

Believe it...this technology has been around for years, mostly used in the trucking industry.

Tune in the first week of December to find out the results.

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Now settled in Mission, TX

We arrived at Lemon Tree RV Inn in Mission on Thursday, November 9th. The weather was cooler than normal (16C) and rainy.  By Remembrance Day the temperature was back up to 26C. Yippee - back to shorts and t-shirts!

Several of our friends have asked for details re the portion of our trip to the Lower Rio Grande area of Texas. 

Distance traveled 2,056 miles from Thornhill to Mission.
The cost for fuel was $768.58 USD ($976 CAD)

We stayed overnight at the Walmart in Effingham, Illinois and at the Walmart in Little Rock, Arkansas.

We stayed 2 nights in Dallas at the Traders Village RV Park. With our Good Sam Club discount we paid $75.60 USD.

The next stop was Leisure Resort in Fentress (near Lockhart where we stop for smoked meat). With the 50% discount as a Passport America member we paid $22 USD. 

Total cost of campsites on our way south was $97.60 USD ($123.95 CAD)

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

What shittie weather 😢

Snow in Arkansas

I remarked to Bev that this year's trip has been the worst weather overall of any year we have gone south.
First day...cloudy and cold. Heading south from Indianapolis...cloud, mist, mizzle, a little rain. From Effingham Illinois to Little Rock...rain, heavy rain bursts but warm. Then we saw snow in the fields of Arkansas.

The next leg to Dallas started cloudy but warmer. We actually saw the sun for brief glimpses.

Psst. ..I lied about the snow. It's cotton ready for pickin'.😈


Rain rain go far away

The day spent in Dallas was cloudy and turning colder. We packed up in the rain on Wednesday morning with temperature about 10C and dropped to 8C by Austin. Rain all the way except for last 20 minutes of trip.
We are now in Lockhart Texas, NE of San Antonio, the home of the best BBQ in all the world. You can see a previous post about Black's and that is our gastronomic choice for tonight.

As bad as the weather has been,  we are thankful we are not home. Thursday forecast is snow and -9C overnight.

We look forward to Mission tomorrow and hopefully leave behind the cool and wet.


Saturday, October 28, 2017

Getting ready to head south

Getting ready to head south. The clutter in the living room is growing,  ready for transfer to the motorhome.

We will retrieve the MH from the storage lot on Sunday and begin the load up tasks.
We head out after the last kids come for their Halloween treats and spend the night at the  Flying J in London. We cross into the USA the next morning.

Note...I hope this post works OK as it is the first time blogging from my phone.
Vic


Saturday, April 15, 2017

a visit to Washington, then home

Monday April 3 we left  Martinsville to drive to  the Washington, DC area.  We booked into the Greenville Family Farm Campground near Haymarket VA (about  20 miles from the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum's annex at Washington Dulles International Airport.

The campgrounds had all the connections for water, sewer, electricity we needed.  No WIFI but great cell phone reception. Smart of us to have unlimited voice and data from Freedom Mobile, even in the USA.

We spent most of Tuesday at the Air and Space Museum at Dulles. One word describes it...AWESOME!
We joined in on a guided tour by one of the docents who really knew his stuff.  He had some great insights that we would never have gotten walking around on our own.

There are 5 main attractions here. The Space Shuttle Discovery, SR-71 Spyplane, B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay, Boeing 707 prototype, and a Concord SST.
The Space Shuttle is very impressive and even shows the singes of the heat of re-entering the atmosphere. It was always my impression that the heat was caused by the friction with air molecules. Not so. It was due to the massive pressure build-up on the surface. Remember your physics? Compressing a gas will result in increasing its temperature.
The docent related a neat story of the Apollo 11 command module. This mission was in big trouble because there was an problem in the command module and the crew had to return from the moon in the mission module. Before re-entry, they transferred back to the command module that did not have environmental controls. It was very cold inside. After successfully landing in the ocean, the rescue crew opened the hatch and it was still very cold inside, even after the blazing heat of re-entry.

