Since Kip and I are taking the slow road home, I started comparing our trip to what it must have been like for the early day settlers. Did they have some of the same challenges as we modern RVers do?
Ma: Pa! Where is the rest of the wagon train? Are you lost again? I swear…you never foller directions. They said to turn right at the third Joshua Tree.
Pa: They said I should turn in the direction of the hand I eat with. I eat with both hands. I’m guess’n I got a little confused.
Meanwhile…
Kip: Why do I hear three GPS voices?
MG: Because I don’t trust the RV GPS. She gets stuck all of the time, and I put the address in your phone by accident. It must have fallen under your seat. I have mine on for reassurance.
After a while…
Pa: I think we’re going in circles. We’re back in that place that is going to turn into a Lake Havasu some day. Why are we repeating ourselves? I thought we were conquering new frontiers.
Ma: You’ll have to ask the head wagon. They’re up front with the two dogs and a grumpy cat.
Rylie’s favorite spot…This is where the dogs ran this afternoon…
It’s true…we are back in Lake Havasu City for three days. We were late getting in, we’re tired, and we needed to do laundry, clean the jeep, and clear out the RV, again. I also had some paperwork to do and after a week or so on the road, there is always something that needs attention. It’s still a whole lot of fun. We camped at Pismo Beach a couple of years ago and saw a very expensive motor home with a big dent in the side. The owner had taped a sign on the dent that read, “There are no bad days when you’re on an RV trip.”
The dogs are beginning to get used to waking up in a whole new world most days. They love to find new places to run and play and remind us that they are just pups…and we are not!
We will head for Yuma on the 31st and spend New Years there. I hear they have an old prison that’s pretty interesting. Hopefully, there will be other sightseeing opportunities as well.
On the drive from Sequoia National Park. We spent one night a few miles south of Barstow.
Pa: I’m running out of clean britches. Do you need me to get the wash board out for you tonight, Ma?
We’re thankful for our national parks. We’ve been to several on our travels and have seen God’s beautiful country on display. The last half of this little video consists of photos taken on our drive through the Sequoia National Park…at least as far as we could get without chains.
We also saw orange and lemon groves ready to harvest. Olives and other delectables are grown in the valleys.
Our Christmas in pictures…Reagan Library, Santa Barbara, and Sequoia National Park
The slippers were Kip’s Christmas present. I got fresh tangelos.
I hope everyone had a blessed Christmas. We’re on our way home, but we’re taking the long way…
My son used to say, “Mom, can I have some Martian mallows in my hot chocolate?
Tonight, after a day that started out pretty disappointing, I was determined I was going to end it by doing something fun. Kip built a fire in the firepit, and I roasted and ate ten or fifteen Martian mallows.
Just the way I like them!I could have used some grandkids about now.
Maybe it was fifteen or twenty. Kip took a pass. He had an exhausting day at the Reagan Library yesterday.
Those teleprompters are more difficult than they look.
Anyway…you’re probably wondering how someone could have a bad day in beautiful Santa Barbara…
We have really been looking forward to taking Nellie and Rylie for a long walk on the beach, and today seemed like the perfect day. It was sunny and warm. We found a beach up the road, paid the $9 to get in, and headed to find the parking lot. It was then that we discovered all the signs posted everywhere. No dogs allowed!
The girl at the booth who let us in couldn’t have helped but notice our two dogs vying for her attention. Did she think we were going to drive to the beach and sit in the jeep? She hadn’t said a word.
We stop on our way out to ask her if there were any beaches around that would allow you to walk your dogs and she along with a ranger who had shown up in the meantime, both said there were none.
We couldn’t believe that could be true, so I googled it and found two within thirty minutes who allowed pets on the beach, and one was even a no leash beach. Though the sun was under a cloud by the time we got there, we had a good time, and the dogs were really funny. They never did figure out the rhythm of the waves.
No beach pictures…I left my phone in the car. These were taken on the way to the Santa Barbara beach that likes dogs. It really is beautiful around here.
One more day here and then off to see General Sherman’s Tree in the Sequoia National Forrest. We’ll be there until the day after Christmas.
As many of you know, our lives and those of my California family have been rather hectic since the first part of August. My brother, Billy, and I have been lazer focused on my stepfather, Gus, who underwent some pretty major heart surgery and has also had to adjust to advanced macula degeneration and the many life changes it involves.
He has been quite the trooper and has put up with my bossy self and my know-it-all attitude. I know he must have been so happy to see me go yesterday. Kip and I were there for 36 days. That doesn’t count the month I was there during and after the surgery.
