Saturday, December 30, 2023

Goodbye to Mammoth

 Thu 9 Nov 2023

Yesterday, Wednesday 8 November 2023, we said good-bye to dear old Mammoth and bought the new thing.

 





We knew it was going to be weird, but had no idea just how weird. First they took us on a walk-through of the new motorhome and demonstrated the features (not nearly all of them) and explained the operation of stuff (not nearly all of it). One significant thing they missed was the engine operation--after all this time, Ed still had never started the thing--let alone driven it--until on Thursday.

While we did the walk-thru a mechanic did a detailed inspection of the old one and noted all sorts of faults we didn't even know about. Some of which weren't faults at all, but just things he couldn't get working. It appears we'd been gradually putting up with idiosyncrasies over time and didn't hardly notice how bad some stuff was.  It was too decrepit for the dealer to put it on his lot--beneath his standards.

But the salesman really wanted to make a sale (of course), so he did some magic with a $10K rebate and applied it to the trade-in value and told us we could go ahead at the stated price. Which only goes to say they were making a significant killing off us with the first price, and only slightly less after they found out that Mammoth was not in saleable condition. Not our problem.

Then they took it over to the camping area and parked it next to the old one. And then we signed a whole lot of papers.  And we were left to move in and spend the night in "the campground", aka a small fenced off parking lot with hookups. The water was probably okay to drink but since the faucet was right next to the sewer faucet, we chose not to hook it up. We were able to flush our toilets, though, and wash dishes from the water in the tank.

 



Since we'd already cleaned everything out of Mammoth and staged our single-night's needs in the Jeep, it was a pretty quick job to load everything into the new one. Then Molly and I took a long walk while Ed started testing all the stuff.

Then we slept.  The bed was nowhere near as cozy and comfy as Mammoth's--it will likely be a long time before I get used to it. Every time I climb on I'll heave a deep sigh of regret.

Next morning it was starting to rain. I made a quick McDonald's run.  Note to self: I don't like the sausage burritos anymore. Go back to the Egg McMuffins or else do the oatmeal.

Then we ate and met with the sales guy again. Went over to get the DEF topped off. And headed out. We'd barely gotten onto I-35 when the driver's windshield wiper started going whackydoodle--flopping all around.  Ed tried to fix it and on the second try, got it put back together.  But we went on back anyway and got a new one, and also discussed the procedure for warranty work.  As expected, we found a couple of little issues. Too bad we didn't find them on Wednesday.

Good-bye, dear Mammoth. I loved you much, but grew to mistrust you so severely...it's a relief to say a sad good-bye. But so it goes.


Friday, December 29, 2023

Catching up on events of November/December

 Wed Nov 1

Today the old Mammoth Motorhome took us to grandmother's house. Pretty boring trip, which is good. Six hours on the dot, and that was with three gas stops. At none of the stops did we have to wait, which probably explains a lot.

This is probably the farewell journey for Mammoth. We'll miss her, a lot. Too many great times, good experiences, good reliability of most of the components. But too many little issues for us to want to endure her declining years for much longer. The transmission; the brakes; the unspecified electrical issue that was probably a coincidence. The flaking surface on the dinette base; the aged and decrepit carpet. And all the little stuff that broke that we didn't fix, like the wiring cover and the chips off the tabletop and counter surfaces. A lot of stuff we did fix, but only about two-thirds of what we should have fixed.

It will all be history soon, but I'll have to make sure I have plenty of pictures.










Saturday, December 16, 2023

Enjoyable (mostly) audiobook

 Here Comes Trouble

by Michael Moore

If you're already a Michael Moore fan, you can't help but love this book.  It's full of stories from his life, from childhood up to the making of Roger and me. Some are funny but most of them are sad, although told with the lightness of spirit that keeps you reading. There was only one that was so unrelentingly sad that I seriously considered giving up the audio book right then and there--and I'm so glad I didn't. It got better.

