Well, we’ve done it.
Crossed the USA and back again, I mean.
In spite of best intentions there was no daily journal, no plethora of
photos that once viewed will never be looked at again by anybody. Instead we have dozens of memories – good and bad – of a trip
long in the planning and surprising brief in terms of execution and
completion. Here are a few random
thoughts on cross-country RVing in general.
The Trip – Outward
Bound for Vermont
My Mom passed away in November of 2015, at the age of
ninety. It was her wish to have her
ashes scattered on Mt Mansfield, Vermont’s highest peak. The event, coordinated by my sister
Stephanie, would call the family back to Essex Junction, where we all grew
up. Mare and I elected to travel
overland because: a) I despise
everything associated with commercial airlines, and b) we needed to see the
country before we got much older and gimpy.
The R Pod was acquired in January from a couple who found
that it just wasn’t right for them.
After several months of planning and two shake-down trips – one two day
trip to the nearby Oregon Coast, and one four day excursion to Southeast Oregon
- we felt ready to roll. The only mod to
the trailer was to install a wireless rearview camera just above the spare
tire. I hand fabbed an aluminum bracket
to secure the camera to the spare bracket, and it worked out just fine. (I hate being surprised by vehicles that
tail-gate and then pull out suddenly to pass.)
Mare, Zeke the Dog, and I headed east on July 26th.
Our trip took us across Oregon and into Southern Idaho. From there we turned north to enter Yellowstone
Park via the Western entrance. We spent
little time seeing the sights, choosing to drive directly through the park and
into Wyoming. From Cody (temperature 102F)
we headed to Garryowen, Montana, where I spent hours going through the Custer
battlefield site. We pressed on to
Minnesota and Wisconsin, then crossed over the Upper Peninsula of Michigan into
Canada at Sault Ste Marie. We fled
Ontario drivers and returned to the US via Buffalo, New York. From there we crossed that state to Vermont,
arriving in Essex Junction on August 4th.
The Stay in
Vermont
For the entire time in Vermont we stayed at Mare’s family
home and at the summer cottage on Lake Champlain rented by my sister for the
family reunion. The R Pod rested in the
long back yard behind the house that Mare grew up in. The next week was spent with family members,
doing things that families do and commemorating Mom’s life. We hit the road for the return trip on
September 16th.
The Trip – Inward Bound
for Oregon
The return trip had one single purpose – to get us back to
St Helens safely and sanely. This meant
pushing a few extra miles each day, compared to our less aggressive eastward
journey. Whereas we traveled under the
vast heat dome that settled over the country on the eastward leg, on the return we saw
periods of heavy rain across Indiana and into South Dakota. Fortunately for us we escaped the tornados
that plagued several states even as we completed crossing them. We arrived home after a hellacious push from
Missoula, Montana, to our driveway in St Helens. Like migrating birds or spawning fish, once
we got wind of our final destination there was no stopping us, and we arrived
home on August 24th.
Reflections and
Critique
No Rvers travel the same path in the same way. We had two major goals: Get to Vermont in time for the family events
and reunion; Get to Oregon as expeditiously as
possible. The outbound leg allowed for
some sight-seeing while the inbound path was strictly utilitarian. Here are some general observations that
represent our experiences and opinions.
1.
On
Campground Reservations
We made advance reservations for the trip
to Vermont and took what we could find on the way back to Oregon. We stayed in membership campgrounds, state
parks, and on USFS sites.
a.
Membership campgrounds are quite
predictable. Ours were impeccably groomed
and maintained. State parks were
similarly well managed.
b.
USFS reservations were at best disappointing and
at worst infuriating. This deserves a
bit more explanation.
The USFS has subcontracted their advance registration process to
vendors, and I am sure you know to whom I refer. After back-to-back “double
booking” experiences it became apparent that the subcontractors’ databases do
not talk to the USFS Caretaker system.
In spite of having confirmation numbers printed and in hand, we were
faced with the choice of moving further down the road or setting off a massive
ripple effect by displacing folks already assigned to “our” spot. We went down the road.
After being advised by one Caretaker to “make an issue” out of the mess,
and upon arriving in Vermont, I did exactly that. What ensued was a very frustrating and unpleasant
exchange with a subcontractor Rep, who claimed her firm was not at fault and
placed the blame on the Caretakers. USFS
of course defended their volunteers and blamed the reservation takers. The request for full refund has to be
reviewed by the USFS bureaucracy; I still have heard nothing from them. Conclusion?
Buyer Beware. The handling charges
basically eat up the benefit of having a Senior Pass in the first place. In the second place there is nothing like
reaching the end of a long day only to find that your “reservation” is useless.
I will have more to say about this in separate posts as I do not intend
to take this lying down!
2.
On Road Safety
After having travelled some 8,000 miles a
few comments are in order.
a.
Politics aside, the infrastructure of this
country is generally in sad shape. Thank
you, legislators everywhere and at every level.
b.
As noted, we travelled some 8,000 miles, of
which approximately 9,200 were under construction.
“Construction Ahead” or Road Work Ahead” has different meaning in
different states. Idaho for example, is
populated by the Coneheads, whereas other states – Montana and South Dakota
come to mind – are the home of the Barrel People. These outward manifestations of lane control
are put in place to slow down traffic in case someone eventually decides to do
highway work and maintenance. I would
guess that only 5% of the miles so identified actually had any real work going
on. This observation includes many, many week days!
I swear that in Idaho we observed one truck and crew picking up cones
even as, five miles later, another crew was solemnly putting cones down. I suspect when the trailing truck was fully
loaded it changed places with the cone placement team.
c.
Blown-out truck tires will wait in ambush and
throw themselves under your vehicle.
They are quite adept at hiding in the tar-patched spider webs of miles
of interstate highways. They have an
innate sense of when the proximity of other vehicles in adjacent lanes will
prevent you from swerving to avoid them.
We lost our sewer hose carrier to such an unprovoked attack. Fortunately the sewer hose itself was not in
the carrier tube at the time; a broken hinge on the tube hatch forced us to
place the hose in double poly-bags for transport, several days earlier.
d.
In the order of severity of threat to life,
limb, and property, the absolute worst drivers that we encountered were, in
order of incompetence, the following:
1.
Ontario drivers within 50 miles of Toronto
2.
Ontario drivers within 5,000 miles of anything
3.
Chicago drivers
4.
Portland, Oregon drivers
5.
80% of all drivers merging with interstate
traffic. People – it’s not called an
acceleration lane for nothing.
e.
Virtually every state we passed through had a
sign admonishing drivers to not text and drive.
Trouble is, those affected don’t read the signs because they are
texting! Rather than spending so much money telling people
what not to do, I think all states should make it illegal to text and drive,
with the penalty of a minimum of one year loss of license regardless of
circumstances, upon apprehension and conviction. My life is not worth your crummy text message!
I am sure more will come to mind and I will post any
follow-on thoughts separately. Fact is,
although we will be unlikely to undertake such an adventurous trip again, the R
Pod worked nicely for us and met our needs exactly as planned.