Saturday, September 24, 2016

Saturday, September 24, 2016 There's no place like home


Saturday, September 24, 2016

Oh oh... my humans are moving things around.  I guess I will have to go into the little house that moves.  I guess I will get some sleep.

Today, we head home.  We got Hannah ready, I did a short walk and on the road we went. It is 434 miles to home.  What will we find when we get there?  My nephew Crew is taking care of the place... or is he...

The boring ride was uneventful - which is a good thing.  I get home to some very dry plants - not an ounce of toilet paper in the house (good thing I noticed that before I went into the bathroom), and he was busy trying to get things together knowing we would be home.  I gave him a 2 hour notice...  He is to be living with us till January - should I allow him to live that long. 

I gave my plants a little water - I will give them a lot more tomorrow, and take inventory on some of the losses.  I see so many had bloomed while I was gone, and one of them that is blooming now has never bloomed for me before.  I guess neglect can be good...

Oh well, next year, I will have one of my orchid friends take care of things.  Now to unload, clean, and adjust to life in the house that doesn't move.

And one more thing... The Dodgers are on TV with Vinny...  YES!

Friday, September 23, 2016 And the golf prize goes to....


Friday, September 23, 2016
I think I want to lay on my paternal human.  No, let's try the maternal one.  Ok, let's go back to the paternal human.  Naw... gotta be the maternal human.  Let me rub face and mark her as my territory.
Today is our last day here.   Last night, the storm was so violent, I thought I would go outside and see what kind of damage there was.  Oh my, Rudy, I don't think we are in Kansas anymore... I see pars, and birdies, and eagles and even a hole in one...  Oh wait... do I have to wake up????
We spent the day cleaning Hannah, so that when we get home, we can just unload her and put her up.  It was a nice relaxing day.
At our banquet, we learned that we are sucky golfers!  We knew that, it was just reaffirmed.  But we did win some skins.  That just means we had a decent hole at the right time!  So be it!  We will take money any way we can.  One of the teams Spouse was on did well - my heroes!  Once again... 4 rounds of golf and not a single hole-in-one...
My left arm is sore from hitting out of the rough.   Time to give it some rest...  We come home tomorrow.
The traffic gods of Utah have a real sense of humor.  Not only do they make those stupid roundabouts so people don't have to make a left hand turn, but instead run into one another trying to get around, but at some of the major freeway intersections, they reroute the traffic.  They create an 'x' where you go on the wrong side of the road, then back all because some moron can't make a left hand turn.  It is so confusing.  California seems so... so normal!  go figure...

Friday, September 23, 2016

Thursday, September 22, 2016 Enter Entrada, and wow, what a storm


Thursday, September 22, 2016
Me-owt, me-owt!  Oh wait... it's wet out there!  I want in!!!
At 2:30 last night, I woke up to listen to the pouring rain.  Hmmm, what will our day be... It was drizzly when we got up, and foggy, but I did see glimpses of the moon and a few stars.  We got ourselves ready and headed out.  It isn't raining.  The streets are almost dry and it looks like it may be possible that the clouds are starting to break up.  By the time we got to the course, I was convinced we could play.  The skies continued to clear, we are on.
We are playing a private course - Entrada.  It is in a beautiful valley surrounded by the Utah red cliffs.  Early, the tops of the cliffs are covered in a fog, but through the day, it totally clears and becomes a picture perfect day for golf.  And the location is incredible.




This is a fabulous course.  A few of the holes are surrounded by lava fields.  There is the right amount of challenge, the greens are diabolical.  Actually, if I were to play the course again, I think I would like the greens because they are true, just fast.  I played with three other ladies, one of them was way too serious and quite bitchy.  Good thing I wasn't sharing a cart with her. I enjoyed myself nonetheless.  My evil twin did show up on occasion, especially when I got in the rough.  That stuff was like trying to hit through velcro - it would grab your club and take control.  It was not pretty for any one of us.  And Bitchy had her fair share of shots from the rough.  And if I had known the course, I would have hit some of the blind shots in different locations.  But other than that, it was my favorite of the courses we played here.
After enjoying the 19th hole, we headed back to Hannah.  What's that smell?  Is that propane?  Crap!  Somehow the oven knob got turned to 'light pilot' and Hannah was filling with propane!  We had the windows opened already, we opened them more and grabbed Rudy and went outside to let it air out.  That could have gotten ugly.
As we sat there, the winds started kicking up.  Then they REALLY started kicking up.  THEN THEY REALLY STARTED KICKING UP!  With Hannah aired out, we turned on the TV and severe weather warnings are being broadcast.  There was a tornado that touched down in Ogden - way north of here.  Then the thunder and the lightening.  Did I mention it was windy?  For about an hour, Hannah rocked while this wicked, violent storm passed through - AFTER we finished a picture perfect day of golf...  Timing.... yes!

