Cruising Past Seventy: The Inner Journeys: December 2012

Sunday, December 30, 2012

OLA: Looking for a Base in Arizona, Yuma and Los Algodones, Mexico

my new favorite, winner at the RV Christmas Decor Contest in Yuma Lakes
“For last year’s words belong to last year’s language and next year’s words await another voice.” T.S. Eliot is one of my favorite writers. And these words for a New Year sound good to me. Although we were still looking at a base in Arizona, this time in Yuma where we spent Christmas, we have cancelled the trip to Bullhead City in northwestern Arizona, very near Las Vegas, Nevada. We have decided to go west on to San Diego to spend New Year’s Eve there, the West Coast now front and center in our travel plans for 2013 because we have to be in Seattle in February for our annual reunion and later in Calgary, in time for the birth of my 5th (and our 10th) grandchild in July!

acres upon acres of cabbages...with farmers at work
Yuma has a population of 100,000 which increases to 200,000 at winter time due to the influx of snow birders, those from up north who look for warmer climes when white fluff falls on their homes. The valley is a big agricultural area with acres upon acres of cauliflower, lettuce, and green and purple cabbages.  Downtown is just like any other city with the chain stores in malls, theaters, restaurants, fast food outlets, and, of course, Walmarts! There were so many rows of RV Resorts filled with amenities and activities each trying to get a fair chunk of the snow birding market. Country Roads and West Wind RV and Golf Resort are like those we liked in Tucson and Phoenix, and cheaper!

pretty coy about his gifts...this Bill!
On Christmas Eve Bill grilled New York strip steaks for dinner while I made mashed potatoes and steamed veggies. Then we went to mass at 9 PM and ended the night with chocolate cake and cocoa and the ‘opening’ of our gifts. Some of mine had been opened since they were combination birthday and Christmas gifts. Some will still be brought to us in February from England (where they were bought) to our Seattle Reunion). And my other gift from Bill will also be delivered to me in Seattle due to the vendor’s shipping delay. Three gift cards came to us through the mail. So the only gifts that were opened that night were a pair of Club Room bedroom slippers and a monogrammed mug.

The church was bedecked with poinsettias, reminded me of the all-poinsettia Christmas tree in Tucson!
Christmas Morning was when we opened ou
Bill busy with getting Christmas lunch started
r stocking stuffers, a tradition Bill and I started in 2007, our first Christmas together. The folks of the Yuma Lakes campground where we were staying provided us with baked ham, twice-baked potatoes, carrot cake and drinks and all we had to do was to bring sides for Christmas Day Lunch. Bill made candied yams while I made fruit salad. Our table had green beans casserole, cranberry salad, some green salad, cut up veggies, and rolls and butter. So Christmas Day lunch was sumptuous BUT we didn’t win any of the raffle prizes, not even the best decorated RV! Christmas Night we went to see the fascinating movie, Lincoln! And, having had such a big Christmas lunch, we simply had popcorn and Dr. Pepper for dinner!  
  
Bill just walking into the 'porous border'
a block of clinics and vendors
But the best part of Yuma is that it is only 8 miles from the border of Mexico. Since our campground is only 9 miles from the center of Yuma, Mexico was really just 25 minutes from where our RV was parked! We literally walked on foot to the town of Los Algodones, after parking our Saturn at a parking lot near the Port of Entry. The town is mainly four whole blocks of dental, optical and medical clinics, pharmacies, and liquor stores Yuma snow birders fill their needs for a song! I should have had my overhauling done there!
The sidewalks and plaza were filled with vendors of Mexican goods that are ‘almost free’! That’s what every hawker says when you stop even for just a second to look! But you have to be a good negotiator. When we walked to the Port of Entry of Andrade, we were asked what we were bringing into the US. We said: two sterling silver necklace/bracelet sets, three sterling silver Omega fashion necklaces, three sterling silver earrings, three big stylish heavy ponchos, one Don Julio tequila bottle, and two pouches of authentic Mexican flour tortillas. All those for only $200!