The plane with Boeing is the prototype of the 707.

The Enola Gay is the airplane that dropped the A-bomb on Hiroshima

Two historic planes...the 707 prototype and the Concord.

B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay

Aerobatics and ultralights

The first flying car. None have ever been successful.

On Wednesday we decided to head into Washington to see the Smithsonian museums. The best way is to drive to the nearest Metro station in Vienna Virginia. For $20 we rode in and returned, parking included. On the drive back to the campground, it was a 45+ minute drive in the heavy traffic. We are so glad not to have driven into the city!

We visited the Aviation and Space museum downtown. This is the original, before the collection became just to big to house everything. Although it is nice by many standards, it was bit of a letdown after the Dulles museum. There are still many interesting displays, even the Kitty Hawk, and war birds. We were done in a couple of hours and headed to the Museum of Natural History.

Boring. We trailed around for a couple of hours, not impressed by anything. We never left the main floor and maybe there was something there to see but we were pooped by now and decided to head for the hills.

The next day was wasted (rainy) doing laundry in Manassas and shopping. We found a pressure washer at Home Depot of $80. The exact same thing in Ontario is Cdn$188. I kid you not!

Sunday. We headed for home as the weather was going to be nice and warm for the next few days and we hate unloading the motorhome in the cold and rain. We stayed overnight at a WalMart in Edinboro PA, having dinner in town at a nice restaurant. The weather was a very pleasant 25C.

We were home by 2 PM the next day after crossing at Fort Erie with very minimal delay.

 

Corpus Christi, Houston, Martinsville



On Thursday March 23rd we drove to Corpus Christi.  We booked into the Colonia Del Rey RV Park which was just a 20 minute drive from the USS Lexington Aircraft Carrier and close to the bridge to cross over to Padre and Mustang Islands.  The next day we spent 4 hours touring the USS Lexington aircraft carrier and then drove up to Port Aransas to explore the area. We happened to stop at a sporting goods store just to kill time and ended up getting great bargains on swim suits. Bev really lucked out getting two suits at $20 each and a gorgeous sun dress for $5. Vic's suit were $10 each.

A view of the USS Lexington from the bridge to Padre Island

heading for a tour of the USS Lexington


Giving it a try

We left the Corpus Christi area on Saturday March 25th to head towards Houston. We stopped at a Walmart in Dickinson (about halfway between Houston and Galveston) and unhitched our tow car to research some of the area RV Parks.  We settled on Green Caye RV Park for $30 per night which was just 6 miles from the Houston Space Center.  

Sunday we drove south to Galveston. We drove around Pelican island touring along the Seawall area, the East End Point, the port area and stopped at the Seawolf Park  to tour a WWII submarine and a destroyer escort ship. 

Amusement park on the pier in Galveston
another glimpse of the rides on the pier

one of the container ships passing by the East End point, site of the remains of Fort San Jacinto




on a dock in the port area of Galveston


Lots of oil rigs

Oil rig that can be toured
The WWII USS Cavalla submarine at Seawolf Park near Galveston





On the deck of the destroyer escort ship USS Stewart at Seawolf Park

Huge container ship passing going into port by Seawolf Park

Monday March 27th we spent most of the day touring the Houston Space Center which was about a 15 minute drive from where we were staying. We hoped to take the VIP Tour but it was booked weeks in advance. We will have to return in the fall and book ahead.
 
Modified 747 with Shuttle Endeavor replica



Lunar Rover replica. Original is still on the moon.

A real piece of the moon.
Space Shuttle cockpit

Space Shuttle cargo bay with Canadarm




The next item on our itinerary was to drive to Martinsville VA for a weekend of NASCAR racing. It would be a 3 day drive, making it the day before the rain came.


Tuesday March 28th we left Dickinson TX and stopped for the night at a Walmart in Mobile Alabama. We had driven in 4 states that day:  Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.

one of the many crawfish ponds along our route through Louisiana
The following day we drove through Atlanta Georgia and found a nice RV park called Carolina Landing near the town of Fair Play. (south of Greenville SC). This gave us the opportunity to dump the tanks and load up with water to last our stay in Martinsville. Nice park, nestled in the hills and trees and very quiet.
 
