Random Thoughts About Retirement

I have decided to exit the cube on more of a permanent basis this time. Some people say I am taking “early retirement” but my response to that is “it is not early”. The fact of the matter is I am 60 years old, my first professional job after college was in 1990 at the Travelers Insurance Company in Hartford Connecticut as a COBOL programmer.  I have been working for 35 years!  Isn’t that enough?

Here are some random thoughts I have had about “retiring”.

  • Who do I think I am?  We are not rich, should I just keep working?
  • I have to do it now before it’s too late!  How many good years do I have left to hike in amazing places?
  • In the end, nothing at work really matters, people leave, get fired, laid off, companies break up, lose money, change leadership, move people around.
  • Woo-hoo! I can do what I want when I want.  I don’t have to go to the grocery store on the weekend when there are millions of people trying to run me over with their cart. I can go to Jazzercise any time, 8:30 AM class, no problem, no need to jump on a work call at 9 am.  Hiking at noon on Tuesday? Sounds great, as long as it is winter. Happy hour at the brewery at 3 pm on a Wednesday?  Count me in!  Impromptu road trip, let’s go! The future’s so bright, I gotta wear shades.
  • What is going to happen to our country, our world.  Everything is crumbling all around us, the world’s biggest democracies are falling, authoritarians are taking over, will there be any Social Security and Medicare when I am ready to collect?  Climate change is destroying civilization, will our mortgage-free house go floating away or burn down to the ground leaving us homeless?  I am not sure if it is a call to work more so we have more cash when civilization crashes or a call to party while we can before it is all over or a call to do something to fight back.
  • I could drop dead tomorrow.

There is no correct answer to the question “when should I retire?”  No one knows what the future holds.

Go West

Our original plan was to head south to Florida for the holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas) after leaving Tennessee.  We have family and friends there that we would like to visit and I have always wanted to see the Florida Keys.  However, my tolerance for living in humidity was all used up.  I could not do it any longer.  I had enough of this moldy lifestyle, I had to go west.  The I-40 runs directly from Knoxville, TN to Flagstaff, AZ.  Stopping in a different state each night we made our way across the southern US on I-40.

The first day we powered through the rest of Tennessee, crossed the Mississippi river into Arkansas and camped along the Mississippi in West Memphis, Arkansas at a place called Tom Sawyer RV Park.  There were barges going down the river all night long.  It was an interesting experience.

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Barge on the Mississippi

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Next night was at a KOA in Oklahoma, then on to Texas where we stayed in a campground that was also a rest area.  When I got up in the morning and headed to the restroom there was an 18-wheeler parked there with its engine running.  There was a historical marker in this rest area with a story of Bonnie and Clyde crashing into the nearby river as they were speeding out of the state.

The next night we were in New Mexico at Santa Rosa Lake State Park. It felt so good to be back in the Southwest, back in the desert, finally!  Where the humidity is low and the camping is cheap.  Only $14 with showers and flush toilets. In the campground we met a guy who trains hawks to hunt with him. On to Albuquerque where we meet up with a former coworker and I got the scoop on the situation at the old job.

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Santa Rosa Lake State Park

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Trained hawk with his dinner down by his feet

Okay we are finally dry, now what?  Still exhausted, we made the decision that living in a van full-time is not going to work for us.  I have always loved Colorado, Boulder in particular, so we decide to head that way and check it out to see if we could possibly live there.  Keep in mind it is now November and winter comes early to Colorado.  It is getting cold and campgrounds are shutting down.  I am having hard time finding anywhere to stay that is still open.  Finally, we find St. Vrain State Park in Firestone which is north of Denver.  It is still open and they are supposed to have flush toilets and everything.  On the way we meetup with Tim’s brother and his girlfriend in Colorado Springs.  Good to keep in touch with family. Traffic going through Denver was a nightmare but we finally make it to the park.  The lady at the entrance wants to put us very far away from the bathrooms and I ask specifically to be closer.  She then gives us a site closer and we head to the camping area and park it.  Later, I go into the restroom building and there are three doors – Women, Men, and Handicap.  I pull the door handle to the Women’s room – locked, Men’s room – locked, Handicap – opens into a single room with one toilet, sink and shower.  Really????  ONE toilet for the entire campground???  The lady at the entrance could have said something when I asked specifically about the bathroom.  This pushed me over the edge, I told Tim I am ready to get an apartment in the city where I can have my own bathroom.  The next day we start heading back to Phoenix with a stopover in Durango, another Colorado favorite, where we stayed in hotel that we have stayed in several times in the past.  We even know how to walk to the brewery.  Something familiar at last!

