Road Trip

Colorado

Colorado Springs

2000 miles, 10 states, 7 full days of driving, and we’ve made it to Colorado! This move has an air of permanence about it. Props to anyone out there who is currently working from the road – we have really struggled to find steady, reliable internet.  The campgrounds all advertise free wifi, but it is almost always crap.  We have the Verizon Jetpack that gets us 3G or 4G LTE almost anywhere… but it also costs hundreds of dollars each month to get any amount of normal data usage. So, we are still working hard on the business, but are also planning on settling down a bit… and of course, we brought the kitties with us!

Camper Kitties

Toulouse Camper

We picked up the camper from storage in Crestview, FL, and set out on a Thursday with the intention of getting to Colorado Springs within 2 weeks. The first night was a quick trip down the road. The second night we went another couple hours, and made it into Mississippi. We quickly realized that this constant driving and moving each day was going to get old really fast – so we decided to quicken the pace.

Last Florida Campground

Sweet Home AL

Mobile Tunnel

Truckin

We made it off the crowded I-10, and almost all the way up to Shreveport, LA by day 3. So far, the Jeep has handled the camper pretty well. On the interstate, it cruises nicely with the overdrive off between 60 – 65mph. Anything faster than that, the thing tends to move around back there a little too much for comfort. Anything slower would be a bit of a hazard with fast moving traffic. I have also started to notice a shimmy when I apply the brakes – this happens whether we have the camper in tow or not. I just paid a shop a bunch of money to replace the pads and rotors on the Jeep. Chalk that up to one more time a car place has totally failed to do the job!

Day 4, we entered the massive bit of land known as Texas. The weather app said “a light rain barely enough to wet the pavement.” Of course, the reality was a torrential downpour. The initial plan was to stay on the interstate through Dallas, but when the weather turned nasty we changed our minds. Something about having a 4,500lb box swinging around behind, while semi after semi goes trundling by with blinding water and shifting winds made me a bit nervous. We got off the big road and took local highways north of the city.

Small Town Texas

Eagles are number 1

We saw a bunch of nice little north Texas towns, and stopped at the Bonham state recreation area the first night. We made it almost to Amarillo the next day, and spent the night at the Old Towne Cotton Gin RV Park – super cute and clean!

Old Towne Cotton Gin

North Texas Plains

Sweet Old Rig

Day 6 had us cross into the northeast corner of New Mexico. Turns out they have a pretty sweet extinct volcano up in those parts – cool!

The High Prairie

Still Going

Sierra Volcano

NorthEast NM

We could definitely feel the gain in elevation, and I think the Jeep was feeling it too. I got back on the interstate at Raton, NM. The road immediately climbed up a mountain. We barely made it up to the top – I kept the pressure on the engine just below the point where it would over-rev. Our speed slowed to about 40mph, but we eventually made it up. There was no relief at the top though, because now we had to make it back down the other side. The grade was steep, I probably should have put it in 2nd gear, but by then I was going too fast. The road curved and steepened. I started to apply the brakes, but that pesky shimmy started up hard – The steering wheel started shaking violently, the car was not really slowing down at all, the road kept sinking and curving. I’ve driven through a blizzard in Minnesota, a tornado in Iowa, and the worst Chicago traffic has to offer… but I think this was closest I’ve come to dying (well there was that one time the door flew open in little Cessna my dad was flying, and the only thing holding me in the plane was the little strap of seat belt… but mom doesn’t need to know about that). After another couple minutes of white knuckle racing down the mountainside, the road leveled out. We made it down, but honestly are lucky no one was in front of us, and nothing disastrous happened. I will not be taking this thing up any more mountains any time soon!

The Mountains

Colorado Springs

So after a week of hard driving we made it to the Springs. I parked the car to check in at the RV park, and the poor thing wouldn’t start back up. It knew we had made it out Colorado-way, and it was done. I waited a bit, and finally got it going again, but we’re done with the long trips for a while. Now we can sit back and enjoy these lovely mountain views!

Mountain Views

VW

Sold the Bus

Bus_Front

I started this blog a couple years ago when I bought an old VW bus.  I started out clueless, and bumbling around trying to get the thing to work – after two years – I’ve had a lot of fun with it, and have learned a bunch.  I’m still pretty clueless, but owning this bus has certainly impacted my life in a lot of really positive ways!

We’re changing our plans with the camper, and starting to look for a more permanent base for our rambling ways.  To help with that, I’ve been closing up some loose ends – the bus is definitely one of those ends.

Bus_Pass Side

 

Bus_Drive Side

Bus Side

I took about a week to clean up and beautify the bus.  I painted and assembled the front and rear bumpers.  Earlier, I bought the front bumper accessories and entire rear bumper assembly from Wolfsburg West, and was pretty happy with how they came together.  It took some creative ratcheting with a strap to get the things to fit properly onto the bus, but I think they look really good.

I also did a little tuning to get the engine running decently again, and then, posted the ad.  Within 5 minutes I had a call. After about an hour and a half, and a multitude of calls and emails, I had the thing sold – to the guy who called first no less!

He came to pick it up, and away went the bus.  Two good years of trial and error, fun times, and a few doses of stress and worry. I never thought I would be someone who would enjoy something like an old air-cooled VW, but now I’m not sure I want to be someone who doesn’t own at least a couple.  I’ll have to make do with an old camper right now, but who knows, I could see a nice shiny Bug in my future!

There she goes

We’re getting back on the road soon – headed west for some new adventures.

Florida, Road Trip

Happy Thanksgiving!

