Thursday, August 30, 2018

Driving All Day

If I'm a little over 5' tall, the corn is 10 feet!
Thursday, Aug. 30, 201

Today was a day for driving-- I don't even have any photos except one! Just as we left the campground this morning, I asked Joe to take my picture next to the corn. It looks much shorter from the highway, because of the embankment of the road. But we were right next to the cornfield, and elephant's eye height (or higher!) it certainly is!

Also before we left the campground, I checked my email for the football tickets for tomorrow--I bought them through Stub Hub and they were due to "arrive" in my email today. Sure enough, they were there. To make sure that they could be scanned from my phone, I called the MSU ticket office, but the guy there said that these are "print at home" tickets. He said if they could not be scanned off the phone, then they wouldn't be able to help us at the gate. So we realized we'd have to find a way to get them printed from my email, and we don't have a printer with us.

Luckily, email and internet have greatly evolved since our early RVing days. We decided that we could probably get our job done at Staples. So we checked our Next Exit book, and discovered that 9 miles down the I-80 in Peru, Illinois, at the exit there was both a Staples and a Walmart. So we first went to the Staples. In the parking lot, we set up the computer with our own wi-fi system, downloaded the tickets into the laptop, and then transferred them onto a thumb drive (I brought several with me.) Then we went into the Staples, found a copy machine, put the thumb drive into the machine, told it to copy the file with the tickets, and voila! For 22 cents, we had our printed tickets in our hand! We were just as pleased as punch.
Tonight's campground location

After that, we went to Walmart. Joe rested while I bought water (we were TOTALLY out), eggs, milk, and a couple of other items. When I got back to the RV, he made us some lunch. Then we drove 2 more miles to a Flying J where we filled up the gas tank. And finally, we hit the road for good. Joe still didn't feel great, so I drove all day-- through the rest of Illinois, the horrible south-of-Chicago traffic, and up into Michigan. We stopped once we crossed the border and I had some dinner. Then we looked about one hour's worth of driving down the road, and found a very nice county park in Kalamazoo County, which is where we are now. It would be a nice place to stay for a day--there's a lake, walking paths, etc. But tomorrow morning we will get up and finish the drive to East Lansing.

GAME DAY TOMORROW!

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

A Great 47th Anniversary

Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2018

Today was our 47th anniversary, and I say a day which starts with a hot shower and includes a stop at the World's Largest Truck Stop just HAS to be great! And that describes our day.

We started the morning in our beautiful park--after rain during the night, the temperature was down in the low 70s and the humidity was all gone. The park's shower house actually had HOT water.  And I was thrilled, because Joe gave me a beautiful bracelet--he bought it in the gift shop at the Elephant Museum in Lincoln a couple of days ago, and surprised me! So we started the day feeling just great.

We knew we were basically "just driving" today, but a look at the map showed us that we were going to go right past the Amana Colonies, which we had visited back in 2007. We bought a really cute lawn thingie which we still love. So we decided to stop there and go back to the same shop. We drove about 45 minutes to Amana, then parked and walked to the shop--which was exactly where I remembered it, even after 11 years! And we bought another lawn thingie this time too.

Then we had some lunch and got back on the road again. As I drove, I saw a billboard which reminded me that we were going to pass the World's Largest Truck Stop, the I-80 Truck Stop at exit 284 in Iowa. It was about 4pm when we got there, and of course we had to stop. We were not in the mood for the truck museum adjacent to the truck stop, but we loved the enormous building with its vintage filling station just outside the door, and it's unashamed celebration of the truck driving life.

The I-80 Truck Stop has been described as "Disneyland for truckers." It has all the things a regular truck stop has, but much more of it-- food (8 restaurants), souvenirs, gifts, CDs, DVDs, and books on tape, etc. It also has a huge department for aftermarket upgrades on everything from horns to lights to hubcaps and tire nut covers. There is also a chiropractor, a dentist, a laundromat, a barber, a movie theater, and a library, as well as the usual TV lounge, showers, and of course restrooms. Outside there's a truck wash and a dog wash too

Joe found windshield wipers, which we still needed to replace, and we both had something to drink before we went back to our RV (we did not wash the dog!) And after that, it was back to driving. Soon after that stop, we crossed the Mississippi into Illinois. We stopped at the Visitor's Center and overlook just on the Illinois side, but it was closed "indefinitely", the sign said. So we used our wifi and apps, and determined that about an hour down the road was a likely-sounding campground.

And that is where we are tonight-- at Condit's Ranch. It appears to be a multi-purpose kind of place-- it is HUGE, and has a lot of "seasonal" RVs parked here, as well as people like us passing through. There seem to be several houses on the property, and I suspect that these barns near us are not unique. We are adjacent to a cornfield which is also owned by the same people (and the corn, by the way, is taller than Joe and I! There is a LOT of corn being grown in this country, that is for SURE.)  The grounds are very spread out, though, so it seems quite uncrowded, and the trees make it seem like a gigantic park. Definitely a good choice for a stopover for tonight.

And that was our day!

Salt & Pepper

Just ONE room full of Salt & Pepper Shakers
Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2018

We started today with a definite destination in mind. And a definite route in mind. And a definite time frame in mind. None of that worked out as expected.

We left our campsite around 10:30ish, heading east toward Indianola, Iowa, to the National Balloon Museum. We deliberately turned away from I-80, because we wanted to avoid it, even though we knew the trip (approximately two hours or so) would take longer that way. So we discovered ourselves traveling down a semi-paved road for well over 30 minutes just to avoid the interstate! Joe loves those roads, although I hate all the little stones that get thrown up by our tires. But it’s all part of the adventure.
S&Ps all shaped like fruits and veggies

GPS kept trying to reroute us back to the interstate, admonishing us that it would STILL take less time if we would just turn around and go back! But we persisted until GPS gave up, although we all recognized we were adding an hour to our drive.

At about 12:30, we were still an hour away and we stopped for some lunch in a larger-than-usual town. Joe also changed the windshield wiper-- we’d encountered some scattered rainstorms, and realized the one we had was falling apart suddenly (luckily we had a spare.) Then I began driving, and I told Joe to put in the exact street address of the museum. And that was when we found out-- it is closed Monday and Tuesday!

50 states with related item for each: "go-withs"
So all our back-roads were in vain-- we needed to reimagine what our day would be like. Luckily, I had exactly one Iowa tourist book from some previous trip, and Joe was able to find us an appealing quirky alternative-- the Traer Salt & Pepper Shaker Gallery. I am sure I’d seen this when planning a few months ago, but it had seemed not that compelling. Now, however, we wanted SOMETHING in the more-or-less general direction we were driving, so we chose this.