colorful place to eat!
colorgul plate of carne asada tampiquena (plus Mexican beer!)
The best part of Los Algodones was the food! Bill thoroughly enjoyed our Mexican lunch of carne asada tampiquena which is a lunch combo of chili relleno, cheese enchilada, steak, and beans, making a very colorful plate. If only it were less spicy, I might have enjoyed it better! For an early dinner we had chicken fajitas and margaritas at the Paraiso. It was like a big fiesta! There were Mariachis playing ‘cowboy’ and Mexican songs. So we danced rock and roll and cha-cha and everything in between! We should have bought those T shirts a group had on, rolling with fun and laughter, printed with the words ‘We partied in Los Algodones’!

dancing at Paraiso
Bill, carrying our stash, and wanting to bring home the giant Tequila!
But I do not really see myself being happy in Yuma and Los Algodones for long. It is too small a metropolis for a big-city girl like me. Options will get fewer as weeks roll by. In fact, we were supposed to stay for 2 weeks! Instead we cut our stay to just 5 days, with a day in Mexico to boot, and cancelled the northern route to Bullhead City, Arizona. So the words of this post, like the rest of 2012’s, belongs to last year’s language of the East Coast and the Midwest and the next ones starting on January 7 will be words of another voice! San Diego, the West Coast, Seattle, and Calgary, here we come!


Bill lining up at the Port of Entry of Andrade, and walk to the parking lot after clearance 

Monday, December 24, 2012

OLA: Looking for a Base in Arizona: Phoenix

Christmas was merrier with the visit of Ales and Ling of Phoenix, Arizona!

Superstition Mountain and Bill and Carol + the Saguaro
Phoenix is the fifth largest city with a population of 1.6M, following Houston, Chicago, LA, and New York (in the reverse order)!  Because of relatively warm and sunny winters, its suburbs abound with good RV Parks. We particularly like the Viewpoint Ridge RV Resort that surrounds a 9-hole executive course plus adjoins an 18-hole golf course. It also boasts of 6 tennis courts, a ball field, a bar/grille and many other amenities for its 1,900 sites! It certainly competes with Voyager RV Resort in Tucson which has a grocery, massage parlor, two restaurants, plus many other amenities for its 1,500 sites! But, we have to wait for what we may find in Yuma and San Diego though before we make a decision!


Canyon Lake on the Apache Trail
Elvis Chapel at the foreground with Superstition Mountain at the back
I was actually surprised to find Phoenix a pretty city. Superstition Mountain on the Apache Trail hovered around us at the Golden Sun RV Resort. It is in Apache Junction, a Phoenix burb, where we stayed as part of our Thousand Trails Network. On the Apache Trail we found unusually scenic sites, even an Elvis Chapel at the Superstition Visitor Center and Museum. The chapel was blasted in one of the movies he made but restored for tourism. Then three lakes surround the Trail although we were only able to go to the first one, Canyon Lake. And part of the magic is the Goldfield Ghost Town where they reenact a 'gunfight' every day! 

Carol's looks probably knocked them dead!
Carol resting at the Hole in the Rock
The unique Desert Botanical Garden offered unusual greenery that has adapted to an otherwise arid land. The Hole in the Rock nearby was a special place for Bill and me. It was as nice to look up to the blue sky in the Hole or to peer down from the hole to the valley below after a little hike! From there we had great views of the Hunt’s Tomb, using our higher-powered lens. Then Dobbins’ Lookout in South Mountain offered a stunning aerial view of the city.

Bill and Carol at Dobbins' Lookout, with a view of the city
Pueblo Grande Ruins right in the heart of Phoenix
The cityscape of tall buildings was clustered in a small area because the city is widely spread out…there is just that much desert land! And right in the middle is Pueblo Grande, the Hohokam Ruins that thrived from 900 BC to 1450 AD much like Chaco Canyon or Taos Pueblo in New Mexico (please see http://rvcruisinglifestyle.blogspot.com/2012/11/ola-discovering-enchanted-places-and.html) and Wupatki in Flagstaff, Arizona (please see http://rvcruisinglifestyle.blogspot.com/2012/12/ola-looking-for-base-in-arizona.html).  Except for Taos Pueblo which is still living, archaeologists still debate why all of them vanished at around the 1400s. But the Spanish influence remains strong. The St. Mary’s Basilica is impressive especially with the special tribute to Mother Teresa.

