Friday, March 17, 2017

PUSH PAUSE THEN HIT REFRESH



Shoshone RV Park at sunrise
Home sweet home

We're closing in on the final days of our camp host job at Shoshone RV Park. We've spent two days per week for three months of our lives making reservations, checking people in, cleaning, completing paint projects, maintaining pupfish ponds, and meeting people from all over the world. 
Debbie (park manager) with Annette and Shug


While in Shoshone, we've crossed paths with all kinds of people. Interacting with foreigners proudly utilizing their English skills, spouses dealing with grief and loss in search of healing, conservancy groups and college classes conscientiously working to better the world through nature conservation, enriches our traveling life. 

Annette and Shug running thangs
The park, buzzing with excitement and lively conversation, creates a space for people to hit the pause button and slip out of their daily groove, taking time to relax by the pool, to gaze up at the night skies, and to slow down enough to soak in the sights and sounds of the desert oasis of Shoshone, CA.  Each night croaking frogs, howling coyotes , and hooting long-eared owls deliver a flawless symphony filled with joy and longing and collectively we exhale and think, "Yes, this is where we are supposed to be."
Desert beauty

Annette sawing the mesquite tree

Occasionally, situations challenged our positive outlook​ on life. Annette named one couple the "Grench Canadians" because their relentless grumpy attitude started up at check-in and stretched well into their second margaritas. They launched complaints about the site not being level so Annette got out our levelers for them and squared up their motorhome. Uh-oh, now a mesquite branch  interfered with the trajectory of their awning. Annette, sick with the flu, climbs up on the picnic table and begins sawing off thorny mesquite branches to get clearance. Oh but wait, now the dogs are in danger of stepping on mesquite thorns and incurring a multi-thousand dollar vet visit. As Annette hauls the cut branches away from the area she hears a whiney,  woeful voice saying that it's too late now for the awning because the sun has dropped so low in the the sky. Controlling the sun is out of our jurisdiction, he he he. At some point in the grump fest, while washing her hands the woman asks Annette, "Just how hard is the water here?" Annette mumbles some pH mineral water hooey and tries to sneak off. Just as Annette starts dragging her droopy, deflated, flu-ridden body away from the complaint zone, the woman says "Don't leave until you've shared a margarita with us." Amazed, Annette reaches for the green elixir and guzzles it as the woman says, "I think we can make this spot work." And they do and they end up stopping at the office on their way out to say what a sweet little park this is.
He he he
Lynn behind the counter of the Charles Brown General Store

Meanwhile, Lynn is working at the general store in downtown Shoshone. Annette, Shug and I walk up to the General store every night to visit Lynn and she usually entertains us with the story of the day. Nevada residents drive 30 miles over from Pahrump and even 90 miles from Las Vegas to buy California Lottery tickets. Sunday nights regularly draw a group of Thai monks from Las Vegas who spend several hours hanging out and buying lottery and scratch tickets hoping to hit it big and sometimes handing Lynn a few dollars as a good-luck tip. Another customer, a 60-something man, comes to the register ready to pay for his items then says that his money is in his other pair of pants in his car. He wanders out of the store and then back to the counter this time carrying his extra pair of pants and begins digging money out of the pockets which tickles Lynn to no end. Customer service jobs, at times, leave you perplexed and amazed, as with the regular customers, man and wife, who wear long fake-fur leopard print hooded-coats in the heat of the desert. They remind Annette of Siegfried and Roy minus the real tigers. Another time, an angry man approaches the lottery counter and says, "I want my usual." Since Lynn has never seen him before she says, "I don't know your usual," which throws him into a huffing fit and he starts sputtering while jabbing his finger at the glass front of the case. 
Shug and Lynn working hard

We loved our time in the little town of Shoshone. Fortunately, nice, kind and fun-loving people outnumber the negative nellies. Our interactions with strangers often cause us to reflect on each person's story as well as our own. These brief connections with those around us offer opportunities to recognize our similarities as we move through life's joys and struggles. Each day reminds us to seek ways to connect with and support our fellow travelers as we journey along life's path. We remind each other to fully notice and participate in each moment, to see the color of the cactus, to smell the creosote after a rain, to hear nature's symphonies in the starlit night and to feel the warm dry desert breeze against our skin, for life is short and our moments are dwindling.....we will continue to create our lives, to be resilient in dealing with life's obstacles and sorrows and to move, with as much grace as possible, forward........ROLL ON!!
Lynn (Vanna White) posing by the amethyst display

Annette and Shug working on the pupfish ponds


Clay (park manager)

Eating breakfast at the Crowbar Cafe and Saloon

What?