Fat lady and fridge "go-withs"
We immediately headed north-east, and it was almost two hours before we arrived in Traer just after 4pm, knowing the “museum” closed at 5pm. I was not expecting too much, but I thought it sounded like our brand of quirky.

Well, once again, our expectations were vastly exceeded! We were greeted by a lovely volunteer (whose name unfortunately I have totally forgotten), who gave us an excellent “tour” of the S&Ps. The entire collection--all 16,000+ items-- were collected by ONE woman, Ruth Rasmussen, who is now 94 years old and resides in a local nursing home (and who still adds to the collection from time to time, as a result of gifts she has received.) She started collecting in 1946, and any and every type/style/material/subject S&P was included.

It was immediately apparent that the volunteers who operate the S&P Gallery had exercised their own creativity in presenting the S&Ps. In the front office area are an elaborate birdcage filled with bird S&Ps, a big area called the “Traer Market” filled with “produce"-- all kinds of fruits and veggie S&Ps, and a Hoosier cabinet displaying food-themed S&Ps. The first room we went into from there included more than 300 pairs of dog S&Ps, shelves of Christmas themed S&Ps, and some highly collectible S&Ps made by specific pottery companies and china manufacturers. In general, animals “of a kind” would be found together-- hence you can see all the cats, for example, shelved together. There are several display cabinets of “go-withs"-- pairs of S&Ps which did not match but made a pair, such as a toothbrush and toothpaste tube, a tent and a folding cot, and a hot water bottle with a pair of feet.

Jonah in the Whale
There were farm animals (some displayed in a barn setting); zoo animals; more birds; as I said, almost any animal you can imagine. There were groups based on advertising, from Disney movies and cartoons; on occupations; on foods. There were shelves with cowboys, Indians, and covered wagons. There was a shelf covered with Black “Americana” S&Ps, and several collections from 50 states. There were shelves organized by material: all wood, or copper, or clear glass, or silver, or bakelite. There were shelves of feet, of hands, “double-sided” faces (smiling in one direction, frowning in the other). There was a shelf of S&Ps which were from Iowa, or referenced certain Iowa things (such as Hawkeye football.) And then there were shelves from all the other states referencing places and things such as the Liberty Bell or Statue of Liberty. And then of course the ones from foreign countries-- all gifts to Mrs. Rasmussen, who never traveled to any of those countries.

There were also more unusual types of S&Ps, such as “bobble heads”, where the S&Ps included a stand and they moved back and forth in the stand (waving, or kissing, or a cowboy shooting a gun!); there were hugging pairs; hanging pairs; kissing pairs, miniatures; and even a closet that included “naughty” S&Ps!

Political S&Ps. Clintons and Obamas heads' "bobble"
Our guide was wonderful at telling us about a number of different items, and pointing out some of the more unique ones (it would be easy to miss certain details amid the sheer mass of S&P pairs.) For example, there was a shelf of Presidents. Among them were two bobble-head pairs-- the Clintons and the Obamas (which was made to copy the Clintons). In both cases, the S&P shakers had the heads of the president and first lady, and were set to hang inside a base which looked like the White House. When used and replaced (or simply pushed with a finger), they bobbled back and forth-- with the President nodding “yes”, and the first lady shaking her head “no”. On a shelf with various miscellanous subjects was a pair with an explorer in a large cooking pot, and a cannibal leaning beside him against a tree reading a book entitled, “How to Serve Your  Fellow Man.” I also enjoyed the Jonah inside the Whale set, as well as several Betty Boops and Marilyn Monroes. Joe liked Lady and the Tramp best, from the cartoons--I liked Tweety Bird and Sylvester.

Cannibal and Missionary
We spent over an hour enjoying the collection--impressed with both the extent of it (who wouldn’t be!) and the creative ways it was displayed. They may seem silly or "trivial," but we found them charming and entertaining. We were the only ones there, and we kept our guide/hostess chatting until well after the 5pm closing time. At that point, it started to rain, and first Joe, and then I went back to the RV. (I almost had to swim back--the heavens opened and SHEETS of rain were blowing sideways for about 5 minutes, causing a mini-flood of the sidewalk, just as I tried to leave the building.)

We spent a little time waiting for the rain to stop, and then headed to a nearby county park which the S&P lady had recommended to us. It was about 30 minutes away from Traer, and the sky was dark and foreboding almost the entire way. We got to the park and to our surprise (especially after last night’s experience), it was EMPTY. At the VERY end of the camping loop, we found 5 trailers in sites, but not one tow vehicle there with them. We ended up in a different area, camped on the grass right next to the lake, with not a soul in sight other than a flock of Canadian geese, who we had to gently urge out of the way as we drove into the site.

It started to rain again as we hooked up (we wanted electricity again, because despite the rain it was muggy), and the ranger came by soon after and hand-collected my payment so I didn’t have to walk in the rain to the check in area. I asked, where is everyone? And he said that the trailers were probably from people who were staking out a spot before the holiday weekend, and that in the next day or two he expected the place would fill up again. But for tonight, we have it entirely to ourselves. The connectivity is spotty again, but we are very satisfied otherwise.

Monday, August 27, 2018

NEBRASKA! GIANT MAMMALS! AMAZING!!

Elephant Hall display
Monday, Aug. 27, 2018

We got up a little earlier today so we could have time to spend in the Nebraska State Museum on the University of Nebraska campus in Lincoln. We drove 3 straight hours, getting close by at around noon, and stopping for lunch first. Then we negotiated the roads in the city, including on the campus of the university, until we came to the museum. It was located right by Memorial Stadium, the home of the Cornhuskers, which holds 90,000 screaming fans when it is full (and it has been sold out for every game since 1962!!)

Our problem was not 90,000 fans, however, but a parking lot made for cars, not for RVs. There actually was a section clearly labeled "For Museum guests ONLY!", but all the spaces were metered and were, of course, normal size slots for cars. We were lucky, I guess, because those spaces were half empty, including a stretch of about 10 of them in a row at the end of the parking lot. So we decided to park parallel to the side instead of like a normal car, and take up four whole spaces. This worked fine-- except of course, we had to stuff quarters into 4 parking meters to make ourselves "legal". Luckily, we also had a LOT of quarters (despite using up quite a few doing laundry last week, and using up others when we ran out of singles and needed to pay $12/night for camping at Stillwater campground.)