Wednesday, September 21, 2016 Raining at the Ledges


Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Sometimes, my maternal human sits at the table and looks at this box thing.  She taps on it with her paws.  She also moves this... this thing that she calls a mouse.  It is the most boring mouse I have ever seen.  It doesn't move unless she paws at it.  What fun is that?  I knock it off the table to see if it runs, but it just lays there.  I don't get why my human is so interested in it.

Today we are playing the Ledges.  It is a couple miles west of St. George.  It rained some during the night, and it is cloudy and damp.  When we got there, the staff discouraged me from walking.  Since we are playing a scramble - it is not my own game - I relented and shared a cart with Spouse.  Seven holes later, I was glad as it started raining.  It wasn't a hard rain.  It was intermittent, but I needed to put on my jacket as it really cooled down.  I was glad I was wearing closed shoes.  I still walked a lot, using the cart as a caddy, but I was able to duck in when the rain started. 

When I go into a new golf course, I judge it before I ever go out to play.  I check out the bathrooms. It seems that the nicer the bathrooms, the nicer the course.  And these bathrooms were top notch... but the course???  Well, I guess it is nice, but there was lots of damage around the fairways on several holes.  And the greens were just ok.  And they did have an outhouse to use when out on the course.  It was so disgusting, I almost threw up when I went inside.  I held out till we made the turn at the clubhouse.  I would have gone in the chaparral before I would have gone back in that outhouse.  It seemed disgraceful to have that out there.

But our banquet will be here Friday night, in the nice bathroom area!

We had a decent team out there and had fun.  But in the bar afterward, Utah law says if you order a mixed drink, you must order food.  Really?  It was cool, I wanted a keoke coffee... guess we will have some nachos. Whatever...

For dinner, we went to a Gun Barrell Steakhouse for one of the gang's birthday.  I really don't like going into a restaurant with 50 people as it is impossible, but we made the best of it.  We purposely sat near people we don't normally hang with so that we could mix things up and it was fun.

The weather on TV says major thunderstorms tomorrow...  will our last game be rained out?  When we got back to Hannah, the rains came big time...  But weather.com says we will golf...  we shall see...


Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Tuesday, September 20, 2016 Off to Kolob Canyon


Tuesday, September 20, 2016
My maternal human is using her litter box.  I am pawing under the door at her feet.  She threw a toy down for me.  This is fun!  Let me get both paws under there!  FUN!
Today is an 'off' day - no golf.  Spouse and I did a walk, then went to the Holiday Inn Express to meet up with Karl and Kurt and enjoy one of their crappy - I mean delicious... breakfasts.  So, what do you do in this neck of the woods when you don't want to consume your whole day but wanna do something?
Over the years when we have driven I15, I saw Kolob Canyon, Zion National Park.  Now, I know Zion - at least the heart of Zion is 20 or 30 miles east of I15, so what is this Kolob Canyon?  It is about 25 miles north of us, so with Karl, we head that way.  It actually is part of Zion.  There is a 5 mile scenic drive, but it doesn't connect by paved road to the main Zion.  There are quite a few hiking trails, and there are the buttes... the scenic rocks.  The reds... the beauty.  We drove to the top, which is about 6000 feet.  There is a mile roundtrip hike out to an overlook where you can see for a gazillion miles.  The clouds are threatening rain, and we were warned to stay off dirt roads.  I think Jack is glad about that - Spouse washed him and he is clean.  The thought of getting muddy does not interest him... or Spouse.  Thus, we kept it easy.






