Wednesday,
August 6, 2025
The
big trip of the year was upon us. 27 days!
Longest to date, and maybe the longest we’ll ever attempt. We’ll see.
The
goal was to head to Massachusetts, hang out with the kids for a week, then
return via the Atlantic Seaboard and see some of the old American historical
sites. Sounded good on paper, but reality was not what it seemed. As you will
see.
We
started the day off bright and early at 9am with a malfunctioning slide-out. Ed
pronounced it okay to go but slightly worrysome.
The
first night camping stopover was a place I’d been wanting to check out—a
campground located smack in the middle of downtown Little Rock, Arkansas. Sounds scary, but it’s fenced and gated and
is scenically located right on the Arkansas River. So we have a scenic view,
security, big city sirens and air pollution—all in one package!
Getting
there was a little challenging, but that’s because we let the Trucker App guide
us instead of following the RV park’s instructions. After getting off the
Interstate, it should have been very simple, with just a couple of turns. But
the app took us on a back-and-forth hopping route that ended up near, but not
at, the park. I hope I remember that if we come here again.
After
connecting utilities, we sat outside for a bit. There was a nice breeze blowing
in the cottonwood trees and making it pleasant in the shade.
It was hot but not unbearable.
Molly
and I walked across the Arkansas River on the big bridge shown in the pictures
below. On the way out of the park, I tried to go out the front gate and
couldn’t get my code to open it. Eventually I found a side gateway—for walking
through—and lucked out with the code after several tries. But on the way back I
discovered that the RV park had a back exit with a sign saying, “enter code and
push gate immediately.” That’s what I was doing wrong before—I’d enter the code
and wait for some sort of indication, and when it never came, try to open the
gate. Already re-locked, duh.

All
this was despite my little toe giving me agony from the stupid thing I did
earlier. At the rest stop, I was feeling so good that I tried to run around a
sidewalk circle for a few steps. My little toe contacted Molly’s back leg
tendon and it wrenched the toe sideways. I almost hit the ground, but a couple
of quick steps saved me. Shortly thereafter the toe became swollen and very
painful.
On
the other side of the bridge there’s some little parks and a bike trail. We
didn’t go that far—too crippled. No birds to speak of, but a pretty place.

Our campground from the bridge

Molly was not impressed
REVIEW
Downtown
Riverside RV Park 58.94
Perfect
spot for visiting the city and not bad for a stopover
Downtown
Riverside RV park is a really nice place. Yes, it’s a concrete-and-gravel gated
parking lot for RVs, but a nice one. There is grass all around the riverfront
edge, a nice river view, and despite the wall on the city side, it has a
park-like aura. There are a few picnic tables and benches scattered around plus
a riverside fire pit with seats. And a big pavilion that can be reserved.
We
had a really long concrete pad on a gravel driveway. 50-amp electricity with
water and sewer. And a pleasant lady in the office at check-in time.
Getting
there from I-440 would have been simple if we’d followed the instructions on
the RV Park web site. Google would have been okay, too. But the trucker app we were using couldn’t
get us there and took us on a lot of left/right turns to get us under the
bridge, where it left us.
For
dogs, there’s a poo station near the sites, plus, at the very end of the park
there’s a nice little fenced dog park under the bridge that goes over the
Arkansas river. The back exit of the park is opened with the gate code, and it
allows you to get to the dog park and also the bridge, aka the Bill, Hilary and
Chelsea Clinton memorial bike trail.
You can also walk to the bridge by the front exit, but make sure that
you enter the code and immediately push on the gate—it re-locks almost
instantly. Very secure.