January 6, 2015

Peg & I went to Tohono Chul Park in Tucson. This is a donated piece of land that has been turned into a botanical garden sort of right in the middle of town. It is gorgeous and we took a bunch of photos.

Since we look ancient they gave us the senior rate entrance fees despite the fact neither of us was 62.

From this park we drove to Catalina State Park to check out the RV camping although it is unlikely we will move. The camping spots are $20 for dry camping, $25 for 30 amp hookups and $30 for 50 amp electrical. All electric sites have water but none of the sites have sewer. The adjacent scenery is a mountain range that rises almost immediately up to the point where snow was visible in the higher elevations. Maybe next time.

From this place we drove to the west unit of Saguaro National Park. As usual, we got in free because of our access pass we bought last July in Gold Beach. This part of the park has all the same sort of cactus-like stuff we saw in the east unit but this area must get better light or more water because the vegetation is very thick. I don’t think you could walk through the areas off the road w/o being skewered by saguaro, fish hook, chollas, teddy bear chollas or some other form of cactus. We did a drive-by at the Arizona Sonoran Desert Museum and we will return to it prior to departure from this area. We exited the area by driving over a road called Gates Pass and the scenery is spectacular but the road is such that about 20 mph is your best speed. There are plenty of places to pull out, however, and I heartily endorse this route as long as you are not pulling a trailer.

January 5, 2015

Drove by a couple of RV parks to see if we wanted to move but decided not to. There is an allegedly nice place north of Tucson (Catalina State Park) but we did not make it up there. Maybe next time.

We also went to the Tucson Visitors Bureau and got the poop on the local area. We also went to a post office near where we were camped to see if we could have our mail forwarded to us but the !*?!#!! assholes do not allow general delivery packages to be delivered to their office so we would have had to travel back to Tucson to get a facility where general delivery could occur. We will try UPS since it seems the USPS is not in the mail business any more.

Following our mail disappointment, we drove up to Saguaro National Park (east unit) for a 9 mile loop drive through the park. The varieties of cactus plants and the vistas are extraordinary. I suggest anybody coming by to take the loop even if the speed limit is 15 mph.

From the park we went to something called Colossal Cave about 10 miles SW of the east unit. Unfortunately, it is a privately-owned park where they charge $5 to get in but then charge $13 a head to see the cave. We deferred on the cave tour. My suggestion is to pass on this feature of Arizona.

January 4, 2015

Departed Casa Grande and drove east on I-10 but only as far as Tucson. We set the Barbarian Invader up in the Pima County Fairgrounds for $20 a night with full hookups. Again, the wi-fi was NFG. The RV area was a big gravel vacant lot which is not too different from the surrounding country which is a big flat area with tough little desert plants. Water, power and sewer worked well. The fairgrounds are about 5 or 10 miles south of Tucson.

January 3, 2015

Peg & I went to the Casa Grande National Monument about 20 minutes from the RV resort. It is an ancient four story building built from caliche mud and stacked up higher than I would have believed possible. The builders were stymied by a serious lack of suitable building materials; the floor support beams came from mountains better than 50 miles from the site covered by saguaro cactus sticks and topped with more caliche. The Casa Grande (big house) was built in the 1300s so it ended up being quite a bit more durable than I would have guessed. There is now a big steel shelter built over the top of it to keep it from turning into a gigantic pile of mud. The government experts at the site figured it has not less than 1300 tons of piled-up caliche which means they must have had quite a bit of labor and time to create the structure.

In the monument headquarters building they offer a video running in a little theater and the video explains how the indigenous folks lived around the big house. They lived in big walled compounds that had clan houses, some other public buildings and some flat-topped mounds that nobody is too sure about. There are also some structures believed to be ball courts and some remote family/clan dwellings outside the walls. About all that can be seen outside the Casa Grande main compound is foundation ruins.

Apparently, the experts believe the folks were around here for about 400 years but they abandoned ship not too long after the building was completed. It is believed or speculated that, despite extensive irrigation works around Casa Grande and a bunch of the Gila River Valley, there were initially some over-population issues but also a few years of heavy rain followed by many years of drought that made communal living impossible. The denizens broke up into small groups and dispersed to points elsewhere.

January 2, 2015

Left bustling Quartzsite east on I-10 headed for Casa Grande, AZ which is about an hour south of Phoenix. The vistas as one drives across Arizona are spectacular and the roads are basically dead flat between the ranges of mountains. Went by the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station which was spewing enormous amounts of steam from their cooling towers, probably because the air temperature was about 45 degrees and the relative humidity was zilch. One can spot the steam rising behind the low mountains near the station from about 40 miles out. The drive through Phoenix was easy w/ Peg and the Garmin navigating. We made it to Casa Grande at about 2:00 PM and set up the Barbarian Invader for a two-day stay at Casa Grande RV Resort. The park had full hookups but the wi-fi is terribly overloaded so no streaming video here.

