Monthly Archives: March 2014

Tuesday Afternoon

We’re enjoying beautiful weather here in Mesa, Arizona with daytime highs around 80 degrees with 20% humidity and overnight lows in the mid-50s. Can’t beat that.

Yesterday Donna rented a car from Enterprise. Her intention was to drive to Scottsdale for an appointment with her hair stylist. When people ask Donna about finding health care or dental care on the road, she tells them it’s not an issue. Finding someone to do her hair is the challenge! Since she lived in the Phoenix area for about seven years, she has a stylist here who does a great job. In San Diego, she got hooked up with Tonia at Ts Hair of San Diego and she was very happy. So we have those two places covered. This summer, we’ll have to find someone in the northwest.

Anyway, the gal at the Enterprise car rental agency was having trouble with her printer. She was on the phone with her company’s technical support trying to print a contract for the person ahead of us. After about 30 minutes, she gave up and said she would complete the paperwork by hand. By the time she was starting Donna’s paperwork, Donna had to cancel her hair appointment because she would have been 30 minutes late.

Yesterday, we had a visitor for dinner. Stevie Ann Rinehart came to our site here at Apache Wells. She and Donna caught up with each other. We enjoyed conversation, wine and barbeque garlic shrimp for dinner.  Stevie Ann was on of the first people Donna met when she moved to Arizona in 2002. That was actually a tough year for me.

Garlic shrimp with basmati brown rice and broccoli

Garlic shrimp with basmati brown rice and broccoli

In yesterday’s post, I described the diagnosis of a secondary tumor in a lymph node on my neck. This took place at Christmastime. The day after Christmas, I had another appointment with Dr. Brown. He advised me to have someone drive me to his clinic, so I would have a ride home. He would be taking tissue samples and I would be under sedation.

He had a pretty good idea of where he would find the primary tumor. He had already examined me once before. This time he looked into my throat and told me he would be cutting some tissue to send to the lab. He said the area of soft tissue around my right tonsil had the texture of a strawberry. He said this is what throat cancer looks like.

Throat cancer. I had been under the care of an allergist for the previous two years. When Dr. Brown said throat cancer, I thought about my allergist and the treatment I was receiving. He had tested me for allergies and found I had severe reactions to tree and grass pollen. I was on a regiment of monthly allergy injections with periodic exams. This doctor was looking into  my throat on a regular basis.

About six months earlier, during an exam, he said he would prescribe a nasal spray that would relieve sinus pressure and also reduce the pain in my throat. I thought, pain in my throat? I didn’t complain about pain in my throat. Right then, an assistant opened the door to the exam room and asked the doctor if he could step out for a moment. When he returned, he gave me the prescription. I was distracted and forgot to ask him why he thought I had throat pain. I think he was looking at cancerous throat tissue and dismissed it as an allergy symptom.

Dr. Brown sliced some tissue from my throat. He said he would have the results by the following Monday, New Year’s Eve. He wanted me to come back on Monday to discuss the results. My daughter, Alana, had driven me to the appointment. On the way home, she said she didn’t want to return to Washington State University in Pullman where she was studying to be a nurse. She wanted to skip a semester and take care of me. I wouldn’t have it. I told her the best thing she could do for me was finish her schooling and go on to become a nurse, which was her dream. She accomplished this goal a few years later after transferring to the nursing program at Arizona State University. She graduated with an RN-BSN degree.

Alana graduating from ASU

Alana graduating from ASU

On New Year’s Eve, Dr. Brown confirmed that I had throat cancer. He said I needed surgery, a procedure called a radical neck dissection. During this procedure, the tumor would be surgically removed from inside my throat and the sternocleidomastoid (SCM) muscle would be removed from the right side of my neck. This is the large muscle that attaches to the inner third of the clavicle, next to your throat. The other end of the muscle attaches to the skull, behind your ear.