Early four-tusker elephant
Anyway, we each simultaneously slipped quarters into the meters until we'd put in enough for an hour (each quarter was only good for 12 minutes!!) I added a sign on the window for good measure saying "Visiting Museum", and we went inside.

We were immediately WOWed!!!  The museum is largely a museum of paleontology, and it turns out (who knew???) that Nebraska is a huge repository of... well, HUGE bones! They have found a complete fossil record of the development of elephants in Nebraska. There were more than 10 complete skeletons of elephants, beginning with some with 4 tusks (instead of only two), shorter legs, etc. and going to mastodons, mammoths, and modern elephants. ALL of which developed in Nebraska! They were fabulous!

Giant Mastodon (modern elephants in front of him)
In the next room over, we saw camel skeletons-- it seems a giant camel evolved in Nebraska, too. It was only later that they migrated into other continents. The llama, also, is a descendant of this camel; it ended up in South America. So both the dromedary (one hump) and bactrian (two hump) camels which are seen in the middle east and Asia, and the llama in South American, developed from the giant camel in Nebraska!

There were other galleries-- giant rhinos, horses (we should have come here instead of the Hagerman Fossil Beds!), one of "weird animals and fish", including a shark with teeth that looked like a buzz saw blade, large armored fish, and a 5 foot tall invertebrate of some sort which was just horrible looking! Speaking of horrible, there were several animals, some dead-end evolutionary "experiments", with truly ugly skulls. There were also skeletons of a giant sloth, a giant deer, and some kind of huge round THING, I can't remember what exactly it was (I'm posting a photo.)
Giant Camel

This floor of the museum was so utterly fascinating that we spent well over an hour in it--I had to run out and shove MORE quarters in our parking meters! We had about 30 minutes left to go upstairs where the "real dinosaurs" were-- including a stegosaurus which came from, guess where? Utah's Dinosaur National Monument! So we had visited the place it was buried, and here was the skeleton itself! They also had an Allosaurus from there as well. And in the room next door, there was a plesiosaur neck in the floor--it went from one end of the gallery to the other.

Plesiosaur skull and body found in Nebraska
This museum has a number of really rare fossils, such as a fossilized early deer which was pregnant, and the bones of the fetus were also fossilized. There is a giant something that I never heard of, which is very rare, and an entire flying dinosaur skeleton still embedded in rock for display-- it is rare to find an entire skeleton in one piece, so to speak. All in all, we simply were boggled by the richness of the fossil record in Nebraska, and plan to come back again. For one thing, we didn't find out until today about the Ashfall Fossil Beds in northern Nebraska. We easily could have stopped to see them on our way west a few weeks ago. They are a paleological version of Pompeii-- a volcano erupted in Idaho, killing hundreds of now extinct animals at a waterhole area in what is now Nebraska. I took a photo of one fossil from the site which was in the museum, but I am avid to go see the original site now, which, I believe, is also enclosed inside a building like Dinosaur National Monument is.

"Round thing"-- a Glyptodont, related to an armadillo
There was also an exhibit highlighting the fossils found through the State's "Highway Paleontology Program," where there is cooperation between the state and the scientists when new roads are being put it-- the paleontolgists work side by side with the road construction crews to deal with fossils that may be uncovered at the time of the work being done. It is one of the first cooperative programs of this type in the country. All in all, this was one of the most fascinating museums I've ever seen, and just standing in the "Elephant Hall" was to be in awe. As Joe said, Nature is truly incredible! This museum is worth a special visit-- I hope to go back there someday soon. We had to skip entire galleries due to lack of time and energy (and quarters!)
Complete flying dinosaur skeleton

By the time we finished up at the museum, Joe was pretty wiped out (he'd done almost all the morning's driving), so we found a park to stop in while we looked at our options for the rest of the day. There are a LOT of places to "overnight" in parking lots near Omaha (Walmart, Cabela's, Cracker Barrel, and even the highway rest areas), but we needed electricity tonight--it was in the 90s and SO hot, and we knew we wanted AC tonight.  In the end, we decided to go to a county park campground near Omaha, about 45 minutes further east. But when we got there, it was full.
Plesiosaur paddle

Allosaurus
Stegasaurus from Dinosaur Nat. Monument in Utah
Fossilized animal burrows (bottom one has animal remains in it)
A very weird animal-- I have no idea what!
So we did MORE thinking and mapping, and headed east again, crossing the Missouri River into Iowa until we came to another county park, Arrowhead Park in Neola, IA. We were lucky yet again to get one of the last spots available. So we are in Iowa now, about 2 hour's drive from tomorrow's destination. I can't upload today's photos because we have very little connection for some reason, but I will certainly do that. The skeletons we saw today were, as I said, mind-boggling! If they are not here when you read this blog, come back again!


I have no idea what this is!

Heading East

Cassie rolls in Nebraska grass
Sunday, Aug. 26, 2018

We turned out backs on the Rocky Mountains this morning and headed east--it’s finally that time. East is never as much fun as going West--especially on Interstate 76 in Colorado. This is truly one of the most boring and unattractive stretches of road we have ever had to drive on-- but it happens to be the best connection between the Denver area and I-80, the direct route home. Meanwhile, it was hot as heck again--into the 90‘s. That’s what coming down out of the mountains will do, I guess!

So we drove.... for about 3 hours without stopping, until we finally crossed the state line into Nebraska. It is amazing how Nebraska is immediately more attractive than that stretch of Colorado! We stopped soon after crossing the border at a Flying J, where we ate lunch, and then filled the propane tank. Cassie rolled in the grass. The entire stop lasted about an hour altogether--for some reason our lunch stops always do! We got back on the road again at about 2:00, and about 15 minutes later, it was 3:15! We’d crossed over into the Central Time zone.

The loss of an hour wouldn’t matter too much, except I wanted to stop at the Golden Spike Tower, and I thought it closed at 5:00. It looked like we’d be passing by at about 4:20, and I knew that wasn’t long enough. But Joe said, “lets stop anyway and maybe it IS long enough.” And then Google told me that it closed at 7pm, not 5:00! And Google was right (the website I’d looked at earlier was wrong?) Anyway, we got there at 4:30, with plenty of time to visit.

