In the meantime, we had a nice Christmas with kids and grand kids and spent time with friends. Hope everyone out there had a very Merry Christmas.
Thanks to the Yuma Proving Gound Facebook page for this slightly photoshopped photo. |
Thanks to the Yuma Proving Gound Facebook page for this slightly photoshopped photo. |
Icy crystals at the St. George Crystal Inn. |
Our car parked in front of our room. Jim was a little worried about the ice cycles, so this morning we didn't use the sliding glass door. |
This heron and a big white egret were walking around the dock and seemed very comfortable with people. |
How "Wilson" got in the upper left branches of this dead tree is a mystery to us. |
From a distance we thought these American White Pelicans were barrels that had floated out into the lake. They are big boys and girls with black-tipped wings. |
Jim watching the pelicans, which are about five feet long, weigh about 16 pounds, and have nine-foot wing spans. |
Closer shot of a single pelican. |
Not far from the funky Fam Camp were some nice lakeside houses. Also nearby is the beautiful Imperial Wildlife Refuge,which we visited last year. |
A mama burro and her baby in front of a rig that is kitty-corner from our rig. |
Jim and I would like to take this one back to Salt Lake, but I'm afraid she'd brutalize our lawn. |
After touring the Fam Camp, the five burros slowly made their way to an area where equipment is being stored.
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Since I took this photo of how Jim reinforced the awning (so the wind won't catch it and break it), he added one more strap attached to a bag of gravel. Looks like a hillbilly motor home. Or, as we like to say, efficient but not elegant. |
View of puddles (the TV weather caster called it "ponding") as seen from our rig door this morning. |
Jim pushes up on the awning and collected rain water starts to cascade over the edge. |
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One of the views while rock hounding. You probably wouldn't want to drive the dirt path we were on in a regular car. At one point it was so bumpy it felt like we were in a washing machine with an agitator.
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Some of the sand/dirt was very loose, and in one of those places I slipped, landed on my elbow, and then skidded about six feet on my rear. Afterwards I tried to take a selfie of my elbow wound; the one above included my rock hounding companions. To the immediate right of my bloody arm is Marv from Washington state. In the distance are Scott and Linda from Idaho. |
Marv sitting near a vein of desert rose. |
I asked Marv to better document my rock hounding wound. Afterwards, Scott doused it with antiseptic and covered it with gauze. Last year Linda fell, was knocked unconscious (briefly, I think/hope) and was Life-Flighted to the hospital. She broke her wrist and a rib and lost her glasses -- which she found this year. Fortunately for me, my fall was down a much smaller hill. Linda is fine now, but everyone had a scare.
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This is the first time we've kayaked near palm trees. Jim is to the right. |
Selfie of a happy kayaker.
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A coot close up. I thought coots were ducks, but they are not. They are an order of bird called "rails" and are more closely related to Sandhill Cranes than to ducks, but they do dive like ducks. One of the sounds they made is like a gate with a rusty hinge being quickly moved back and forth. Errk errk. Pause. Errk Errk. Pause. The closer we got, the shorter the pauses between the errk errks So yes: they swim like ducks and dive like ducks, but they don't quack like ducks. And they probably don't quite walk like ducks, because they don't have webbed feet. |
We also saw a heron (above) and some osprey.
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We want to do some boon docking (camping without electricity/water/sewer) at Mittry Lake, a nearby wildlife area managed by the both the BLM and the state of Arizona, so we scoped out the area for good camping spots near the water. The big shallow lake will be fun to kayak. |
Here's a field of lettuce we drove by on our way to the farm stand. I'm pretty sure this is butter lettuce. |
And here's Bev in front of a tiny church in the middle of a farm field. It has room for 12 slim-hipped worshipers to sit and I read that it was built by a farmer in memory of his wife. I also read that visitors should beware of a nearby one-eared pit bull, but we didn't see him. I hope the coyotes didn't get him. |
Jim clearly misunderstood when I told him to go stick his head in the oven. Actually, our kitchen faucet quit working. Here's my technical explanation of the repair job: Jim took apart the sink innards, determined something was clogging the line, and now it works. That pretty much sums up Jim's technical explanation, too.
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Granddaughter Mia turned four while we were home. Here she listens to the family's rendition of "Happy Birthday to You." She's wearing her mermaid/princess gown, which she also wore for Halloween. I asked Mia what she wanted to be when she grew up and she said something having to do with mermaids. |
Grandson Marshall in his bat costume being held by his Mom (our daughter), Ashley, who dressed as Flo the Progressive Insurance lady. Shad (our SIL) went to work dressed as Larry Czonka. |
The kid's Halloween parade wound through dozens of offices and I bet we walked at least half a mile. It was slow going with Marshall, who stopped at every locker to do quality control. Later Ash and I did some quality control of our own: we told Mia she probably wouldn't like the Reese's Cups and Almond Joys and that Grandma and Mom better eat them. Mia probably won't fall for that next year. |
And here are the tow car and rig parked in Yuma, AZ. We're staying at the Yuma Proving Ground campground, where we spent some time last year. There are empty spaces here now, but this place will be full by New Years. And we'll most likely be somewhere else. |
A chukar (on the right) courtesy of Wikipedia. Too cute to shoot, I think. |
Somewhere in eastern Nevada we finally got near the mountains that previously were in the distance. In the foreground is sage in bloom. In the mountains are yellow-leafed aspens. |
The salt flats of western Utah. That stuff on the ground is salt -- not snow -- although I'm sure many a driver has thought the bright white salt was snow. And that weird thing in the lower middle is called the "Tree of Life." It's an 87-foot sculpture about 25 miles east of Wendover created by a Swedish artist who had a vision while driving across the salt flats. That's the story, anyway. |
Our first glimpse of Salt Lake in nearly four months. |
As soon as we got home we unloaded the rig and started some laundry. Looks like Jim is carrying in at least one six-pack of IPA.
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