Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Lunch Stop


Yesterday we drove across West Virginia through the woods along winding twisting turning backroads to find of all things a winery. It is Harvest Host participant which was how Layne found it, but we weren't spending the night. We had miles to cover to get to Chicago. 
The guy behind the counter wore his mask even while protected by the now usual plastic screen and we tasted some interesting wines by flipping our own masks up as needed. It's the new normal I suppose. The guy doing the pouring was as interesting as the grape tinted port he offered, going off on a. rant, totally unexpected about how the President has screwed everything up and we should have been wearing masks from the beginning and how the economy is suffering and so forth. We just stood there and sipped the conceptions and let him vent. We haven't seen tourist tags on vehicles and I'm forced to assume that the struggle to understand the virus and to adapt to it isn't doing anyone any good. There must be frustration everywhere even among the people we don't speak with. 
Isolation feels more like a privilege than ever. Especially on the road as we can limit our contacts as much or as little as we like. Our firsts top ended up being at the conversion factory in DeLand when a shelf came adrift by coincidence less than an hour from Custom Coach Creations as we traveled on I-95. That was a short unscheduled deviations hick set us back so we arrived late at my wife's sisters place near Asheville. The rest to hang out in the woods was welcome so we were rested when we set off on Monday to find Eric who lives slightly north of Richmond. We met through scooters and he has a garage filled with interesting rides.
We did some male binding adjusting the headlights on the van while Rusty sat outside in the sun reveling in the lawn that surrounds Eric's place. He and Lisa have four dogs which required some canine separation but we feasted on steak and corn and chocolate and so forth which called for more rest...
I got a quick ride on a rarity, a Benelli 135 mini bike which I expected would make me feel like a circus bear on a monocycle but it was shockingly fun ride. Eric went to Pennsylvania to get the bike and orders accessories from all over to make it a fun project for his inventive mind. You can follow his exploits on Kraken's Garage as he is diving into the world. of YouTube video productions.
With left over steak and chocolate pie in the fridge (how cool is that? our own fridge) we took to the hills. The Promaster 3500 is the biggest of the three variants of this van, an offshoot of the Fiat Ducato, and though all three types of Promaster share the same engine the 3500 has more powerful suspension to cope with the longer body and greater cargo carrying capacity. I try to stick close to 60 mph on the road to keep fuel consumption between 18 and 20 miles to the gallon, but it cruises happily at 70 mph and 15 mpg. On the usual angry online forums people complain about the engine and the seating and this that and the other but after 4200 miles and long days driving I find it a very capable vehicle on the road. To expect formula one performance from a fully Alden cargo van just seems stupid to me but we all know that internet anonymity brings out the stupid in the best of us. And some of the whiniest people seem to inhabit Promaster discussion boards. I have come to ignore them and just keep driving.
Rusty has been learning to adapt and as far as I can tell has no opinions about the van other than he likes to get out and explore new places as you might expect. Travel seems to exhaust the little tyke and he sleeps soundly in his bed which we set up behind the front seats for him to use whenever he wants a rest.
He doesn't mind at all being in a cooler climate, even though it is hot around here, and the unusual deciduous forests speak his curiosity. Thunder and lightning greeted us in Indiana  so a lunch pause was an exercise in curling up in bed listening to the rain on the roof and hoping the thunder would move further away. Like they say the van life is all about the weather, whether it rains or whether it doesn't and today the weather gods noticed I wasn't working so rain it is for the  crew of Gannet 2.

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Kentucky

We arrived at dusk at the Kentucky welcome center on I-64 and pulled into a slot far from the trucks and the welcome center restrooms. It has been. steep learning curve but after several days on the road, stopping with friends and stopping by ourselves the van is starting to feel like home.
The pleasure of having your home with you is still slightly surprising novelty when I look around and see my wife's decorations,my dog sleeping on the bed and the fridge filled with food and doing it's silent job. We had a couple fo pauses in the process but this is a shake up cruise and so a couple of slight issues got dealt with and that added to the sense of accomplishment. From Chicago  where we make other planned visits, we hope to finally get a few days of not much travel in the woods of northern Wisconsin. And there and time to photograph and wrote and walk Rusty at my leisure.

