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Friday, April 24, 2020

Grandkids and Gardening


I woke up this morning to the sound of my five-year-old granddaughter's voice asking Grandpa to tickle her. I have not been that content that early in the morning in a long time. The world has gone mad, but there are some things that remind me what is important.

We are still in the staging lane waiting for things to open back up so we can get on with our summer routine. Most campgrounds in our area are closed as we wait for the park, we work for, to reopen. We spend each day assessing a very fluid Plan B to get us through this transition time.

The whole country is struggling to feel normal. Graduation and Wedding Season has been unceremoniously (no pun intended) swept to the curb and everyone reaches as far as they can to try to grasp something each day that makes them feel grounded.

For me it is gardening and grandkids. My mind has been in a swirl like most full time RV’ers trying to focus as best they can right now. We all feel like an old grocery store bag snagged in a tree whipping in the wind not knowing where we will end up. I stay in contact with others around the country who are living the same nightmare my husband and I are. Gradually we are all getting to a place where we are starting to bring our new reality to fruition and finding our grounding point. We are constructing our contingency plans and hoping our old normal will reemerge soon.

I went to my friends place yesterday and helped her with some spring yard work. Aside from the fact that she is one of my dearest friends, she also lives in the woods, so I had the birds and timber sounds serenading me as I cleaned flower beds and spread mulch around perennials that are starting to poke their heads up. My soul was the most content it has been in weeks. Later that afternoon, as I scrubbed the dirt out from under my fingernails, one of our grandkids arrived to spend the night. Their parents and us agreed we have all been disconnected enough to warrant an overnight visit. A much-needed break for the kids who have been sequestered for 6 weeks with her and a dream come true for us just like a lot of grandparents in the times we live in. We had a great night outside in the mild weather riding bikes, taking walks, and letting her take pictures with her new kid camera. The Polaroid has made a comeback in the form of a youth camera. Who’d have thunk it?

It is amazing to witness the growth the young grandkids achieve in the 5 months we are absent in the winter. Suddenly, they can tie their own shoes or read a book to me instead of the other way around.
In the upside-down world of the full time workcamper the past 48 hours has been just what the doctor ordered for this one.

Until next time…

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Waiting in Limbo


The world of fulltime workcampers has been turned on its head the past few weeks. I have resisted talking about COVID-19 on the blog, mostly because I am so sick of hearing about it every time, I take a breath. But the reality is that this current issue has wreaked havoc on the entire sub-culture of full time RV volunteers.

In a mere thirty days we have gone from looking forward to moving from our winter jobs to our summer assignments, to being in a state of limbo, that is not only inconvenient but could well be dangerous for some. I never dreamed I would own a face mask to wear in public, let alone, learn to sew my own. But, making them has become a way to fill my time. Material under the bed that I thought would eventually become a quilted tote bag is turning into masks.

Campgrounds, parks and amusement parks sit idle all over the country. The work campers who make up a large part of the peak season work force are in limbo, not being allowed to come on site, while in many cases, not being allowed to stay in their winter locations for various reasons.  Instead we are in the very few private parks that are open and those arrangements are often temporary. In our case we have accommodations at one of only three private parks that are still open in central Iowa. That will end on May 11th. The decisions from the Corps of Engineers come out weekly and are pushing their targeted opening date back with each update.  They won’t let us onsite until they open to the public, even though we are often onsite as much as a month before the recreation season begins to do the pre-season work to prepare the park.  Even the Rangers are working from home to keep interaction to a minimum. These are turbulent times for us all. All we can do is wait.

I have talked to work camping friends who are in the same situation all over the country. Some are literally homeless, moving from place to place and even boondocking in some cases. States have varying levels of restrictions on movement and access to parks. Iowa is restricted but not completely inaccessible like some of the areas in the Northeast.

We are glad to be back in Iowa despite the challenges we are facing. We spend our days semi-isolated from friends and family and know how lucky we are to have two close family members with rural property that will welcome us during our time of limbo between the time we have to leave this park and the eventual date that we can finally start our work at Saylorville Lake.  In a way we are looking forward to staying at our sons for a few weeks just to have the opportunity to spend time with him and the grandkids from that part of the state. It will be a little inconvenient without full hook ups, but we will manage, and hope to make some good memories during our time there.

We stay in contact with those we know around the country and encourage each other as we all navigate these difficult times. I have realized just how tight knit the work camping community is even with hundreds of miles separating us. We know some better than others, but the common bond of the lifestyle is strong and there is a genuine caring for each other.