St.Mary's Basilica in dowtpwn Phoenix
Tovrea Castle
Many unique architectural sites are also around Phoenix. The Tovrea Castle looks like a huge wedding cake and the waiting line is already up to April! The Mystery Castle is a Dad’s interpretation of his daughter’s fantasy! The Wrigley Mansion is part of the legacy of the chewing gum magnate. And Taliesin West is the companion masterpiece of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin East in Wisconsin (please see http://rvcruisinglifestyle.blogspot.com/2011/07/peeling-intriguing-layers-of-wisconsin.html ). Then, when we were atop the Hole in the Rock, we saw this glistening white pyramid atop the other Rock across the one with the Hole. We found out later that it is Hunt’s Tomb is where the very first governor of the state of Arizona is laid to rest in 1934 after a record seven terms. Both Rocks are actually part of Papago Park.

Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin West
Hunt's Tomb
But the best part of our stay in Phoenix was the visit of Alex and Ling of Gilbert, Arizona, another burb in the city SMSA. Alex is the Global IT go-to person for Amkor Industries, one of the semiconductor companies that have a plant in the Philippines plus many others in Asia and here in North America. I was glad they were in for Indian food because I prepared one of Bill’s favorites, slow-cooked chicken tikka tandoori served with three kinds of naan. Ling who worked previously at BPI in the Philippines brought me lengua de gato, a favorite Filipino sweet cookie! And Alex brought special red wine for Bill! It was a night of chatter and banter, a trek down a Filipino memory lane. If we choose Phoenix, they will certainly be constant companions for Alex and Bill shared a liking for some guy things!

even the Christmas tree is uniquely un-red!
I can’t wait to complete this search for a base! Phoenix stays up there with Tucson for now!  Yuma and San Diego, here we come!

Monday, December 17, 2012

WOW: Utilizing Technology on the Go

showing off my Samsung Galaxy Note II from Bill and my Samsung GalaxyTab 2 from Trish and Deejay
Technology is the sum total of state-of-the-art means (specific methods, materials, and devices) used to solve todays practical problems.  Todays means include hardware, software, etc.  The practical problems of cruising in an RV are 1) staying in contact with distant family and friends, 2) reducing load on the RV to minimize fuel expense, 3) getting around new destinations through unfamiliar roads, 4) documenting the enjoyment of new places, activities, and friends, and 5) being prepared for all kinds of conditions (no power, getting stranded, etc.). For you, we scan below the general purpose gadgets and the special RV technologies we are using on the go!

General Purpose Gadgets
the roof contains the dome for the dish satellite
as well as for vents, heat strip, and a/c units plus antenna

Black Fridays (which is always near my birthday) have always been opportunities to upgrade our gadgets. In 2010 Bill gave me with a high power, lightweight (3 lbs) 13-inch Toshiba Protégé laptop. In 2011 I gave him a 5-inch and lifetime map update Garmin GPS.  He gave me a new combination microwave/oven/crisper and a Samsung Galaxy Nexus, a smartphone with mobile Hotspot.  And we gave ourselves the connection for our DirectTV satellite In-Motion dish. This  year Bill got me a Samsung Galaxy Note 2 which is a 5.5 inch smartphone (and he gets the Nexus) and Trish, my eldest daughter and her husband Deejay got me a Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 for my birthday/Christmas gifts (Bill gets the Protégé then!).

the Kindle!
So with all this processing power in our RV, we can do anything we want anywhere! We use the laptop and tablet for keeping and updating many digital files, banking and paying bills, writing posts and processing other stuff, emailing and  video-chatting with family (April in the UK and Claudine and family in Calgary and all the kids and grandkids all over  the USA). The Kindle now holds about 50 odd books and mags for Bill and me. And our smartphones, besides being our          phones, now have Mobile Hotspots, replacing the MIFI (Verizon broadband), become our PDAs (personal digital assistant), and serve as back-up cameras when we forget to bring the bulky Nikkon DSLR! 