Then he said, “I do these surgeries on a frequent basis, but you don’t want me to do your neck dissection.” He said, “I follow the traditional technique, which cuts the tenth cranial nerve. Once that nerve is damaged, you’ll never raise your right arm above your shoulder again.” Then he explained to me that most people with this diagnosis are much older than me. Damaging their tenth cranial nerve is usually the least of their worries. He said that since I was relatively young, fit and active, he wanted to send me to see a surgeon at the University of Washington Hospital. This surgeon, Dr. Weymuller, had pioneered a new neck dissection technique that would spare the nerve. I would retain my arm function.

I sat there numbly while this information was sinking in. Dr. Brown said he would set up an appointment with Dr. Weymuller for me. He said he wanted to discuss my case with him and felt he could get me in quicker than if I tried to set the appointment myself. He said he would call me later with the appointment time.

Later, Dr. Brown’s office called me and said I had an appointment for an exam and consultation with Dr. Weymuller on Friday, January 4, 2002. I had been off work over the Christmas holiday break while all of this was going down. On January 2nd, I notified my boss of the diagnosis. I told him I would need a little time off for the surgery and recovery.

On Friday, I met Dr. Weymuller. He poked and prodded inside my mouth and throat. He palpated my neck. Then he told me that he had already reviewed my case file and lab reports. He agreed with Dr. Brown’s assessment – I needed to undergo a modified radical neck dissection. He said since I had a secondary tumor in the lymph node, we already missed the opportunity for early detection. We shouldn’t waste any more time. He told me if I agreed to have the surgery, he would schedule it at the University Hospital.

I said, “Of course,I agree to the surgery. The alternative is to die.” He said he would send a nurse in to schedule the surgery. He shook my hand and left the exam room.

The nurse came in and opened a calendar on the computer in the room. She was scrolling through days and saying how busy the schedule was. She kept scrolling, I could see she was looking at dates in March and saying things like, “Oh my, where am I going to find an opening with enough time for this? We need to block six hours.” The she said, “It looks we’ll be scheduling in early April.”

I said, “Umm…I was under the impression that Dr. Weymuller felt this was urgent. He said we shouldn’t waste any time.” She said, “Oh, let me go talk to the doctor. I’ll be back in a minute.” A few minutes later, she returned and said, “How’s next Tuesday afternoon?”

This is a long story that will require a couple of more installments. To be continued…

 

 

Power Naps

I neglected to mention Donna’s new portable computer table in yesterday’s post. She ordered  it from Bradd and Hall a few weeks ago and it arrived on Wednesday. It’s very nicely made with a dark cherry finish. And it’s height adjustable.

Donna's new height adjustable laptop table

Donna’s new height-adjustable laptop table

The top also tilts.

Tilting table top

Tilting table top

There is a compartment under the table top for storing papers or folders and a smaller compartment on the right side for supplies.

Side compartment propped open with a white rubber ball

Side compartment propped open with a white rubber ball

I ended my story yesterday with my primary care physician, Dr. Gary Schillhammer, telling me to come back in 30 days if the swollen lymph node on my neck wasn’t resolved. To be honest, I have no recollection of him telling me that. I was taking powerful anti-inflammatory and pain medication for my shoulder at the time. I remember him measuring the lymph node and saying he didn’t think it was a big deal.

When my shoulder started to improve, I started physical therapy to strengthen it. By spring, it was getting stronger and I felt pretty good.

I had highs and lows in 2001. My marriage to my ex-wife lasted 21 years, but our relationship deteriorated over the last few years of our marriage. By late spring, we decided it was time to end it. Washington  State requires a period of physical separation before you can file for divorce. I moved out of our home in Darrington and rented a small apartment in Arlington. The owner of the apartment had converted the upstairs level of his house into separate living quarters. I had my own entry, bath and two rooms. One room was the kitchen and dining areas, the other was my bedroom/living room. It wasn’t much bigger than the motorhome I live in today.