Tonite, dinner at the Painted Pony.  Supposedly a real treat.  We shall see...
I have no internet in Hannah, so I am forced to go to the clubhouse to post.  I like where we are except for that.

Monday, September 19, 2016 Sand Hollow with no evil twin!


Monday, September 19, 2016
My humans are getting ready to leave me again.  Will they be gone long?  Will they let me-owt?
Today we are playing Sand Hollow golf course.  It is a type of scramble format.  I am playing with Bruce.  As the only twosome, we have to tee off twice on each hole.  We then take the best drive, then play individually.  Bruce can drive the ball, but I am definitely the better golfer.  However, the drive is what we need so it worked pretty well.  We probably used about 10 of his drives, 8 of mine..
It is a beautiful course, run much better than yesterday at Coral Canyon.  It was a tad slow, but not bad.  I was hitting the ball a whole lot better.  There were some stunning holes on cliffs overlooking a valley with the Virgin River.





Spouse is playing with two guys that are known to hit some wild shots.  But when they are on, they can really win because their handicaps suck.  And with Spouse's handicap, they tore it up!  YAY!
A nice Thai/Japanese dinner...  mmmmmm....
 

Sunday, September 18, 2016 My evil twin... darn her...


Sunday, September 18, 2016

Oh no... my humans are getting ready to leave me.  Will they be gone long?  I want to go outside!  Where are they?  Me-owt...  I guess I will just lay around...  I want out... where are my humans?

Today we are playing golf at Coral Canyon, just a couple of miles from here.  I am allowed to walk the course, although the staff thinks I am crazy.  It is a shotgun start, which means people all start at the same time but on different holes.  We are starting on 17, which means I have to walk two holes back... on a course I know nothing about.  I was told to take 10 to 11, then the 17th tee is near the 11th green.  So off I go... I climb.  I am pushing my clubs.  I climb, I push... I climb and push... I finally get to the top.  I go down... I pull back my clubs, I go down... and so it goes.  Lots of desert chaparral but nice fairways and greens.  We are playing with Paula, the coordinator of this trip.  She is a pretty good golfer.  Not so for us.  My evil twin was there for most of the day.  The day was EXTREMELY slow.  The foursome in front of us was part of our group, but the foursome in front of them was not, and they were slow.  A round of golf should take about 4 1/2 hours.  This took 6 hours.  For me, it is impossible to get any momentum when you are waiting and waiting... Did I mention that it took SIX hours for this round????  And most of the ball cleaners had no water in them, which is really tacky when there are tournaments out there.  Spouse did pretty good getting over some of the hazards on his drives.  Yay Spouse!


And it was warm... I was surprised to see alcohol being served in the bar on Sunday.  An ICE COLD beer with an ICE COLD glass please....

When we got back, we stopped at our friend's trailer, Brian and Kathy Boals.  They are playing in this neck of the woods so we thought we would connect.  After a shower, we decided to go out for Italian food.  One problem... all the Italian restaurants are closed today (except for Dominoes Pizza and the Olive Garden).  When life deals you a lemon, you make lemonade...  We got some pasta and sauce from Hannah, they had some tomato based beanie/weanie stew, some fresh creamed spinach and fresh parmesan!  Voila, we had our Italian meal.  And don't forget the meatballs...



After a great visit, back to Hannah.  Rudy wants some out time...

 

 

Saturday, September 17, 2016 Red Solo Cup - I fill you up, let's have a party


Saturday, September 17, 2016
My humans have me in a new place.  It seems kind of tame to me... Wait!  I see a birdie!  oh, there is a dog...
My morning walk took me around the area.  There is lots of development going on here.  Of course, Spouse talked to every person he met to find out the details of the park we are in.  It is really a mobile home park where you own the space.  There are a few RV spots that the office will rent out for the owners.  Apparently, the owners go travel around, and rent their space while they are gone, then they come back.  It is very clean and quiet.
We ran some errands, which for Spouse involves stopping at RV stores so he can chew on what he likes and doesn't like.  And what this friend may like or that friend.  And on and on... Ok, can we go now?
Tonite is the 'meet and greet' of all the golfers that are attending this soiree.  They are staying at the Holiday Inn Express.  This being Utah, no alcohol can be served at the event... unless it is disguised in a plain pitcher, and you pour it in a red solo cup...  Hah!  We just happened to have a plain pitcher and red solo cups...
 

