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We're running around the service center area too. Staying with family while they work on our coach.
I'll wander over sometime tomorrow. I'm the grey headed old man with a confused look on his face. lol, and that's on a good day. :)
 
Underneath the 50’s era 2 lane bridge near Kingston, OK.
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This is our windshield
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and yard view this morning. Wild Cherry RV Resort, Lake Leelanau, MI.
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That bridge is scheduled for a major rebuild soon. We used to have a boat slip/dockominium at Catfish Bay near there
I've heard that. There's a head on collision on it several times a year, it's quite narrow. The old Miss. Rvr. bridge at Cape Gerardeau was narrow like that too. I just slow down to 40 mph going across, it doesn't make the traffic behind me particularly proud but they get over it.
 
Washing the coach today to get her ready for the road soon. 🤪
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That is the best kind of rinse.
 
For the first time I didn't wash the coach for a trip this long, it wasn't bad at all and I spent the time washing the roof and a few inspection items. It poured terribly the first day on the road and then hit multiple unpaved roads under construction (coastal rte 1 north in Maine) they had spray trucks to keeps the dust down, one went right by me while stopped at a one lane portion and sprayed the whole drivers side.

Some times I catch a break.
 
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Lunch at the MuleHouse, Talking Rock, GA.

According to a person in the know, the name "MuleHouse" actually comes from a historical building type common in many small towns back in the early 1900s, a mule house.

These were structures where travelers could safely store or stable their mules when passing through, kind of like today’s RV storage pull-offs, but for livestock. Over time, towns often named buildings, or later, businesses, after that humble but practical function. In Jasper, for example, owner George Koulouris opted for the name Old Mulehouse to pay homage to that local mule-trading history.

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It took two days of white-knuckle driving, battling I-40, wind gusts strong enough to test your will to live, roads barely wider than my RV by about four inches, and rain that made Noah look like he overreacted. But I made it!

And before @Neal kicks off with the usual nonsense about that being my Mountain Aire, let me stop you right there: no, it is not! Mine’s tucked away over on the budget side of the lot, quietly hoping someone mistakes it for something that belongs here. 😂

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Just went through there today. Praying all the way that each strange thump was not something hitting the coach. Definitely a test of driving skill and ability to ignore the long line of impatient vehicles behind me.
 
Gibbs Gardens in Ball Ground, GA

Founded by Atlanta landscaper Jim Gibbs, the gardens began in 1980 when he bought 200 acres and slowly expanded it into today’s 376-acre showcase. After decades of vision and hard work, he opened it to visitors in 2012 as a world-class estate garden.

It was high on Trish’s “must-see” list, so that made it a "must see" for me as well. lol But overall, it was a very beautiful landscaping masterpiece.

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