Friday, April 17, 2015

Shake Down Cruise Part 2

While in Nashville, a couple in a Phaeton pulled in beside us for a night on their way to Ohio.  They full-time about six months out of the year and we struck up a conversation.  I had been working to sanitize our water system and they told me to keep a spray bottle of bleach in my wet bay to use on the RV park spigot.  I asked why and they told me about seeing other RV'er take their sewer hose over to the spigot and hold it under there to rinse it out before they pack it up.  Wow, the stuff you learn.
My conference was over, so we hooked up and headed to Huntsville, AL where we had reservations at Redstone Arsenal Campground (reserved for military/DOD folks).  If you are authorized to use it, this is a nice clean, quiet and secure park.  We got in on the pre-season rate and had full hook-up for $17 per night.  The WiFi worked, the laundry was clean and they had a nice dog run area.  It is also within walking distance of the PX and Commissary.  Again, I had business meetings during the day and moved in to a company office building in Huntsville.  After a week of living in the coach, we were settling in on where items should be stored and learning where they should not be stored.  I sleep with a CPAP machine and decided it could be tucked inside the closet with just the hose running out a small opening. Well it didn't take but a couple minutes of breathing closet air to decide that was not a good idea.  In addition to the shoes stored there, we had the laundry hamper in there with the dirty cloths.  Lesson learned, don't keep the dirty with the clean in a closed area.  We also were trying out all the systems we have not used and found the icemaker does not work, the dryer makes a grinding noise when in use and the dishwasher is possessed with a demon.  We went through the steps to run the dishwasher and it kept giving error codes then began randomly turning itself on and beeping its alarm.  So, we have a couple things to get looked at, but nothing major.
For Easter weekend, we decided to pick-up my mother and drive her to Auburn, AL so we could attend church with my sons who attend college there.  Mom prepared food and we stored it in the bus then she climbed aboard and off we went.  We stayed at Eagle's Landing campground near my son's mobile home.  I am not sure if it was because we were only staying one night or because it was a holiday wee end, but the price was $47 for a full hook-up.  Seems a bit high considering the park was half full, but they do have nice level concrete pads and all the amenities.  I broke out the grill and cooked big hamburgers for the boys Saturday night.  We made Mom a bed on the jack-knife sofa since we removed the sofa with the pull out bed and replaced it with two Lazy-Boy recliners.  She said it was very comfortable.  We celebrated Easter by attending the church my sons go to and enjoyed seeing all the young people and meeting older mentors in the church that have built a relationship with my sons.  Afterward, we gathered at my son's mobile home with the food Mom prepared and had an Easter feast leaving the boys plenty of leftovers.

On Sunday afternoon, we headed to the Cummins Service center Birmingham, AL where they have free 50 amp and water hook-ups for those needing service.  Pattie took the Jeep and ran Mom back to her home and we slept well prepared for our early Monday appointment.  The people at this service enter were very nice.  They let us bring Sparky in the waiting room while the technician changed the oil, filters, and lubricated the chassis.  By late morning, we were back on the road to Huntsville where we plugged in and I worked mobile.  We planned to stay the week in Huntsville, but we received a text Wednesday that Mom had a heart attack and was headed to the hospital.  I texted Pattie and by the time I got to The Bus, she had it ready to unhook and roll out.  We pulled in to Tannehill State Park about 20 minutes from the Tuscaloosa, AL hospital, hooked up, crated Sparky (sorry girl) and headed to the hospital in the Jeep.  Mom was doing fine and the docs were running tests.  She was released the next day and must return for more tests, but she seems ok.  This is one of the reasons we want to full-time RV.  With the boys in college and our Moms both in their 80-90s, we want to be able to respond and help when needed.  
Friday morning, we headed back toward Maryland and made it to North Carolina (Yeah, a new sticker!) before stopping for the night.  The Cross Winds Family campground we chose had somewhat confusing instructions on how to enter and we ended up down the wrong road facing a dead end.  I was really tired having planned a 6-hour day that had turned into 9-hours due to traffic accidents and was not pleased.  I unhooked the Jeep and Pattie took it scouting for the campground after we got The Bus turned around.  The campground was very nice and convenient to the highway, just poor signage getting to it.  In their instructions, they say they are down the first driveway on the right.  Which is totally correct.  Unfortunately, there is a small road on the right BEFORE you get to the first driveway and the blue campground sign leads you to believe you turn there.  They should modify their instructions to say take the second right and put a big arrow pointing ahead on the campground sign.  After I cooled off, I laughed and told Pattie I can guarantee that will not be the last time we get into a situation where we must unhook the TOAD to get out of a mess. 

