Monday, February 13, 2012

A City of Rocks

February 13, 2012—Nature does some awesome things. Here in New Mexico one of those things was a natural event that occurred 35 million years ago—a volcanic eruption. According to the literature, the eruption was at least 1000 times more powerful than the eruption of Mount St. Helena.

The result of the eruption was an outflow of volcanic ash that, over time, has been sculpted by wind and water into rows of monolithic blocks. From a distance, these rocks truly do look like a city, complete with buildings having “windows” facing out onto “streets”—natural lanes that meander throughout the rocks. This City of Rocks outside of Deming, N.M. is one of only six such known formations in the world.
City of Rocks 

One of the formations


We visited the site today. It cost us only $5 (honor system) to visit this state park. Day visitors can either drive or hike among the rocks; we did both. Campers are also welcome. The state park has 62 sites, 52 for dry camping and 10 with electric and sewer. It would be a pretty cool place to picnic or camp, since the dry camp sites are adjacent to the rock formations.
City of Rocks from a far distance

Same distance, but with telephoto lens


After roaming around City of Rocks, we drove into Silver City, home of Billy the Kid. It is also the home of Western New Mexico University, which has a nice museum devoted to the Mimbres Indians, the prehistoric tribe that lived along the Mimbres River, near City of Rocks. The Mimbres were known for their intricately decorated black-on-white clay pottery. Silver City also has a museum, but it was closed today.

We found it interesting to observe the countryside between here (Hidden Valley Ranch outside of Deming) and Silver City, which is more than 6,400 feet in altitude. (City of Rocks is at 5,200 feet—about a mile high.) We experienced several changes in microclimates, visible by the changes in vegetation. Some places actually were filled with some types of fir trees!

We will be here a couple more days. Originally we planned to go see the cliff dwellings outside of Silver City tomorrow. However, the weather forecast suggested that it might snow in that area, so we are going to wait until Wednesday for that trip.

In the meantime, we are being entertained by a couple of jackrabbits that come out and play around sunset. We saw them last night, and they returned this evening. Unfortunately it was too dark and they were too far away for us to take pictures. Believe me, though, when I tell you that I’ve never seen a rabbit with such big ears!

Until next time,

Your Reluctant RoVer,

Linda

Sunday, February 12, 2012

A real hidden valley ranch

February 12, 2012—We are always ready for a surprise when we book into an RV park. This one is no exception.

It is called Hidden Valley Ranch in Deming, N.M.—except it really isn’t in Deming. It’s about 10 miles outside—on a dusty (really dusty) gravel road.





HVR is on 7,000 acres, surrounded by BLM. It is really remote, as you can see from the pictures I’ve included here. The manager said that it’s been here since the 1970s, having started as a rock hound park. It has 170 pull-through sites—some full-time, most for casual RVers. It is so remote that neither Jim nor I can use our cell phones. Luckily they have WIFI for $2/day, and it seems to be pretty fast.

I can’t say this would be my first choice for an RV park, because of its remote location. (I’m glad we stopped at the grocery before we drove all the way out here.) The one nice thing about it: Jim will be able to look at his stars in a night sky that does not suffer from light pollution. The other nice thing is that it is part of our new membership and cost only $9/night.

Tomorrow we’ll explore some attractions around Silver City. I think there are some cliff dwellings, and probably other things as well.

Until next time,

Your Reluctant RoVer,

Linda

Saturday, February 11, 2012

From earth to the stars

February 11, 2012—Yesterday we went to the earth (Biosphere 2); today we went to the stars (Kitt Observatory). Both were very interesting.

Biosphere 2 (biosphere 1 is actually the earth) was a living experiment built in 1991 and then again in 1994. In the first experiment eight scientists were locked up into a self-contained space, where they grew their own food, maintained their environment, and tried not to kill each other.




They succeeded in all those things, except that they were really, really happy to get out of the greenhouse on the appointed day. They weren’t too fond of each other. The problem, our tour guide told us, was that although they had enough nutrients to keep them going, they didn’t have enough calories to keep them satisfied. Consequently they were chronically hunger. Hunger creates crankiness.

The second experiment was aborted after several months. (The guide did not elaborate why.) What scientists learned, however, was that any type of mission like this requires multi-skilled people. They need to be farmers, butchers, bakers, and multi-skilled mechanics. They also need to be able to do their scientific work. And they need to be psychologically compatible. That’s a tough assignment to fill. I wonder if NASA will be able to find the right assortment of candidates when it is time to send a colony to the moon or to Mars.
The original Biosphere was self-contained, sealed off from the world. Today, not so. The building is still a living laboratory, where scientists study soil and water conservation. They have the building divided into several areas, including a rain forest, a savannah, a high desert, a low desert, and an ocean. (True: they have a real ocean.)