 

 

The Great Smoky Mountains

This is the type of picture that lured me to the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee.  I didn’t really know much about the Southeast, have never been there and I thought just maybe I have been missing out on a beautiful place.  These types of fall pictures would pop up on my Facebook feed every now and then and it made me think I must go to see this foliage.  Internet says best time for leaf peeping in the Smokies is late October, so our camping reservations in this National Park were made long ago and my sister and her husband agreed to  meet us there.  However, when we got there it didn’t look quite like the picture above.  The picture below is what we really saw.  Apparently, the Southeast has been in a major drought.  The trees were still green or they had already lost their leaves which were now laying on the ground and turning brown. The reds and the oranges were far and few between.  Same story across the country – unusual weather patterns.

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We went on a ranger-led walk and heard some history of the park. I knew that it is the most visited national park (10 million visitors in 2015) however what I did not know is that there is no admission fee.  Makes you wonder how can they maintain the facilities and services for all these people when there is no money coming in?  Before this land was a national park it was privately owned and there were various settlements in the area.  People’s family history is here, their houses, churches, cemeteries.  When the land was transferred to the federal government for the park in the 1930s, part of the agreement stated that there will never be a fee for people to access this area.  That is why they cannot charge people to get into this park.

A place in the park that I was attracted to is Clingmans Dome.  You know I am all about high places, usually hiking them but I am attracted to high points in general.  Clingmans Dome is the highest point in GSMNP.  Also, the highest point in Tennessee and the highest point on the Appalachian Trail, I had to see it!  My first thought was back to the big cairns along the AT on the side of Mount Washington in New Hampshire.  Such an extremely harsh environment, cold, windy and enveloped in white clouds. It did not make sense to me that this calm hilltop of Clingmans Dome is actually higher than Mount Washington.  Numbers certainly do not tell the whole story.  Clingmans Dome is 6,643 feet while Mount Washington is 6,288 feet. Clingmans Dome is a drive up with a short steep half mile paved walk to the observation area.  Not as satisfying as a true hike up a mountain but nice view all the same.

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Clingmans Dome Observation Tower

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View from Clingmans Dome

Because this park was once private land there is no shortage of old abandoned structures.  The most famous settlement area is Cades Cove.  There is an 11-mile driving loop where the speed limit is 20 – 35 mph and it is packed with cars.  Not really an ideal way to enjoy a NP but something to see if you are there. There are several old structures you can tour including this working mill where they were grinding corn.

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John Cable Grist Mill, Cades Cove

Another area with old houses was near our campground, Elkmont.  The community was originally a logging camp but later the affluent built summer cottages here.  The cottages were eventually taken over by the park.  They have not been maintained by the park and are not an official attraction, just some old houses in the woods.  It is not clear if the park will tear them down or preserve them for historical significance.

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During this part of the trip we had been on the road for almost 5 months and I was getting very tired.  Tired of camping, tired of breathing smoke into my lungs every night from people’s campfires, tired of being exposed to humidity, rain, cold and heat, tired of no internet (many NPs have no cell service), tired of not knowing where I am or how to get anywhere, tired of searching Google, Tripadvisor and Yelp for campgrounds with clean bathrooms, parks with hiking/biking trails, parking lots with room to park the van, restaurants with vegetarian food, grocery stores that are not all processed junk, laundromats that are not all moldy, hotels that aren’t too expensive and aren’t too dirty, tired of dehydrating myself to avoid getting up in the night, putting on shoes, unlocking the van (which turns on the headlights into the neighbors campsite), getting a flashlight and going out in the dark to the outhouse, tired of towns with no sidewalks (no walking allowed) and the list goes on.  I feel the need to get back to the West… back to what I know.

