We had a great weekend in Joshua Tree, with some good learning experiences. These "practice trips" are very important to figuring out our systems and what we need and don't need, so we will be doing more of them! The learning started before we even left, as you will see...
Our First Learning Experience: Trusting the Ford Dealership Service Manager
We took the Moho into Keystone Ford the previous Friday for a "regular checkup" - that is service, lube/oil/filter, checking systems. They didn’t drop our RV off the lifts, like happened to these poor folks in the photo, and as far as we can tell, the mechanics did a good job. Our brakes didn’t fail as we drove off the lot, our battery seems to be charging now, the power steering no longer groans like a dinosaur dying in agony... but we probably won’t take the Moho there again.
First the guy told us it would probably be done on Tuesday. Then Wednesday afternoon. So Devin took Thursday off so we could go pick it up and have a long camping weekend. Then they told us Thursday morning. And each time, we had to call ~them~ even though they had told us they would call.
We headed out there to do some errands before picking it up, go to REI and Camping World (aka "The $100 Store") to shop for some comfy patio chairs and lounges to make our camping experience complete, and when we called to see if it was ready, they said Thursday afternoon. After some more shopping, they finally told us it wouldn't be ready till Friday. So we went home with a car full of camping gear.
Then on Friday, we got up early and loaded the car with an ice chest full of food for the weekend, clothes, and everything we'd need, and headed out to pick it up. Okay, not ready till early afternoon. So we went back to Camping World and bought that Weber Baby Q we'd been ogling the day before! We planned to finish up registration at the DMV when we picked it up, so we scoped out a nearby DMV, went in to see if we could take care of anything ahead of time, found out where we needed to pull in for the inspection.
We ran out of things to do, so we went to the Ford Dealership and sat in their waiting room for about 45 minutes watching bad cartoons until they *finally* got it done! We got out of there around 4:45pm. A little too late for the DMV! So we went to Devin's dad's house in Whittier to fill it up with water and load it up with camping gear, change the tow bar to Devin's Segway Hauler, leave the car and head out to Joshua Tree, late on a Friday with the rest of the traffic.
So, I guess Lesson 1 is, it's not ready till it's ready, or the fat lady sings, or something like that. Just because they give you an optimistic time estimate, don't count on it. The work they did seemed to be satisfactory, but by telling us it would be ready much sooner than it was, Devin took a day off work unnecessarily, we missed a day of camping, missed the DMV, and ended up in traffic, driving the Moho late into the night to get to a campsite.
Our second learning experience: Unlocking the Towbar
A great Blue Ox Towbar came with the RV, which is the kind we planned to buy for our "toad." It had a locking stainless steel bar to attach it to the hitch, to which we thought we had a key. Devin had a key that fit the lock on his keychain, but the key was cracked, and when he tried to turn it, it broke off. So I started looking for other keys that looked like the one that fit, and found one and promptly brought it to him. That one wouldn't turn either, so after quite some time of messing with it, he decided to just crank on it with some pliers, and risk breaking it because we needed to get the towbar off!
Well, the second key broke off, right about at the same time that I realized what key it was... it was the last key to our slide out! Lesson 2: just because the key fits into the lock does not mean it's the right key!!
So now we were stuck without a slide out for the weekend, which is okay, because at least our slide out room does not block anything when it is in. Some models block cabinets and even the kitchen sink! For us, it's just a little narrower, but still perfectly liveable for a weekend. At least we chose our RV wisely, even if we broke keys foolishly!
We wanted to get the towbar off, by the way, so we could put Devin's Segway Hauler on, to take his Segway out to Joshua Tree, which would give Devin some mobility in the campground and make us able to take walks together. Since we don't have a toad yet, we didn't need the tow bar.
So Devin's dad brought out his Sawsall, and they proceeded to try to CUT off the locking mechanism to the tow bar so Devin could bring his Segway. Lesson 3: Stainless Steel is Really Hard! (The Sawsall didn't work, so we couldn't get the towbar off.)
