Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Read this First—Then Everything Else Will Make Sense...


Greetings!
This is my most recent attempt at a blog. It's not a personal journal where I share my feelings or a daily thing—there are lots of days I don't do anything plus I may not have enough feelings that day to share. Go get your own.

I will add some things here when something is worth saying. I won't promise daily but do promise often. I trade e-mails with several RVers that want to know what I am doing and what's going on so I will try to address that and more.

Mixing in some serious and useful RV information, at the conclusion of each blog, I will add a brief section entitled, "Thinking About RVing…" where I will also suggest RV tips, tricks, and suggestions to make your RVing life easier, cleaner, more efficient, safer, and more fun without spending extra money. I don't do gadgets so don't depend on me to promote what I consider to be useless trinkets and a waste of money. If my tips help you, great. If not, check back for the next one.

I'd appreciate it if you would tell your friends about the blog.

Send me a comment. Let me know I'm getting through to someone.

A Quickie Blog History...
I've been screwing around with this blog, off and on, since 2005. I used to use this blog as a test for articles and a travelogue back when I was writing for the magazines. I would rough out an article and photos on the blog before I polished it. I also used it to rough out sections of my books.

I have written for all the major RV magazines including Motorhome, Highways, FMCA, Escapees, and was a columnist for Coast to Coast RV magazine for a few years. The Good Sam website used my Tips on their website plus articles in their RV Community and CyberSam newsletter. The magazines lost a lot of ad revenue during the recession and had to cut back, so an article might sit in their files for several months. So, I quit submitting stuff to them a couple of years ago. We all parted on good terms.

I enjoy the writing. It's fun. I don't do this for a living.

Enjoy the trip. Be safe.

Ron Jones
ron@aboutrving.com
aboutrving.com

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Wednesday, November 02, 2011

Back in Texas

We are back in Texas (near Denton) to take care of several things. We need some maintenance on the coach. We need to get some medical and dental stuff done. We need to visit the daughter, three grown grandkids (and respective spouses), and three little great-grandkids (at 5 years, almost 3 years, and 4 months old). This is really early for us to arrive here. We usually get here around Thanksgiving and stay through Christmas.




Thinking About RVing…
Maintenance #1
Our first maintenance was handled by MCD in McKinney. We use their indoor sunshades on side windows and have a single, powered, privacy shade on the inside of our windshield. The powered shade totally stopped working when we were in Ruidoso, NM and we literally had to manually roll it up and Velcro it in the stored position in order to see to drive. This worked just fine but then we didn't have any front privacy screen. I called their tech support and was guided to check for a fuse but could not find one. So, we had to get to McKinney—luckily, close to Denton.

That is their production facility so they have everything there. We had made an appointment. They determined that there was an electrical short resulting from two bare wires occasionally touching (nothing dangerous here but just a functioning problem).

What made it almost funny was that when we pulled in and the tech finally came out. The first thing he did was to try the switch. It worked just fine! We had tried it many times over many days with no luck. Oh, well, they checked it thoroughly, fixed the wiring, tested it, reinstalled, and off we went to our campground in Lincoln Park.

Maintenance #2
I found a new RV service facility (new to me) in Lewisville, TX. Called the National Indoor RV Center it is a combination storage, detailing (wash/wax), and service facility. The place was spotless, people seemed really on the ball, we stayed one night (plugged into 50 amp only), and they tackled our coach in the morning. We had a problem with our air levelers (we don't have jacks). Something seemed to be leaking. Luckily, they did not find a leak and a total reset of the system (an easy fix) did the job. I was told by their general manager that they had the "best of the best" of the techs from the closing of the Buddy Gregg Dealership (also here in Lewisville last year). Everything was great except their labor rate. It was $120.00 per hour. That's on the high side of what I have been paying nationwide.

(By the way, the lowest I have paid is $68.00 per hour at All 4 One Service in Elkhart, IN. This business is owned by two former Monaco techs and they do excellent work. I've been there every year.)
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Tuesday, November 01, 2011

A Visit to OKC

We have been hanging around the north Dallas area as I said in my last post, getting our annual medical and dental stuff done and visiting with family. We are the type of fulltimer that needs to meander. It is difficult for us to set in one place for very long. For us, a week is "very long!"

So we decided to visit Oklahoma City and be our normal "touristy" self, play a bit, see the city, eat some good food, and have a good time. Hey, it's what we do. We left Texas and came up to OKC planning to spend 4-5-6 days but with no agenda—we are not big on agendas.