I started racing motorcycles again with the Washington Motorcycle Road Racing Association (WMRRA). Motorcycle racing is very demanding. Contrary to how it looks on TV, with the riders appearing to smoothly flow around the track, you have incredible G forces to deal with, especially under braking. In club racing, there are fast guys that aren’t in great physical condition. These guys are fast for a couple of laps, but then they fade. You have to be strong and have good endurance to consistently put in fast lap times.

I worked hard at my physical conditioning. Every day, I either ran three to five miles or I worked on strength training. I continued this all summer and into the fall. I was in great shape, I weighed 170 pounds, but one thing bothered me. Every day, after I returned home from work, I had to take a 20- or 30-minute power nap. I would be so exhausted, I couldn’t do anything without taking a nap first. I was 45 years old that fall and I thought it was just a function of growing older.

At the end of the racing season, I struck a sponsorship deal with Beaudry Motorsports of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Steve Beaudry set me up with a 2002 Suzuki GSXR 600, new and still in the shipping crate. Over the winter I planned to gain more sponsors and build it into a top-shelf 600 Supersport race bike.

I made an appointment with Dr. Schillhammer to have my annual physical exam in December. Dr. Gary Shillhammer wasn’t just my primary care physician, he was a close friend. We hiked, hunted and kayaked together. My ex-wife and his wife were good friends with each other and we had them over for dinner or joined them for dinner at their place from time to time before my divorce. My youngest daughter, Shauna, went to school with Gary’s daughter, Eliza, from kindergarten through high school graduation.

During my routine exam, Gary asked me if I was having any issues. I told him how I needed a daily nap after work. He didn’t seem too concerned about that. Then I told him I still had the lump on my neck from the swollen lymph node. He looked at my chart, then he measured the lymph node.

That’s when he lost it. He said, “I told you to come back if it wasn’t gone in 30 days! Why did you wait, why didn’t you come back? You should have told me.” He was almost shouting and was very agitated. He gathered his composure and got back into his professional role as my primary care physician. I knew then that something was very wrong. The lump had been there for more than a year at this point. Dr. Schillhammer gave me a referral to have a biopsy done.

My next appointment was with an otolaryngology (ear, nose and throat) specialist, Dr. Gary Brown in Mt Vernon, Washington. He took a sample of the lymph node tissue. He told me his wife was going through cancer treatment. He understood the anxiety of waiting for test results and said he would call as soon as he had the results.

I was riding in a car with friends when the call came on my cell phone. He told me the tissue was malignant, but there was another problem. He said it was squamous cell cancer. Squamous cell cancer doesn’t originate in your lymph system. The cancerous lymph node was a secondary site. I had a primary tumor somewhere else in my body that had spread cancer cells into my lymph system.

I thought about how slowly my broken shoulder healed. My doctors couldn’t understand it. Now it made sense, cancer was spreading through my body while I was recovering from the hunting accident.

The next step was to find the primary site. To be continued…

 

 

Free Falling

Our days are falling into a routine here at Apache Wells RV Resort. It doesn’t give me much in the way of exciting adventures to post about. There will be some good times and things worth mentioning, but I think I’ll take a different approach today. I’ll go back into my history.

Yesterday, I went to the dentist. I had a gold inlay removed and my #14 molar prepped for a crown. I had a good dental record until a few years ago. I mentioned in this post how head and neck radiation have damaged my teeth. Why did I have head and neck radiation? That’s a long story, but before I can start that story, I have to tell you this one.

In the fall of 2000, I spent many weekends driving over Stevens Pass to go bird hunting in eastern Washington. I had an excellent pointing dog. AJ was one of the best Weimaraners to ever be judged in a North American Versatile Hunting Dog (NAVHDA) meet. I started him on birds when he was a puppy and he loved to hunt. I loved to walk behind him as he would stop on point with birds frozen still in front of him.

One weekend, AJ and I drove over the pass to Swakane Canyon, north of Wenatchee, on the west side of the Columbia River. Dustin Nations, my oldest daughter Alana’s boyfriend at the time, went with me. We were going bird hunting on the steep walls of Swakane Canyon. The floor of the canyon is at an elevation of about 1,500 feet above sea level. The steep walls of the canyon quickly rise to an elevation of more than 3,000 feet.