Fall in Virginia

Our plan has always been to see the fall foliage in the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee, so after Connecticut we head south in that direction and stop in Virginia.  Being an avid hiker I have seen a couple documentaries about the Appalachian Trail and they always talk about the Great Smoky Mountains, Blue Ridge Mountains and the Shenandoah Valley and how beautiful it is so I just had to see for myself.

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We stayed at Shenandoah National Park in Virginia which is really a 100 mile road through the mountains called Skyline Drive where 100 miles of the Appalachian Trail also run through, criss crossing the road in many locations.  At the campground Tim checks the TV in the van to see if there are any channels and he is surprised that the antenna is actually picking up several TV stations and even more surprising a lot of them are international news.  I take a look at the map and immediately see the reason for this… sitting here in the woods, we are very close to Washington, DC, who knew?  It is very hard to keep up with our orientation to other things, sometimes we even forget what state we are in.  Something I could NOT answer however is why the cell phone had no service! Arrrgh!

Weather was great, sunny and cold, a couple days the highs were only in the 50s.  One morning it was 46 inside the insulated van when I got up.  We went on a ranger led hike on the Appalachian trail and it turns out this 100 mile section of the AT in this park is actually one of the easiest parts of the 2,160 mile trail that goes from Georgia to Maine.  We saw part of the AT on Mount Washington in New Hampshire and I am sure that part is no picnic.  Being around this hiking culture makes me feel like I should plan something big.  Not sure if a thru hike is for me, and definitely not a thru hike in the East, but something big.  In the park the AT is marked with these posts:

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The AT

The trees are not very colorful here this year and after talking to a couple people we realize that this is due to an ongoing drought.  This has been the story we have been hearing in all our travels, unusual weather.  Most of the Eastern US has had a hot summer with little rain.  They say the leaves will just fall off the trees without much display of color.

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I have heard about the beauty of the Blue Ridge Parkway and after reading up on it I see the road actually connects Shenandoah National Park with the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The Parkway is part of the National Park System, it is like a road that is a national park, not unlike Shenandoah National Park.  We started out on the Blue Ridge Parkway with the intent of driving the whole 469 miles, stopping at various NP campgrounds along the way.  The road is very curvy and slow going, speed limit is 45 mph. After one day, 150 miles and one overnight on the parkway we decide it is just too slow and the views are not that incredible so we decide to pop off the parkway around Roanoke Virginia.

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Blue Ridge Parkway

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View from Blue Ridge Parkway

We make our way to a Virginia State Park, Natural Tunnel. We are finding that the state parks are really great places to camp.  Most of them have nice updated campgrounds with showers and there is always something to do in the parks.  A lot of them have hiking trails, lakes and visitor centers.  The Natural Tunnel State Park has a rock tunnel with a chair lift going down to the bottom.  The tunnel has railroad tracks going through it which are still used today to transport coal. All very interesting.

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Connecticut is Old

After leaving Cape Cod, Massachusetts we made our way to Connecticut, the place where Tim and I grew up, met and fell in love 25 years ago.  We have been back a couple times since moving to Arizona but overall we are both glad we made the move to the west.  While in Connecticut we were able to visit lots of family and friends which was really great but we couldn’t help but think how moving west all those years ago was the right thing to do.

While in Connecticut we stayed at a campground that is attached to an amusement park, Lake Compounce.  It was a convenient location and turned out to be a good campground with electric and water hookups and decent showers.  All this time Tim is telling me how they have the oldest wooden roller coaster and I am just saying yeah, yeah, yeah.  Then while we are there the park is not actually open, they are basically closed for the season but the gates are open for the workers who are working on various construction projects.  We wandered into the empty amusement park and I see this structure covered with greenery with the number 170…. and it says years, 170 YEARS, and I thought wait… what… 170 YEARS?!?  Then we see a sign that says this park here in Bristol, Connecticut is the oldest amusement park in America, wow that is pretty amazing!  Tim is now saying “see, I told you”.

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Camping at Lake Compounce

 

As a side note we found a nice paved bike/walking trail near the West Hartford Reservoir:

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Still on the East Coast

It has been a while since my last post.  Excuses are – we were in Connecticut busy visiting family and friends then we had no cell service / internet at Shenandoah National Park and on the Blue Ridge Parkway. Real reason – laziness.