One of the most interesting facts I learned was that originally they introduced 200 different types of animal life forms to live alongside the Biospherians. Among the insects were cockroaches. Roaches and ants become overwhelming and had to be managed—without introducing insecticides. Interesting.

Today we went to two places: Tohono O’odham Nation Cultural Center and Museum in Topawa, and Kitt Observatory. Both were free, since we did not take a guided tour of the observatory.

We wondered if we were on the right road, as we were driving to find the Tohono Cultural Center. At one point Garmina (our GPS) stopped producing a map! Apparently, the Indian Reservation road(s) is not on the map. We kept going, and eventually we did find the cultural center. We enjoyed the visit.

After the cultural center, we headed back and turned onto the road up to Kitt Observatory. I remember that road from when I visited it with Mom and Dad. (I may have gone there twice; I’m not sure.) As Jim cautiously drove up the switchback road (12 miles almost straight up, to an elevation of 6,500 feet), I switched between closing my eyes and eyeballing the fantastic scenery.
Kitt Observatory can be seen on top of the mountain, miles away.

One of the several observatories

The solar observatory

Looking out from the solar observatory. What a view!


I really don’t like mountains. They are nice to look at, but not nice to drive in.

We were too early for the next tour, so we decided to go the self-directed route. We walked up to one of the observatories and saw the actual telescope. Then we hiked up the mountain to look at the solar observatory. When I say hiked, I mean hiked. Up. The mountain. I’m still breathing hard.

At the solar observatory, we were looking at the pictures on the wall, and through the glass at the laboratory, when an older scientist invited us into the lab. Neat. He explained what he was observing. It didn’t make any sense to me, since I really have no interest in astronomy, but Jim was captivated and pleased that we had an “inside” look.

We’re back “home” again, and tomorrow we will be leaving Tucson for New Mexico. Until later,

Your Reluctant RoVer,

Linda

Friday, February 10, 2012

Change of plans: Touring Tucson

February 10, 2012—One of the nice things about being in the motorhome is the flexibility it affords. That’s a good thing, especially when “things” happen.

We arrived in Tucson on Tuesday, intending to enjoy a free night’s stay at the LazyDays RV Resort. (LazyDays is an RV dealer from Tampa. It recently opened a location in Tucson. At both locations, it offers a full-service resort. This one is the nicest resort we have ever stayed at!—with two heated pools with spas; club house; wide paved streets; wide stone-based RV plots with paved patio, paved parking, and table and four chairs; bocce courts; putting green; and a full-service restaurant and bar.) The resort was giving away a free night’s stay to introduce its facilities.

After dinner, Jim told me one of his caps felt loose. Not a good thing. Obviously, we had to go back to the dentist. We considered our options on how to do this: We could:
  1. Drive the motorhome back to Yuma and take care of business. This was an expensive option and we decided against it.
  2. Find somewhere to boondock for the next night. We could move Baby to a dry-camp area and boondock for one night and just delay our New Mexico trip by one day. We don’t like to boondock, and we didn’t know where to do this around here.
  3. Look for another RV park. This one cost $40/night. It might be possible to find another, less expensive place to spend an extra night, but that would have required searching and moving, with no guarantee of finding anything less expensive.
  4.   Stay here. It turns out LazyDays offered a 2-for-2 deal: Buy two nights, get two free. We opted for that, and we are here in Tucson for a total of five days. We rescheduled our New Mexico jaunt.

On Wednesday we returned to Los Algodones. The dentist fixed the problem, and we got back to Tucson by 8 p.m.

When we extended our stay here at LazyDays, we inquired about discount coupons for area attractions, such as Old Tucson. The clerk told us about a “passport” book. The cost for $18, and it provided two-for-one coupons at many area attractions, including Old Tucson, the Desert Museum, the Biosphere, and many others. Yesterday we went to the Desert Museum.

I think I’ve been to the Desert Museum at least once, but I did not remember seeing anything that we saw yesterday. It was quite nice.

We decided to take a free guided tour, led by a women about my age, who was a trained herpetologist. We learned more about the Sonora Desert and its plants and animals in that one hour than I ever knew before! At the end of her tour, we watched a release of trained rafters (a native desert hawk), which swooped down among the crowd and awed everyone with their soaring and hunting skills.

Jim took almost 100 pictures of the animals, plants, the mountains, and the saguaro forest (really neat). I was not so prolific, only taking a handful. I’ve included a few of the best pictures here.







Today, we are going to the Biosphere.