He he
Home for three months...What a town!!


   

Saturday, March 11, 2017

TRIP PLANNING IS A TRIP

Trip planning is a trip alright! We will complete our three month camp host job at the end of March and we'll be back road trippin' once again.
We love maps

Our tentative itinerary includes exploration in Nevada, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Colorado and, finally, ending up in South Texas for next winter. State Parks, historic sites, and at least four National Parks ( Great Basin, Glacier, Yellowstone and Theodore Roosevelt) will shelter us along the way.

While in Idaho we plan to do a few short backpacking trips and visit our friend, Kay, and her daughter in McCall at their new business, The North Fork Coffee Roasters. Even on a paper map, Idaho looks like a wild, rugged state.
Annette planning our next move

By September we'll roll in to South Dakota.  Kristy's nephew, Logan, runs cross country and he will be in his senior year in college and we want to see at least one of his meets. Hopefully, we can also fit in a bike riding trip on the Mickelson Trail with Kristy's brother, Kerry, and sister-in-law, Laura.

We look forward to kayaking again at Pueblo Reservoir in the fall and visiting friends and family in Colorado. Hopefully we'll get caught up on doctor appointments, eat our fill of muffins at the Mate' factor, enjoy our beloved Colorado Spring's hikes and breathe in the fresh mountain air. We hope to circle the wagons with the newest addition, Rolleo (unofficial name), Juliet's new cute trailer.
Circling stops along the way

While planning our adventures we utilize maps, books, on-line guides (The Shunpiker Guide and Trails End), read other full-time RVing blogs, stop at Visitor Centers and get info through conversations with other travelers. Planning sets a structure but we remain flexible and open to changing direction. As always we are loving our rolling life!!




Friday, March 3, 2017

MOSAIC CANYON, DEATH VALLEY NP

We spend an early morning hiking Mosaic Canyon in Death Valley NP. This short 4 mile round trip hike takes us through polished marble narrows filled with beautiful and unique color patterns and textures. A must do hike when visiting Death Valley.

Polished marble walls in Mosaic Canyon

Kristy early morning in Mosaic Canyon

Beautiful colors in Mosaic Canyon

Annette making her way through the beauty

Annette surrounded by the beautiful colors

Annette admiring the beauty

Polished marble walls

Bike trip to the Borax Company Museum

Texas Springs Campground

A beautiful warm March evening

Thursday, March 2, 2017

JOURNEY TO THE RACETRACK DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK

Racetrack Rock
The Racetrack Rocks in Death Valley National Park have been on our bucket list for many years.  Actually getting to the rocks can be quite an adventure and many people blow out tires on the 27 mile dirt road. Annette, Lynn and I decide to rent a jeep and make our way down the rough road and out into the middle of nowhere to witness and walk among these famous mysterious rocks.  Here is a picture journey of our trip which was, without doubt, worth the effort.
Teakettle Junction

The day before we set out on this journey, Annette, myself and others tried desperately to save a 73 year old woman in the Shoshone RV park who had collapsed in her trailer.  unfortunately she did not survive and her husband was left to pack up and move on without her.  Over the years they both have spent many vacations here in the park and were on their last two days of a month stay when she passed.  Life is short and the fine line between life and death is razor thin.  We headed to Death Valley for healing and to honor Donna who loved this area.


Kristy and Lynn celebrating life

Racetrack Rock on the Playa (the playa is 1,000 ft deep)

buddies moving through life together

Kristy Annette and Shug at Teakettle Junction

Move at your own pace

Annette and Kristy admiring the rock and its track

Keep moving forward

Kristy and Annette falling over the edge of the  Ubehebe Crater

Make your own path in life

Kristy and Lynn

Choose your path wisely

Annette at Ubehebe Crater

Rock solid Friends