We arrived home safe on Saturday and are working to sell off items and pack for storage.  The moving truck comes 20 May. 

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

The Shake Down Cruise Part 1

This post is written to document our first impressions of living full-time in an RV after two years of planning and preparation.  It will include lessons we learned that will make some veteran RV'ers laugh.
The last week of March and first week of April I had business meetings in Nashville, TN and Huntsville, AL.  We decided to take The Bus on the road for two weeks to test our compatibility with the full-time lifestyle.  The weekend before we departed it was warm enough in Maryland that I could de-winterize The Bus.  We were thankful that we only had one leak after the harsh winter and it was just a loose connection at the washing machine drain pipe.  Pattie and I packed what we thought we would need, hooked up our Jeep Wrangler TOAD, loaded Sparkey the beagle and Katty Kat in and headed toward Nashville.
The Bus ran great and TOAD followed along fine.  We made it to a Ft Chiswell campground in Virginia before stopping for the night.  We had stayed here once before overnight when we had a travel trailer as it is convenient to the highway.  We hooked up to power only since it was forecasted to get down to 18 degrees that night.  I had loaded about 1/3 tank fresh water so we would have all systems available enroute.  Letting out the slides was a bit delayed because Katy Kat found her way under the bed where the slide mechanism lives. We heard that you must keep a eye on your pets before moving the slides, but Katy had a stronghold on her new hiding place and was not coming out without a fight.  We needed something flexible to hook around one side of the bed and scare her out.  It seemed to me this would be a good opportunity to try out the central vacuum system.  It worked like a champ!  I ran the hose in there, turned it on and Katy came out the other side into Pattie's arms.  
Once the slides were out, we activated HydroHot (aka AquaHot) on electricity and waited for the warm air while syncing up the DISH satellite TV.  All was working well, but the temperatures were dropping faster than the warm air was flowing.  I read the HydroHot instructions and found out that it takes several hours for the electric system to heat up.  If you want a lot of heat now, you need to activate the diesel burner.  I flipped the switch and heard the pumps activate followed by the wonderful sound of the burner lighting.  In no time, the hot air was flowing and we were toasty.  I checked inside the lower compartments and they were also pleasantly warm.  Sparkey adjusted quickly; but it took Katy a bit longer to come out and join us.  We slept well.
The next morning, we headed out to Nashville and warmer weather.  Here we stayed at Jellystone RV Park which we had also stayed at when we had a travel trailer.  It had full hook ups and all pull-thru sites making it easy to get in and out.  They also had WIFI repeaters throughout the park allowing us to use their service and save the data usage on out AT&T Unite Pro plan.  The Unite Pro is a mobile hot spot that creates a WiFi network for up to 10 devices inside your rig.  We plugged it in up front and tossed it on the dash.  This allows Pattie to use her iPAD to search for RV Parks, traffic and routes as we travel.  In Nashville, it was suits and ties for me working while Pattie took care of The Bus and pets.  

We already had a list of things we wanted to buy and a few blocks away was a Camping World happy to help us out.  We bought a water pressure regulator with gauge, small outdoor table and the infamous US Map sticker set.  Pattie says we will hit all 50 states.  I said we might, but The Bus can't swim to Hawaii.