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Rest Area Walk

The Internet has changed so much about travel not least the ability to find stuff online and in maps. Type 'rest areas' into the map search function and up they pop like little red toadstools. It's easy to dismiss rest areas as necessary evils but traveling with your home makes them ideal free legal stopovers. Far better than hotels you drive in, park and go to sleep if you want no more than that. In the morning leave quick and easily.
The beauty of rest areas is that they vary wildly, and some are mere parking lots though others can offer a welcome center, vending machines, dump station for RV toilets and delightful wooded areas to walk your dog and maybe your camera.
South Carolina surprised us with many people wearing masks and superb rest areas. Expansive as though designed for social distancing.








And then you are back in the headlong rush to get somewhere else.
We have driven to Asheville numerous times but I was still miffed that we couldn't take it a little slower and get off the freeways. This vacation is a yes tot see how our gear works, to see what's possible in a pandemic, and to see how we cope with renewed sense of life and living off the freeways of life. Hmmm...


Bye Bye Mangroves

I took a walk with Rusty as usual and I made it a point to photograph some mangroves for myself. 
It is not often noticed but in June 2007 when I created this page I called it a Diary and the reason was that it was going to be a record such as I had never had of things I liked. I like mangroves and where I'm going these three weeks I shan't see any. At least I don't think they have red mangroves Up North, that I've ever seen.
So I thought to myself, I shall post some pictures so when I'm on the road I can refer back to what I left behind. 
So this is for me, to remember the heat and the smell and sweat and the irritation of my viewfinder misting up. Of Rusty crashing down the trail and sitting in thick brown water to cool off.
Of the heron that flew straight overhead pushing the air aside  audibly like  a wind turbine.  I saw a white crowned pigeon flying alongside my car as we arrived and I looked to the right and there framed in my passenger window was the pigeon making high speed travel look easy. 
Mangroves are unique and weird and what makes them even more special is they are completely useless to humans. You can't burn them, you build with them,  they are a law unto themselves. You can't even walk among them, they are awful to try to traverse.
For the longest time they were targeted by developers because  they were considered not only useless but obstructive. And then of course they were found to have remarkable properties of great human value...Human beings are quick to pounce in judgement and slow to retract. 
Mangroves protect dry land by absorbing wave action. Mangroves protect fish spawn by giving shade and protection from the sun and from predators. If you want to go fishing protect your mangroves. And because the state of Florida values tourist dollars mangroves are now protected and you can't cut them down. as it always should have been. 
I really like Florida.  Not all of it, but some bits of it quite a lot.

