Saturday, June 14
It was planned to be a short drive—under three hours!— to Sandhills State Park in Kansas. When we added in the gas stop it became a 3:30 drive, which is weird because the stop was right on the route. And when we executed it, it became a whole lot longer because we never came close to hitting the 75 mph speed limit on the Interstate or the 70 mph speed limit on the secondary roads. Blah.
I found myself getting cranky. Long trip, I guess, with lots of interpersonal aggravations. I must exercise patience and keep my dumb mouth shut.
And
by the way, for planning gas stops I need to shoot for 450 miles with a maximum
of 475. Because if route planning is no longer my job, then all assurance that
we’ll take the planned route is lost.
I made the note that Nebraska was really flat. It should be called the one-dimension state. But changed my mind later.
Close to the Kansas border I started seeing coneflowers and other pretties at the side of the road. The road also got rougher, but only for a few miles. But when we crossed into Kansas it all stopped. It was just grass at the roadsides. I guess they mow at the wrong time to let wildflowers set seed. Maybe I should call Kansas the “Plow the Plains to a Pulp” state. But Nebraska is okay; it can be the wildflower state.
But at least we arrived by two-ish.Or maybe two-thirty-ish. Or maybe it was three—I didn’t think to check until after we’d unhooked, parked, and started connecting the utilities.
Sandhills is a really pretty state park. The camping sites have concrete pads, nice smooth fake wood picnic tables, fire pits, barbeque grills, fiber-optic poles but I don’t think they’re connected to anything, and full hookup sites along with water/electric ones. The only thing missing from complete luxury would be pull-thru sites, but that would mean that fewer people would have the lovely little “backyard” access to grass that walks down to the mosquito habitat.
Sadly,
the sites around the other side of the pond are much more empty—the ones by us
are pretty much all full—but those sites didn’t have sewer hookups and I kinda
thought we needed sewer by this time.
The last four or so places we’ve camped at were all electric-only sites,
where we had to fill the water tank at the potable water station when we
entered the park, and we had to stop at the dump station on the way out. No big
deal either way—we’ve become experts at those tasks—but it’s a welcome change
to not have to.
They’d had a good bit of rain early in the morning, so there were pools of standing water here and there. But the grass had mostly sucked it up when we arrived. It was extremely hot and a little bit humid, though. The thermometer said 80 but it felt hotter.
I dragged Ed on a walk up to the Dune Overlook trail and really wished I hadn’t. There were Bell’s Vireos in the trees all around. Merlin heard them, but I could never see a single one and soon gave up trying. It’s not fair to non-birders to force them to stand around in the sun while you try to track down a little tiny thing no bigger than your hand just so you can tick off an entry in your life list.
(But I’m planning to go back next day and snag one. Maybe even this evening)
There were Mississippi Kites all over too—I saw at least four. And field sparrows in the distance, and one box turtle in the grass. And a Yellow-breasted Chat in the bushes. Lots of blackberries and persimmons there…quite lovely.
House sparrows all over. I hate those things. They make an awful boring noise and crowd out native birds.
After two nights of sleeping on the bed and two days of driving in the Motorhome, my right leg pain is back. Damn! What’s causing this? I suspect the Motorhome, but I can’t prove it. Maybe it’s both? I’ll try moving to the floor tonight and see if that helps any at all.