Thursday, November 26, 2009

Palm Springs/Indio CA in Nov 2009

Hi everyone,

We have been doing a little relaxing, a little dancing, a little maintenance and a little geocaching. We had some R & R before the square dance festival started.

The festival was terrific!  With callers like Tony Oxendine, Gary Shoemake, Marshal Flippo, Ken Bower, Wade Driver, Mike Sikorsky and Johnny Preston how could it be anything but wonderful!  Cuers included one of our favorites, Chuck Weiss.  There was a 'Trail In" dance Thursday evening.  Friday and Saturday had morning, afternoon and evening sessions, and Sunday morning was a Trail Out.  It's hard to get enough good dancing...but I think we finally did!!  We were able to park the motorhome pretty close to the dance halls there at the Indio fairgrounds, and had 50 amp service too.  We were very comfortable, and it is so nice to 'hobble' out of the dance hall and into your house to rub your sore feet and take a little nap!  There were a record number of dancers--1100.  We made a trip out to the date farm packing house to drink our free date shakes.  We had thought there was going to be a tour, but not so.  We bought 11 pounds of them, enough majools to last us until next year!

Afterward we did a little geocaching and will show you one of the caches we thought was interesting.  It hung above a canal.   It was tiny, about the size of the upper joint section of my little finger.  It was on a cord and you had to pull it to you, take it apart and sign, then pull it back out over the canal. 


 This one shows a little of the canal and surrounding area

The next picture you may think is a little strange.  We were driving down the highway when we saw this one.  It was fascinating and the camera was handy.  It was aluminum cans that had really been compacted.  I don't know if they were  anchored together in any way or not.  The can colors showed up like there was nothing around them.  If anyone has seen them from a better viewpoint I'd like to hear about it.

These next pictures were taken on a 5 hour hike.  It was labeled as 5 miles but it felt more like 7 or 8.  We were pretty "done in" by the time we finished it even though the day was a perfect one for hiking.   It was in the Pushawalla Preserve and trails criscrossed our path all day long.  The geocache series was called the Pushawalla Power Path and there were 29 geocaches in the series.  We found 27 of them so it was a pretty good day's work.  One of the missing caches was definitely missing.  It had been tied to a little rope,  when we came home and checked the previous logs on it we discovered that someone had reported being able to see it at the bottom of the ravine with their binoculars.  The other one that we didn't get had reported that it might have been moved and had another set of coordinates. We checked both locations but since there were several DNFs (did not finds) we assume it has disappeared also.


 
This last one shows the area where the other pictures were taken from.  It was such a spectacular spot so you could shoot in every direction and get a different view.
 
When we worked our way off the hill we had several caches in the Oasis.  There was still water seeping  from the ground as you can see in one of the pictures.






We also found some closer to the park where we are staying.  The next picture shows where we are headed, it was all loose sand and sand dunes.  The name of the cache was Dry Dock.  Interesting name.






























We stopped just outside Sun City Palm Desert to pick up a couple of caches and we thought you might like to see the tower there.  We don't know if they are Cell towers or what, we have seen them in AZ as well as CA.  They try to make them look like a palm tree.



Gary often enjoys a nap while I fetch groceries.  This day he didn't spend his time doing a crossword puzzle, or napping, he had other interests.  This 65 Mustang convertible came in and parked near him, he took a bunch of pictures but I won't bore you with all of them.  Except for the color it is like the one we bought in NC and took with us to CA.  We are always fascinated by them. 






The owners were not spring chickens, even older than us I think.  Maybe they had a new one in 1965?The mustang was gone before I finished in the store but this VW was there when I came out.  Really a unique one. 

 
We did another hike on Tuesday, it was 4 hours and we did about 13 caches.  It was a hotter day than our 5 hour hike and we were really soaking up the water.  Just a few more views from this area, it was a little lower than the other hike so the photos may not be quite as spectacular.  Here they come:



We had a pretty good Thanksgiving Day dinner, all the trimmings.  As always we eat too much and are still waiting for the main course to settle before having pecan pie for dessert.  I hope you all had an ample Thanksgiving dinner.

We will be heading into AZ next week, some maintenance work to be done in the Phoenix area and some more in Tucson.  We will be spending 2 weeks in Apache Junction and then on to Benson.

Gary's step-mother Jeanette is getting married on Saturday.  Our congratulations to her and her new husband!

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Oct 30, 2009 Lake Meade to Lake Havasu and on to Palm Springs

Hi everyone,

Wow, after looking at the last download of pictures it makes it hard to know just where to start.  It will be mostly pictures in this blog, not much to say about them except we certainly live in a beautiful country.

This is the boat ramp at Lake Meade.  As you can see it is pretty worthless at this point, the lake level is so low and has been for a long time, from the look.

 

Close by were some unusual formations that I thought you might like to see.

We were there with our friends Jim & Peggy.  We stayed on BLM land on Government Wash Road, just off Hwy 167.  Going for a drive up Hwy 167 we came to an area our friends knew about and did a hike.  Here are some pictures from the hike the first one is from the top, looking back toward the parking lot:

 

 

 

After our hike we went further north to this area.  Sorry,  neither of us remember what it was called.  It was gorgeous and here is a little description to help you understand the formations:

 

 

 

 

 

 

While we were at Lake Meade we did a little geocaching.  Want to see some of the unusual caches?