This trip involved getting Gus settled into a new house and all that entails. I fear I fell way short of leaving him as organized as I should have, but it was really time to take my husband and my dogs and go. Gus’ eyes told me not to come back even if I left my car keys or my coffee mug behind, which I usually did when we left to head back to the RV over the 36 days.)
A little housewarming fun. “To die for” food provided by Billy’s wife, LizThe RV tree I purchased at Goodwill today. I added the lights.
So, we left and decided we needed to go somewhere and take some time to figure out where we were/are. Right now, we’re in a lovely RV park near Simmi Valley. We’re taking off early tomorrow and will see the Reagan Library and then we’re going to spend three days in Santa Barbara near the ocean. By the time we leave there, it will be December 23rd. Christmas will be spent on the road, and it will surely feel weird. Did I tell you we have 4 kids, 8 grandkids, and 4 great grandkids? Christmas snuck up on me… I will never understand how people manage to keep their lives organized.
It was fun to warm myself by this bon fire outside the laundry room at the RV Park last night.
I did buy a tree today for the RV and the dogs helped me decorate it. They have really come a long way in their relationship- building with the cat. One of them puts their ball near the cat who is reclining in the recliner and the other one tries to get the ball while the kitty bats them with her paws. She enjoys the game a lot. I can tell. She had both paws around Rylies head today. It looked as if she was hugging him.
I don’t hug dogsEver felt like this?“I’m pretty creative myself. I can’t wait to redo these valances to better match my new chair coverings,” says the cat.
I have to call it a night, but I want to share this Christmas picture of me and some of my cousins that was taken at my Aunt Emily and Uncle Wayne Sanderson’s house. I’m the one in the dress with the fur collar. I just loved that dress. I grew into it about ten years later.
This poem is from the heart. I wrote it because I know there are others like me who have a difficult time finding the right words to say to someone who is grieving. I have three important people in my life who have recently lost their husbands. This is for them.
Keep looking up!
Sometimes, when our eyes are closed, we can see much better. I can’t seem to find the words, so let’s do this together.
We can sit here quietly, and I’ll take your hand in mine. I’ll look inside your hurting heart and see what I can find.
I see the one you’re missing is right where they belong. They want you to know they have been there all along.
See them fill it up with all the love they have to give.. They want you to remember that in your heart is where they’ll live.
Let’s sit here a while longer. You can tell me what you see… A smile, a laugh a wink… a treasured memory?
One thing about memories…you’ll recall the cream of thecrop because the bad ones sink to the bottom, and the good ones rise to the top.
When our eyes are closed, we can see a little better. Let’s keep them closed a little while and say a prayer together.
I heard the perfect saying for me on television the other day which is strange because I’ve had very little time to watch television. Some of the advertisements sink in by osmosis. The words I heard were, “Heavy is the head that wears the crown.” Perfect right? I think it’s supposed to mean that I’m the head of something which I’m not but I try really hard to do my part. And I do occassionally wear a crown.
Kip and I will be in California for a while longer. We’re enjoying spending time with family and trying our best to get our dogs trained. Nellie loves the dog park and she behaves herself. She knows the drill and follows other dogs around until she gets one to play with her and then she runs them ragged. Rylie is too rowdy for the dog park so I walk him, or rather he walks me, on the leash. He’s a real cutie though and very sweet and affectionate.
I wrote a little poem to say thank you. I owe so many family and friends my thanks. I hope you know I miss you.
May your Thanksgiving be filled with love and laughter….Kip and Mary
Kip and Rylie
I have so much I want to say and things I want you all to see.
To my dear family and friends, thanks for sharing your love with me.
I love you more than I can say. Wish I could shout it loud and clearly.
Instead I’ll whisper loving words, hoping that you will hear me.
We all have things to comfort us and things we share to comfort others.
Thanks for all you give to me. I love when we help one another
When I hear It is well with my soul, my breathing slows to its lovely pace.
When I hear In the Garden, I walk beside He who gives me grace
I often worry about things that never make it to fruition.
I don’t know what the right things are. I don’t have that intuition.
So I push the fear away and don’t give it space inside my head
I look to something I have read or something someone else has said.
“Don’t push the river it always flows.” My mother often said to me.
“It’s important to remember that we shall see what we shall see.”
So much depends on where I look…and that which I wish to see.
Do I see what makes me sad or will my heart look for the beauty?
