Living full time in our motor home allows us to be Ready To Go. . .on to the next adventure!

Golden Gate Bridge - San Francisco Skyline as seen from the Marin Headlands - California

Monday, February 6, 2012

Evans Escapades–Low Water Crossings

 

Low Water Crossing

As we drove across the bridge into the Colorado River Preserve RV Park,

a part of the Thousand Trails Membership System, in Columbus TX a couple of weeks ago,

I commented to David, “well, I’ll bet this is  a low water crossing.” 

Having had one of these on a mail route I delivered,

I recognized that low dip in the road, with the little creek trickling under it. . .

Colorado River Preserve Low Water crossing was impassable for at least two hours - five inches of rain in two hours time

Lo and behold, the following Wednesday,

as we thought we were leaving the park, this was the scene.. .

Colorado River Preserve Low Water crossing was impassable for at least two hours - five inches of rain in two hours time

After five inches of rain in two hours. . .and a huge tree from upstream blocking the culverts. . .

no one was leaving the park anytime soon. . .

it looks good here, it was almost to the top of the railing when we first arrived. 

At that point, we wouldn’t even consider taking our big truck across, much less a regular sized vehicle.

I told one guy, (on FaceBook,) who said we could go swimming. . .no way, that looks like class five rapids!

Colorado River Preserve Flooding - Columbus TX - 01282012 - low level crossing into the park itself was at least two feet deep. . .we were trapped in the park for at least two hours

Once the rain stopped,

the guys at the park got out the trusty John Deere,

to move the tree, and debris, and had us out of there in short order!  Good job guys. . .

Columbus River Preserve - Columbus TX - Feb 2012 - Red Tailed Hawk - Peterson Field Guide to Birds of North America - page 121

Our resident Red Tailed Hawk that we’ve been watching,

caught itself a squirrel when it made the mistake of running on the ground from one tree to the other. 

I had the camera out, trying to get a shot of it in flight,

when all of this took place.  I was thrilled to get such an awesome pic!

 

Now that we’ve decided to keep the fifth wheel rather than purchasing a motor home,

we’ve gotten started with the repairs it is going to need. . .

Slide Troubles - this is what Dave had to do to get the slide in - crank it in like a Model A Ford!

Our big living room slide has always needed an assist.

It’s almost like they didn’t put in a quite big enough motor for all that weight. 

It used to be that Dave could just go out, and give it a push as I was pushing the button inside. . .

but a couple of trips ago, it started making a horrible sound,

like gears grinding, or some such nonsense. . .so here is Dave with the crank bar. 

It’s like starting a Model A. . .he cranks away, I push the button and pray. . .

 

however, this is not even the worst of it. 

 

The kitchen slide opposite this one, has been hanging up in one corner. . .

but with a little assist from the trusty crank, would always just come right in. 

We’ve known it was somehow out of balance. . .

but after trips to three shops where they told us they just couldn’t see any problem. . .

that it was on all it’s rails. . .nothing was out of place. . .

we just accepted using the crank as part of our normal breakdown routine. 

 

Well, ladies and gentlemen. . .after putting it in the shop this week, we find out that, yes, it is on it’s rails. . .

however, one of the rails has come loose from the frame,

and in order to do the repair, they will need to completely remove the slide from the coach. . .oh Lord!

 

Not only will they remove the slide, they will remove both refrigerators from the slide,

before it is removed. . .so, we emptied out both the fridges. . .

I’m much, much too cheap to let all that stuff go to waste. . .

Super 8 Motel refrigerator

Thankfully, I had been holding off on grocery shopping until we got to San Antonio. . .

so this stuff managed to fit into the hotel fridge. . .

I know, I know. . .we could have came and stayed with you. . .

there were any number of friends and family who would have been more than happy to have put us up. . .

but. . .we are soooo independent. . .we keep weird hours. . .yada, yada, yada. 

A hotel room was so reasonable, and we were able to be right around the corner from the shop. 

That way, Mr. Dave pops in every day to check on progress!

 

AND. . .prayers going up, fingers crossed. . .

upon closer inspection, our service advisor says,

now they think they can make the repair WITHOUT removing the slide. . .

that sounds like really, really good news to me.

 

Keep us in your prayers that everything will go smoothly,

and we will be back on track in short order. 

Regardless of the cost, having the repairs done

is still way, way cheaper than a motor home payment. . .

well, at least that’s what I’m telling myself. . .

Safe travels,

Janice

4 comments:

  1. Indeed, one of the joys (and perhaps necessities) of full-timing is having a flexible schedule and being able to go with the flow of Mother Nature's whims. In a little under two years on the road, we have experienced blizzards in Illinois, evacuating our site here in NJ twice due to river flooding and a mixture of things between those two. It is a terrific lifestyle, though, and we're having a ball!

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  2. Wow Betty. . .you guys have had a lot more close calls with nature than we have. . .so, do you have a weather radio onboard? We have talked about purchasing a NOAA radio a million times. . .and still haven't done so.

    I know everyone speaks of watching the local channels. ..but since we are on DirecTV. . .we just get the New York feeds, and rarely have access to local stations. . .really need to follow through on the radio thing. Tornadoes are what is prevalant here in Texas. . .especially in the spring, when the Gulf starts warming up.

    So great to hear from you. . .keep on enjoying the journey. . .and safe travels to you!

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  3. We had a similar incident happen to us in Missiouri last spring. We barely got out of the campground in time. Whew! Glad the campground was able to assist in your departure.

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  4. ahhh. . .well, the campground itself is actually quite a ways from the low water crossing. . .so none of the rigs were in any danger. . .and we were just doing a day trip, so Dave could teach a class across town. . .but there were a couple of folks who had planned to depart. . .and since this is the only way in and out. . .they were somewhat inconvenienced for several hours. . .however, better safe than sorry.

    Only one time. . .near Austin, was I genuinely concerned enough to ask where the nearest safe place was in case of tornadoes. . .but we did have friends who barely escaped a rising river. . .very scary!

    Glad you guys were able to depart safely. . .that would not have been a good beginning to your full timing adventure. . .isn't this a great life?

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