January 1, 2015

Temperatures early in the AM dropped below freezing (about 28) but between the furnace and the two electric heaters we have we were quite cozy. Peg and I watched the Rose Parade from 9 to 11 AM MDT and then went to Sweet Darlene’s restaurant for food around 12:30. Sweet Darlene’s is a grubby little joint where the chefs have figured out a way to render perfectly acceptable food totally tasteless. I had a chicken-fried steak with vegetables and mashed potatoes and gravy and Peg had a chicken cordon bleu burger with baked beans. My chicken-fried steak had lots of chicken-fried but scant amounts of steak coupled with a bowl of corn mixed with some red and green unrecognizable things and also some watery mashed potatoes cooked recently but certainly not today. Peg’s chicken cordon bleu burger was a pre-formed alleged chicken patty with some ham-appearing stuff on it along with a tiny little cup of beans cooked apparently in ketchup.

Service staff at this eatery is two quite ancient ladies that seem wholly inadequate for the task assigned to them. It isn’t that there are too many patrons for the available staff – the staff is just not suited to the task considering their abilities. One waitress told us that she wore a pedometer one day at work and, according to her reading of the pedometer, she puts in 60 miles a day. Using some fairly simple math I calculated that she would be required to move along at some 7.5 miles per hour for eight hours to reach this figure and, based on my observations it seemed she would not be capable of maintaining this speed.

We will endeavor to skip Sweet Darlene’s on any future visits.

We drove around a bit checking out the finer aspects of Quartzsite. The place seems to be an enormous swap meet with bleak desert on all sides but the vistas to the surrounding mountains are wonderful.

Weather cleared up but was still pretty cold today. We bought diesel today for $2.999 here which is the cheapest I have ever purchased. We will depart tomorrow for points east.

December 31, 2014

Departed Palm Desert headed for Quartzsite, AZ. We had a reservation in a park called 88 Shades RV Park which didn’t seem to have any shades that we could see. There were no membership parks that we could use here so we had to pay about $30/night but they did have 20 or so cable channels that we watched and also they had free wi-fi but it was so slow that they should call it slo-fi or disconnect-fi. Jed’s nasal and lung glop issues seem to be getting slightly better with big doses of Day-Quil and Ny-Quil. Arrived a bit after 1:00 PM PDT but then remembered we had passed into another time zone so we reset clocks to MDT. Peggy made great bacon/vegetable soup for the sickly old fart Jed.

Temperatures dropped, rain started and stopped and then temps dropped some more. Up until midnight the indoor/outdoor weather station Peg got for Xmas showed the temp hovering just above freezing. Rain totaled about a millionth of an inch. East of us they got quite a bit of snow; Flagstaff area received over a foot of snow.

December 30, 2014

Sightseeing day. We drove back west on I-10 to a Pilot/Flying J travel center to get diesel which Jed insisted would be a good idea. Jed was wrong, of course, because virtually everywhere we looked after buying fuel had lower prices. I don’t think I will be hitting any more Flying J stations unless there is no option. From I-10 we turned N on Hwy 62 headed for Twenty-nine Palms which is the north entrance for Joshua Tree. Since we have a National Access Pass that we bought in Gold Beach back in July of ’14, the entrance fee was $0.

The scenery in the park is pretty spectacular. Joshua trees on the high-altitude Mojave side of the park and Yuccas and Chollas cactus on the Colorado Desert (south) side of the park. Although the temperature was down around freezing in the daytime, all campgrounds were full. The mountain vistas are magnificent. Peg drove us on down the park road back to I-10 where we went west back to the TT campground.

We did go out for Ny-Quil because Jed’s nose was running like a faucet and his lungs were filled with glop. We also hit a Carl’s Jr. to get ice cream for Peg and chicken gobs for Jed. The ice cream was fair but the chicken gobs were tasty when dredged through barbecue sauce. Prior to dark, Jed went out and performed one of his favorite activities – dumping the black and gray tanks. He returned unsplattered.

December 29th, 2014

We left TT Pio Pico campground to head east, sort of. Drove up I­15 to I­215 to Hwy 60 east which becomes I­10 headed for the Joshua Tree NP area. Many stupid drivers were noted on this segment and CALTrans has the highway necked down to an insufficient number of lanes approaching Perris. We stayed two nights at TT Palm Desert which is like a big parking lot with RVs wedged into parallel adjacent spaces. The sites have all the services (power, water, sewer) and they worked fine.

The staff is very friendly.