Until next time,
Your Reluctant RoVer,
Linda

Monday, February 6, 2012

Cost comparisons

February 6, 2012—Operating a motorhome is not inexpensive. We’ve paid as high as $3.85/gallon for diesel fuel. “Baby” has a high metabolism; she gets about 9 mpg, compared with our little HHR “toad,” which gets about 25-30 mph on the highway. And, of course, there are other operating expenses as well, ranging from replacing windshield wipers ($20 each; they are big!), to repairing leaking toilets ($40 for a repair kit).

So, does it make sense to drive one of these beasts on a vacation? The answer is, “It depends.”

We drove 2,386 miles to go from Jacksonville to Yuma, via McKinney, Texas, and Quartzsite, Ariz. Our diesel expense for that trip was about $980, and we spent $209 on RV parks, plus $20 for water and dumping while boondocking in Quartzsite. Because we bought a membership into an RV park while we were in the Quartzsite area, we have not had any other overnight expenses. The total for our trip out here, then, comes to $1,209. I have not tracked out eating expenses, because we would have them anyway. Mostly we eat in; we dine out about on the road about as frequently as we do at home.
For comparative purposes, if we had driven our car on the same trip (Jacksonville-McKinney-Quartzsite-Yuma), gas would have been $310 (at 25 mpg and $3.25/gal); motels would have been more than $1,500 (at $50, conservative estimate. The one in McKinney was $100 night), and meals for both of us would have been $1,500 (figuring $50 a day, conservatively), for a total of $3,310. (We would also have had to pay someone to look in on the cats.)

Flying would have been even more expensive.

Aside from the cost differences, I don’t like to sleep in motel beds anymore. Reports of bedbugs have creeped me out. In our motorhome, we sleep in our own bed, do our laundry in our own machines, and eat our own food. We also sometimes get to meet nice people, like the couple from British Columbia, who are parked next to us here. We’ve become friends with them; that’s nice.

We’re not done traveling yet. We leave Yuma area tomorrow. We’ll spend a night in Tucson, then head up to the middle of New Mexico so he can see the night lights without light pollution. We want to stop at Carlsbad Caverns, spend a couple of days in San Antonio, head back to McKinney for a night on our way to Arkansas, and stay in Arkansas a week.

Jim wants to pack up the cats, clothes, and perishables and head home in the car, while leaving “Baby” somewhere in Arkansas until we are ready to travel again, probably in another month. I’m against that; I don’t see how we are going to travel with the cats in that little car, packed to its gills. We’ll see.

Until later,

Your Reluctant RoVer,

Linda

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Baby's new friend

February 4, 2012—If you were to walk around this (or any other) RV park, you would see a lot of personalization. I thought perhaps only people who stayed in one spot for a long time—for instance, the winter—would take the time to make their spot homey, but that’s not the case.

The resort where we are staying caters mostly to RVers who stay, at the most, for two weeks. But during that time, they seem to make their mark.

Flags are common, especially if the RVers are from Canada. Lights are also common. Some RVers lay out a carpet under their awnings and their outline the carpet with LED lights. I saw one motorhome with a plaque hung where the front license plate would go, saying “The xxxx’s, xxx and xxx.” (Fill in the xxx’s; I don’t remember their names.) In the front window of another motorhome were assorted stained-glass pieces. And yet another sported a bunch of stuffed animals sitting sentry along the front window pane.

Jim saw something he decided he wanted, and so, our “Baby” now has a new friend, Mr. Peacock, who will be put out by the front door each time we make a new home.We found the metal peacock, whose body is a heavy rock, in one of the shops in Los Algodones. The seller wanted $55; we got it for $30. Bargaining is expected in Mexican shops. Our other tourist buys included a Los Algodones windbreaker and a tee shirt for Jim, and a tee shirt for me.



Several years ago we thought we would buy a Christmas ornament to remember the various places we’ve visited. We have a few, but we rarely put up a Christmas tree anymore, so destination tee shirts seem like a good alternative souvenir. Not only do they remind us where we’ve been (and tell others, too), but they are utile.

Jim’s smile is now complete; we are both happy with the work Gator Dental did for him, and soon our Mexican expedition will be a thing of the past—except that Mr. Peacock and our apparel will remind us of our adventures.

Until next time,

Your Reluctant RoVer,

Linda

Friday, February 3, 2012

Los Algodones

February 3, 2012—We arrived in the Yuma area on Sunday, and made our first visit to the dentist on Monday. When we were here last August, we saw a dentist, whose first name was Edgar. He was a young guy, seemed competent, but even then he carried on with an air of a short-timer. Apparently he was. He is no longer with the Gator Dental Group, where we received our care; he was fired. Apparently too many people complained about his work.