Rainy Days

Happy Thanksgiving! This is our first holiday away from both sets of families. While they know we love them, I can’t say we haven’t had a great Thanksgiving in Florida!

Earlier in the week, a big cold front came through, and the weather gods decided it would be a good idea to test my feeble waterproofing attempts. It rained hard for over 24 hours. A few hours in, I checked the weather – it said weather advisory – yep, it said flood watch – yep, it said lots of rain – yep, it said “Heaviest accumulations north of the I-4 corridor – yep, I looked outside – yep, we were in for a monsoon! My silicon-caulking job held at first, but eventually water started seeping in around the side window and the top of the front windows. The only other leak we detected was from part of the roof vent. Noelle rigged a nice little water catcher for that – she’s so smart!

A little leak

I got bored and decided to fix the oven vent fan. It would vibrate, and make a real racket when running. I pulled the fan part off, tightened the support bolts, cleaned everything, and reassembled. Now we have a whisper quiet oven vent fan – sweet! I wish all projects were like that.

Vent Fan Fixin

After the rain died down, the weather turned nice and pleasant. We’ve been able to get a decent amount of work time in. We also hit up this awesome used bookstore. An entire room full of romance novels kept Noelle pretty busy – and they had the good vintage stuff, none of this new age “everyone loves each other” junk!

Sweet Bookstore

We missed our families for the holiday, but we are still having way too much fun in the sun to go back now!

Florida Living

North Carolina, Road Trip, VW

Camper Regroup

Camper regroup

Our camper shakedown cruise is officially over!  We completed our round-about circle through the backwoods of North and South Carolina, and headed back to do a little house sitting for the in-laws.

It was certainly nice to have a stationary roof over our heads for a little while, but I’m also really happy with how our first bit of camping experience went.  All the systems seem to be functioning properly on this thing; we didn’t really have any major mechanical troubles – sweet!

It was fun to do some catching up with the kitties – we’re very thankful that Norm and Carla are taking care of them while we are on the road!

Kitty!

We also got to do some catching up with the bus.  You know… that stupid rotting VW bus that started us on this whole wingdinger of a trip!

Bus is back

I mentioned that I had decided to “outsource” the bus work to a shop in Charlotte before we left for Amsterdam.  Unfortunately, they didn’t actually have the capacity to do anything either, so the bus just sat outside for a couple months.  I would rant more about car shops and how worthless each and every one of them is, but it’s just not really worth it.

The drive back from the shop went really well – the bus fired right up!  I almost took a wrong turn down the on-ramp to I-85 which was fun, it was really cold with no windows, but the thing drove beautifully.  We made it an hour or so up the road, and it’s now tucked away nicely in the garage – success! (kind of).

I’ve got a camper project list a mile long, but at this point nothing is critical.  We’re planning on heading south next – hopefully we’ll find a beach soon!

Headed South

North Carolina

Our Next Project

Beautiful View

We’re back in the good old US of A! We had a great time living and working in Amsterdam for the last 2 months, and are now back in North Carolina ready to keep living it up.

Our original plan when I quit my job back in May was to spend the summer getting the bus ready for a long road-trip.  By August, it was clear that the project was going to take a lot more work (and welding equipment) than I was willing to invest.  So we decided to outsource the thing to a local VW shop, and see what they could get done. Well… it turns out my luck with find an efficient and timely VW place has not improved at all since the Illinois days!  The bus has sat outside for 2 months with nothing done.  At this point, I know I don’t want to do all of the heavy lifting myself, and it seems like I can’t even pay someone else to do it either – so we’re moving to plan B.

What is plan B you ask?  Such a great question!  While the details are still being fleshed out, it might involve something along the lines of a cute vintage pull-behind camper, and a fully functioning (already paid for) Jeep Liberty on a road trip around the US and Canada.  If we can get this plan off the ground, good times will be had by all!

To get a feel for things to come, Norm and Carla took us up to the Blue Ridge Parkway for a little side trip.  The leaves are just turning, and the scenery up there is truly breathtaking.  Something about a belly full of Chik-fil-a seems to make those vibrant fall colors look even more awesome!

Blue Ridge Pkwy

Grandfather Mountain

Climbing in flipflops

The Fog

Awesome

We’re also back in the market for some sweet antique camping gear.  I’m always looking for a good deal and good find.

Gibson Mill

Yes. BBQ. Mmmm Yes.

Troutman's BBQ

A little fun at Bass Pro!

Good shot

The first part of plan B is to get Noelle’s Jeep cleaned up and trailer ready.  The U-haul hitch electrical connector that we’ve had trouble with in the past finally gave out when we were towing the bus to NC.  We got them to look at it, and it turns out that a wire was installed incorrectly. This had caused a short that fried the electronic tow module.  Sparks flying inside concealed compartments of the car – not cool!  Luckily for us, nothing really bad had happened, and they replaced it all under warranty.

Next, we tackled the shabby front grill on the Liberty.  This thing is some aftermarket addition that is falling apart.  A little googling told me we could pop the entire front piece off very easily, and we quickly found out that this plastic chrome-ish nightmare is just clipped on.  Pulled it off, cleaned the underlying grill, re-installed.  In about 30 minutes it feels like we have a brand new looking car – success!

Nasty old thing

Much better!

We’ve also decided to plan on spending a big chunk of our time in Florida – warm weather, sandy beaches, no state income tax, and we’ve got family there on my dad’s side – I’m sold!  We will drive down to get everything set up when we eventually find a camper.