I had to do it – I had to get outta town. I could tell it was time – every time I saw
an RV on the road, I just got that itch.
It was building and building – I do believe they call it hitchitch in
inner RV circles.
Back in the old day, pre-retirement days I would live for
the weekends. Everything was planned
around the weekends because that was the only time I had available. I would join the masses trying to fit
everything I could into the few weekend days available. Nowadays I find that I still plan around the
weekends but it is different, I plan to do everything I can during the week
while the regular people are busy with their nine-to-fives.
I decided to leave Tuesday afternoon right after my weekly
riding lesson. This would work out great
because I keep the RV out at the stable where I also keep my horse. Very efficient am I. The plan was to come back on Thursday with an
option to stay over Thursday night I felt like it.
I ended up at Willow River State Park in North Hudson,
Wisconsin. Twenty minutes from the
barn. It could not get any better – hardly
any driving and I’m in a campsite. I had
stayed in this campground last year doing a trial run with the new RV – this would
be a repeat performance.
Willow River has three campgrounds. I have only stayed in the newest one where
the trees are just starting to grow. The
best campsites in this loop, the 100 Campground, are 16, 17, 18. I was in 17 this time. Electricity, all major TV stations, picnic
table, fire ring. The sites are fairly
large.
When I got there I had to go down to the 300 Campground to
the dump station there to take on some water.
If you remember, a lot of times when I would fill up with water, as soon
as I moved the rig, half of the water in my fresh water tank would siphon
out. Hilltop Trailers could not
duplicate this issue so as a consequence, it was not fixed last time I had it
in the shop. It seems to not happen if
after I fill up the tank, I open up one of the drains and let a little bit of
water out. This seems to break the
siphon factor up. Don’t know if it is an
actual fix, but water has not siphoned out since I started doing it.
Willow River is known for its waterfall. You have to go down a very steep hill into a
gorge to get to the waterfall. Last year
when I was here I discovered a trail that got me back to the campground which circumvented
the huge climb back up the hill. It went
along the river down to a lake and there were only a few brief hills to get us
back to the top. When I got down to the
waterfall, I sat on one of the benches for quite a while just listening to the
water. It was cooler in the gorge and it
was wonderful to just sit. Recharge the batteries, zone out – just be.
Miko On The Trail |
As you know, Miko is nuts about deer. During our evening walk, she spent a good
portion of the walk walking along on her hind legs, leaning against her
harness. That way she was tall enough to
look over the tall grass looking for deer.
When Miko and I were lounging around camp toward evening
fall, a vole came running across the campsite.
He headed straight for Miko, saw her and stopped and looked. Miko was just lying there watching him. Then he made a mortal mistake. Instead of heading in the opposite direction,
he headed straight at Miko. She was up
in a flash, grabbed the vole, shook him a few times and that was the end of Mr.
Vole. I felt bad for him, but I also
thought this was a true case of Darwinism in practice. How dumb can you be to stop, see a large carnivore in your path and run straight at the aforementioned carnivore.
Besides the hiking, a lot of the time was spent catching up
on some paperwork and computer tasks that I had just never gotten around to. When you are out camping, sometimes there
seems to be more time to do that kind of thing.
In-between the hiking and lounging of course.
My RV broke again – gee, isn’t that a surprise? This time I had no hot water – couldn’t
figure out how to fix it. So, when I
needed hot water, I just heated up water on the stove, just like in the olden
days. Toward the end of our stay, if I
had the water pump on, the water heater would make this constant clicking
noise. I ended up only turning on the
water pump when I needed to use water.
Otherwise I kept it off. I now
have an appointment with Hilltop July 7th for them to look at this
current issue. Sidenote: when I got back
to the barn one of the other boarders who just so happens to be a heating/air
conditioning guy showed me the reset button on the water heater. By pushing this button, I was able to get hot
water again. The water pump clicking is
still going on, but at least there is hot water.
Since this campground was only 40 minutes away from home,
Tony came to visit on Thursday morning.
We hiked, we ate lunch, we lounged.
It was one of those perfect days – warm, lovely little breeze. I decided that I really needed to stay one
more night. When I got up to the Ranger
station to pay for another night, I found that my campsite was not
available. Somebody else was moving
in. So that settled it – I was on my way
home.
I'm going to have to do more of this type of mid-week getaway camping. It certainly does recharge the soul.
I'm going to have to do more of this type of mid-week getaway camping. It certainly does recharge the soul.
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