Sorry I can't think of a one to relate. There was the priest who couldn't forgive himself for his actions during World War II, but still insisted on pestering Mr. Moore to return to the church and start praying again. Maybe all the other redeeming acts he did weren't enough to allow him to be forgiven. That was kind of good.  The stories of his early life, such as the gay kid in the neighborhood in an era when kids didn't know from gay, but their bigger brothers did. That one was sad, but it needed to be told. People need to know how things used to be.

The one story I could not recommend to anyone, anywhere, is the story of his mother's illness and hospitalization. It was a complete bummer.

But so much else was funny or funny mixed with with pathos, the stuff of great writing. To me.


Thursday, December 14, 2023

Not so great as I hoped. So much she could have chosen

 Butts A Backstory

Well written and well researched, but I think the author got hooked on a theory and tailored her research, and her narrative, to support it. Possibly she started out with an open mind and was curious to let the facts lead her where they might, but I don't think so.  I'm not sure I ever understood exactly what it was she was trying to prove, but it seemed to be something about how white people exploited black people because the white women wanted to understand the fascination their menfolk had with black women's anatomy. But even then, she seemed to dwell on black people (people of African descent) rather than include Hispanics. Very odd.

But now that I've said that, please ignore it and read the book anyway.  It's very interesting a lot of the time, especially in the first half or so. I got a little bored near the end, but that's because she was dwelling on modern performers such as Miley Cyrus. I enjoyed the historical parts more (personal bias!)


Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Just a recipe book

  The Blue Zones American Kitchen: 100 Recipes to Live to 100

I know you don't really "read" a recipe book, but I scanned a lot of words in this one. The recipes are grouped in chapters according to culture or social group they were represented in--Okinawan, South American, African, that sort of thing. And the chapter introductions plus the head notes for each recipe made up a lot of interesting reading.

And a lot of interesting recipes. All vegetarian, too. I have not tried any of them yet, so no promises.


Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Farming, family and food

 Good Husbandry


by Kristan Kimball

Was the title a pun?  The book is about a farm and the man and wife who own it, told by the wife. But a good bit of her struggles are with the husband she loves as much as the work that she learns to love.

It's lovely. Very much. Throughout. A little sad in the struggles they have with modern farming methods that threaten to overwhelm their little operation as they try to grow it. But they stay true to themselves and their beliefs, even while they compromise with "progress."  Such as this--they tried to use draft animals for plowing and hauling, and did so quite successfully for some time, but they kept having to train new teamsters to handle the horses. The new people, once trained, would eventually leave and go on to start farms of their own. Eventually the tractor took over more and more of the work around the farm--less learning curve.

But still, very, very lovely. If I lived there, I'd join their CSA.

Sunday, December 3, 2023

Fluff, and some serious stuff.

 Kappy King and the Puppy Caper

by Amy Lillard


Well, golly. I wanted to love this but didn't, but then I didn't want to like this but I did. The kapp maker of the Amish village, oddball "Kappy" King, is an amusing and likeable character. She is pulled into detection only to help a neighbor, jailed for suspicion of murdering his mother. So she's not a dedicated detective but she at least keeps her mind on her job and does a decent job of noticing clues and following them down.

Which is in great contrast to a lot of cozy mystery detectives, who seem to stumble and bumble around until they're hit on the head with so many obvious clues that they can't help but notice them. And then they usually get attacked by the murderer and duh! Now they know!

Not so here. She's a good solver. I'll probably read another one, especially if I can get it at the library for free. But her romantic interest is a real loser, and I sincerely hope that the danger signs that the author keeps sprinkling around his feet are real and not just something that irritates me. Frankly, if as smart a person as Kappy ends up with a loser like him, I'll quit reading right then.

But we can hope not.  Oh, and a quick warning--I'm not so sure the author knows a lot about Amish people. Some of the stuff she puts in seems off kilter to me, but I'm not the expert.  (NOTE: according the the review, she does know a lot. So I guess she just has a good imagination.)


The End of Craving
by Mark Schatzker

Once again I managed to forget to make notes of a book's good features at the time of reading. So all I can remember is that his theories were intriguing, and if even a few of them are established as science (demonstrable, testable, repeatable, and all that), we know a whole lot more than we ever knew about human obesity.