Friday, September 16, 2016 On to the Golf tourney


Friday, September 16, 2016

I caught another mousie!  It is so easy here!  I love it.  I played with it.  I threw it in the air and everything.  Then my paternal human pulled me off of it and let it get away.  What's with that?

This morning, we had Kathleen over for some coffee and warm air.  It was another cold night, but not quite as bad as the nights before.  After we bid farewell, we went for the hike up to the Spectra Point.  It is warm in the sun, cold in the shade, but at least I didn't need a jacket.  There were two hotshots that passed us with nothing but shorts on.  I guess they wanted to strut their stuff...  It was NOT that warm... but their stuff was definitely strutted!

We got back and readied Hannah for her next trip, down to our golf tournament - the whole reason for this trip.  It was hard pulling Rudy away from his mousing, but we did it and moved back down to Cedar City, then on to the town of Washington, right north of St. George.  I am sure the city of Washington and St. George used to be quite separate.  Now, they run into one another with all the development.   This is 69 miles from Cedar Breaks, but it is 6000 feet lower, and 35 degrees warmer!  Back to shorts and t-shirts.

We booked the RV spot a couple of months ago.  Correction:  Spouse booked it.  He did not remember which park he booked...  He kind of remembered the space number though.  I looked through some emails and narrowed the parks down to two, then he remembered.  When we got here, there was nobody in the office to confirm the space number, but a gentleman in a golf cart took us to the space Spouse thought it was and it was empty, so maybe he is right.  I hope so because that is where we set up.  With no internet...  Ugh... posting blogs may be a problem.

And Samantha... from this direction, the RV park is on the LEFT not the RIGHT!

Friday, September 16, 2016

Thursday, September 15, 2016 Rudy loves his rodents


Thursday, September 15, 2016
I caught a mousie!  I caught a mousie!  I was outside with my paternal human and he dropped the leash so that I could run.  I ran right over to the bushes by the house and caught a mousie! I got to throw it in the air, and chase it.  Then it stopped moving.  I tried to get it to play with me some more, but it wouldn't.  So I left it.
Last night, we set the thermostat at 50 so that we wouldn't freeze during the night.  But, it wasn't even 9:00 and the heater was running.  At this rate, we would run out of propane and run down the battery... which we did both.  To top it off, I woke up with a terrible sinus headache.  I took drugs... it was dark.  The moon was hogging the night sky.  I hate headaches.  I dozed.  When Spouse got up, he switched propane tanks.  It was after 7 and someone else was running a generator so he started ours.  It was 42 degrees inside Hannah.  Ahhh, the heat... oh the headache... back  to sleep...  The drugs started to work, but they make me sleepy.  I dozed.  I swore I was going to get up, then I would drift off.  Finally, at 9:30, I felt good enough to get up.  I rarely sleep till 7:30 let alone 9:30.  The drugs...  they will keep me a bit slow all day, but it sure beats the pain.
We took our morning walk along a new bike path they have at the monument.  It weaves around a forest and you can get views of the canyon.  Even the subtle uphill climbs are getting me today, but we are at 10,000 feet, so I am not sure if it is my sinus thing or the altitude.  We come back for a brief lunch, then hit the road exploring. 
We took off towards Brian Head.  It is a ski area about 8 miles north of here.  It is bigger than I remember, with some new condos across from the lifts.  It is a forested drive.  We crest a summit at 10,420 feet.  There is a 13% grade going down the hill from our direction - not recommended for trailers.  I could imagine coming up this grade during ski season.  Now that is a slippery slope!