It was a tough climb up the canyon wall, but I knew we would find California quail and chukars there. Chukars are one of my favorite birds to hunt. They live in steep, rugged terrain, usually near water, and feed on grasses. When they flush, they usually glide downhill and disappear quickly. This makes them a challenging target. They are also one of the most delicious birds on the dinner table.

On this day, a light snowfall covered the upper half of Swakane Canyon. Dustin and I parked my truck and began climbing up the south side of the canyon. About a half hour later, we were on a snow-covered trail, about a thousand feet above our parking spot. It wasn’t very cold, the snow was a little wet and the trail was slippery. We hiked past a rocky ledge. The ledge was very flat on top – the flat top jutted out from the canyon wall about 15 feet and was maybe 25 feet wide.

We continued to make our way up the steep climb. AJ was casting about ahead of us, looking for bird scent. He lost his footing and tumbled past me. He scrambled and regained traction, giving me a look that said, “What are we doing here?” He loved to hunt though and climbed above us once again, searching for birds.

After we climbed another 300 feet or so, we stopped and caught our breath on the narrow trail. These trails are carved into the canyon walls by bighorn sheep and mule deer and meander all the way up. Dustin and I debated whether we should continue upwards or call it off due to the treacherous conditions.

All of a sudden, my feet swept out from under me. I think that while I was standing on the steep incline, the snow under my boots was melting and gave way. I was sliding on my belly down the steep canyon wall. I wasn’t on a meandering trail anymore, I was sliding straight down. I clutched my prized SKB over/under shotgun in my left hand and tried to grab at scrub brush with my right hand. In some places, the canyon wall was vertical and I would be airborne as gravity propelled me toward the canyon floor.

At one point, while I was no longer in contact with terra firma, I let go of the shotgun. When I made contact with the hillside, I tried with all my strength to dig my fingers into the rocky ground and stop my descent. It was useless – all I succeeded in doing was ripping off a couple of my fingernails.

I was dropping very quickly now. I remembered the flat ledge we walked past and I thought I was directly above it. I figured I was moving way too fast to be stopped by the ledge. I thought that the ledge would only propel me away from the canyon wall like a ski jump. My thoughts were racing as I tried to think of options. I wondered if I should tuck into a ball and protect my head once I launched or should I spread eagle and try create as much wind resistance as possible as I fell the next 1,000 feet to the rocky canyon floor.

I didn’t hit the center of the ledge – my left foot caught the edge of it. This flipped me around and I was now falling head first. On the side of the rock ledge, a gnarled old juniper had grown. As I fell head first in a superman pose, my right arm was trapped between the juniper and the rock ledge.

This brought me to a sudden stop. I was dangling off the side of the ledge, 1,000 feet up the canyon wall. The sudden stop yanked my right shoulder and dislocated it. The ball on the upper end of my humerus bone was behind my shoulder, it was like my arm was coming out of my shoulder blade.

To my left, there was another rock jutting out from the canyon wall, just a few feet away. I pushed my feet against the rock ledge and jammed my back against the other rock. I was able to shimmy my way up a little bit and relieve the tension on my shoulder.

I heard Dustin scrambling down the trail towards me. I hollered, “Slow down, don’t fall. I’m okay.” Then I said, “Do you see my gun?” He appeared on the ledge above me. He  had my gun. He said, “I can’t believe you’re okay! I thought for sure you would be dead.”

I told him I wasn’t really okay, I was hurt pretty bad. He laid prostrate on the ledge and reached down to clasp my left hand. Dustin was a strong lad and he was able to pull me up onto the ledge. As I was coming onto the ledge, I felt my upper arm pop back into place. That’s when the pain started.