And, sadly, we are hopeless to overcome it. The theories I remember are (1) artificial sweeteners or fats cause the brain to become confused and overeat to compensate for the sugar or fat it was expecting to receive based on the sensory cues it received, (2) the modern practice of over-fortifying foods with vitamins is providing the body all the parts it needs to layer on the pounds even if you eat relatively "normal" food. That particular theory is well demonstrated by animal foods that make it easier for pigs to layer on the pounds even when they're eating a diet high in the cheapest and least nutritious grains, and (3) any kind of food uncertainty, even if we don't recognize it, tricks the brain into overconsumption.

He has some good research backing these up. Plus I may have missed some other points he made. So read this for yourself and see what you think.

Friday, December 1, 2023

More Ellie Dwyer! And a pretty good YA. And a really unexpectly good mystery series.

 Ellie Dwyer's Unexpected Ally
by Diane Winger

I'm liking these better and better as they go along. I don't know whether it's her writing that improved or just that I like her people better as I get to know them. In either case, I loved this to pieces. I wouldn't recommend it to just anyone--it's not deep, or extremely thoughtful, or heartwrenching or laugh-out-loud funny. I can't say that I had trouble putting it down at bedtime. But, next day, I was very happy to pick it up again.
 


Excuse Me While I Ugly Cry

A pretty good YA, even for a grownup reader. I was a little bored at first, but I was very glad that I didn't give up. It kept getting better.

The main character Quinn keeps lists of everything. I understand that--I like making lists as well as the next person.  But for her, only after someone steals her "list notebook" and blackmails her to do the things on her very, very private to-do list, does she realize how the listmaking was confining her ambition and keeping her stuck in a frightened world.  Nothing like having your deepest and darkest secrets out in public to make you free of fear. 

 

 

The Sound and the Furry
by Spencer Quinn


Before I started reading, I didn't realize that this series was narrated by the dog. If I had known that, I probably wouldn't have read it. And dang! I'd have been sorry!!!

Somehow he makes this work and it's funny as heck. And the mystery was pretty good, too.
 


Wednesday, November 29, 2023

A winner and a pretty good

Brave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany of the Grand Canyon
by Melissa L Sevigny

I listened to the audiobook and was entertained from start to finish. And from Navajo Bridge to Boulder Dam.   And I especially appreciate the author's including the names and scientific names of some of the significant species they collected.

She appeared to be working from the "vibrant letters and diaries" of the women, plus newspaper accounts and other historical records. And she did a fantastic job of piecing it all together into a great narrative. Loved it!

 

 


Dogged Pursuit
by Tracy Carter

Apologies for losing the review I wrote while this was fresh in my memory. I had to look at the synopsis to immediately remember some of the stuff I disliked, but I don't remember what I did like.  I think the ending, the pursuit through the woods and the final takedown, was great. Suspenseful; somewhat believable; just plain good stuff. I'll leave it at that--it ends well.

But before all that, I have a vivid memory of a sugary sweet story--she rescues a dog from an unrealistic team of teenage pursuers. She's helped by a young guy who has just aged out of the foster care system, and despite having no decent upbringing or family connections, turns out to be an angel in the raw. He's just way too perfect for any teenager, and he magically turns out to be the helper she needs.

Her father is another unbelievably perfect character. He's very flat and seems to consist of superhuman smarts overlaid on a motherlike love and concern that goes all the way from fixing her meals to cleaning her kennels. (I'm exaggerating a little--but only a little).

And her dog, of course, is freakishly perfect. I think the only time she comes close to committing an infraction is a very brief pause if a search to check out a wild deer or some such trail. But I don't remember if that actually happened or if the author just alluded to it having happened "once."

So, I liked the book and might try a second one in the series, if it happens. But I just need to be in the kind of mood with a high tolerance for frosted sugar cookies.


Tuesday, November 28, 2023

 The Girls of Pearl Harbor

I won't give this book a rating because I didn't read enough to make a fair judgement. So let me just say, it didn't suit my taste well enough to get past the first few chapters.  I even tried skipping to the gory stuff--it's about nurses in Pearl Harbor after the bombing--and still didn't get interested. Too bad--I think it has great promise.