In my last post we were at Acadia National Park in Maine.  We enjoyed the “quiet” side of the park on the Schoodic Peninsula more than the main area of the park.  Update on Tim’s wrist is the doctor called a few days later and said the wrist is actually broken and he only needs a cast if it hurts a lot, which it does not so he should just keep wearing the brace and get an x-ray in a couple weeks to make sure it is healing correctly.  Life on the road is difficult when you only have use of one hand.   I try to do as much as I can but there are a lot of things that only he knows how to do.

After Maine we decided to visit Cape Cod, Massachusetts.  I have great memories of camping there with my family when I was a child.  With the sand dunes and beaches it was a fun place we all liked to go.  Tim had only been there for a day trip once a long time ago so we decided to give it a try.

We stayed at a campground very close to Provincetown which is a tourist town all the way on the tip of the arm of Cape Code.  We were able to walk into town as well as walk to Race Point Beach.  We are finding with the van the ideal situation is to just park it somewhere, like at a campground, then walk places.  When we do take the van into town or to a trailhead it can be hard to find a place to park it.  In the East here things are very packed in so it can be hard to maneuver a large vehicle.  We are also finding a lot of places are not really walker friendly, as was the case at the Cape.  Walking to town there are no sidewalks in a lot of places and of course cars are going fast which makes for a dangerous situation.  Walking to the beach was a little better because part way there we came across a bike trail which you are allowed to walk on. As we were walking out to the beach we started seeing RVs parked out on the beach.  I read that the park service allows a certain number of people to get permits to camp on the beach but you have to be totally self-contained, meaning you have to have your own bathroom inside your vehicle.  The campers looked like they were really enjoying themselves camping on the beach and fishing.

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Bike Trail to Beach

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Campers on Race Point Beach

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Campers Fishing on Race Point Beach

 

A lot of the beach on Cape Cod is National Seashore and the park service does have some visitor centers and ranger programs available.  The highlight of our time on Cape Cod has to be seeing a couple hundred seals “hauling out” on a sandbar.  This is when the seals pull themselves out of the water and rest.   There was a ranger-led walk on Head of the Meadow Beach to the location where the seals would be.  We really enjoy the ranger-led activities because they give you so much background information and history.

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The Only National Park in the NorthEast

We have had enjoyable experiences at National Parks in the west such as Grand Canyon, Great Basin, Glacier, Rocky Mountain and Sequoia so we are hoping that the only National Park in the northeast, Acadia, will be a good experience as well. We scheduled some time on the “quiet side” of the park, the Schoodic Peninsula and also some time in the main area, Mount Desert Island.  Schoodic was very nice, we had a couple great weather days, cool and sunny.  Campground was new, had big sites, hookups, great bathrooms but no showers.  It was very quiet.  We were able to hike across the peninsula and catch the bus back to camp.  Saw the wild blueberries above on our hike. You can catch the bus to a small village called Winter Harbor where you can get ice cream.  Not much else in town except a ferry to Bar Harbor, a five and dime, a library which is only open one day a week and a lobster co-op.  Funny, when I hear the word “co-op” in a town I think surely it is a place that sells fruits and vegetables, not in Maine, here everything is about lobster, lobster, lobster.

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View From Our hike on the Schoodic Penisula

Tim decided to get the bikes out and we had a great ride around the park.  Roads are smooth and there is a big section where it is two lanes going one way, so the cars have plenty of room to go around.  Everything was going great until we got back to the campground and were just looping around the roads when Tim’s chain fell off the chain ring, going uphill, he couldn’t get the chain to catch and couldn’t unclip and ended up going down.  Well his wrist was hurting and swollen, the same one he broke a few years ago.  We decide we should go to the “big city” and get an x-ray just in case it is broken again.  This leaves me to get the bikes apart and back into the van.  Wow, what an ordeal.  At least Tim was coherent and able to give me instructions but it was very difficult.  Front wheels and seats come off. Wheels go into their special bags after the spindle is taken out.  Bikes have to be put in a certain way to get close together and take up the least amount of space, which means the pedals have to be in a certain place, the handlebars keep getting hooked on each other.  And the front forks have to clamp into their preset holders. Wow, to me this setup really does not seem workable at all, but that’s another discussion. We make it to the urgent care place before closing, they take the x-ray and the PA says she does not see a break but it will be examined by the radiologist to be sure.  They put a wrist brace on and send him on his way.  So now, no more biking for a while.  Also we are finding most of the hiking here in the east requires using your hands to climb over rocks, so that would be difficult with a bum wrist as well.