We followed the road down to Parowan, then got on the I15 south to Cedar City.  We ran a few errands - I got my hair cut (Sorry Daf, I couldn't wait any longer!).  Then we headed back to camp.  Rudy is awfully proud of himself.  He caught another mouse.  He was playing with it, but Spouse took him off of it before he could 'do the deed.'  The mouse will have one good story of survival...
Our campfire drew all sorts of folks from the campground.  Kathleen, the elderly chemist (who is tenting it next to our site) came by.  We heated her food and cleaned her dishes afterwards.  She wasn't banking on it being quite so cold. The Texan, he was so cold he was wearing a bathrobe over his jacket, carrying his glass of wine.  Another couple came over and Spouse regaled them with all sorts of lies... or maybe just half truths.  All the while... Rudy's pet was in the fire...
 

Wednesday, September 14, 2016 Nothing to sweat over...


Wednesday, September 14, 2016
I thought I had my humans trained better.  I let them know I want out, and once again, they ignore me!  Back to the stinkeye treatment.
During the night, we had a rain shower.  I love the sound but I hope it isn't raining in the morning.  It is cold.  It is the middle of the night.  Spouse decided to turn on the heat.  But wait... it kicked off.  Hmmm, we know it is cold enough for the thermostat.  Are we out of propane?  No, the refrigerator is still on and the stove will light.  Uh oh... batteries... We do what humans do when they are cold - we throw an extra blanket on and drag our FHG (feline heat generator) under the covers.  His ears are cold, but he is purring and staying in place.  He must be cold too.  We will deal with that when the sun comes up.
Spouse can't sleep so he goes in the other room to read.  I encourage him to look at the stars as this is another certified 'dark' place.  It is 46 degrees in Hannah.  It is 4:00 am.  I doze off and on till 6:00 am.  It is 43 degrees in Hannah.  My orchids are screaming at me.  There is frost on the cars outside.  It is too early to run the generator.  It is arctic inside and I won't check the temperature anymore because I don't want to know.  Hot coffee in my mug is warming my hands, but I have to go to the bathroom - the room where we leave the vent open for obvious reasons...  I can't wait any longer...
Finally, at 7:30, Spouse turns on the generator and the heat.  We apologize to our neighbors but they are ok with it.  Spouse has some diagnosing to do.  Do we need to go back down to Cedar City and buy batteries?  Or is just one bad, and if we charge the other, will that get us through until we get to St. George on Friday when we will have full hookups?  A half hour later, it is up to 53 degrees and it feels downright balmy!  Spouse diagnoses the number 1 battery is bad, but number 2 is ok.   We are good to go.
Our morning walk is a hike at the Cedar Breaks visitor center.  The trail goes along the rim of the canyon.  There are no railings, just a steep drop off if you trip.  You have to keep your eyes on the trail because a stumble could be fatal.  If you want to look at the canyon, you have to stop.  It is windy, it is incredibly cold.  We met up with a man from our campground.  He said his outside thermostat read 30 degrees.  We didn't leave Hannah until 10, yet there is still frost on cars and on the wood they used to make steps.  There is even a dusting of snow on the shady side of one hill.








It is a half mile trail to the visitor center from the campground, then there are two lookout points.  The first one, Spectra Point was one mile.  It winds along the top of the canyon, then though some woods.  You climb some, and we are already at 10,000 feet.  Then you descend some.  It amazes me that you have this massive arid, rocky canyon on one side of you, then, just twenty feet away on the other side  you have a lush forest.  The bark beetle has taken its toll, that's for sure.  There are railings at Spectra Point with sweeping views of the canyon.  If I didn't tell you that it was Cedar Breaks, you would think it was Bryce (which is only about 60 miles away).  A bristlecone forest adorns the end of this trail.
I wanted to go on, Spouse did not trust his knee, so he went back, and I forged on to Ramparts Overlook, which is another mile.  It was probably a good thing Spouse went back as the trail has a lot of downhill to it.  There are a few switchbacks through the forest with occasional spots where you can stand on the ledge and view the canyon.  The trail ends at a promontory jutting out into the canyon.  It is scary to know that you can take one step too far and end up thousands of feet down.  I slowly walk as close to the edge as  I dare to take a few photos.  I then hold on to a dead tree to look down.  I am all alone... nobody to hear me scream...