I was afraid to walk down the trail with my right arm hanging useless. I was afraid of falling again. I sat with my feet in front of me and scooted along on my butt all the way down. We drove for more than two hours over Stevens Pass to the hospital in Arlington. I don’t know why I told Dustin to drive home instead of going to the hospital in nearby Wenatchee. I guess I was in shock and not thinking too clearly.

The morphine they gave me in Arlington sure helped. The doctor didn’t seem too concerned about my shoulder. He was looking for internal injuries. But I kept complaining about my shoulder. When they took an X-ray, I couldn’t stand or lie flat, they shot the X-ray with me seated in a chair.

After a while, the doctor put my arm in a sling and sent me home. The next morning the hospital called and said the radiologist wanted to see me. He showed me the X-ray from the night before. It was out of focus and blurry. He said something didn’t look right, he wanted to take an MRI image of my shoulder.

He found that my glenoid (the flat area of bone that the humerus seats against) was fractured. There was a triangular piece broken out of it that looked like a slice of pie.

I had surgery to repair the glenoid and labrum (the soft tissue that holds the upper arm to the glenoid).

After the surgery, the orthopedic surgeon was puzzled about my slow recovery. He thought the bone and soft tissue should have mended after five or six weeks. It took me months to recover.

On one of my follow-up visits with my primary care physician, Dr. Gary Schillhammer, I mentioned a small lump on the right side of my throat. He felt the lump and said it was a swollen lymph node. He measured it and said it may be the result of low-grade infection from the cuts, scrapes and torn fingernail beds from my fall. He said I should come back in a month if it didn’t go away.

I’ve told this story so I can get to the next one, which occurred about a year later. I’ll write about that in next few days.

Five Dollar Card

Yesterday I spent time getting settled in. It’s a little bit of an adjustment, going from the wide open spaces in the desert back to a city setting. As I’ve said before, both places have their pluses and minuses. There’s always a trade-off. That’s the beauty of this lifestyle – we’re not locked into one or the other. We’ve committed to a month here at Apache Wells RV Resort. The monthly rate is favorable. It works out to about $23/day plus electricity. At this time of year, we don’t really need to use air conditioning or heat, so our electric bill should be low.

Yesterday, I used the on-site laundry facility to catch up on 10 days worth of laundry. We didn’t do any laundry at McDowell Mountain Regional Park, because the washer/dryer on board would put too much water into the gray tank. Our Splendide washer/dryer combo works really well, but it can only handle small loads. I thought it would be best to use the large, commercial machines here to catch up all at once. Then we can keep up on the laundry as usual with the Splendide.

The washing machines in the Laundromat here don’t accept coins or cash. You have to purchase a card in a separate machine at the office, then insert that card into the washer or dryer. I read the instructions and put a five-dollar bill in the card machine and pressed the “New Card” button. The machine dispensed a card with a micro-chip in it.

I loaded two large washing machines in the laundry room. Then I inserted the card. The display on the machine read “Card Value $0.00.” What happened to the five bucks I put in the card machine? I walked back to the office and asked about it. They told me the five bucks paid for the card and that I have to re-insert the card along with another $5 minimum.

I didn’t have any more cash on me, so I walked back to our site and got a $20 bill from Donna. I took that to office, had them break the $20 (I didn’t want to load the card with $20) and loaded the card with $5. Then I walked back to the laundry room. There was a guy standing in front of the machines I had put the clothes in. He asked if I was finished with those machines. I told him what happened and he said he went through the same thing. What a rip-off. Five bucks to be the proud owner of a card with no value! Each washing machine costs $1.25 per load – same for the dryers. So my two loads of laundry cost five bucks. Add the price of the card and I’m out $10 for two loads of laundry.

I was told the card doesn’t expire for three years. So I can reload the card anytime I want to use the laundry facilities. I guess if we were to use it regularly, the price of the initial card purchase would average down. I don’t want to sound like a cheapskate, but I feel like I was taken for five bucks.

Later, I washed the scooter. Although I covered the scooter, the storm last weekend left it a bit of a mess. The wind and heavy rain found its way past the cover. I really should buy a good fitted cover for it.