On to Mount Desert Island.  Campground is not as nice, sites are close, no hookups, no cell phone/internet service, bathrooms are not bad but have no showers.   We did go to the last evening program of the season in the campground which was about bats.  Apparently bat numbers at Acadia have been dwindling and they are not sure why.  The last few years they have been studying and tagging bats here.

There is a free bus that goes into the town of Bar Harbor which is a busy tourist town with restaurants, shops, boat trips, bus trips.  At least there is cell phone service there.  With rainy days here we find ourselves getting on the bus to go into town just so we can use the internet on our phones, pathetic. And who can resist the cupcake store when you are depressed?  Oh and did I mention everything is wet?  It has been rainy and humid, no hookups means we cannot run the dehumidifier in the van, it would take too much power.  There is no sun for the solar panels to recharge the batteries.  Sheets, clothes and bodies, damp.  The floor in the bathroom at the campground has been wet for days, I am not sure why, it is indoors, why is it wet all the time?  A new element here by the ocean, fog!  There was a cruise ship in Bar Harbor blowing its fog horn, that was interesting.

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Cruise ship in the fog in Bar Harbor

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Lots of Fog

The last day we had nice weather.  The highlight at Acadia was definitely hiking Cadillac Mountain which is the highest point on the eastern seaboard.  The trail is really not very difficult at all, it is rated moderate.  We were able to leave from the campground, hike up one side to the top then hike down the other side and catch the bus back to camp.  All worked out great.

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At the top of Cadillac Mountain

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When we got to the top we saw all the people who drove up Cadillac Mountain

Vermont and New Hampshire

Burlington, Vermont

After leaving the Adirondacks of New York state we continued east and just on the other side of Lake Champlain is the biggest city in Vermont by population. So what town are all these people gravitating to? Burlington, Vermont of course, population 42,000!  More and more we are finding ourselves gravitating toward civilized areas.  We enjoy having things like internet, public transportation and restaurants with vegetarian food and craft beer.  Burlington delivered on all of this, too bad it was a little too hot there for living in a van, high 80s and high humidity. We stayed in a town beach park which has camping as well.  The beach is on Lake Champlain and there is a bike/pedestrian path that runs right through the park to downtown, and also a city bus that picks up not far from camp at Burlington High School.  Campground location was great but the bathrooms and showers certainly left something to be desired.  We walked the mile and a half into town, did some shopping, had some food and beer and took the bus back to camp.  If I had to live in New England, I think I could live in Burlington.

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Church Street, Pedestrians Only, Burlington, VT

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Our Van on the Left, Camping at North Beach Park, Burlington, VT

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North Beach, Burlington, VT

White Mountains of New Hampshire

On to New Hampshire.  Growing up in Connecticut my parents had a vacation home in the White Mountains of New Hampshire which I spent many a weekend at before they sold it. Since we were passing through the area I was eager to see if I could find the house.  I did find it and my first reaction was that I couldn’t believe it was the same color.  I always thought the colors were ugly – gold with burgundy trim – and it looked the same 40 years later!  However, the whole area is now very wooded with overgrown trees everywhere.  I remember it being more wide open.  Just as we are driving our big silver van down this dead end dirt road in the middle of nowhere, New Hampshire, a lady comes out on the front porch of the house and decides she is going to set a spell.  Feeling awkward, I turned the big van around as fast as I could and I did not get a picture of the house.

In New Hampshire we stayed in Franconia Notch State Park.  We managed to get one short hike in which went to one of the huts that is managed by the Appalachian Mountain Club.  The Appalachian Trail passes through the area and the club manages huts where through hikers can stay overnight, have dinner and breakfast and be on their way.  I saw these same types of huts in France when I was hiking in the Alps.  There is certainly a lot of hiking in this area of New Hampshire, but as always we are limited to a few days and are hampered by the weather among other things.