No one has been untouched by our current events. RV’ers or not.  I have friends and family with small businesses, who are struggling to operate and stay in the black. Entire families are unemployed, and still others are forced to work in situations that place them and their families at risk every day. The world seems to be barely functioning. A new normal is on the horizon and I don’t think anyone will slide into it seamlessly. All we can do is support each other, wash our hands and stay in as much as possible till this all blows over.

The Iowa weather is about to play a cruel April prank and plunge us into late February like temps for the next week.  Social distancing will be easy in the nasty weather. Champ and I will spend it watching the entire Star Wars catalog borrowed from our daughter. Sadly, neither one of us has seen any of the movies since Return of the Jedi. By the time the weather straightens out I should know what a Sith is and what all the weird action figures in the grandkids’ bedrooms are called.

Until Next Time…


Monday, April 6, 2020

What A Long Strange Trip It's Been

Jerry Garcia's lyric has been in my head this entire trip.

We left Mercedes on Friday with a heightened vigilance that anything can happen on the road, knowing this trip would be different.  We had 1,250 miles ahead of us, some very uncertain times and the knowledge that if we headed down the road and changed our minds, coming back to Llano was not an option.  The park has been basically locked down the past 2 weeks. Only residents and those delivering essential services are aloud in. No new check ins aloud.  I spent the past two weeks telling people checking out that they absolutely were not aloud to check back in if they left. A couple of people headed down the road and had trouble and wanted to come back and could not, due to ‘shelter in place’ orders to protect the parks 55+ population dynamic.

The morning started with a headache that we have seen happen to others and even helped others overcome. One of our two 22’ slides refused to come in. Champ spent an hour and a half working on it and did rig it so it would come in and there it has stayed the entire trip. We have purchased 6 RV’s over the years and my big requirement has always been that it must be inhabitable with the slides in, just in case. If you can cook, poop and sleep the floor plan satisfies my basic requirements.  Of course, if you know me that is just the first step in a long list of things that must satisfy me when picking out a rig. But I digress.

We are on our last leg to Des Moines this morning. The trip has been very different and eerie in a sense. Campgrounds and RV parks are open but with no contact procedures in place when we arrive. The weather was bad the first two days. We left oppressively humid mid 90’s weather and drove into a cold front that resulted in heavy rain and plunged temperatures into the lower 40’s.  The coldest weather we had experienced all winter.

The most noticeable and eeriest factor was the utter lack of traffic in the Interstates. The most we saw was going through San Antonio at rush hour on Friday afternoon. Normally it would have been stop and go through the city, but we didn’t even slow down.  Traffic was plentiful but moving along at speed limit. When we travelled through Waco and Ft. Worth on Saturday, we felt like we were in a post-apocalyptic movie. We have been in Waco on Saturday in the past and it is normally busy with Baylor University folks and tourists heading the Magnolia Markets or maybe the Texas Ranger Museum in the shadow of I-35. Not this Saturday. Ft. Worth was even more desolate. We also noticed the absence of law enforcement. No speed traps, no DOT Inspectors ruining a trucker’s day with a spot inspection and portable scales. We were well into Kansas before we saw our first State Trooper on the road. Interstate LED signs that normally remind us to wear our seatbelts and announce how many people have died in accidents this year, now tell us to wash our hands and avoid contact with each other. Traveling through the cities, it is strange to see the sprawling retail complexes, along the interstate frontage road deserted.  It's like being in a Stephen King novel.
Approaching Oklahoma City

Deserted Flyovers in Ft. Worth
Our normal view the entire trip



Even stranger is seeing people gloved and masked at the truck stops. No one is talking to each other. Suspicious glances are about all the communication that is going on in public. Society is so raw and scared these days. A sad situation indeed.


We met up with friends in a Casino RV park in southern OK on Saturday night and again were stricken by the fact that there were only about 20 sites occupied in a park that can accommodate over 400. We sat outside around our portable propane fire pit and talked about our last two days. We parted ways the next morning on different routes and time frames that will ultimately bring us to the same destination early this week.