At this point, I have hiked 2 1/2 miles and I am still wearing my jacket!  It is warm in the sun, but the wind is biting.  I head back... up the hills... and up... and up.  I see a marmot and it poses for a photo.  I rest, I climb, I rest, I climb.  There is still ice on the wood steps and it is after noon.  There is ice in the crevasses of benches.  I am able to unzip my jacket, but don't take it off until I am all the way back to the visitor center. 
When I get back, Spouse is outside with Rudy.  He drops the leash and Rudy runs to the bush right outside Hannah and picks off a rat!  He runs into Hannah.  Spouse chases him and his pet outside.  He is having a ball throwing the rodent in the air.  But wait... it stops moving.  He is trying to make it move... Alas... he gives up.

After a brief respite, Spouse and I jump in Jack and head towards Panguitch Lake.  It is about 1:30 and it is 46 degrees.  It goes down to 42 degrees before I stopped looking and turned on the seat heater!  We wind through the roads with their meadows and forests.  We stumble upon a fall color show that is stopping the few cars that come by for a photo.  The reds, oranges, yellows and greens are screaming for attention.  A mile later, the road descends some, and all is green, with barely a tinge of yellow.  It was like a light switch.




Panguitch lake is a recreation area.  It looks like a summer home for some.  In the town, there is an RV park, and cute cabins.  It looks like the area is also geared for off road riding.  We cruised around and then headed back.  Spouse is tired since he has been awake since the wee hours.
Tonite, a campfire.  We will cremate the remains of Rudy's rodent.  We might light the campfire inside Hannah if stays this cold!

Tuesday, September 13, 2016 Cedar Breaks National Monument


Tuesday, September 13, 2016
That wretched cat is back and he is meowing for MY humans!  He is on MY doorstep!  These are MY humans!  Mrrrooooowwwww!
It is windy today.  I took my walk up a back street around a golf course.  Looks pretty nice but not on our agenda.  When I woke up, I figured this might be the last easy time to do laundry so we got that going.  Spouse found the missing part for my golf cart and fixed that.  We got ourselves squared away to spend the next three days off the grid.  We don't plan on going far, just up the mountains a bit.
We headed up hwy. 14.  It is incredibly scenic with steep, rocky mountains coming right down to the road on one side, and down to a river on the other side.  The river is hugging the road so it is a very narrow corridor on which we are travelling.  The trees are stunning in those that are turning for the fall, but most of the trees are some types of pines.  We climb, we turn, we ooh, we ahh!  We have been this way before but I don't think you could ever get sick of it!




We decided to head up hwy 143 to the Cedar Breaks National Monument.  There is a campground there.  Most of the sites have reservation tags on them, but we did manage to find one for us and it is a nice one.  We set up Hannah, then left Rudy to watch over things.  And I got out of my shorts and into my jeans and closed shoes. My jacket is in Jack... good thing.
The Cedar Breaks National Monument visitor center is the second highest in the country (Rocky Mountain is higher).  We are over 10,000 feet.  It is windy and cold, about 49 degrees.  There are stunning views over the red rocky canyon a la Bryce, complete with hoodoos.  And I was able to get me a new coffee cup (thank you Rudy for breaking my favorite one...).



After our photo ops, we headed back down to 14 then east over to Navajo Lake.  There is construction there, they are making the dirt road a paved road.  Most of the campgrounds there are already closed for the season.  It is windy, it is cold, it is cloudy.  We head to Duck Creek Village.  Samantha dumped us about a block past the village at a dirt road.  We didn't fall for that this time.  We turned left, HAH!  It is only about a 2 block town, but we found a little cafe as it started to sprinkle.  Good down home cookin'.

When we got back to Hannah, Rudy was whining to go out, so Spouse obliged him.  Imagine, at the first sound of thunder and the first few drops of rain - wait, that is sleet - Rudy ran for Hannah!  What a wimp!  It sleeted for about 10 minutes, then subsided.  After that, there were intermittent thunderstorms with rain.  I love listening to the rain fall on Hannah.  When it wasn't raining, Spouse took Rudy outside.  Rudy would be happy under Hannah with his human out in the rain, but his humans don't play like that...  He had to settle with curling up on a soft blanket on one of his humans' laps.  Tough on all of us!
Too cold for a vodka tonic.  Too wet for a campfire...   turning on the heat for a bit... and hot tea...