Saturday, July 18, 2020

Shake Up Cruise: Departure

Driving out of the Keys, I felt as always a mixture of excitement at the prospects for the immediate future and a slight sense of missing out on those parts of keys living that cannot be reproduced elsewhere. I left work at two in the afternoon and got home with those last few pre-departure details to organize, remembering to unhook the van from the household current I managed to electrocute myself as I forgot the inverter onboard sends electricity both ways.  My right forefinger and my tongue tingled for a few minutes as I hopped around waiting for a heart attack to fell me and end my pointless existence, yet as I looked at a colorful world through tears of painI wondered if perhaps I had enhanced my natural senses rather like the delicious Dilaudid of happy memory but everything went back to normal, especially as my wife never heard my yelp of pain when I grasped the still live outlet in my right hand. What a dumbass, I thought to myself as I coiled the now lifeless cord, thinking how little trouble I had ever had with my shore power cords on boats. Van life requires its own set of skills and we are on a rapidly arcing learning curve.
The plan was to drive as far as possible Tuesday night to make for a short easy drive on Friday to my sister-in-law's place near Asheville in the mountains of Western North Carolina. Normally it's a 16 hour drive from Cudjoe Key but the van stays closer to sixty than 75 mph so Google distances take longer than I expected. My first van life lesson. It was a  Good plan suffering from Poor execution as it turned out. Rusty has yet to get used to the van which makes weird noises as we run over bumps and the engine roars unexpectedly giving our nervous dog no peace which is unusual for Rusty who lies like a dead dog on the back seat of the Ford Fusion. He likes time to get used to things so time is what we will give him, especially as we ourselves need time to get used to this new way of traveling. In the era of coronavirus our roadside activities are curtailed anyway and we on this trip we shall rely more on ourselves than outside entertainment and I know we will miss it. Snacks from the fridge are much healthier but much less eye popping than some fo the objets on sale in southern convenience stores. Pickled pigs trotters have been on my list of things to try when I am too drunk to notice what I am eating. Not on this trip will my curiosity be satisfied.
Mask wearing seems spotty judging by what we have seen at gas stations and rest stops, and avoiding non mask wearers is exhausting and frustrating. That the debate about the value of masks grinds on gives me little long term hope for humanity. as it seems a small enough burden.  I have to say that the simple of act of driving makes the world feel normal. Sitting high up in my Promaster van the world outside looks as it always has done, no change, no pandemic out there on I-95. It is oddly reassuring to be taking a road trip.
I drove until one in the morning, remembering similar journeys by car and of course by motorcycle, and here I was now with my family asleep in the back, a BBC radio drama on the Bluetooth connection and the cabin temperature perfectly regulated against the outside heat and humidity of a Florida summer night. We arrived at the rest area where I took a wide open spot in a parking lot constrained by construction where all types of vehicles were mixed in together. No one was wearing face coverings at the toilet facility where we scuttled in and out like masked bandits. We try to use our portapotti for needs of last resort, like a two in the morning call of nature. Mostly its nice to know its there for emergencies. Very civilized travel.
When we were out sailing my wife and I liked to anchor where we thought we could get away with it, frequently trying to ignore the guidebook's recommendations which were always specifically marked on the sketch charts with a little ink drawn anchor.  We noticed how sailors on the Mexican Riviera liked to park their boats right dead on Charlie's recommended spot. Our choice of anchorage in the van became a Charlie's preferred anchorage by morning as we clearly had the best spot in the rest area, hemmed in by a whole bunch of late arrivals. Gannet 2 proved herself once again by blocking all outside noise including the rattling generator of the 18 wheeler that slid in next door about 2 in the morning. I think they packed Gannet 2 with serious insulation when they built our conversion.
Rusty and I were out walking the vast expansive rest area when Layne sent me a text saying she needed help. I hurried Rusty back and found her standing to attention with her slide out pantry pushing her hard in the back. The shelf on which the slide out pantry is built had come adrift making it impossible to close. We held it half closed with a bungee after we emptied the shelves which was when I noticed something. Custom Coach Creations was 44 minutes away according to Google and as I drive The Golden Van rather more slowly than average I told them we'd be there in about an hour. One missed turn later we showed up and Dave the magic carpenter set to work and fixed the whole thing. Done under warranty in 15 minutes. Back on the road we passed our rest area four hours after our intended departure but who cares, all was well I with the world and my sister-in-law had Indian Igli ready for dinner whenever we arrived. Igli is a rice dumpling with curried vegetables on top and it was excellent even if we got there at eleven o'clock that night....Long driving days in defiance of my plan to smell the roses and take it easy on this pandemic vacation.
Rusty made his own statement by stealing Layne's breakfast wrap when she put it down to do something, the first time he has done that perhaps because he was hungry, unlikely, or making a statement about van life, I don't know. While she set to and found more prosciutto and cheese and a tortilla in the fridge I took Rusty for a walk. Once again the little tyke refuses to be taken for granted. There was no point in yelling at him.
Upon hearing about our retirement van a friend of ours in St Petersburg decided to get one built for him, triggering a latent impulse he had been nurturing for a while. Dale got the last Promaster van Custom Coach can sell for this model year. Amazon is delivering in its own vehicles and has bought the entire national stock of Promasters, Ford Transits and diesel Sprinter vans this model year. I feel lucky we got to order ours with our optional color last year and get it done before the virus and Amazon make things so difficult for everyone else.
Rusty meanwhile tucked himself up under a van awaiting conversion and like the good stray he used to be, stayed out of trouble. Even when I called him to come out and get with the program he sat tight wagging his tail slowly and wondering why he had to move. He only came, and reluctantly when we started to back up towards him. He rides mostly sitting under my wife's legs, popping up when we change course or hit a bump and he looks out of the passenger window over her knee with profound interest. I hope he settles down but my idea of him laying in bed looking out the back windows which are at eye level has only been realized when one of us lays there with him. 
Layne took the wheel outside Jacksonville and drove through Georgia while I slept the sleep of the just with Rusty curled up next to me. I hope he learned from my sterling example that van noises are no bar to sleeping soundly. The nap set me up to keep on driving though South Carolina into the mountains as dusk, that lovely long drawn out northern dusk settled over the Appalachian mountains.
The winding mountain road to Celo community on State Highway 80 from Burnsville was wreathed in wisps of fog giving incoming headlamps a Transylvanian twist as they approached dipping and weaving on the impossible winding ribbon of asphalt. In the best of cars, or on the nicest of motorcycles the speed limits in the mountains of North Carolina are a nonsense in my opinion, designed to make visitors from Florida feel small. I ask you: 55 miles per hour? Here??? I muttered to myself as I set. to dodging wet patches and fog patches and weedy patches as the locals smoked by in a blur of speed. I pulled over when I could but in the foggy dark it was impossible to tell which opening in the side of the highway was a driveway and which opening was a plunging crevase of doom.
Finally we arrived in the self built Hansel and Gretel cottage Bob and Geeta have lived in for half a century in Cell community and with a struggle, after riding the wild gravel approach road through the rhododendrons I parked more or less flat and turned off the engine. Rusty leapt out and settled next to the van, front paws crossed watching the world go by while listening to the night sounds. He ignored us, socially distanced around an outside table eating Indian food and drinking beer and bourbon and talking nineteen to the dozen until sleep overcame us and we filed out to the van while the civilized people retreated inside the house. Silence descended except for the sound of dog and woman snoring and me typing. 

