Note: Much of the next few posts have been posted recently. (Florida, 6/20/16) and The Big Trees, (6/15/16) I skip over here to avoid repeating myself so quickly.
Crossing into California, Gas jumped up 12 cents a gallon, and we needed
a fill up in both vehicles. Wouldn't you just know it?
Behind San Diego, the desert is at sea level. It rises 10,000 feet very
quickly. I started noticing barrels of water on regular pull offs, and I knew
we were in trouble. We had to stop, cool the motor off, and add more water,
several times before we reached the top. That had never been a problem before.
I knew we had a lot more Rocky Mountain crossings ahead, and I shelled out
several bucks to get a raised, topographical map, so I would know what was
ahead. I could then pull the car off and drive it up separately on those long
pulls. Turned out, all the other high Rocky Mountain crossings were cold, and
we didn't need it. San Diego was a neat place, especially the Zoo. They had
four pandas, which were rare at zoos, and Barbara was in love with them. There
was a long line by their cage, and the pandas were treated like royalty.
Everyone had to be really quiet, enforced by four security guards. She went
through that line four times. San Diego also had a very large naval presence,
along with ships, and that was interesting.
We
found our friends Patty and Dwight's house at Temecula, and we parked our rig
right out front. They just never fully understood why we slept in our RV
instead of coming in their house, But it was our home, now. And, Barbara builds
a great bed. It sometimes gets so tall, before she gets it right, that she has
to have a step stool to get in it.
They showed us around Southern California royally for a couple of days,
The J. Paul Getty Museum, and lots of other wonders. The Cafe we ate in
specialized in being crass and rude. A large sign, right up front, said, “Eat
and get out.” The waitresses had a really big chaw of bubblegum, and, between
bubbles, greeted us with, “Yeah, whatta' ya' want?”
I
drove our 53 foot road train right through LA. After that, I knew no big city
driving could scare me again. Later, Europe was a totally different story.
We
parked just north of LA near Hollywood, in Van Nuys. Barbara was not doing well. Her abdomen hurt.
It got worse. She said she felt like she was full of gas, so I tried pushing on
her belly to help get it out. Not the smartest thing I've ever done. She got
even worse. Finally, I walked across the park to a pay phone and called the
police, asked where the nearest hospital was. He said he didn't know. It
depended on where I was.. I had not the foggiest, and I had to go back and ask
Barbara. I didn't even know the name of the park. Kinda illustrates yet once
again, just who the brains of this outfit is. Even when she's impaired. After
waiting half the night (literally) in the emergence room, the diagnosis was
gall bladder problems, and it had to come out. Right now. And it's infected. I
sure hated to see Barbara being wheeled down the hall, waving and looking back
at me, all the way to the OR. The surgery went well, but her infected condition
required several days in the hospital. The Kids were ready to load up and head
west, but I told them it was too far,
and there was nothing they could do for her here. Being away from family in a
crisis is just part of being a traveler, and we both accepted that. When I went
to check Barbara out of the hospital, I knew our insurance was handling it. But
they said they preferred to get $1000 down in cases like this, being travelers
and all. Okay, that sounded reasonable. A long way and weeks down the line,
they sent us another copy of the bill. The $1000 had just disappeared. We had
befriended the hospital's Patient Advocate lady, who was also an RV'er, and we
called her. She said she would take care of it. A few days later we got a check
for that $1000. When insurance is involved, never pay up front. Let it go
through the insurance process. Early payment always gets confused, and the
confusion is always in favor of the hospital.
After she recouped for a few days in our RV, she wanted out of it. So we
took a few smaller trips, seeing the area. That old strategy of seeing a large
city on Sunday just didn't pan out in LA. The traffic was as bad at daylight
Sunday morning as any other time.
After ten days, she felt like she could travel, so we headed for Arkansas
in the car to let her regain her strength before continuing on with our
travels. In moving the RV to storage, that thing about the back end sticking
out far right on a left turn finally got me. I left a long deep scratch in
someone's car. I never talked to the owner, but the Park Director and our
Insurance fixed it while we were in Arkansas.
I
made the long drive home as easy on Barbara as possible, but it was still hard
on her. Corey, the rising “Next man of the clan,” took us aside. “OK, now, you've
had your trip. It's time to end it, now.” We thought otherwise. Barbara and I
decided long ago, as long as one of us was capable of wiping both our bottoms,
we are in charge of our life. Of course, if we live long enough, the time will
come when we both are very appreciative that we have caring children.
After two nice weeks with family, Barbara was pretty much her old self,
just with different eating habits. No grease. We made the long trip back
leisurely, seeing the sights. At Zion, I was amazed at the very tall cliffs. We
saw a tiny figure, two thirds of the way to the top. Binoculars proved it was a
climber, carrying his bed along. An overnight trip. In Death Valley, we saw a
giant black cloud just rolling across the sands to us. A huge sandstorm. Back
in Hollywood, we saw Paramount Studios. The emergency brake on our car just
would not release upon leaving, and we had to be towed. Again. A big comedown,
after just meeting Goldie Hawn, and seeing the other stars.