Thurs Mar 30th we started out about 9:15 am.  By noon we stopped at a Rest Area at the North Carolina border to change into long pants as the weather cool (14C and drizzling). Sad to put on long pants for the first time after 4 months wearing shorts. By 2:44 pm we were in our camping spot at the Martinsville Speedway.  We had tickets to watch the Pole Qualifying on Fri, truck race Saturday and STP 500 on Sunday.  Let the fun begin!
Alas, Friday it rained and the practices and qualifying were cancelled.   

Mudsville. And the fun begins.


When it rains, as it often does at this time of year, the campground becomes very slick and soft mud in many places. The guy pulling this 5th wheel trailer is in big trouble. Too much mud and not enough traction. He needed a pull forward to get into position beside his friends .

Saturday was cool and windy but dry.  We were able to watch the practices, truck qualifying and finally the truck race at 3 pm.  Our favourite driver, Chase Elliott won that race!

#23 is Chase Elliott, during the warmup laps.


 Sunday Elliott finished 3rd in the race, part of the Monster Energy Series. 

Turn 3. Elliott on the outside of Larson. Two of the young guns.

Go #24! Chase Elliott is our guy.
 
Vic sporting his Chase Elliott shirt

When it came time to leave many RVs were stuck in the mud from the Friday rain and tow services were required.  In the photos below, even one of the tow trucks got stuck and had to be towed out!
Red tow truck stuck in the mud.

Big Brute tows Little Red.


Wednesday, March 22, 2017

now in Mission Texas

We had a relaxing winter in the Riviera Nayarit section of Mexico.  Sun, sand, surf, friends.... what more could you ask for!

The area has become quite popular.  The government is building toll highways to reach the area faster from cities such as Guadalajara and Tepic.  The new road will be only a 2 hour drive from Guadalajara to the coast where it currently takes about 4 1/2 hours. New condos and hotels are under construction. Most campgrounds and bungalows were full this winter. But the electrical and internet services have not been increased to handle the new load.  Reaching internet sites such as Facebook was painful -- best done about 5 am -- after 7:30 am to midnight no good.  It does not help that the cell phone provides include 2GB access specifically to Facebook on even their cheapest monthly plans!

It is wise to have water in your tank and fuel for your generator in case the electrical service goes down for an extended period of time.

The 2 best investments we made last fall were the awnings for our slideout windows on our motorhome and a countertop washing machine which we used for our smaller laundry items.  Many campgrounds have no laundry facility. Those that do, usually have only 1 or 2 washing machines and no driers. With 10 families using 1 or 2 washers and limited lines to hang your clothes on, it can be a challenge.  So we just used the communal washer (cost $25 pesos per load) to do our bedding and towels.  All the rest we did in our countertop machine. Luckily we were in a campground that allows you to put up laundry lines behind your RV.

Other than that, it was much the same kind of winter that we had the previous 7 years.  Hot and humid in December with cooler nights not coming until mid January.  The ocean temperature was 81F most of the winter except for a few days at the end of February where it went down to 76F.  Still comfortable to swim in.

We did not take any side trips this winter.  We were involved in the local charitable organization plus Vic volunteered as a swimming instructor for 2 hours a week. There was baseball, exercise classes, town square dance nights, taco nights, etc.  We especially enjoyed the 2 weeks our son and family visited us.

Now we are back at Lemon Tree RV Inn in Mission socializing with our friends here. We have been busy in activities every day since we arrived here on Mar 16th. The weather is sunny and hot with 31C (90F) day time high but strong breezes make it comfortable.

Tomorrow, March 23rd, we pack put the tent and move to Corpus Christi for a couple of days. We look forward to touring the USS Lexington aircraft carrier. Beyond that, we have nothing specific planned. Ah...the life of vagabonds.