There are some serious writing issues, at least in the early chapters. Such as:
Poppy had lost interest and was taking her sunglasses from her bag, the big white-framed fashion statements pushed high on her nose.

Huh?  And
...although April was taller than her and not quite as petite.
Actually, that's using the definition of "petite"  that says "fairly short and of slim build".  But when I read it, I thought of the other definition, "short".

Yes, I am being picky. But it doesn't take too many forced rereads of a sentence to make the whole flow go sticky.

Still, I think the author has a great subject and should try again, maybe with a better editor?  And she should create some characters I really care to hang out with for the duration.


Only When I Step On It

by Peter Conti


Quite a feat! To hike the Appalachian trail and have good enough notes to write a detailed book about it. It almost felt like he described every day of hiking, but I'm sure that wasn't true. Still, he has a lot to say.

And a lot of it is very, very enjoyable. The only issue I had was that the constant mention of his leg and foot pain, and the very frequent seques into paragraphs of description of his issues, treatments, and episodes of pain, got really tiresome.  I expected his story to be mostly chronological--it started off that way. But then he'll be sidelined with pain and all of a sudden be jumping back to talk about failed treatments from months and months earlier. As I said, that got really old. And, I confess, I started skipping the boring parts.

But the base story and the way he learned to deal with his optimistic plan--if I make it all the way to Mt, Kahadin, I'll have to be healed!--was great stuff. I enjoyed it very much. With omissions.


Monday, November 27, 2023

Mammoth Goes to The Falls. The Big Ones. Day 19

Sat 7 October 2023

Going home day. We got an abnormally early start but we had to hookup and dump, so we didn't get on the road until 9:50. Google said the route was going to take 4:30 and we had a gas stop, so that would put our arrival at about 2:45.  As usual, I forgot to note our arrival time but it was about 2:30-ish.  The little google maps/phone navigator app had us going in circles to get on the interstate, trying to avoid a road closure that did not exist.  Luckily we are smarter than Navigator, so we only did the inane circle once. But unluckily, since we're STUPID, we did do it once.

It was an easy drive, though.  Even with the construction that always plagues interstate highways, the roads through Texas and Arkansas are better than those up north. They're flatter, for one thing, and have higher speed limits, for another.  But there were a LOT of trucks on the road and a lot of cars, too. So our drive was slower than it might have been.

And so our longest trip to date is over. What have we learned?

Some will be obvious from the notes below. One thing to note is that packing with the plan of shopping mid-trip is okay, but it assumes you'll be able to find the foods you prefer in any place in the USA. I was unable to get Vital Farms eggs or even Happy Egg; nor could I find Smartfoods popcorn or Skinny Pop; they didn't have unsweetened Gold Peak tea; and I forgot to get fruit.

I learned that preparing vegetable foods for lunches is a great idea, provided I remember to eat them.  I returned with two bowls of tuna-rice balls (onigiri) and almost two bowls of sweet potato-veggie sausage hash.  But they were yummy!

I also learned that there are never enough jellybeans in the cupboard.

I think we both learned that Canadian Border Patrol is bad but American is horrible--so horrible, we may not ever cross the border in an RV again. Actually, I'd do it in a heartbeat...provided I was alone. The guys have an impossible job and all I want to do is make it as quick and painless for everyone as I possibly can. Answer the dumb questions, follow the pointless instructions, and get it over with.

And I learned that no matter what else you do on a trip, family time needs to be priority; birdwatching second priority. Sadly I spent way too much time on trivia (including sleeping) instead of fun stuff--what I was there for!  


NOTES

1. Try harder to always schedule a full-hookup day on the last day

2. Plan shorter drives, with the possible exception of Interstate highways in Texas and Arkansas. Those are easy.

3. Before scheduling Pine Acres again, make absolutely sure they're not having a party weekend. Especially not a Halloween party (in September!)

Sunday, November 26, 2023

Mammoth Goes to The Falls. The Big Ones. Day 18


6 October

This day had sunshine, but I could only see Barkley  and Kentucky Lakes to say farewell to them. 