My happiness can be found in skies filled with either sun or rain.
Don’t think I over simplify but peace can rise above our pain.
If you want the best seat in the house, move the dog.
When someone smiles do you smile back? It’s the natural thing to do.
So offer all your sweetest smile. You might say, “God Bless You,” too.
Have you missed me? We’re in Ontario and will be until Thanksgiving day. We were going to stay until the Saturday after but the huge RV park we’re in now will be full. Our plan is to head north and see the Ronald Regan Museum and then maybe see some other parts of northern California. Everything for the remainder of the trip will be on a whim.
We’ve been enjoying our time with Gus and our eating is still out of control. I decided this morning that I have six weeks until my (big) birthday and I want to lose ten pounds before then. Maybe seven. I’d be happy with seven. Even five would be better than nothing. I have looked at recent pictures of myself and I was amazed to discover how chubby my face is. That’s not a good look for me. Maybe three pounds will help that part. I’ve heard that if you know the right technique, you can contour your face with makeup. I’m leary of that because I have seen women who are wearing all of this perfectly done makeup and I wonder what they look like before they put it on and after they take it off. I don’t like to look that much different.
The dogs are learning a lot on this trip. They sit, poop and pee on command. It’s just that they want to do it at 4 o’clock in the morning. At least the weather has been gorgeous. I think Nellie and Rylie will be writing a blog rating the different dog parks they have frequented. There is definitely a difference. They are full of pros and cons, but I’ll let them tell you all about it.
Tomorrow, Gus, Kip and I are going to join Gus’ group of friends who gather for a “meeting” every Wednesday morning at the Ontario Bakery. The bakery makes the best bear claws I have ever put in my mouth. I know I said that about two other places, but I forgot about the Ontario Bakery bear claws. There are really none better. Tomorrow night, we’re going to the Legion for steak night. The steaks, baked potato, salad and dessert are consistently outstanding. Everyone else usually only consumes half and then take the rest home, but I can never manage to do that. I eat it all! Who cares about a fat face, anyway.
Some shots taken at the Bonelli Bluffs RV park and resort where we are staying.
We’ve been busy every waking minute, but I can’t tell you what we’ve been doing. It’s not a secret. I just don’t know how our days get so full.
My plan was to blog our trip with a little more regularity, but it was not meant to be. I do want to pass on the story of the London Bridge that was transported from London and rebuilt piece by piece in Lake Havasu City.
I took this photo in 2016…
For nearly 2,000 years, a series of bridges has spanned the River Thames in London. The bridge spanning Lake Havasu City’s Bridgewater Channel today was built 190 years ago in 1831. Due to a heavy increase in vehicle traffic in the early 20th century, this bridge began sinking into the River Thames, so the City of London had it dismantled and sold it at an auction in 1967.
Robert P. McCulloch was the winning bidder at $2.4 million ($19 million in today’s dollars). As Lake Havasu City’s founder, he teamed up with C.V. Wood, Disneyland’s master planner and the theme park’s first employee, to design his dream city. An eccentric but visionary entrepreneur known for the McCulloch chainsaw brand, McCulloch had an idea that many thought was odd: It was to reconstruct the bridge as an attraction to draw tourists and prospective buyers of residential lots.
The London Bridge is NOT falling down contrary to the popular English nursery rhyme. The inside of the bridge is hollow but it’s reinforced with a sturdy steel framework faced with granite. The vintage lamp posts on the bridge are made from the melted-down cannons of Napoleon Bonaparte’s army at the Battle of Waterloo.
The London Bridge survived World War II Nazi warplane bombings. Visitors can see the battle scars left behind and where two U.S. soldiers tagged their names on the centuries-old stone.
The English village surrounding the bridge features little shops and fun things to do and see.
Joshua tree on the way to San Dimas…last night at Cattail Cove…
We left Cattail Cove State Park on Wednesday morning and traveled 8 hours to San Dimas, CA. We are now staying in another lovely RV park on Puddington Lake. It’s about 10 miles from where Gus lives. We met him fir lunch at Andy’s, a family owned restaurant Mom and Gus discovered many years ago.
We took the pups to a couple of new dog parks yesterday. A good time was had by all. Well, if I’m going to be honest, we left the first one before we got kicked out. Rylie got a little too roudy.
Today we will catch up on shopping and laundry and maybe have Gus over for a cookout tonight. Breakfast with Liz and Bill is planned for tomorrow.
What would we do without food? The weather couldn’t be more perfect for long walks and eating outside…