So we were without a slide out room and without the Segway. Frustrating, but not the end of the world, so we gave up and went camping! On the way out of town, we stopped by Pep Boys with the broken key fragments, to see if they could make a key, but they couldn't A regular locksmith possibly could have, but it was late on a Friday night by this time. We gave up after making one phone call to a 24 hour service - left a message and never got a response.
So we hit the road - finally!
Ahhh, Joshua Tree!
We finally got to J-Tree at around midnight. I dozed a good portion of the trip out there - past my bedtime! We went to Cottonwood Springs campground at the southern end of J-Tree, which is not too far from I-10, and has an RV dump station and sites large enough for RVs. We found a nice spot with great views, parked, leveled, and...
OMG the stars!! The stars were incredible! SO many stars, I had a hard time picking out constellations! The Milky Way was vibrant - and we had such a wide view of the sky, we could see the Summer Triangle AND the Winter Hexagon (almost all of it) both at the same time!! Orion was rising in the east as the Corona Borealis set in the west - Lyra, Cygnus, Aquila, Delphinus, Cassiopeia, Ursa Minor, The Pleaides, Taurus, Gemini, Orion - ahh, my old friends!! So nice to see you! A shooting star! Greenish and bright, streaking across the sky - one of the Orionid meteors - tiny bits left in Earth's path from Haley's Comet. There is a meteor shower tonight!
Suddenly I was wide awake - desert stars are a wonder to behold.
“All men have the stars, but they do not mean the same things for different people. For some they are guides, for others, no more than little lights in the sky. But all these are silent. You--you alone have the stars as no one else has them.
...The stars, the desert, what gives them their beauty is invisible...
It is only with the heart that one can see rightly.
What is essential is invisible to the eye.”
~ The Little Prince
Shade to go
The next morning, after sleeping with the window open to see stars and meteors during wakeful moments, and the Tibetan prayer flags our friend Leaf gave us fluttering in the desert breeze all night, we settled in to our campsite a little more.
We had leveled "good enough" the night before, but we weren't really level, and one of the jacks was actually off the ground, so we retracted them and drove up onto blocks on the right side before leveling to stabilize and finish the job. Worked great - we want 3 more of the leveling blocks we bought at Camping World. Lesson 4: we need blocks AND jacks to keep the RV both level and stable in sloping sites.
Then we pulled out our awning. An awning on an RV is a wonderful thing - it not only creates a shaded "patio" area for outdoor living, and shades the side of the RV making it cooler inside, but it creates a personal space that disappears when it is rolled up. It makes that part of the campsite "ours" for the time we are there - creates a sense of home. I think it has to do with the bulk of the RV - sitting next to it without the awning feels like sitting next to a wall, but under the awning you are on your patio. In a tent you don't really need this because you don't have the wall effect. But shade is a nice thing to have with you in the desert, no matter how you are camping.
We finally figured out how to properly set it up - it had been hard before because one of the latches was broken, but now it was fixed, and so once we got it set up, we decided to do it again for practice. Lesson 5: We found that we needed a stepladder to tighten the arms properly once it was set up - maybe we should have set up the awning before leveling so the RV would be lower. Next we put on the "de-flappers" which hold the awning in the center to keep it from flapping in the wind. It all worked great and we had a solid awning all set up!
Lesson 6: watch out for the awning arms!
We proceeded to organize the "basement" storage bins, getting out our chairs and small astroturf mat (those really help keep dirt outside the RV, and also help define that space nicely). I managed to bend over into the awning bar - I hit my head so hard I literally fell over backwards! Ouch! I sort of wish someone could have seen it - it was like in the cartoons! I was laying there on the sand saying "ouch ouch ouch ouch!" with little stars and birds circling my head, and Devin didn't even rush to my rescue. He didn't even get up to look at me lying there, or take a picture (which is probably what I would have done - document the indignity!) I guess he figured if I was talking, I was okay. Next time I want sympathy, I guess I'll shut up! Ha.
We found out after we did some organizing and repacking, that we have more storage available than we thought, which is great! Devin keeps saying we're going to run out, though, gloomy pessimist that he is. He wasn't pessimistic when we were out there and found out we had free space, but everytime I talk about buying something for the trip, he starts in on how we are going to run out of room! He's funny. Lesson 7: Space may (or may not) be an issue!