Travel from Grand Rivers Kentucky to Little Rock Arkansas:


Last day of camping--Maumelle campground in Arkansas. It was listed as having an address in Little Rock, but it was really a few miles north of I-440, past a very new and very expensive subdivision.  We could have eaten at a decent restaurant there, but I hadn't planned ahead so we just had leftover pork skewers.

 The campground was lovely, though. Right on the Arkansas River, with long spaces that angled right up to a great river view. It was very crowded, but that's because it was Friday night. On a weeknight I expect it would be nearly perfect as a campground.


There was a small web of paved trails in the woods, which would be great for birding although they didn't stretch on long enough to provide any real exercise.  I'd just gotten my binoculars on an Ovenbird (a kind of warbler) and was looking for other treats when Molly somehow managed to hurt her foot.  It was so bad that I considered calling Ed to come get us, but then I realized that it would be a shorter distance for her to walk if I simply cut across the campsites back to the motorhome.

She was fine by the time we arrived, but all the nuthatches, redheaded woodpeckers, jays, titmice, chickadees, and probably a whole bunch of warblers, were left behind.

Out on an island in the river I saw a couple of bald eagles, an osprey, herons, egrets and a kingfisher. Very birdy place--I liked!

Saturday, November 25, 2023

Mammoth Goes to The Falls. The Big Ones. Day 17

Thu 5 Oct

We went to Paducah to find the old homeplace, and I couldn't find it!

But first...we went to find a place for breakfast. Two places had biscuits and gravy on the menu, and I wanted some. But I passed up the first place to go back to the second, called "The 50's cafe." I ordered the special but asked them to hold the meat--it was supposedly biscuits and gravy, two eggs and meat. But what they brought me out was "biscuit and gravy".  One stinking biscuit!   

I should have immediately asked for another one or sued them for false pluralization. But it was a very good biscuit and excellent gravy, and while my eggs were undercooked I survived the meal.

We ate in Calvert City, so we returned to the motorhome for a short Molly walk and then headed out to Paducah. Did I mention it was alternately raining and drizzling the whole time?  I was already dripping wet when we set out, and I wanted to park in downtown Paducah and walk the length of Broadway to fifth street and back in search of the old Kresgies building that was my first job site.

But the place where Ed ended up parking was the lot at the farmer's market across from the Market House Theater. So basically, the riverfront.  For reasons unknown I left the umbrella in the car and so we walked the street and back in the rain. My raincoat has a plastic liner, so my skin didn't get wet, but my hands, feet and phone camera sure did.

I couldn't figure out which was the Kresgie's Building. If I'd pinpointed the address up front I probably could have...most likely it was this one:

 Looking at the 10-story building

Up Broadway,

Down Broadway, toward the river,



Lots of cool old stuff, and lots of unfamiliar stuff:

I think this is the building that  used to be The Variety Store, where we got our comic books and then later, our used paperbacks and record albums.

 



Finkels!  Loved it but couldn't often afford to go there. I may have gotten the work boots that I used for my Desert Ecology field trip in college there.  Probably--it used to be hard to find high-topped work boots in women's sizes.

Floodgates at the river,
 

 

Then, soaking wet, we went up to Monroe street and circled around the block. I honestly could not find the homesite from the Monroe Street side. There was a house on the corner where I think the previous house burned down?  Or not. I forgot to look for Gina Davis's house across the street but I don't think it was there, because if it had been there, I would have seen it. It had a huge stone front steps and a basement underneath.

So we drove up and down and across and then came down Jefferson Street. There, at last, things looked familiar. I hopped out of the Jeep (in the rain) and walked across the big field that was there for most of my childhood after they tore down the houses that used to be across the alley. Then when I stood on the alley behind my house, I could see it as clearly as if it still stood. It had been replaced by a grassy lawn and a metal building, but it was still there as strong in memory as if I'd never left.

With my eyes, closed, I saw the two elm trees that succumbed to Dutch Elm Disease. The black locust. The driveway and the metal shed that Dad and I erected. The old wooden shed that we tore down. The angled bricks that lined the driveway, where I'd meticulously transplanted violets for several years until they bloomed purple cheer every spring and thick green leaves all summer. The garden that my brother (or was it me?) rototilled for her.