I am retired military and, therefore, have the ID card privileges. One of those privileges is the use of the military FamCamps. These military-run RV parks, while not on every base, are scattered around nationwide. Like the private campgrounds, some are wonderful, pristine, and resort-like and others are the pits. For the most part, they are cheap. And, just like the base exchange and commissary, there are profit centers and do not use tax dollars.

We found a FamCamp on Tinker AFB in the edge of OKC and luckily, this is one that falls in the category of "wonderful, pristine, and resort-like." Plus, they have killer-speed WiFi here. Out our front window is a small lake and the sunrises are spectacular (as told to me by Sandy). Located 9 miles from the middle of OKC, we have access to everything.

It had been years since I had visited Bricktown, an entertainment district just east of downtown. Bricktown is full of shops, restaurants, pubs, and clubs, plus a baseball stadium. You can go to dinner here from cheap to expensive. We ate at the Bricktown Brewery (a local microbrewery) and another night had dinner at "Toby Keith's I Love This Bar and Grill" (yes, that is the name of the place). One night we went to the Cattleman's Restaurant (not in Bricktown but next door in Stockyards City). This restaurant is one of the oldest around, has been featured on "Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives" and serves a great steak for not much money. I recommend it. I recommend all of them.

The first thing we toured was the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum and it was very well done, quite large, and enjoyable. From the cowboys in the movies to western art (including numerous works by Remington and Russell) to rodeo fame, you can meander the halls, rooms, and galleries for several hours. We did.




















In the edge of Bricktown, we visited the American Banjo Museum. The museum contains more than 300 instruments including replicas of early banjos developed by African slaves in the Old South, Minstrel Age instruments, post WWII instruments used in bluegrass, folk, and world music, and an array of ornately decorated banjos made in America during the Jazz Age of the 1920’s and 30's. On Saturday afternoons, they offer free entertainment on the 2nd floor and you can come and go as you want. The banjo player was excellent. I don't play an instrument but have always been fascinated by the banjo. This was fun.







The 45th Infantry Division Museum was also well done. The Division was formed in 1920 and disbanded in 1969. The 45th Infantry Division served with General George S. Patton’s U.S. 7th Army during the WWII Sicilian campaign, and when the fighting was done, the commander had this to say about the division, “Your division is one of the best, if not the best division in the history of American arms.” 

 
The 45th Infantry Division was primarily in Italy, parts of France, and into Germany nearing the conclusion of the war. The 45th  was also the Division that was first into Dachau—one of the more "famous" concentration camps. 


The Museum houses a large collection of cartoons produced by Bill Mauldin, famous for his depiction of the lowly GI slogging his way through the war. His two most famous characters, Willy and Joe, were outspoken on any subject related to the war. Mauldinwas a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist from the United States.


This museum also displays one of the largest collections of memorabilia owned an used by Adolf Hitler. It was a fascinating display. The museum has a few acres of larger military equipment displayed outside ranging from helicopters to tanks to various vehicles. This was thoroughly enjoyable and free. 













The Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum was definitely on my list as I had never seen this. Like most of us, I remember that morning's news very well. On April 19, 1995, this country changed. At 9:02 AM, Oklahoma City's Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was destroyed with an explosion of an estimated 4,200 lbs. of homemade explosive. Ultimately, 168 men, women, and children were killed.

The Museum is excellent and presents this gut-wrenching story in a professional manner. One important note here… their website says that the "average visit lasts an hour and a half." That may be true but I would allow about 2.5 hours. We did not make it completely through in our two-hour effort. Do this. Take an extra handkerchief.




Thinking About RVing…
Canadians commonly use two coins that have replaced certain denominations of their paper money. The two coins are commonly called the “loonie.” and “toonie.” There is no paper money equivalent.
The $1.00 coin has a picture of a loon on it and became known as the “loonie.” The loonie is one color— brass/copper colored—sort of like our penny. The $2.00 coin was nicknamed “toonie”—short for “two loonies.” The toonie has a silver outer ring and a penny-sized brass insert in the center (the coin is two colors).
Keep the “T’s” together—Toonie and Two colors = TWO dollars—and you will keep them straight. 
If you use a laundromat in Canada, it will typically take loonies.  
Every time you hand someone a bill ($5.00 is the smallest denomination of paper money) and get change back, these coins will accumulate and they can weigh quite a bit—enough to start to pull your pants down or to make a purse very heavy. Spend them.
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