Back
home in our RV Park, we were awakened one morning by a young woman, knocking on
our door. When I opened up, she said, “I'm Cindy.” She started to sidestep me,
and come on in. I cut her off, saying, “I don't know you, Cindy.” She looked
puzzled, then walked back to a man who was waiting for her across the street.
They talked, he made a phone call, then she walked to the RV next door,
knocked, and was let in with a smile. She stayed there about half an hour, then
her and her Pimp walked off.
We
headed up the coast. We were on our way to the Hurst Castle, and being early, I
stopped at Moonstone Beach. The trail down the cliff was so steep, and it was
so windy, Barbara stayed in the car. The beach below was hidden from the
parking area. I really got into this moonstone hunting, and stayed a good
while. I found lots of pretty rocks, surely at least one was a moonstone. When
I finally walked out to where I could see the top of the cliff, Barbara was
waving her arms and shouting, but her words just floated off with the wind. Her
face told me a lot, though, and I quickly climbed up. She was scared, thought I
had just disappeared. I caught it pretty good over that. We may have been a few
minutes late for our appointment at Hearst Castle, but we still caught the bus
and headed up.
Hearst Castle was built by William Randolph Hurst, the Newspaper
Magnate. He went way over the top on everything. The grounds had many exotic
animals roaming about, from all over the world. The swimming pool was lined
with gold, and the castle itself was monstrous in size, and contained exotic
furniture and paintings from all over the world. William Randolph Hurst was a
man who could not be denied. In his travels, if he found something he wanted to
put in his castle, the price offer just kept going up until he had his way. A
big portion of the bus top blew off on the way back down. It can be windy in
California.
The
Remington Mansion was huge. The Remington Arms Company financed it. Mrs.
Remington, haunted by the ghosts of all the people killed by their product just
kept building on it as long as she lived. Stairways to nowhere, doorways with
no opening, On and on. As I was typing “Remington” the first time I wrote this
story, one of those ghosts must have came after me, because I just hit a normal
key, I thought, and the whole story just disappeared from the screen, never to
live again. I'm not a fast writer, and that was two day's work for me. Believe,
me, I am now typing this paragraph very gingerly, not wishing to anger anybody,
or any thing.
The
Big Sur coastline was magnificent, and we even walked on Pebble Beach Golf
Course. Years later, Corey and son-in-law Mickey paid in advance for a trip for
us to Pebble Beach. A week before, Corey hit his drive a mile at a course in
Florida, and as always, I felt I should swing as hard as I could to try to stay
somewhat close to his. My back went out, bad, maybe my worst. But there was
just no way around it. I had to play Pebble Beach. What else could I do? The
course of a lifetime, the chance of a lifetime. I left a lot of pain lying
about on Pebble Beach, and my scorecard overflowed. But I played it.
Next stop, San Francisco. As with many cities on this trip, with time
not being a limiting factor, we just jumped off into the city and quickly lost
ourselves. Actually, one cannot truly get lost if you have no destination, as
long as we eventually met back up with our RV. At lunch time, we stopped at
Little Orphan Annie's. Turned out, once we were seated, we realized it was
really “Little Orphan Andy's,” and we were the only straight people about. I
was trying to decide whether to stay or not, and my legs were out in the aisle.
The waiter walked up, looked at me, and said, “Are you STAYING?” I stammered
out, “Just long enough to eat.”
Once
we crossed the Golden Gate Bridge, we stopped, debating about whether to take
safe highway 101, inland a ways, or tackle highway 1, in the RV, along the
cliffs. An old full time RV'er told me
once on Prince Edward Island, half a world away, that driving an RV on Highway
1 north of San Francisco was the ultimate test for driving an RV in the world.
“If you can drive it, you can drive anywhere.” Well, that was too much of a
challenge to pass up. After we started up the winding road toward the cliffs,
we stopped at a station. I asked the operator, “Have you seen many people
driving RV's past this point?” “Well, I have seen a few, but they almost always
come back in a few minutes.”
When
we went on up, It got bad quick. I had to sling the car off in the ditch on a
hairpin curve to avoid bikers coming down. Once out overlooking the ocean, the
road was just a tiny shelf along a high cliff, and if one is brave enough to
look ahead, it was the same for many miles. At least, I had the inside, going
north. Barbara tells me that drive was beautiful, but I didn't see it. All I
ever saw was ten white knuckles over the top of my steering wheel. After 50
miles, I was done in. We went inland to 101 and eventually parked it, driving
out to see the good view in the car. I began to realize Barbara was right. The
scenery WAS breathtaking.
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