 Looking down the alley toward 11th street

The fenceline between our house and the Pate's house,
Our backyard, from the alley looking toward Monroe Street,
The oak trees in the field behind the house,
 

The three big oak trees in the field across from our house (Jefferson Street side) were still there and just as big and strong and healthy as to make your heart glad. Those trees must be 250 years old by now, and they're majesties!


And I could kind of see the back porch where we spent so many hours, playing or sitting in the evening to hear the sun go down...the gourd vines Ma planted one year that ran un strings to shade the porch and sprouted so many squash beetles that she never ever considered growing them again.  There was an apple tree she planted by the back porch and a patio of bricks that Dad laid. It was us kid's jobs to transplant moss in between the bricks and to yank up dandelion plants  when they sprouted, but we complained a lot and never did a very good job.  I think there was a brick path around to the garage, too.

Then the house, with dark green siding. The back door opened into the kitchen; off to the left was a family room--although if I remember right, they moved the rooms around occasionally and in the end that one ended up being my parent's bedroom.  A hall went straight down the center of the house, but I don't remember it very well. I was pretty young when they divided up the hall into closet space and put a central furnace in the middle closet.  

On the right of the hall (starting at the back door) was my bedroom and then my brother's bedroom at the front. In between them was a stove in the old days before we got the furnace.  There was a closet in the corner of my brother's room, backing up against the wall of my room, and there must have been some unused, walled up space next to it where the stovepipe vented. Maybe a chimney used to be there originally, but that would have been before we moved in.

And all those years of playing in the yard, eating beans and cornbread at the kitchen table, reading kids' books and acting them out with paper dolls and plastic toy horses, and then reading teenage books and eating pizza from Dairy Queen. Christmases; Birthday Cakes; Mom in her headscarf and bermuda shorts; Dad in front of the TV, complaining that they never showed local news. So many years; so many memories it would take me as many years to write them all.
And all so long ago.


Dinner at Patti's. Don't do this again. It would have had to be a lot better than it was to be worth the price they charged.



Friday, November 24, 2023

Mammoth Goes to The Falls. The Big Ones. Day 16

 Wed 4 Oct

Through Columbus and Cincinatti to Grand Rivers, Kentucky. 


Crossing the Ohio River!

The river:

 

 


This Canal Campground (COE) in Grand Rivers is indeed as nice a campground as everyone said. However, the site I picked sucked sucked sucked!  Basically they paved a parking lot and put about 12 "camp sites" in a circle around the edge. Our utilities were on the wooded side and our picnic table in the middle of the parking lot. And it was packed full of old people, friendly old people I will admit, sitting out on their picnic tables. '

 
I don't hate humanity and I'm often making good resolutions to be more friendly with my fellow campers, but that doesn't mean I want so many fellow campers thrust into my face that I can't pick my nose without being on exhibit!  I got my chair out of the back compartment and hid on the woods side behind Mammoth, to get a little privacy.

The only thing I can guess is that I looked at the campground reviews and then chose a pull-thru site to make it easier for us to access after a hard day driving. Little did I realize that the site was so short we'd have to unhook just to squeeze into it, nor did I notice that the middle of the loop was empty asphalt, not a wooded area with trees and bushes.  I assumed the normal layout where they would have left a ring of trees in the middle and made the road loop around it.  Rather than just pave the whole blame thing!

Barkley Lake shots, in the gray weather didn't look great.
 





But then later Molly and I took a long walk in and around the campground, where we discovered that there were a whole lot of other camping loops and they all had lots of back-in sites that were just lovely, some with a lake view.  

We were on the shore of Barkley lake, up near the dam where the canal joins it with Kentucky Lake to the west.

So if we decide to come back--and I would definitely come back--I'll be choosing one of the camping loops with sites that are more spread out and have some privacy. There were lots of those.  Easy to get to from new Interstate corridor I-69 and I-24.

No birds to speak of.  I'm sure there were plenty around, I just didn't see any. But there were some deer for Molly. She likes deer. They run away when she barks at them.