Monday, September 12, 2016 Onward and upward... soon anyway


Monday, September 12, 2016

Who is that feline and what is he doing with my humans?  Mrrrooooowwwwww!

Sometimes, I don't sleep well.  Last night, was one of those nights, so I came and laid on the couch.  The one good thing about being awake in the wee hours in the Great Basin is that you get to enjoy the night sky.  The moon has moved, so it is not illuminating the sky.  The stars are endless with the milky way.  It is beautiful.   Back to sleep... maybe...

The morning walk was a repeat of yesterday.  The path is wet from the rain.  You can see turkey tracks.  When we got back, we readied Hannah for her next adventure.  This has been a good campsite, with a creek running through it and a nice fire pit.

We leave the Great Basin and take 50 west.  We pass the turnoff to Osceola and Jack shakes as we go by... On to 93 south.  It is supposedly scenic; and it is scenic.  Mt. Wheeler towers over us on the east side.  There are other mountains to the west, with a huge, wide high desert valley in the middle with us on the highway.  The desert scrub is blooming with yellow.  The only problem... after 5 miles, it gets boring.  Only about 80 miles more to go.  Ugh...  I am driving.  There is a sign for a rest stop in a half mile...  Ok, we can stop.  The only thing is that the rest stop was in about 100 feet and I was going too fast to stop.  Oops!  That sets the Spouse bitch-o-meter to register!  He is hungry, look out!  We stop in the town of Pioche to make a sandwich, then continue on 93 till it hits 319 east.

The terrain is changing.  There are farms, and it is starting to look more like... Utah, I guess.  There is a red rock gorge and it is more arid, even when there are pines.  We have the town of Uvada in the GPS, only there is no town of Uvada.  Samantha tells us there is when we pass by a rock, but there is no sign of any town, or any road leading to a town.  It is a dot on the map, but it is all lies!  We thought of heading into the Dixie National Forest, but opted to go to Cedar City instead.  Tonite we will stay in an RV park, with electricity and water and sewer and internet.  And we will even watch a bit of TV!  Haven't done much of that at all!  Who is running for president?

A cute kitty came up to us and started talking.  We fed him.  Rudy was none too happy about it!

 


 

Monday, September 12, 2016

Sunday, September 11, 2016 Osceola, really? Ely, really...


Sunday, September 11, 2016

This morning, my paternal human took me outside first thing.  I got to roll and sniff.  My trick from yesterday worked.  They are so easy to manipulate.

Last night's astronomy presentation was interesting.  The Great Basin is certified as a 'dark' location.  It is actually one of the best locations in the country to view the stars.  Even though there was a half moon last night, we could still see the milky way.  They had telescopes set up.  We viewed Saturn as it is tilted on its axis so you could really see the rings.

For this morning, our hike took us on a foot path up to the Upper Lehman campground.  There are two directions in this park.  Up and down.  So, up we went meandering by a creek.  The campground is being renovated and is quite nice.  There are a few spots RVs could fit in, but it is geared - as they all are - to tent campers and small rigs.   There were a bunch of people bird watching, but other than that, the place is deserted.
The view from Upper Lehman


We decided to check out the town of Ely, about 65 miles from here.  There is the Osceola ghost town on the way, so off we go.  I am driving.  When we turn onto the road to Osceola, it is a dirt road about 7 miles back.  Most of it has been graded in the last decade so it isn't bad.  The last mile or so is a bit bumpy.  We have our route in Samantha and we see an old building behind a locked gate.  About 500 feet later, she tells us we have reached our destination on the left.  It is a bush.  But the building we passed is not accessible.  Is that it?  We drove 7 miles off road for a single building we can't go look at?  We see a couple of workers and they said a fire wiped out the other buildings and this was about it.  But instead of retracing our steps, he said the road goes to the highway in about 4 miles.  So we continue on.