The Golden Spike Tower is an observation tower overlooking the Bailey Yard, the world’s largest rail yard, in North Platte, Nebraska. There is an introductory film which gives a brief overview of the activities at the rail yard-- how the cars get sorted by going over two “hump yards”, the enormous engine shop for repairs and overhauls, etc. Over 10,000 railroad cars go through the yard per day over 315 tracks. The tower has two observation decks-- the 7th floor, which is open (and you can hear the sounds of the yard), and the 8th, which is completely enclosed (yes, there is an elevator!)

View of green Nebraska fields.
We went inside, and were greeted by several lovely women, and a sign that said that “well behaved dogs were welcome.” They even had dog biscuits waiting! So we went back to the RV and brought Cassie in with us. She showed off her tricks for dog biscuits, and won them all over. Meanwhile I was looking around the gift shop, which was full of train-related toys, clothing, and other items. We watched the film, then went up to the 8th floor.

View of the rail yard
The view was beautiful from up there, over the green Nebraska fields to the south, and the multiple train tracks to the north and west. The engine repair building was longer than 3 football fields (the entire rail yard is 8 miles long!) The coolest thing was watching the cars going over the humps to get sorted. The train gets pushed up a hump, and then each car individually rolls down whichever track is designated for it, and it automatically couples with the car in front of it when it rolls into place. They are precisely placed, so I am sure it is entirely computerized, but watching the cars just rolling onto each track all alone is fascinating. And so the entire train is put together depending on where it is headed.

There were two retired railroad men up on the 8th floor, chatting with visitors and answering questions. They mentioned that the volume of rail traffic had increased in the several years since the video was made. The rail yard runs 24/7, so trains are constantly moving in and out.

Besides the views and the information from the railroad guys, there were several displays, and a corner where a video from PBS called “Orphan Trains” was running. The latter was about the years when children (ages 6 to 18) were shipped from New York out to the midwest and were basically “given” to families who wanted to adopt them. The idea was that they had no family in New York, and the people out west needed extra hands to work on their farms. Sometimes the children were not orphans; their parents would relinquish their parental rights so that the child would presumably have a better future, if the parents could not afford to raise them, or didn’t want them. But this was, of course, traumatic for the children. I watched the video for a while--it wasn’t really about trains per se, but the trains were the means of transport, and midwestern families would go down to the train depot and pick out a child from those on the train. This actually went on for 75 years, even though it sounds utterly barbaric now!

Time line of the Baily Yard
We spent over an hour at the Golden Spike Tower, and then decided that rather than stay in North Platte, we would put some more miles behind us. So we drove about 45 more minutes before stopping in Cozad, a small town which is located along US 30. US 30 is the original Lincoln Highway route through Nebraska, and we picked up some traveler’s guides in the Tower telling us all the historical places along US 30, which runs very close to I-80. Anyway, Cozad is on the route, and their town park has about a dozen RV parking places. For $10, we have electricity, water, and there’s even a dump. It’s a nice little park-- a lot of green right behind us, with a walking/exercise path, and of course playground and volleyball courts. The railroad is nearby, and the trains will be going by all night--we feel quite friendly toward them (it sounds like being home in HP.) Really a good deal for the night, especially since if the weather doesn’t cool down enough, we may want the air conditioning.

So that was today. We are eating a little bit late, because of the time change, I guess. Tomorrow we will continue along the Lincoln Highway and/or I-80 toward Lincoln, Nebraska, where we are planning to stop at a museum on the campus of the University of Nebraska.

Saturday, August 25, 2018

Two Low-Key Days

Colorado River near Kremmling
Friday/Saturday, Aug. 24-25, 2018

When we woke up yesterday morning and looked at the lake, and Joe said, "OMG, just LOOK at how beautiful this is!", I decided that there was really no rush to go anyplace, and our lakeside view was too good to give up. Unfortunately, we did have to move, because our site was reserved for Friday night. But the next site on the road, about 25 feet along, was a "first come" site. So we rolled forward and claimed it before anyone else could come along.

We spent the rest of the day just relaxing! I put our chairs up, and I fell asleep for about an hour or so in the sun (I put my sweatshirt over my face to protect me from sunburn.) Joe napped inside. Cassie spent most of the day outside, tethered to our picnic table, which provided ample shade. The temperature reached perhaps the high 60s, although the sun made it feel warmer. I chatted with one of the camp hosts for a while, and she told me that it hadn't gotten above 80 degrees there all summer! The altitude was about 8,000 feet, which made it quite nippy at night, down into the 40s. So we just loved it.
Selfie of me, sunbathing

This morning we packed up, though, because we had plans to meet up with our friend Noah sometime around dinner. He texted us that he had to go in to work, however, so it was unclear when he might be free. Nevertheless, we needed to head east. And although the least mileage was to drive through Rocky Mountain National Park, we just weren't up for it. Joe has been feeling the altitude, and I did not want to be freaked out by the 12,000 foot road through the park. The closer alternative was US 40, but that went over a 12,000 foot pass also! So we retraced our steps past Sulphur Hot Springs and Kemmling, down to I-70, and took the Interstate through the Eisenhower Tunnel, which went through the mountain instead of over it (at 11,000 feet, still!) We did a lot of gasping for breath.

Soon we stopped at a Walmart, where we picked up some groceries and some other household necessities. Then we tried to figure out where we could possibly meet Noah, although we hadn't heard from him yet. But it was after 4pm. So we decided to drive to the Cabela's which was not terribly far (we thought) from where he lived, and hang out there. We were getting worried about camping, because due to city ordinances, the Walmarts and the Cabela's did not allow overnight parking. Our only choice seemed to be the Cracker Barrel, not too far from Cabela's.

Anyway we got to Cabela's, and I went in to browse while Joe rested. I actually found a vest just like I'd been wanting, at the price I had wanted to spend ($15!), and I splurged on a pair of earrings. By 6pm, we still hadn't heard from Noah, and he didn't answer his phone. So we assumed he got tied up at work, let him a message that we'd see him sometime soon, and tried to find a place for the night. I thought it was kind of early to stop at the Cracker Barrel, and was thinking we should just start heading east on the interstate (tomorrow's route) and see if anything turned up.

Joe, meanwhile, was also searching on his phone app for any possible campgrounds, and found Standley Lake. It was only 16 miles away, and he convinced me we should just try it, even though I was convinced that this late on a Saturday night, it would be full. I drove and he navigated, and when we got to the park, the ranger station was still open, and the girl inside told us that she thought there were still spaces in the "walk in" section. There were only 12 to start with! But we got the very last one!! Ironically, we are only about 6 miles from where Noah lives (much closer than we were before), but he sent a message that he got tied up at work with his team and had no idea when he might be free.