This isn't really a lesson, but we learned that we chose well in our cookware! We bought a Fagor nesting cookset from Camping World and I love it! The heavy bottoms disperse heat so well and evenly, you can cook at much lower temperatures, and not worry about buring stuff on the bottom. Yay!
Devin set up the Baby Q just to get it working, and it seems to work great, but as we didn't bring anything to grill this time, true testing will have to wait until next trip.
We pretty much relaxed and worked on the RV all day Saturday - we were pretty tired from not enough sleep, so not too ambitious. But on Sunday...
Maggie Conquers Mastodon Peak by accident
We decided we needed to come back a day later so we could go to the DMV on Monday, and hopefully take care of our broken slide out keys as well. So I walked down to the pay station with the site fee for one more day, and told Devin I would walk to Cottonwood Springs on the road and loop back on the Nature trail which came out right near our campsite.
Four hours later... Devin was ready to call search and rescue and was so worried that if I was alive he was going to kill me!
Lesson 8: We need two-way radios
I wasn't sure we really needed the radios, but this was a situation where if I had one, I would have called him and he would know where I was an not worry - he could have even gotten out the binoculars and seen me on top of Mastodon peak, where I could see the Moho in the distance! (see the photo - ours is the one on the far left - what, can't see it? Okay, try the next photo, which uses 10x zoom - click the photo to enlarge - you really can see it!)
It was a great little hike that just about killed me because I am SO out of shape. But I had "next bend syndrome" and just kept going to see what was around the next bend, because it didn't seem that far, because the view was so great, because it was such a lovely day, because I could. I wasn't going to do the scramble to the top of the little peak, but there were some other folks ahead of me on the trail, so I went for it. My heart rate got up to about 240 going up the steep narrow ledge, but it wasn't really hard. It was coming down, and the sandy washes that they called the trail on the way down that made it take so much longer than I thought. I took lots of photos of the trail, views, birds, rocks, old mines, etc, and you can click here to see them!
Lesson 9: We need to get our checklists for breaking camp, etc, set up and use them! Lots of stuff to remember when "battening down the hatches" for travel in a rolling home. securing doors and drawers, putting stuff where it won't fall/roll around, closing windows and vents, making sure all outside compartments are closed and locked and everything is put away, jacks retracted, leveling blocks stowed, awning secured, nothing behind us, no overhead branches, etc, etc. This time I only forgot to latch a couple of drawers which came open, so not a big deal, but with so much to remember, we need checklists!!
The Mothership and the DMV
On the way home, we went by National RV in Perris, where the Moho was born. One of the reasons we stayed an extra night is so we could take care of the slide out key issue, and since "the Mothership" was on our way home, we stopped there. Sure enough, they had the keys, no problem! So we "win" again - we didn't really need the slide out room this weekend, and even if we did, we couldn't have used it because our campsite didn't have enough clearance (it would have stuck out into the road!) AND we made a very convenient stop at National headquarters and were able to pick up extra keys quite painlessly on our way home. Yay us!! Even when we are unlucky, we are lucky.
We were lucky with the DMV, too - we stopped at the one in Banning, and had no wait to get the RV inspected and get our official registration finalized. We ordered handicapped plates, so we will get them in the mail soon and be set to go!
Lesson 10: Devin's Dad is Wonderful
(But we knew that)
When we got back into cell range on the way home we got a phone call from Devin's dad, checking on us (since we'd stayed an extra night leaving our car there), and he told us he had bought a special blade for his Sawsall that would cut stainless steel! So when we got back to Whittier, he and Devin cut off the lock and we removed the tow bar. Success!
Then we went to put on the Segway Hauler for our next trip, and guess what? Devin's key wouldn't work!!! Deja vu... No broken keys this time, but we wouldn't have been able to get the Seg Hauler on the RV even if we had been successful the first time getting the tow bar off! We still haven't found a second key to try in the Seg Hauler, and are thinking we'll get Devin's Dad to cut that one off, too, since now we know he can.
We filled up our water and put it back into storage, and now we are ready for the next trip (where, no doubt, we will learn some more)!