Then Samantha tells us to turn left.  We look ahead at the road and we are thinking that this looks like the right way.  But she knows where we are, right?  So, like a couple of idiots, we put our trust in this psycho bitch and turn left.  The road is smaller and rougher and there is a dropoff on the right.  My hands are sweating.  Of course, Spouse has to tell me how to drive.  'You are getting too close to this edge, the shoulder might collapse.'  'Spouse, I am hugging the hill on my side, I can't move any more to the left'.  Hah!  Now he knows how I feel when he is driving, especially when he 'Doug's the curb'.  It is getting ridiculous.  This can't be right.  Spouse is bitching, like I could do something about it.  There is no place to turn around.  I finally told him he could drive and we switched places.  Within a minute, the road got a bit better, but where is it going?  Samantha dumped us a few miles ago. She has no idea where we are.  Another fork in the road... great.  Oh well, let's take the lower one.  We finally see the highway way out yonder.  There is hope!  We follow the road, twisting and turning.  Then as we see we are heading towards the highway, Samantha comes on and tells us to turn left in one mile, like she has been there all along!  She can't be trusted on dirt roads...

Back on to 50 - the loneliest road in the country.  There is no traffic.  It is high desert with hills and mountains, so it is quite pretty.  We climb the Connors pass and follow the hills and valleys past a prison that we don't see.  The 'No Hitchhiker' signs are prominently posted.

Ely is a mountainish town.  There is the old side of town, with a couple of small old casinos and storefronts.  But it is Sunday, and everything is closed.  We are essentially all alone.  We cruise the town on the other side looking for a place to eat.  We stop at a small casino where we had a good meal, and gambled just a tad - broke even.  We asked if it is always this deserted and we were told yes! 

We stopped at the grocery store for a few things.  Lots of hunters in camo.  The few I talked to were not happy that they hadn't bagged any deer.  RUN BAMBI RUN!

Got back to a little rain.  No campfire tonite!

Saturday, September 10, 2016 The Bristlecone Forest


Saturday, September 10, 2016

What gives?  My humans are not letting me out when I beg them!  They are IGNORING me!  I will teach them.  I will go lay on the bed and give them stinkeye.  My maternal human came and rubbed my belly and I didn't even turn on my purr box.  I will teach them...

This morning's walk was actually a hike.  There is a 12 mile scenic drive up the mountain to a series of trailheads.  Our campsite is at about 7300 feet.  The trailheads start at about 10,000 feet.  If you hike to the Mt. Wheeler summit, you will be at 13,000 feet.  We opted for the Bristlecone trail.

We packed a lunch and started the ascent.  It is a soft forest path, then there are lots of rocks.  It is fairly easy, but any time you start at 10,000 feet, you need to go slow.  Altitude sickness is no fun and we wanted to enjoy the day.  It is a forested trail with scenic vistas of the Snake Valley below.  The Snake Valley looks so much prettier from up here.  The surrounding mountains are covered in pines and aspens in various stages of fall colors.  It is absolutely beautiful.  The temperature is probably in the 60's which is quite comfortable for hiking.

It is about a mile and a half up the trail to the bristlecones.  This forest has trees over 3000 years old that are still alive.  They live in harsh conditions - sometimes no water, brutal winds, snow.  They grow in amazing twists and turns.  I would love to mount orchids and tillandsias on these puppies!  Even ones they think are dead, turn out to send up new growths.  They are incredible specimens of the test of time.












Continuing on, we hiked to the glacier overlook.  As a rock hound, I didn't know if I was in hog heaven or the depths of hell.  We are hiking in a glacial moraine where gazillions of rocks have been pushed aside for the glacier to do what it has to do.  These rocks, actually boulders, are fabulous!  I can see every one of them in the lapidary shop, except for one thing...  They are huge!  Can I sneak one into Spouse's backpack?  Do you think he would notice this tiny 100 pounder?  As it was, I put a few in my backpack and my waistpack. Then we get to hike down...  over the rocks... over the tree roots... with rocks hanging all over my body.  Definitely an 'I Love Lucy' moment...  We did take a little side trip to look at Teresa Lake.  Or should I say pond...  When I got back to Jack and took off my pack, I had trouble walking. My legs didn't know what to do without the extra weight of the rocks!  It was pretty weird!  Who knows what will become of these rocks, but for now, they are mine.  Shhhh, don't tell anybody...

Tonite, we are going to the astronomy presentation at the visitor center.