I want to take advantage of the ability to wash our coach while we’re here. The coach looks good. I wiped it down with microfiber cloths after the storm. But I want  to wash and wax it. I’m thinking I’ll do it in sections, maybe spend two or three days at it instead of trying to do it all at once. I’ll spend two or three more days thinking about it.

Donna had a visitor in the afternoon. Kathleen Romagnoli drove over from Estrella on the west side to visit. It was the first time she and Donna met face to face. They connected online four years ago and were both looking forward to finally getting together. While we were sitting outside talking, we saw our neighbor across the street start to back his truck out of the driveway next to his 5th wheel trailer. There was a small step ladder behind his truck. We yelled, “Stop!”

I walked over and removed the ladder from beneath his bumper. He got out of the truck and thanked me. He said he was only moving a couple of feet and forgot about the ladder. I would guess he’s about 70 years old. He said he was working on the truck, lubing the Pac brake when he spilled some oil. He also dropped a wrench and it was stuck between the radiator and frame. With the truck back a couple of feet, he could clean the oil spill, but wasn’t sure how to retrieve the wrench.

I looked it over. It was indeed stuck in a difficult to reach place. I got a mechanics magnet from my tool box and tried to lift the wrench, but it was too heavy for the magnet. Once he cleaned the oil spill, I crawled underneath the truck. I could just reach the wrench and was able to remove it. That’s how it is in RV parks. People watch out for each other and help out whenever they can.

Today I have a dental appointment at 1:30pm. I need to have an onlay removed and replaced with a crown. They’ll remove the onlay and grind the tooth, then install a temporary cap today. In about two weeks, I’ll have to return to have the crown fitted.

 

Forum Fighters

Sunday was fairly uneventful. Donna went for a bike ride and quickly realized that the race organizers had made the right decision to cancel the duathlon. As we feared, flood water had left sand and debris across the road in the low spots. Also, there were signs at the entrance to the park asking visitors to stay off the trails to give them a chance to dry out. While she was out, I started organizing the trailer and the main basement compartment.

I waited to load the scooter until we had the slides in and the jacks up yesterday. With the coach leveled on the jacks, the trailer was nose high. It’s hard to secure the scooter with the trailer at this attitude. The scooter rolls back away from the wheel chock while I’m trying to attach the tie-downs. With the jacks up and the air dumped from the suspension air bags, the trailer is slightly nose down. Then gravity works in my favor as the front wheel stays tight against the wheel chock and I can secure the tie-downs.

We fired up the engine around 10:30 a.m. While the engine was warming and the air bags were pumping up, I did a walk-around inspection before we drove off. We decided to take a different route back to Apache Wells RV Resort in Mesa. We left Fountain Hills and took a left on the Beeline Highway (Rt. 87). This took us east about 10 miles to the junction of the Bush Highway. We took the Bush Highway through the Tonto National Forest past Saguaro Lake and followed along the Salt River. We drove past our old camping area at the Phon D Sutton Recreation Area.

As were were cruising along, I remarked to Donna how much I enjoyed driving this coach. It’s so easy to drive, it rides smoothly and handles well. We have more than adequate power. On the RV forums I visit (check out my new Resources page), threads start from time to time regarding gas-powered motorhomes versus diesel. Just like threads asking which is the best oil or what are the best tires, people start defending their choices and it devolves into a forum fight.

I try to stay out of these types of threads, but I get sucked in on occasion. In the gas-versus-diesel argument, there’s no right or wrong. You choose what works for you. In the beginning, we chose a gas-powered rig. The purchase price was more affordable and I could do all of the maintenance work myself. We didn’t know at the time that we would be full-timing.

After living in it for five months and traveling 7,000+ miles, we found it didn’t really fit our needs. We wanted a different floor plan, one that was more open and conducive to setting up a work station. Although the big 8.1 liter (496 cu. in.) GM Vortec engine was powerful, we found ourselves struggling at times, especially at altitude crossing mountain ranges. I detailed some of the experience in this post.