Friday, July 17, 2020

On The Road

I have reached that time of the year when I get a long vacation from answering 911 and fielding calls to the police department. As much as I enjoy working at Key West PD I do also enjoy my breaks and I try to get in a long stretch away early in hurricane season before the threat of storms gets serious, usually in September and October. So it is that we now have our camper van to use for a vacation which it happens is a pretty good deal in this time of coronavirus. I am supposed to be back at work on August 8th so I have three weeks to explore while remaining socially distant. This page will not be focused on Key West and will most likely not get daily updates. Things will return to normal in the second week of August I hope. Maybe sooner if our travels are stymied by the virus.
Our original plan was to go to Maine for cool weather and friends who live isolated as they too fear the effects of contagion. The northeast has long since imposed quarantines on incomers so that was out. Our desire to spend more time in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and Up State New York will have to wait. Then we thought go to Chicago and visit equally self isolated cousins while combining a tour of Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula, two area unknown to us. Also hopefully some cooler weather...At the moment it's impossible to say if we can pull this off in our self contained van but if plans have to change we have no reservations, or tickets or requirements to be anywhere. 
Our back up back up plan is to explore Appalachia which is not new to us in general as my wife's sister lives near Asheville and we had hoped to go further afield. I tell people who for some unaccountable reason call the police department for advice that if they come to the Keys prepare to be flexible, rules change and not everything may be open or available. So now I get to take my on advice.
We spent the last week sorting our tuff and loading the van and filling the water tank and second guessing our choices so by the time you read this we will I hope, be in North Florida or close to Asheville casting off the cares of the daily grind. I hope in less than two years to be on the road to Alaska but that is a high expectation considering all the madness and uncertainty this year has brought into our lives. I may find myself still working and glad to have a job with health insurance and seniority....
It may seem implausible but I shall look forward to returning to local walks with Rusty as he returns to his favorite trails. He is a creature of habit but he wouldn't want to be left behind, nor would we wish tot ravel without him. Just as I won't mind being back at work, my wife enjoys her students, online or in person and she expects to be teaching from home for her last year with the Monroe County School District. For now we shall see what we shall see and I shall post here some pictures as I am able. Have a good summer yourselves- I intend to, socially distanced, masked but on the road somewhere.
Dog is My Co-Pilot. Not really but he likes to get up close and look out while we are parked ready to see what's next.