Yesterday I started to feel normal and the anxiety of travelling began to fade. It was my day to drive. I watched the roadsides change. Poplars, Northern Red Buds and Pear trees blooming replaced the Cacti and gnarly Live Oaks. We saw our first Casey’s General Store and knew we were almost home. After checking into our site in a state park, backed up to a river oxbow, I really started to feel like my old self again. We collected firewood, and I listened to the Cardinals and Robins in the timber. Gone are the calls of the Great Kiskadee and the Red Crowned Parrots. Annie and I watched a Hairy Wood drumming away at the tree next to our site and the sound of a freight train in the distance, reminded me I was back home in the Midwest. After an early dinner sat by the fire talking about how strange trip this has been. 
Annie birdwatching with me

We slept soundly knowing we are almost home. Three days ago, 1,250 miles seemed like a million. This morning we are less than 300. Iowa will greet us today with 70-degree weather but the same weird vibe of no contact. The kids and grandkids will be near but so very far away still until they feel comfortable with contact. Champ and I are practically sterile with three weeks of very minimal contact under our belt.

The Rio Grande Valley is just beginning to see cases of COVID-19. With only 38 cases, they imposed shelter in place orders two weeks ago.  Iowa’s cases are growing exponentially and nearing 1,000 cases. We struggled with the decision of whether to go home or hunker down. The deciding factor ended up being that cases were starting to ramp up were we were, so we had nothing to lose by being home. It is better for me since my health insurance is non-existent outside of Iowa. If I get sick, I need to be In-Network as they say. It is a risk I take each winter when we leave, but this is a game changer. We know we are heading to a place with more cases per capita but we will be home and there’s a lot to be said for that. We have been in regular text and phone contact with other RV friends. Some have already made it to Iowa, others are still waiting things out. There is a mutual comfort in knowing we are keeping tabs on each other. The full-time RV life is inherently a little uncertain, but this is different. On the upside, gas is the cheapest we have ever pumped into the motorhome.

Tonight, I will be sitting in my lawn chair at Griff’s RV Park a stone’s throw from our daughter’s house.  I know we are healthy and what we have or have not encountered the past weeks. We do not know the details of who our loved ones have been in contact with as many are still working each day. It is like a musty, damp gym towel hanging over our homecoming. We dream of the day later this spring when Saylorville will open once again and site number 7 in Volunteer Village will be home. I long for my summer days on the mower, or with Judy in the Butterfly Gardens. I long for the sound of my grandkids voices as they snuggle up against me on the couch after a busy day playing outside. The world needs a big dose of normalcy. I hope it comes soon.

Until Next Time…


Thursday, April 2, 2020

One Last Walk


We are looking toward our trip home with a strange mix of excitement and trepidation this year. As the Coronavirus numbers increase and news about the subject perforates every nook and cranny of our lives, I took yesterday morning and spent a couple of hours walking the trails in the State Park next door just to disconnect for a while. I walked alone but did run into a couple others searching for the same peace along the way. We exchanged small talk briefly but the vibe hung heavy in the air that we were out there searching for solitude not company.  
Creek through Estero Llano Grande State Park

Texas morning sky


I went armed with my binoculars and camera, just as I do any other nature trail walk but I was not searching all that hard for anything. Mostly, I was just happy to be in the woods and enjoying the absence of synthetic sounds. I did see a Green Heron up close and took a couple of pictures. For some reason I stood for a long time looking at a Verdin nest that showed evidence in the downy feathers left around the entry hole that the Verdins’ were done using it. I’m not sure why it intrigued me so much. Maybe it is because like the birds we are preparing to take flight and leave our winter nest, ourselves.
Verdin Nest

Green Heron at the creek bridge
For Mature Audiences Only

Jeruselum Thorn Tree Blooming


We have packed up our site and are relaxing this afternoon. With any luck the trip will be uneventful. We are both taking a deep breath as we have no idea what will lie ahead in Iowa for the summer. Those who have left ahead of us have been in contact and told us things were business as usual on the road. Except for the contactless procedures in place when checking into the campground. They report truck traffic is heavy, probably hauling toilet paper and bottled water and car traffic is down. We are leaving an area that is currently experiencing relatively few cases and headed into an area that is on a steep increase each day, but it is home and we have to get back sooner rather than later we decided. Iowa is not in nearly as bad a shape as other places around the country, but it is a serious situation.  All we know for sure is that we will not pull into our normal summer spot and spend a joy-filled day seeing the kids and grandkids. All the surprises when we just kind of show up at work places and school yards and tears of joy as we hold grandkids and hug our adult kids will have to wait. Arrival will be anti-climatic to say the least. Uncertainty is the only constant for most everyone these days.

Until Next Time…