After Dr. Edgar had provided us with our crows, we each complained the bite wasn’t quite right. Jim, especially, had difficulty biting. Dr. Edgar had told us to come back in six months for adjustments In hindsight, we should have remained and had the work redone then. I think dental bites are like shoes: They either fit or they don’t. You don’t break them in. Oh, well, we learned a lesson.

When we arrived at the dental office, we had to wait a couple of hours to see the new dentist, “Dr. Oscar.” This young man took about an hour or so to make the necessary adjustments to my bite, which is now better than it has been for 50 years, so I am happy. Jim went in next. Unfortunately, Dr. Oscar could not correct the poor workmanship of Dr. Edgar, and Jim has had to have all of his crowns redone. The senior dentist of the practice, Dr. Miguel Fuentes,  one who has at least 20 years of experience, is doing the work, and we are confident that it will be done correctly this time. Jim should have his final crowns in place tomorrow, Saturday. (Mexican dentists work six days a week.)

Los Algodones, as I reported in August, is a medical-destination community for Americans and Canadians, most of whom are retired. Last summer, the streets were virtually empty. Now, and throughout the winter months the streets are literally packed shoulder-to-shoulder with Americans and Canadians.
Getting into Los Algodones is easy: You simply walk across the border. The Mexican government doesn’t care who you are or if you have a passport. They just want you to spend your money in town, and that becomes very easy to do.





As soon as you access the main street in the town, street hawkers confront you, trying to get you to come into the various drug stores, dental offices, and optical shops. They hand you brochures that offer free exams. (Getting free dental exams is actually a good way to assess several different dentists to get their opinions and cost appraisals before making a decision on where to get dental care.) These hawkers will also escort you to the dental office and introduce you to the staff.

If you know where you are going (or don’t care), the next thing you notice are the street venders. Not only are there shops that feature every sort of trinket you can imagine (three-foot tall ceramic monkeys dressed in cowboy apparel seem to be very popular), there are also sidewalk venders who sell serapes and ponchos, wallets, purses, tee shirts, and jewelry, to name a few souvenir items. Buyer beware!

You can get some bargains in this town. Our dental work (guaranteed) cost about one-fourth of what we would have paid in Jacksonville. One optometry shop advertises single-lens glasses for $29, bifocals for $39, and progressive lenses for $49. (Jim may get an eye exam and new glasses tomorrow.) We haven’t shopped much yet (tomorrow we plan to browse), but as an example of bargains, last summer I bought a leather purse for $20. A comparable purse at home would be about $40. The other day I got a much-needed haircut for $6. (The quality of the haircut? Not any better or worse than the Supercuts I get for $18 at home.) And I bought a liter of vanilla for $3. (Have you bought vanilla at the grocery recently? A little bottle of extract, less than one ounce, is about $7, if I recall correctly.) Judging by how turistas were buying tequila and rum, I would guess liquor is a bargain, too.

Drugs are also inexpensive, and you can buy many of them, such as antibiotics, without a prescription. However, you have to be careful about what you buy. I learned the hard way.

I wanted to buy some generic Cipro. Last August I bought some for my mother and had no problem taking it across the border. This time, however, was another story.

We stood in a slow moving line several blocks long, waiting our turn for more than an hour to cross over to the United States. When I handed the border agent my passport and showed him my purchases, he said I could not take the Cipro into the United States! The FDA had banned it.

I was willing for him to toss it, but he couldn’t do that without filling out a lot of paperwork, which he said would take about 90 minutes to complete. He advised us to take it back to the drugstore and get a refund. When I bemoaned the long line, he gave us a pass to go to the head of the line when we returned.

The drugstore refunded the money, and the pass worked. The people ahead of weren’t even angry; they had seen us being sent away.

I said that getting into Mexico is easy. Leaving is hard—mainly because you have to wait in line for an interminable time. Last summer it was quick; not so, now. We waited in a line that snaked down a couple of blocks. The monotony of waiting was occasionally broken by a few gray-haired guys who had sampled some Margaritas while their wives had been shopping. Not so entertaining were the many, many beggars who intruded upon the line. You could see that these people (children included) were dirty and malnourished, and your heart went out to them. But…

As we were standing in line that first day, we saw something interesting: Pedicabs loaded with four to six people shortcut the line of cars exiting the country. Jim and I decided that the $5 per person cost to be whisked across the border up to the parking lot was worth the money. I don’t mind standing in line for 15 or 20 minutes, but more than an hour is way too much.

Until next time,

Your Reluctant RoVer,

Linda

Back home again...

Rob and I hit the road about 1:30 p.m. on Thursday, June 15. The movers were incredible: They had everything loaded into the huge moving tru...