Our trailer

Our trailer

Monday, July 24, 2017

Wow Half a year has flown by

I have been out on the road for nearly 7 months now. I keep meaning to update this and something always comes up. This will be a brief overview with post following with more detail.

 First let me say that there is a big difference between boondocking out in the wild for a week or two and doing it full-time. When we use to go for short periods we would load up, fill the water and take off. On the way home the trash went into our trash can at home. The waste tanks were dumped into the RV dump in the storage lot. The dirty laundry went into our washing machine and the next trip was just a trip to the grocery store away which was just down the street. We could decide to go and be on the road in a hour and within the same time frame you would not have known we had been gone once we were home.

Now even though I have added capacity to some area of the rig, it is still the same one we used in the Rockies for 6 years. The difference is it is just me and I have rarely been in my beloved Rockies. Every new place I go I have to find out where to get food, water, propane, mail. Where to dump the tanks and do laundry. Even where to get my puppy taken care of. I will move in two weeks and start the whole process over again. It will get easier as I return to some of the areas next year following a path of good weather, I know this. Right now it is part of not only the learning process but comfort level adjustment as well. Dealing with mail was a biggy and still is.

I spent New years eve not as planned, all packed up and resting with one last nice dinner with the other half. Instead I was running around the house sorting, packing and looking things up when the back said no more. I think I would have been doing the same if I had stayed another month, it just never ended. I pushed back the grocery until the morning of the New years and focused on getting everything into the trailer sitting out front. A few last minute things the next morning, a run to the grocery ad I finally hit the road at 1 pm. I knew I needed to make Raton pass on the Colorado/New Mexico boarder by nightfall as there was a winter storm moving in. I was a beautiful sunny day except the wind was lane changing at times. As a head wind it slowed me to 50 Mph and cut my gas millage to the point that I nearly ran out on the way to Trinidad. The one station I tried to stop at was closed, luckily I had the 2 gallon gas can filled for the generator and added that to the tank at the rest stop before Trinidad. Since then the policy is to start looking as soon as the tank hits half full. This has benefited me over and over in my travels as there is not always a gas station where you would think there is one.

I made the rest stop after Raton pass around sunset. It is on the high plain with some historic markers among the usual bathrooms and such. It was pretty cold so I fired up the furnace, then had a hamburger patty and ravioli for my first dinner on the road. I checked all of the hotspots to find T-Mobile was wicked fast, Verizon had a weak signal, AT&T was good and Sprint showed no signal at all. I was pretty happy getting a signal I could stream on without the booster and directional antenna. I went to sleep my first night by the hum of a big truck motor. I woke the next morning alone ready to hit the road again.







From there my next stop was Albuquerque, N.M. for a quick stop to pick up a 435w solar panel to mount on the truc and then on to San Antonio, N.M that same day. It didn't work out very quick as the building the panels were stored in was locked for the holiday and I spent the night in its locked store yard. I had a key to get out if I wanted but instead I made dinner, tested the hotspots and played on the internet or streamed the rest of the night. I had all of the services being in a big city, Sprint was wicked fast so I used it. The next morning I cleaned up, ate, bought the panel and headed out. I kind of wish I had bought more of those panels because I have never seen them for sale again. Next stop is San Antonio, N.M.





1 comment:

  1. Halo,I'm Helena Julio from Ecuador,I want to talk good about Le_Meridian Funding Service on this topic.Le_Meridian Funding Service gives me financial support when all bank in my city turned down my request to grant me a loan of 500,000.00 USD, I tried all i could to get a loan from my banks here in Ecuador but they all turned me down because my credit was low but with god grace I came to know about Le_Meridian so I decided to give a try to apply for the loan. with God willing they grant me  loan of 500,000.00 USD the loan request that my banks here in Ecuador has turned me down for, it was really awesome doing business with them and my business is going well now. Here is Le_Meridian Funding Investment Email/WhatsApp Contact if you wish to apply loan from them.Email:lfdsloans@lemeridianfds.com / lfdsloans@outlook.comWhatsApp Contact:+1-989-394-3740.

    ReplyDelete