I test drove several gasoline-powered motorhomes before we bought our first rig. Ours was built on a Workhorse chassis that had upgraded shock absorbers, a beefy rear track bar and a steer-safe steering damper added to it. It was the best handling rig of all the coaches I test-drove. But it was difficult to handle in windy conditions. Semi tractor-trailer rigs passing by would cause it to sway. Even with the suspension upgrades, the coach would roll and lean through turns. Coming down long, steep grades required good braking technique and concentration to avoid overheating the brakes. Was it a bad vehicle? No. Was it un-driveable? No. But it was exhausting at times. If we were weekend warriors, we might have kept that coach.

When we decided to look for a replacement, we set certain parameters. First of all, we wanted a rear-engine diesel pusher. We wanted certain considerations with regard to floor plan. We looked online and compared rigs for several weeks before we settled down to a few choices that met our requirements. Now that we own a diesel pusher, the higher purchase price, fuel costs and maintenance seem to be well worth it for us.

The big Cummins ISL diesel engine makes plenty of power. The engine also provides two stages of compression braking. I wrote about that in this post. The air-bag suspension rides smoothly and there’s very little body roll. For us, diesel is the right choice. I couldn’t go back to a gas engine, steel-spring chassis.

I guess I went off on this subject so I won’t have to jump into the fray on the RV forums!

We’re set up in a nice site at Apache Wells RV Resort. Our site has a large concrete pad. Donna directed me in as I backed the trailer onto the pad. Once I put the wheel on the front jack of the trailer, rolling it where I wanted it was a piece of cake. Then we positioned our coach next to the pad. We have our patio carpet out and chairs set up under the porch awning. The only downside to this site is spotty wifi. When we were here before, in site 56, we had a smaller concrete pad – the site was mostly gravel. However, we had great wifi there. There always seems to be some kind of trade-off.

Our new site

Our new site

By the time we were set up yesterday, we were starving. It was nearly 2pm and all I had to eat all day was a cup of yogurt and coffee. We hopped on the scooter and rode over to an old favorite, Senor Taco. I had rolled tacos with guacamole and Donna had fish tacos with a Corona beer. That hit the spot.

After we returned, I took a long, hot, luxurious shower. That’s the big plus of a place with full hook-ups. Unlimited water and sewer usage! Of course the trade-off is that we’re in a tight site with neighbors close to us and were not surrounded by nature. This will work for us until we get the hitch itch again.

Today I’ll catch up on laundry at the park laundromat. I also need to wash the scooter. Maybe we’ll lounge around the pool this afternoon. No real plan, just go with the flow!

Hail Jinx

Yesterday the weather guessers had it right. As predicted, after a short pause in the rainfall, we were slammed by thunderstorms. The precipitation fell in short, heavy bursts, then would taper off. At times, the sun broke through the clouds. At one point, I had the door open and let some warm, fresh air in through the screen door. That didn’t last long though.

Donna’s friend, Julia, picked her up around 1:30pm and they went to a Cabi clothing party in Fountain Hills. While she was out, I thought it would be a good time to practice guitar. I plugged in my guitar amp stand next to the co-pilot’s seat and got my Gibson ES-339 out. I played for about an hour and had fun rocking out in the coach.

On their way back from the party, Donna and Julia stopped at the Fountain Hills bike shop. Donna picked up her race packet there. The packet included her race numbers to be displayed on her bike, helmet and jersey. It also had a bar glass stenciled with the race logo and a few small goodies.

After Donna returned, we saw a large storm cell to the north of us. I thought it might pass by without much effect as it seemed to be far enough away. I was wrong. We started experiencing high winds as the cell approached. Then we were blasted with intense rain fall. Sheets of big, heavy rain drops. I jinxed us when I said, “At least it’s not hail.” Within minutes, we had pea-sized hail drumming on the roof of our coach.