Wide Screen Garmin GPS
The GPS has the widest screen available (although there is a wider screen, special RV GPS model which we thought was  too spendy) in the market and now includes real time traffic information. Together with the smartphones, we always have a guide to the next campground, the next tourist spot, the nearest Costco, the nearest  Redbox,  the type of food we crave for the moment, the local attraction we do not want to miss, the nearest gas station, the closest dump station, and other necessities of being so new in and around places all the time!

Nikon DSLR D5000 
Bill's Dashboard
The DSLR camera has been great for taking superb shots of outstanding scenery. We have 2 lenses to take care of most distances (like capturing a bear in action from a safe distance), action shots (like me singing in a karaoke session),  and other changing requirements. The DSLR gives us greater control and better pictures than a point-and-click camera. It allows for higher resolutions for higher quality pictures. Editing the photos for posting to this blog is an enjoyable and hugely rewarding task especially after you see the results. We now have about 30,000 photos in all our external drives combined, exceeding a terrabyte in capacity.

Ziller Karaoke System
And I havent even talked about our thousands of songs on our 2 iPods and our Asian Karaoke system (gifts to each other from early times)!

                                       RV Technology Gizmos
Bill's main control system or tanks, batteries, propane, water

Our home on wheels also requires lots of special technology! We utilize systems that are mostly satellite-based so that things can still be operable wherever we may end up. There are also usually different kinds of systems available for different kinds of situations. And the devices are usually more compact than those we use in regular homes.

refrigerator controls that now shows electric power use
combo washer/dryer
Let us take power for instance. On the road or while dry camping (camping without hook-ups or in the boondocks), the refrigerator runs on LPG. Parked at a full-hookup campground, it draws power, like all other appliances and lights, from a 30 or 50 amp circuit (we prefer 50 because we have included everything a home needs including a washer/dryer).  While dry camping, lights are run by house batteries while the generator runs all others heavy drawers such as the furnace, air-conditioning, microwave/oven, washer/dryer, etc., including my hair dryer!.

main system under the RV for control of plumbing systems
the campground hook-ups we attach to
Plumbing is also different in an RV. We have three different tank systems.  We can hook up to city water or store it in a fresh water tank underneath the RV.  The grey water tank holds the water from the sinks, shower, and washing machine/dryer combo. The black water tank holds - you guessed it- the water from the toilet.  We have to make sure they are all drained and flushed regularly.  Most campgrounds have hookups to take care of this but when they dont or when we just use a parking lot, like at a Walmart for a night or just camp by the side of a river as we did on the road to the Arctic Circle, we have to look for public or for pay dump stations or (heaven forbid!) resort to blue boys (you dont want me to tell you about those!).

monitor for inside and outside temperature and humidity
and the white unit above right for automatic control of fans and vents
This is only our second RV (first was Star and now its MA). We have yet to install solar panels, and activate the in-motion TV so I can watch even while Bill is driving (whenever I need to watch Nadal live!). And driving a 37 foot Class A towing a compact car behind it means a total of about 52-53 feet! Backing up can be quite tricky. So there is a TV  monitor that helps Bill. And the towing system (Blue Ox is the brand we use) is readily set up in a Saturn (too bad they are out of production). We have not had an opportunity to use the short-wave radio though. There is really no end to the  technology we can benefit from.  

protector for gas leak from anywhere
microwave/browner/oven/combi cooking
After almost 4 years on the road, we have many devices we no longer can do without. We are not really early adopters but we certainly utilize technology as much as possible. In this lifestyle, technology has become our slave! So has Bill become mine because I do not know how to operate many of these gizmos!
entertainment deck

Monday, December 10, 2012

OLA: Looking for a Base in Arizona: Tucson

the city of Tucon from Sentinel Peak, at dusk

From everything we heard, city size, climate during winter months, and other criteria (please see http://rvcruisinglifestyle.blogspot.com/2012/01/wow-slowing-down-taming-our-bucket-list.html), Tucson was in fact getting to be at the top of our list. Excited, we went to inspect 6 RV Resorts and chose 3 finalists (Voyager RV Resort, Far Horizons RV Resort, and Western RV Resort) for an interim settling period called snowbirding. In the next three years we plan to keep our RV for visiting family and friends and places we want to go back to (July to September), staying in a winter haven RV resort during the cold months (October to March), and making trips to Europe and Asia (April to June). 