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The cache was up behind that rock formation, not exactly an easy one.  The photo below is from the cache, showing what we went through to get there.

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The one below was strange but a pretty easy one. 

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One day, from the same camp we went south of Las Vegas to an area called Red Rock Canyon.  There is a one way driving loop there.  The sun didn’t shine much that day so the colors of the rocks didn’t really show their beauty.  We did a lot of caching along the way so here are some photos from that trip:

The next one was pretty cool, sorry we didn’t get another shot of it back in place.  They had glued pieces of the joshua tree to the end of the container so when it was back in place you could hardly see it.  Peggy found this one:

More caches:

This was the only picture from Red Rock Canyon that really showed the colors but as you can see from the sky, we didn’t get any help from the weather.

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From Las Vegas we headed south going to a park in the Coast to Coast system in Bullhead City, AZ, just across the river from Laughlin, NV.  There we did a little caching but spent quite a bit of time catching up on the blog.  We were there when we finished up the St George and Colorado segments.  We did visit a Car Museum in one of the casinos, and walked along the river.   Sometimes you just have to stop and catch your breath but it was only a few days until Jim & Peg caught up with us and we were off to see Oatman and the wild burros.  Wild??

There was a gunfight in the street.  I think the gunfighters enjoyed it as much as the observers.  After the fight they passed the hat for donations that are given to the Shriners Childrens Hospital.  Here are some of the fighters:

We didn’t stay in Oatman long, making our way back to Laughlin and stuffing ourselves with the great dinners offered there. 

From there we headed to Havasu City.  Neither of us had seen London Bridge although we saw lots of bridges in London when we were there.  I guess we didn’t get any pictures.  If you get there, be sure to note the numbers on each brick.  It is truly incredible that they numbered each, disassembled it and moved it to the U.S.  It is the main bridge from the city to the island.  We spent one day riding our bicycles on the island, caching along the way.  Pretty cool way to travel there.  They have nice wide bikeways.  An interesting thing was that the bicycles are supposed to go one direction and the walkers the other direction.   This wasn’t a notable cache but a beautiful spot

The one below looked like a bolt in the sign:

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This was a good location, any other would probably have been washed away.

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In this one you can see how the city sprawls up across the hillside beyond the lake.

This replica was built by the “Lake Havasu Lighthouse Club”

The plaque read:

SPLIT ROCK LIGHTHOUSE

The Lake Havasu replica is approximately one third the size of the original at Two Harbors, Minnesota.

The Lighthouse in Minnesota, on Lake superior was built in 1919 and deactivated in 1969. The Minnesota Lighthouse is lit one day a year.  On November 10th, to commemorate the sinking of the ship the “Edmund Fitzgerald”, which went down off shore of the lighthouse on that date in 1975 with all souls lost at sea.  The Havasu light was lit on November 10, 2003. 

The Lake Havasu Lighthouse Club is a group of Lake Havasu City citizens dedicated to improving the navigational lighting on Lake Havasu. 

The Split Rock Lighthouse is sponsored by The Esmay Family.

Dedicated January 4, 2004

 

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Before leaving Havasu we decided to do a few more caches and take a hike, leaving from Sara Park.  It turned out to be a little more than we had bargained for.  We lined up the caches, took our lunch and headed out.  The only problem was that one of the caches was a multi (meaning that you have the coordinates for the first and each time you find it it gives you new coordinates until you reach the final cache.   The biggest problem was that the multi took us in a different direction then some of the caches we had hoped to find.  As you can see the colors here are entirely different than the country we had been traveling in.  Along the way I thought a lot of the rocks looked like petrified Dinasour dung.  The hike started up the wash but after finding the first in the multi it started taking us up and over some pretty rough hills.  Our intention was that we would find the multi and then get the ones we had missed on our return trip. 

P1040762 In this series you will note the bolt on the post, the cache was inside the drilled-out bolt and stuck to the post with a magnet.

The next picture was the 3rd in the series, of course the snake was the first thing you saw when you moved the rock away. 

The final picture was near the second on the multi.  The coordinates were inside a fake rock but this fella was close by.  We thought he looked like Fred ( the tarantula our kids found while camping and adopted when they were in elementary school).

When we got to the lake we discovered that the other caches we wanted to get were way over there.  We had already walked 5.4 miles and still had to return to the car.  Needless to say maybe “Next Time” we will take the other route and add them to our list of “found”.

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We were 2 tired bodies when we finally got home that day and lucky for us the next day was a short travel day taking us to Ehrenberg, AZ, just across the river from Blythe, CA.  Our park there was very nice but the wind was fierce the next day after we arrived.  Lucky for us that it waited until we got in.  We did do a little geocaching and played some pool.  I guess Gary will get even later but for once it was my turn to win.  Our travel day there was a nice calm one,  the next 3 days were windy and luckily it was calm again today for our travel to Indio. 

We are now in the Thousand Trails park here for a few days, then moving to Catalina Spa for a week.  Our main focus here will be the RIVCO Square & Round Dance Festival with seven of the finest Square Dance callers in the World.  Take care and we will see you after the Festival!