Standley Lake Campground in the evening
In any case, we feel lucky to have found this site, given the lack of other options. I feel that Denver is, overall, a very RV-unfriendly city. Besides the traffic (as with any large city), the western suburbs are very "steep" whenever you leave the highway, which makes it hard to get around. And with the no overnight parking laws, it means there's really no place to stop and rest! So I will add Denver to the list of places I will drive around rather than through, from now on. It's too bad we have friends here!

Tomorrow we will head for Nebraska. I have some stops planned out, and it should not be too arduous to get to East Lansing in time for the football game next Friday night!
View of Standley Lake on Sunday morning

Thursday, August 23, 2018

More Hot Springs

What's out there??
Thursday, Aug. 23, 2018

We got a slow start this morning--it’s kind of nice not having a heavy itinerary to keep up with! It was raining during the night and into the morning, but it stopped around 9a.m., which was when we rolled out of bed. I updated my blogs with photos, walked Cassie, called home, and did whatever while Joe got himself going. Our one “must do” for the morning was to dump our waste tanks--we’d filled with fresh water when we arrived at the campsite last night, but there was no dump.

When we finally rolled out, it was about 11 a.m., and we stopped to ask the campground host where we could dump. He directed us to the Waste Treatment plant for the city of Frisco. I thought I understood his directions, but when I put “waste treatment plant” into the GPS, it told us something else. We got turned around in the city where the GPS led us (after going over Independence Pass, I should know better than to believe it for ANYTHING!) but finally were back on the road the camp host had indicated. However, we left what seemed to be most of Frisco, and still hadn’t seen the high school, which was supposed to be our landmark for the dump.

So we turned around and went back toward Frisco again. As we stopped for a red light, I looked to my right and there was a fresh fruit and veggie stand there, and-- it was flying a Spartan flag! I said to Joe, turn here, park in the big lot behind the veggie stand, let’s buy something (we HAVE to support a fellow Spartan, right?) and maybe they know where the treatment plant is.

So we pulled in and bought some fresh corn, heirloom tomatoes, and a few other things Joe wanted. The woman in the stand, however, didn’t know where the treatment plant was, but she did tell us that there was a visitor’s information place only a few blocks away. So we drove down Main Street of Frisco, which was all kinds of tempting touristy shops, food places, and cute buildings of all sorts. Clearly, Frisco is basically a tourist town! And I am lucky it’s so hard to find parking for an RV, because it saves me a lot of money when we go through towns like this!

Selection of Flags: Colorado, US, Planet Earth, and SPARTANS
We did find a spot a block off the main road, however, and Joey waited while I went and talked to the lady in the visitor center. She gave me a map and some info about the dump-- turns out we were on the right road, but just didn’t go far enough. So we went back down Main Street again, and drove farther out of town until we found it. By the time we’d finished dumping, it was well after noon.

Main Street, Frisco, CO
From there we drove back through town AGAIN (we’d gone up and down the same main drag 4 times by the end) and headed north. Our goal was Hot Sulphur Springs, a very small town whose main claim to fame was a hot springs “spa and resort.” It got mixed reviews online, but the attraction was 20 hot springs pools, of varying heat from 98 to 112 degrees. So we drove up there, following the Blue River, and stopping at a pull out on the way for a fairly late lunch. We finally got to the hot springs at about 3:30 pm.

The place was interesting-- I understand the mixed reviews. It was not flashy in any way-- it had a very low-key vibe. The cabins were not fancy, but looked relatively comfortable (I peeked through the window and saw they were fairly basic). The reception area for the pools was reasonably attractive without being flashy. They also do massages and other spa treatments there, so they were promoting quiet, peace, and relaxation. There were some kids, but not a lot-- there are only 4 pools which the under-12 set are allowed to use.
Four hot pools (one is inside the tan building)

Anyway, we changed into our suits in the RV after we paid to get in, and came back with our towels and shampoo. Joe put his stuff in a locker, but I took mine with me so I would have my camera this time, a water bottle, sunscreen, and a few other items. The pools began at ground level (98-101 degrees) and went up the side of the mountain. So we climbed the stairs until we found a small pool labeled 106-108 degrees. I thought it might be too hot, but it was probably a little less hot than advertised-- it felt perfect, and that’s where Joe stayed the whole time. I wandered around after a bit to see the other pools, but “ours” was best. It was just the right size for 2 people.

2 more hot pools
So we spent an hour soaking and resting there. There were areas with sun shades over them, and lounge chairs, and there were not a lot of people, so it seemed very comfortable and quiet. There were “quite zone” signs everywhere, which helped too. I liked it. It wasn’t fancy, but it was comfortable. At about 5pm, we were sufficiently “cooked”, so we went into the bath house and took showers-- hooray for clean hair!! And then we walked slowly back to the RV.

Joe in a hot pool
Now the issue was, where to spend the night. The town we were in had a small park with some free camping, but all the sites were taken (I’m guessing that some of those folks just live wherever they can find free camping!) So I looked at our map, and realized that there wasn’t that much too nearby. The closest seemed to be some National Forest sites about 30 minutes away, so that’s where we went.

Campsite view--Lake Granby
At about 7pm, we ended up on a lovely lake in the Arapahoe National Recreation Area. It seems that all the sites are reserved for the weekend, but we almost had our pick for tonight, given that’s all we wanted. We are at a site overlooking the lake, which is beautiful, and again we get 50% off the fees (and a free pass to be here-- a day pass costs about $5/day). So we are quite satisfied with our day, all in all! We are now discussing where to go tomorrow--I want to head to Loveland (we were there in 2011) but it requires driving through Rocky Mountain National Park on yet another twisted road with high elevation. I will do some research on that subject right now.

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Laundry Day

View from tonight's campsite
Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2018 [more photos to follow]

We woke up this morning after a pleasantly rainy and cool night, knowing it was time to leave. Two main reasons: we were out of water (both drinking and in the RV tank), and we were out of underwear. Time to do the laundry!

We drove out of Cascade Campground, immediately encountering a lovely cascading stream. This was Chalk Creek, which we bathed in briefly on Monday. As we continued driving, it was amazing how much more there was to see than there had been in the pitch black on Sunday night!

We headed for Buena Vista, as planned, to the Lost Sock Laundry. It was rather crowded (one lady asked me if I had ever SEEN it this crowded, and I told her I'd never been there before!) I ran 4 washes, but had to wait about 30 minutes before a dryer came free. All in all, it took until about 2pm for me to get everything washed and folded and back into the RV. Meanwhile, Joe walked Cassie and hung out, and dug up a couple of small desert plants for me to bring home.