Tucson Mountains
Tucson (city population more than half a million, SMSA almost 1 million) is a modern metropolis already with the demographics of what the US will be in 2050 (non-Hispanic whites as minority).  Sentinel Peak is an easy to access vantage point for an aerial view of the city. Two districts of the Saguaro National Park conserve fine tracts of the Sonoran Desert, including ranges of significant hills, the Tucson Mountains in the west and the Rincon Mountains in the east. The park gets its name from the large cactus of that name which is native to the region, the largest of which grew to 75 feet tall and 10 feet wide! For American Indians it represents a man reaching out to the sky! Much like the Joshua trees of California.

the flistening Biosphere 2 
Bill at the South Lung of Biosphere 2
With the University of Arizona located in Tucson, the state now has the only Biosphere2 in the planet, designed to mimic Biosphere 1 (the earth). It is an amazing venture started in the late 1980s by the Texan billionaire Edward Bass who put in $250M to create this infrastructure with five different ecological systems: tropical rainforest, savannah, marshland, ocean, and desert. In the early 1990s, 8 Biospherians (4 women and 4 men) lived there for 2 years and learned much about human ecology. The University of Arizona has recently expanded it to include LEO (Landscape Evolution Observatory). The main thrust today is to study the conservation of water on earth, one of the key ingredients to life.

LEO: Landscape Evolution Laboratory
Mission San Javier del Bac
The influence of the Spanish and American Indians is very evident in many places in Tucson. The Mission San Javier del Bac is a beautiful white adobe church, one of two notable churches in honor of St. Francis Xavier. It was founded in 1692 and internationally recognized as the finest example of Spanish Colonial architecture in the United States, much evident in the rough but gilded altars and saints. We heard mass there on his Feast Day, Dec. 2 and witnessed men happily lighting ground fireworks, like when it’s New Year in Manila. And what a delicious lunch we had that day, with all the Mexican/Indian tiendas selling hot local frybread with carne de seca!

the Mission at Tucumcari
Chapel de San Pedro
Other fine churches are the Cathedral of St. Augustine, completed in 1868, housing the Diocese. Another charming chapel, the Chapel of San Pedro, belonging to the Old Fort Lowell Neighborhood Association, is frequently used for weddings and belongs to the National Register of Historic Places. South of Tucson is the Tucumcari Mission built in 1691. There the trail of missions started on to California by the Spanish Anza. We also visited Barrio Historico which featured so many old colorful adobe homes with many cacti growing around their perimeters.
 
the lights were best at Elvira's
molcajete with side beans and guacamole
Tucson is also a base for some interesting towns, notably Tombstone where the Battle of the OK Corral happened and is still regularly played out every day for tourists. We visited the town three years ago enroute to Mexico, only 60 miles from Tucson (please see http://rvcruisinglifestyle.blogspot.com/2010/11/exploring-southwest-part-2.html ). We also went to Tubac, famous for its fine furniture and craft making and where thousands of lights mark its Iluminaria Night on Dec. 7 & 8 every year. At Elvira's, Mexican restaurant since 1927 we had molcajete with flank steak and cactus that kept on boiling in a volcanic bowl until we finished it! It tasted MUCH better than it looked! Bisbee, the setting of several mystery novels Bill has read was a real magnet, too! 

another one of those stairs in mysterious Bisbee!
Base number two, Tucson, is definitely a contender. It is a big enough city, the winter weather is fine, there are good hospitals and educational institutions, there is LA Fitness (which has bought Ballys) where we can use our lifetime fitness membership, cheap Mexican goods are easily available, taxes are low (thus a Redbox movie rents for only $1.10 whereas other cities do so at $1.30!) But we will suspend our decision until we can finish the three other bases in Arizona -- Phoenix, Yuma, and Bullhead City, and the bases we will find in southern California next year! Home-hunting is exciting!