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Lonesome Lake AMC Hut

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Dorms at AMC Hut

Mount Washington

Since we are in New Hampshire one thing we wanted to do is ride the cog railway to the top of Mount Washington, the highest mountain east of the Mississippi at 6,288 ft.  Amazing how low these elevation numbers are compared to the west.  What is not low is the cost of the cog railway at $70 per person. But when will we ever be in NH again?  At this rate I would bet on never.  I have a childhood memory of being on top of Mount Washington and all I remember is it being white, cold and windy.  Tim and I tried to pick the best day where there may be some clearing, so maybe we could see something but it ended up being the same as my memory, white, cold and windy.  They say average wind speed on Mount Washington is about 50 MPH and that is what it was the day we went.  The highest wind speed recorded anywhere in the world observed by a person was on Mount Washington in 1934 at 231 MPH!  It is certainly a strange place to experience.

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Cog Railway at the Bottom

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Could not see any of the mountains from the top

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Old Weather Station on Top of Mount Washington

Next up is the only National Park in New England, Acadia National Park in Maine.

Searching for Coolness in the Adirondacks

After sweating it out across the Midwest in August all I wanted was to be cool.  The heat, humidity and mosquitoes of North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Indiana, it was all just too much to take without AC in the van.  There was no escaping all the wetness.  The water bottles were sweating all the time, the clothes, the sheets just felt wet.  Tim did buy us a small dehumidifier which does help but to get it to work you have to close all the windows and that is not really practical when it is hot outside.   Exhausted and knowing we had to keep moving east because we have plans to see family and also plans to see the Great Smokey Mountains in the fall, I looked at the map in my Weatherbug app and saw that the closest place where there is a pocket of coolness is the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York.  Even though we both grew up in Connecticut neither one of us was familiar with the Adirondacks aside from my vague recollection of a trip to Lake George when I was a child.  Looking at the tourist websites, Lake Placid sounds familiar, think Winter Olympics, think skiing, think mountains, sounds good! However, there is no camping in Lake Placid, it is now a busy tourist town.  The closest camping is about 10 miles away in Wilmington, NY.  We set our sights on the North Pole Campground.  We thought about stopping at Niagara Falls but in the end we decided that it is not something either one of us is really excited about seeing so we do not bother.  Tim wanted to check out his childhood home where he lived only until age four in small town upstate NY.  He had an amazing recollection of where the house was located and other structures in the neighborhood.

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Tiny Dehumidifier

Hiking

Hiking in the Adirondacks is all about the rocks, the mud and the crazy tree roots that look like they may come alive and wrap themselves around your ankle at any moment, very different from the desert hiking I know and love.  Here, there are no switchbacks, the trails go straight up the mountain. We completed two hikes while we were there, the Flume Knob and Whiteface Mountain.  We prefer to walk to hiking trails right out of our campsite rather than packing up the van, unplugging, taking the window covering off, spinning the seats back to forward facing position and driving somewhere.  Also parking the van at trailheads can be difficult since it is 22’ 9” long.  We walked 1.5 miles each way to the Flume Knob trail, which was only a four mile RT hike, so about 7 miles all together.  Relatively steep, straight up the hill, nice views.  The second hike, Whiteface Mountain was VERY challenging.  We were able to start walking right out of the campground and it eventually connected to a trail that goes up Whiteface, which is the 5th highest mountain in NY at 4,865 feet.  This elevation pales in comparison to some mountains I have hiked in the west, but that has no bearing on the difficulty of the hike, this was tough, very steep, endless rocks with scrambling.  There is a road that you can PAY to drive up the mountain but when you are hiking and the road is open, you are not allowed to even walk on the road.  There is one part where the trail comes out on the road but you just have to climb up some rocks to stay on the trail, don’t walk on the road!

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View from Flume Knob

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Trail up Whiteface

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Arrows painted on rocks telling you where you are supposed to go

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The road you are not allowed to walk on unless you pay!

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View of Lake Placid  (the Lake, not the town) from Whiteface

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Lake Placid

I did not realize Lake Placid was not only home to one Winter Olympics in 1980, but actually hosted the event in 1932 as well.  Also, the town of Lake Placid, a busy little tourist town with shops and restaurants, is not actually on the LAKE of Lake Placid, imagine that?  There is a lake in town, but it is Mirror Lake.  While in town we wandered into the Olympic Ice skating rink. Turns out there are two rinks in the building, one from the 1932 games and one from 1980.  In our ongoing quest for coolness we decide to sit in the stands at the 1932 rink for a while and catch some cool air off the ice.  Just so happens they have “Freaky Friday” ice skating competitions during the summer and one is about to start.  It only lasted 10 minutes and contestants were mostly young girls but nice to see they are pursuing something.