Large storm cell

Large storm cell

The heavy rain from this cell caused water to puddle on top of the living room slide-out. Water puddled faster than it could drain. After a while, we had water intrusion through the slide seal near the microwave oven. I used the hydraulic jacks to lower the left side as well as the rear of the coach. This allowed the water to run off of the top of the slide. I left the coach tilted overnight and leveled it this morning.

After each thunder storm passed by, there would be areas of flooding. Our site had a large puddle under the coach.

Rain water puddling in our site

Rain water puddling in our site

The ground would drain quickly though between bouts of rain.

The puddle didn't last long when the rain stopped

The puddle didn’t last long once the rain stopped

Storm cells continued to pass through the area. Around 8:30pm, Donna received a call from her training partner alerting her to the email message she just received from the race organizers. They had canceled the race. She was disappointed, but felt some relief at the same time. She wasn’t looking forward to rising from bed at dark-thirty to ride to the race start area on a cold, wet morning. Also, parts of the road were likely to be flooded in the morning and could have sand and debris in places.

Donna is planning to ride the road course later today, once it warms up. The forecast is calling for temperatures to reach the upper 60s today. I’ll start organizing the trailer in preparation for tomorrow’s move back to Mesa. Tomorrow will be a busy move day, so I don’t think I’ll post again until Tuesday.

Donna signed up for another race in Mesa on April 5th. I guess we’ll extend our stay there.

 

Nature’s Way

Yesterday, I rode to scooter to town to pick up a few things in anticipation of a rainy Saturday. On the way back, I pulled over to the shoulder of the road and shot a few photos to illustrate how the road dips into arroyos in places. I wrote about that yesterday, but you know what they say – a picture is worth a thousand words.

In the first picture, I’m facing north on McDowell Mountain Road. The road dips ahead and there’s a warning sign – Do Not Cross When Flooded.

Warning Sign

Warning sign

The number of people that ignore these signs and end up stalled in deep water never ceases to amaze me.

In the next picture, I rode the scooter to the bottom of the dip. Looking west, across the road, you can see the arroyo. This is not a dirt road, it’s erosion from rain water draining into the arroyo. The gate was put there to keep people from driving up the arroyo.

Arroyo on the north side

Arroyo on the north side

I turned around and shot a picture of the east side of the road. You can see how the flood water crosses the road and continues to flow east to the Verde River.

Arroyo continues on the south side

Arroyo continues on the south side

Hopefully these pictures will make yesterday’s post regarding flash floods and sandy places in the road clear.

I tried a different allergy medication yesterday. So far, it hasn’t been very effective. Some allergy meds take a few days before they really begin working. We’ll leave this area in a couple of days and hopefully my symptoms won’t be so bad in Mesa. We’re currently parked next to a huge, flowering brittlebush plant.

In the afternoon, Donna and I rode around the park and explored a bit. We stopped at the nature center. Behind the center they’re building a pond. It looks to be nearly complete. There’s also an enclosure with desert tortoises.

The desert tortoise is an herbivore classified as a reptile. Desert tortoises are native to the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts. Their population has been declining over the last 50 years. Estimates in the 1950s showed an average of 200 adult desert tortoises per square mile. Recent estimates show 5 to 60 desert tortoises per square mile.

Desert tortoise snoozing behind a bush

Desert tortoise snoozing behind a bush

Desert tortoises create burrows underground to escape the heat. Other desert animals often move into these subterranean chambers.

This guy moved in for a closer look at us

This guy moved in for a closer look at us

In the afternoon, I prepared for rain. I put things away in the trailer and covered the scooter. When it became apparent that the rain wouldn’t arrive before nightfall, I got the grill back out and cooked hamburgers for dinner.

The rain came after midnight and continues to fall sporadically this morning. We have a break now, but it’s supposed to rain again this afternoon. Donna is going to a Cabi clothing party with her friend, Julia, this afternoon. If the rain comes, I’ll probably stay inside and watch TV.