At this point we were a bit stymied-- we had NO PLANS going forward! With the whole map of Colorado in front of me, I simply couldn't figure out where to go or what to do next. I honestly think the altitude is getting to me-- my brain doesn't have enough oxygen to think straight.One thing we knew, we needed water!

We finally decided to head to Hot Sulphur Springs, a town a couple of hours north, which has a hot springs resort with about 20 pools, or so the ads all say! It was basically just a "why not?" kind of decision, but we certainly DO like these hot springs all over the state! We stopped in Leadville at the grocery store to buy bottled water and a few grocery items, then continued toward Hot Sulphur Springs. Then I noticed on my more detailed maps that we were going very close to a reservoir with several National Forest campgrounds. So we decided to see if they had any room before we continued-- it was already after 6pm. I had to find one with water, however!
Tiny House camped here too

We were lucky-- the first campground we came to had some spaces open, and we were able to fill up the RV's fresh water tank before we docked into our site for the night. It is not as beautiful a campground as Cascade, but it is very nice and certainly okay for one night. The big plus is, it is quite near a town (Frisco) and the phone has 4 bars, so we can get wifi and get caught up on our mail and blogs. Of course, the photos are painfully slow in uploading as usual, so that part will have to wait. I do have a few from today, though, of a couple of very interesting vehicles parked in the campground with us tonight!
"Lil Bandit"

Tomorrow we hope to continue to Hot Sulphur Springs and soak in the hot springs there, and then... I have absolutely NO idea!!

Friends, Hot Springs, and Naps

Monday-Tuesday, Aug. 20-21, 2018 [Photos to follow]

Sam the RV in our campsite
Sunday-Monday, Aug. 20-21, 2018

We have had a couple of lovely, relaxing days in Cascade Campground. In fact, it’s been so nice, Joe and I are staying here an extra night until Wednesday, before leaving.

Monday we woke up with me still saying, “That was SO SCARY!” as I thought about the drive the day before. Joe said, “It was an ADVENTURE!” Which indeed it was. We got up and had breakfast, with an eye in the direction of Ben and Miriam’s campsite. Ben had gotten up early and driven into town to handle a business phone call, and there was no evident activity around their teardrop trailer, so we set up our chairs and sat outside in the sunshine, just relaxing. The air was cool-- it went down into the 50s during the night and was still jeans and sweatshirt weather. Just perfect!

Finally I saw that Ben’s car was back and there were small people in pajamas outside, so I walked over to say good morning. Naama (6) and Yael (4) were both awake and excited to say hello. They were eager to come “see our campsite”, so their mom got them dressed and then they came over to visit. Ben and Miriam said they had two ideas for the day-- a visit to a nearby whiskey distillery, and hot springs at the Mount Princeton resort we’d passed the night before.

Naama and Yael drawing on the kitchen table
I suggested I keep the girls to give B&M a little more time at the distillery, so they left for about 90 minutes, and Joe and I spent the rest of the morning with Naama and Yael. Joe did a few “hacks” in the kitchen, fixing the cabinet under the sink so it was far more useful and things would not fall out of it. The girls and I played “Camping Bingo” (which we’d picked up at Dinosaur for them), walked Cassie, they showed me the rock formation near their campsite which was remarkably like a playhouse (we played restaurant (I was the customer, Naama was the waitress and Yael was the cook) and shopping (I was the customer, Yael worked in the store and helped me find what I wanted to buy, and Naama checked me out), and then came back to the RV, where they decided to draw some pictures. No one had markers or crayons, but we had enough pens and some stuff for them to draw on. We had snacks. And before I could suggest we walk around the campground loop and see how many different kinds of RVs we could see, their parents returned and it was lunchtime.

Camping Bingo
Joe and I napped and read our books while they all had lunch and did whatever else they were doing, and at about 3:30 we were finally ready to go to the hot springs. Then ensued changing into bathing suits, sunscreening, etc. We fit all 7 of us in their minivan, and went back down the road about 10 minutes to an obviously upscale resort. There are two areas of hot springs and pools. We started at the upper pools, because they have a 400 foot water slide up there! There are two large pools connected by a small lazy-river type thing, and the slide ends in one of the pools. There are also two small pools, one of which was about 104 degrees, and that is where Joe and I sat most of the time. At some point I went into the 102 degree pool with Naama, and the others bobbed around in the big pools (about 98 degrees) and went down the slide a few times.

The upper pools closed at 6pm (we’d arrived at around 4:30) so we got back in the car and went to the lower parking lot. Down there, we went into the historic bath house (dark wood and an old feel to it), and then going past the two pools, we climbed over rocks lining Chalk Creek, which was flowing vigorously past the bath house. Hot springs flow directly into the creek, and people were lying in stone “pools” along the edge, soaking. We quickly realized that the pools were not as hot as we preferred (except when we found one spot where the water was entering the pool from between some rocks, and it was way too hot to keep a hand or foot under it!) The dilution of the hot springs from the stream tumbling over the rocks cooled the little side pools off a lot. So Joe and I climbed back up the rocks again, and sat on some chaise lounges, while the “kids” waded carefully past a few pools until they found one they could all sit in for a bit. Ben told us that it was neat having the natural sand under them, because if you dug down into it, it got hotter! But for me and Joe, we liked our 104 degrees in the pool earlier just fine!
Chalk Creek, with hot "pools" along the side

About 7pm or so, we finally dried ourselves off enough to come back to the campground. And at that point, Joe and I ate something, and then lay down and realized we were not getting up again. He did take the dog out once more and say goodnight, but otherwise, that was it for our day! And, I forgot to take my phone to the hot springs, so no photos of the very lovely facilities! Maybe I can get some on our way out of the area, although I didn’t notice any place where an RV could fit in the parking areas too well.

Tuesday (today) morning the kids were up ahead of us, getting ready to go back to Denver. Joe and I decided to stay in Cascade for one more night. It is so mellow here-- the campsites are far apart, and the weather all day has been sprinkling rain and clearing up and then sprinkling again. So we are going to hang out here and just enjoy the quiet. We did enjoy the morning, though-- the girls walked with me and Cassie, and then we had a game of Camping Bingo, and then they drew some more pictures while their parents packed up the car and trailer. They are just the cutest! And Judah loved Cassie, who was VERY patient with a little person petting her and poking at her. So cute!

