Texas Clodhopper
RVF Supporter
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2019
- Messages
- 1,888
- Location
- Garden Ridge, TX
- RV Year
- 2017
- RV Make
- Newmar
- RV Model
- Ventana 4369
- RV Length
- Longer daily
- Chassis
- Freightliner
- Engine
- Cummins
- TOW/TOAD
- 2022 GMC Canyon AT4
- Fulltimer
- No
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it infuriated me the last time we stayed at Cheyenne Mountain and half the spots in the loop that we wanted were never occupied during our two days day. they are so difficult to get that I have to sit on the computer and be ready to login at 8 o'clock on the date 5 months before that makes sense.I don't like to make reservations early if I can avoid it as well. I'm worried if I do that then something is likely to go south somewhere enroute. If it's a popular destination then I have no choice. My Colorado adventure was one where it was hard in some places, or sites were not available and then 1-2 weeks prior things opened up. I think people reserve just like hoarding toilet paper (now eggs) and then cancel as the reservation nears so things always seem to open up. I at least need to figure out where and when and what to see.
If you are into "wagon ruts" Baker City in Oregon has an amazing Interpretive Center. Interpretive Centers: National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center | Bureau of Land Management Highway 101 along the Washington, Oregon and California coast is, in my opinion, the most scenic drive in North America. The Monterey Aquarium (and Monterey) are worth the look. Just an FYI.. Highway 101 south of Monterey doesn't have many RV Parks that are Big Rig Friendly. I would plan dates and book if you can. San Francisco has some interesting things to do and see. We found the Alcatraz tour spectacular.We're heading out in early June, briefly visiting a few spots (Cheyenne Mountain State Park, wagon ruts at Guernsey SP, then on the Dubois for a few days, then a few week in Oregon/Vancouver area to visit family....Then we're tentatively planning to drop down into San Jose and Huntington Beach areas to visit friends and family, then over to Colorado for 7 weeks in our fav - Lake City. Heading home in October. Planning to miss out on summer in Texas. Longest trip ever.
We did nearly 3 months out in 2023, and it went great, and it's good that we get along well with each other.
Would appreciate tips on where to stay in California - we've never been there in an RV, and I think Bob has never been at all. I visited friends in the late 70s, and they took me around to Napa Valley, Sausalito, Top of the Mark, Lombard, Ghiradelli, Redwoods. Tourist stuff - it was OK.
I have found a couple of Parks that will do for our access to family/friends.... we might have a 45-60 minute drive to meet up, but that's fine.If you are into "wagon ruts" Baker City in Oregon has an amazing Interpretive Center. Interpretive Centers: National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center | Bureau of Land Management Highway 101 along the Washington, Oregon and California coast is, in my opinion, the most scenic drive in North America. The Monterey Aquarium (and Monterey) are worth the look. Just an FYI.. Highway 101 south of Monterey doesn't have many RV Parks that are Big Rig Friendly. I would plan dates and book if you can. San Francisco has some interesting things to do and see. We found the Alcatraz tour spectacular.
Safe travels
Darrell
I'm unsure what chaos you're referring to or all the budget slashing. Do you think the National Parks are going to close?With the chaos in Washington DC and all the budget slashing, we are not counting on any national parks this year. Maybe boondock on NF lands a lot more.
The national parks could close. Staffing and budgets are slashed. Some campgrounds will be closed. Visitor Centers will have sharply reduced hours if they open at all. No services like trash pickup or toilet servicing. SAR and Ranger personnel are cut 50% at many Parks. Firefighting crews reduced. Support staff completely cut. National Forests and BLM public lands are similar. It is going to the Wild West on public lands this year -- completely unregulated, uncontrolled, and unmanaged.I'm unsure what chaos you're referring to and all the budget slashing. Do you think the National Parks are going to close? There are some long overdue financial audits being done in DC and if that's the chaos you're talking about then every corporation in America is operating in chaos.
Well! I watched many shows like flipper, mayberry RFD, chips where officers were peace officers rather than enforcers. Over time the officers became swatt teams, and dirty Harry.With the doom and gloom some see, you, Kevin, "anticipate great, and muchly needed changes in the public lands that I will roam." You have more experience camping on government land than most; I'm curious what are the changes you predict may come about?
At Tillamook is a nice Cheese factory and gift shop. A lot of good cheese. Also at the local airport is a small Aircraft museum in an old Blimp hanger. Lots of history about WWII and how Oregon was bombed by the Japanese.Just made some plans for heading up the Oregon Coast, east to the Cascades, and work our way south. ~5 weeks total. Maybe six.