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1932 Rink

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1980 Rink

North Pole

In Wilmington we stayed at the North Pole Campground which turned out to be a good campground. It was relatively quiet, bathrooms and showers were clean and they had some trails in the woods you could walk on.  Not much wildlife to speak of aside from the white tail of a deer I saw running away one night. We did see a very unique wood pecker in camp one day.  He had a bright red head and he was big, maybe more than a foot tall. We were also able to walk to a little town beach where they had a band playing one night.

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Wilmington Town Beach Concert

Fort Ticonderoga

While in NY we went to see an old military fort, Fort Ticonderoga.  As you know, history, not my thing, but Tim enjoyed it.  The fort was built by the French on Lake Champlain in the 1750’s, then taken over by the British, eventually lost to the Americans in the Revolutionary War.  In 1777 the Americans were forced to abandon Ticonderoga due to the British threat from above on Mount Defiance, which we did drive up and you can clearly see the advantage the Brits had from the high point.  While we were at Fort Ticonderoga they fired a canon which was cool!

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Fort Ticonderoga seen from Mount Defiance

Signs of Fall

Leaves are starting to change color, it must cool down soon.

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South Through Wisconsin onto Indiana

Time to say goodbye to North Shore of Lake Superior and the tourist town of Grand Marais Minnesota and head south toward Indiana for the RV repairs.  Going by way of Wisconsin we stay in the Chippewa Falls County Fairgrounds.  Very strange place but a good deal for this part of the country, $20 includes electric and water.  It is basically a field with spaced out hook ups.  It is self-registration, you just fill out the envelope and put your money in the box.  The place is kind of eerie with the empty building used to house livestock during the fair.  The restrooms are in a big red barn-looking building.  We were able to walk into town and get some dinner but there is a distinct lack of healthy food and vegetables in this part of the country.  We end up with a veggie pizza.  The next day we meet up with a former colleague of mine who is currently working in the Chicago Office spending weekends in Wisconsin.  It was great to get caught up on the state of affairs at the old office.

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Camping at Chippewa Falls County Fairgrounds

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Empty Livestock Building, Chippewa Falls County Fairgrounds

Heading further south we make a stop in Madison, Wisconsin.  I have always heard it is a cool college town so we figured why not stop.  We were able to do some healthy grocery shopping at a Whole Foods which was like coming home.  In the Whole Foods we were approached by an older lady who wants to know if we are the people with the Sprinter in the parking lot.  With pencil and paper in hand she starts asking us questions on how we decided on the van and how it is working out for us.  She wants to get out of Madison and is considering hitting the road on her own but not sure what type of vehicle to get.  We also talked about getting rid of stuff verses keeping it in storage.  We gave her our view of how stuff just holds you down and she said we are wise beyond our years.

In Madison, we stayed in a county park which had a paved bike path running right near it.  With the path right there and a campground with showers and no rain in sight we were out of excuses for not riding our bikes.  After Tim pulled the bikes out of the van, put on the front wheels and seats we sprayed ourselves down with bug spray (something we NEVER had to worry about in Scottsdale) and hit the bike trail.  It was great to be on the bike again.

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Capital City Bike Trail Going into a mosquito infested area!

On to Huntington, Indiana where Sportsmobile has one of three of their facilities.  Looking forward to staying at the Comfort Inn with some AC.  It turns out the Sportsmobile shop is much smaller than the Fresno California location where we actually purchased the van.  In Indiana they can only fit two vans in the shop at a time, in Fresno they work on 12 – 20 at a once.  The guys in Indiana are able to fix some of our problems but cannot replace the warped cabinet door because they use a different color wood for their cabinets.  That will have to wait until we get back to California.I forgot to get a picture of the Indiana facility but here is the Fresno facility.

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Production line in Fresno, California

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Sportsmobile, Fresno, California

Looking for cooler weather, the closest place I see on the map is the Adirondacks in upstate New York.  That is where we are going!