They finally pulled out at about noon or shortly thereafter. Joe and I had lunch, and now he is napping and I am catching up on the blog. Our plan is to spend tonight here, like I said, and then tomorrow we will go to Buena Vista (which we learned is pronounced BEW-na Vista) and do some laundry and, I sure hope, upload the blogs and photos-- we’ve been without connectivity for several days. And by then, I will have to come up with our next destination-- there is so much to do for people who like hiking, bike riding, rafting, zip-lining, and other outdoor sports. But for people like us with limited physical strength, it’s hard to figure out what to do. Joe thinks he might like to go rafting but it depends on how he is feeling. And it’s not so hot anymore-- in the lower 70s and going down to the high 40s at night! So just enjoying the weather is nice. But I’m sure we’ll find some other adventures too-- I have a pile of tourist guides to give me ideas.

Now, it’s nap time! And hopefully Miriam will send me photos of Judah with Cassie to decorate this blog with. [Addition: we napped for hours! It has been raining most of the afternoon, so this turned out to be the perfect day to “stay home” and rest. There is nothing cozier than napping in the afternoon with the rain pattering on the roof. We both feel very indulged. Now Joe is making us some black beans, rice, and corn for dinner--which I started craving when I ran across a can of corn in the back of our pantry. It’s probably time to completely empty out the entire RV, take inventory, and recalibrate. But meanwhile, we don’t need to do much in the way of grocery shopping. We are feeling very wealthy in general living like this.]

Very Long Ago, and Very High Up

Sunday, Aug. 19, 2018

This was another one of our amazing days, I think! We woke up as planned, a bit early, because we knew we had a long day ahead of us. We just didn’t realize HOW long it would be!

Our first stop was, of course, the visitor’s center at Dinosaur National Monument. We first watched a 12-minute video about the dinosaurs and natural impact of the Green River Valley in that area. The reason there are so many dinosaur bones here is because the “ancestral Green River” washed a lot of bones into one spot. But as we learned, the site is misleading, because all the bones here are of huge dinosaurs-- the smaller bones were washed away or otherwise decayed before they ended up in the “dinosaur bone jam” in this particular location.

Wall entirely embedded with fossilized dinosaur bones
Then we hopped onto the tram which took us up through layers of earth to the viewing center. The building is fantastic-- it is built right against the original wall of fossils which were excavated in the first decades of the 20th century. You can’t help but go WOW when you first walk in and see the wall of bones still embedded into the rock.


There are excellent displays to help get oriented to what we saw. The large wall in front of us was originally about 3 times larger-- the areas above it and to the right and left were excavated earlier, as I said. The fossilized bones which were removed are now in museums all over the country, with three complete skeletons in the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh-- now on Joe’s and my list for a long weekend visit so we can see them. (Other bone are also closer-- in NYC and even one in a museum in Newark, DE, if I recall correctly!)

Allosaurus in rock
For $1.00 we purchased a brochure which helped us identify individual sections of the wall and better “see” the bones and how they belonged together (if, in fact, they actually did-- a number are just stray individual bones.) So we looked at them carefully, and Joe pointed out some specific bones which he could identify from his knowledge of anatomy. There were also a lot of panels with photos explaining how the bones were originally excavated, wrapped in burlap and then plaster, then put into boxes and pulled on skids down the mountain to wagons, and hence to the nearest railroad depot where they were shipped back east. The entire area was absolutely fascinating, and we spent at least an hour there.

Placement of bones in wall and reconstructed skeleton in NYC
We left the monument just about noon, and had to stop at an RV park in Jensen to dump our tanks, fill up with fresh water, and buy a bag of ice. Then we finally headed toward central Colorado, where we were meeting Ben and Miriam. I had already gotten a number of texts from Ben, and he was going to send us more info after they found a nice campground for us to meet up at.
Camarasaurus skull

Joe points to corresponding place on his hip
We headed east, crossed into Colorado, and stopped at the Welcome Center in Dinosaur, Colorado, to pick up some info. I chatted briefly with the two people working there, and pointed out the route I was planning to take-- it seemed like the most direct route--through Aspen and down toward Salida, which was the general area Ben was heading for. All they said was, “Well, that sure will be a pretty drive!” And then we continued on.

We stopped in Rangely for a lunch break, and then kept going. My plan included picking up I-70 at a town called Rifle, heading east to Glenwood Falls, and stopping there for a Walmart stop before continuing on. That looked to me like the exit to go south on my planned route, but my GPS kept telling me to go farther along I-70 before heading south, and I decided maybe that was a better idea, although it looked like more miles to me. But the GPS was calculating the fastest route, so I figured I’d trust it.

As we got on the interstate at Rifle, there I saw a Walmart! But it was too late, so we continued with the original plan to stop at the Glenwood Falls Walmart. This was only about 30 miles or so down the interstate, and we got off there. I quickly discovered that Glenwood Falls was actually a resort city, with a large hot springs hotel and pool there, and that the exit from the interstate put us right in the center of a charming but very busy downtown, full of cute looking businesses and restaurants and historical buildings. There was no sight of a Walmart anywhere, which we have come to expect when we use Next Exit to tell us what exits have Walmart. So we had to hastily look for a GPS guide to Walmart.

The GPS worked, although it first took us to a tiny road which was closed. We could at least see the Walmart from there, however, and used our own eyes to get us there. It turned out to be an older store, not a Super Center, and as such it 1) had a very small parking lot; 2) was relatively difficult to get to; and 3) did not have fresh veggies and fruits. However, we were able to get almost everything we wanted, with the exception of sufficient bottled water. The plus side was, it was a smallish store, so it didn’t take us a full hour to get through it.

My first inkling that this was a mistake
And then, we plugged our destination back in-- by now, we knew Ben was at Cascade Campground a little south of a town called Buena Vista. I found it on my map. And now the GPS told me to go MY original route-- keep heading south through Aspen, in almost a direct line to Buena Vista. So I figured, ok-- we’ll switch back to that route again.

Well! It was only about 10 minutes before I was having serious misgivings. Even though the road was a divided highway with 2 lanes each way, we were steadily rising, and I was having a very anxious feeling that we should have gone back to the interstate and use the GPS’s original suggestion. Soon enough, we got to Aspen-- and negotiated carefully through the center of town. And then the road was 2 lanes, and fairly narrow. But okay, this is Colorado, and we were going through the mountains, going up still. But it did seem narrower than I would have preferred, for sure.

Uh oh. The road didn’t have much in the way of a shoulder or a railing. There were a lot of hiking trails around, though. It seemed like a very SMALL road, although it was the only road there was! Unless we turned around and went all the way back to Glenwood Springs, that is.

Double uh oh!! We passed a sign that said, “Lights will flash automatically if vehicle oversized.” But they weren’t flashing, so.... we kept going. And a little further: “Turn around for over-sized vehicles,” with a pull-out. At least there was now a sign-- vehicles over 35' forbidden to proceed. We are under 30 feet. But man, that was NOT reassuring! What WERE we heading for, anyway?
Hairpin turn

We passed several forest service campground areas and a LOT of trail heads. Not much else. The road was not very wide. Whenever we passed ANYONE I had a small anxiety attack. And then a sign: “road narrows.” I said, “narrower than THIS??” And now suddenly the double yellow line disappeared-- the road was so narrow that if they’d put in a line, the space on either side would not have been wide enough! And, did I mention, we were on the OUTSIDE of the road, i.e. looking DOWN as we went around the side of the mountains? We came to at least three of these “narrow” sections. They were just terrifying, because they BARELY wide enough for two cars, but a car and an RV? They were NOT WIDE ENOUGH. And every single one went around the mountain, so we couldn’t see if anything was coming, although it usually was. At one point, we stopped JUST as the road narrowed, because I yelled STOP! to Joe. I could see that if we did not, we’d be face to face with a car and no room for either of us to pass. We waited until 4 cars went past us, then prayed as we went through ourselves.

By this time, I had my eyes closed at least half the time. The speed limit was 20 mph most of the time, sometimes only 15 and on some particularly sharp turns, 10mph. I was having a real panic attack, and practically ready to cry. Joe, meanwhile was doing GREAT. He drove the whole way in 1st gear most of the time, I think, and he was calm as could be. (I was also worrying because it was getting so late-- almost 7pm--and I thought he needed to eat soon! And also, my GPS kept telling me
Drop off on the right. No guardrail.
that the time between us and our destination was getting LONGER each time I checked!)

Finally, FINALLY, we came to the top-- beyond the tree line, to find a big pullout area and a sign that said, Continental Divide, 12,095 feet. Well, no WONDER I was panicking-- I was oxygen deprived! (Joe pointed out that airplane cabins are pressurized for 10,000 feet-- and that our oxygen masks would have dropped 2,000 feet earlier!) There were a number of people parked up there, with some information panels and even pit “restrooms.” Clearly, this was a “destination,” which is why we had so many cars passing us. I found out from the panels that this was Independence Pass, and it is the highest paved road in North American!!! Another panel mentioned that “the Narrows,” as they are called, have been panic-inducing since the pass was first used. No-Duh!!
"Road narrows". TOO NARROW!!

There was a short path to an even higher observation point. I was just unable to walk up it-- I was so shaky and weak and wobbly when I got out with Cassie, I almost fell over! There was a nice young man who offered to take my photo in front of the Continental Divide sign, and he asked which side we’d come from. I said, Aspen, and he reassured me that the other side was “much much easier,” that we’d come from the “hard side.” Honestly, I was VERY glad to hear it-- I didn’t think I could take much more! (Then he added that there were “only” about 3 more hairpin turns! And then I heard him tell his friend, “They came up in that RV!” and I could tell he thought THAT was a bit gutsy! But we had NO IDEA what we were getting into!!) Meanwhile, while I was outside, Joe checked his sugar, which was great, and he ate a little bit anyway so it wouldn’t drop at an inconvenient moment on our way down. Even Cassie got into the act, placing a “deposit” on the highest paved highway in North America!

Above the tree line
So I took some deep breaths (as deep as possible, that is) and we started rolling DOWN the mountain. Although it had its scary moments (we were still on the “outside”, and I could look straight down over the edge of the road to the valley below), it was nothing as bad as coming up had been--the road was wide enough for double yellow lines all the way, and the speed limit went all the way up to 35mph! By this time, though, I was worried about the time. I knew that the campground we were going to was NOT going to be well lit, and I was anxious about actually finding it. I’d originally thought we might get there at 7:30, and now it looked like being 8:30 or even later. We’d had no phone “bars” pretty much since we’d left Aspen, but when we finally came down from Independence Pass, they finally came back. I was able to call Ben, who reassured us that we were almost there and gave us a few more landmarks to watch for, and then we kept on.

We found our turnoff (after disregarding GPS’s suggestion of a side road--I’d had enough of THAT!) but by this time, it was dark. We drove slowly along a county road, and there was more traffic than I expected. It was entirely unclear from the map how far along we’d have to go, and we had trouble seeing some of the road signs. When we saw a sign that said “National Forest Campgrounds ahead,” we were SO reassured! But still there was mostly black road and not much else until I realized there were actually homes on this road, and then the Mount Princeton Hot Springs Resort, accounting for the oddly mystifying traffic. After we passed that, I got out our super-high-power flashlight, and I opened the window, and every time we saw any kind of sign, I held my arm out the window to illuminate it with the flashlight. And so we proceeded until, Eureka! The sign for Cascade Campground, and the turnoff. Then it was a relatively simple matter to make our way through the campground loop until we came to site 8, which Ben had reserved for us, and there he was, waving. So Joe got out and guided me while I backed in. And miraculously, it was flat!

It was 9:00 and pitch black in the campground, but Ben had the coals of a good fire going, so we sat and talked to him and Miriam (and Judah-bear, who is 14 months old and was wide awake). Joe soon went to lie down, and I sat with them just a little longer before realizing that this long day and all the adrenaline rushing during the couple of hours we drove over Independence Pass had really exhausted me as well. So we said goodnight, and I stumbled across to our campsite. Joe made us some scrambled eggs (we still hadn’t eaten) and then we passed out in bed.

Joe was FANTASTIC driving over that pass. He didn’t seem at all nervous, and he was in total control of the RV the entire time. I, on the other hand, apparently do not respond well to 1) heights; 2) lack of oxygen; 3) lack of knowledge of where I am going. I was a genuine wreck. According to Ben and Miriam, we have now negotiated the two “worst” (i.e. highest and scariest) roads in Colorado-- Independence Pass, and Route 550 from Durango to Ouray, which we did in 2015. But with the latter, we KNEW what we were getting into, and it was broad daylight. Today’s adventure was a total surprise, and turns out, I don’t do very well with those! But Joe was completely unfazed. So now we know whose nerves are better!