Friday, May 28, 2010

Leg 1 Home to Shelby, Montana

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North to Alaska, go north the rush is on!  To borrow a lyric line from Johnny Horton (1960), we are a fixin’ to do just that.  Been planning this trip for over a year now and the time has come.  We will be traveling with 3 other couples, very good friends made through our HitchHiker (our trailer brand) forum/internet association.  We like having a small group to share fun and experiences with, while providing some comfort in being able to help each other if necessary, but not so large a group that planning and finding camp spots gets challenging. Our general plan is to be gone 4 months.  We will officially rendezvous in Shelby, Montana, then proceed north to Fairbanks, arriving in time for the summer solstice (and longest day of the year) celebration. From Fairbanks to Denali Park, Anchorage, Homer, Valdez, Chicken, back to Canada to Banff and Jasper and back to Washington State for a HitchHiker rally in Prosser.

We finally left home after getting ourselves ready (doc appointments etc.), the truck ready, the trailer ready, the camera stuff ready, the fishing equipment ready, the RC airplanes ready, shopping, packing and that old et cetera and et al stuff.  We were crazy enough to buy a new trailer in the midst of all this crazy planning, just to add to the excitement (the Godfather made us a deal we couldn’t refuse!).  Below Roxy’s Rig III ready to go at Topside Circle home.

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We like to keep the first travel day short due to the agony of L.A. traffic and went to a place near Beaumont in the near desert.  We were trying out a “Passport America” sight. Passport America sells memberships (inexpensively) and then you get to stay at certain places for half price. Our destination was Twin Lakes RV park in Newberry Springs.  Wow, what a surprise.  See this post opening picture, looks like something out of 1930’s, that was the actual road into Twin Lakes!  Totally in the middle of nowhere.  Wouldn’t normally dwell on a campground so much but this was an experience, maybe our second worst campground. Here is our campsite next to the “Lake”  .

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Looks kind of nice, huh? It wasn’t awful but I colored that water to try to make it look a little like water versus a mud pool.  And here is the other or twin “Lake”;

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How about their hand painted signs, tre chique, tre gross, or tre gick?

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But wait, they did have a pump out station / fish cleaning station (efficient, eh?):

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And, shoot fire, they even had a work out room:

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Just in case you are looking for it – say what – here is the entrance:

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It actually was an O.K. stay and we had fun but oh my what a surprise.

Now it is just get up to Shelby, Montana and start the journey.  Won’t bore you with the travel details getting to Shelby, maybe a couple of comments along the way. Stayed in Mesquite, Nevada, behind a casino, good for an overnight and one artsy night time shot:

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Observed a strange sky phenomenon in the Nevada desert, eerie rainbow arc in the sky, not a ring around the sun as we sometimes see, but just an arc.  Looks like this:

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Here we see it double:

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After Mesquite we stayed in a really great park in Fillmore, Utah, Wagons West:

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Yes those are snow capped mountains.  Utah is really a lovely state, beautiful country and lots to see. Next onward to Brigham City (oh my, the drive through Salt Lake City is almost as bad as driving through L.A.) and then to Idaho Falls. Weather has been decent but since we left Mesquite it has been cold and some rain.  Hey, we are going north in May!

 

Wednesday the 19th we arrived in Dillon, Montana.  Wow, this is one great town.  Lots of atmosphere, good feeling, nice folks and lots of rivers and streams. Dillon University is here, over 150 years old and looks really cool (heavy stone buildings with ivy and such growing on them). The RV park, Southside Park, is excellent, a stream runs through the middle of it and the back views the Rockies and picturesque pastureland.

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See that sky, wow Montana is big sky country for absolute sure!  What a great state, we loved it.  Here are what we call “shots from the cockpit” – shots that Shelle shoots out the cockpit window, some processing help from yours truly. We will intersperse these from time to time.  I have to admit, as a true Nikon man, that our new Canon S 90 (point and shoot) does a marvelous job, and especially when you consider these are shot through the truck window glass.

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Cockpit shot along the highway, big sky, big mountains.

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Lots and lots of Montana stock, hmmm Sunday steak!

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more big sky!

 

  1. Meanwhile, back at the park, Roxy decides to converse with a fellow animal (but remember she is a predator and fellow pal here is a prey, things went well until Roxy remembered this part of the fomula!)

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We loved Dillon, here is the view from our rig’s back door.IMG_0262a sm

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Traveling through the great state of Montana is so wonderful, it is one of the best view states of all.  Shoot fire, even Roxy, who normally sleeps, was often checking out the scenery.

IMG_0236a sm P.S., if you haven’t seen the Rox for a while, it would be discreet not to mention the “whitening” of her lovely fur. She is aging gracefully, perhaps better than I, and keeping up her figure and wonderful enthusiasm.

Out of Dillon, we did actually run into some snow, drove through some snow – yikes, snow in late May – spooky! More views from the cockpit:

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So on we push on to Great Falls.  I hadn’t anticipated this part of the journey being this long in the blog.  Must be all that great scenery in Montana. Next post (leg 1 1/2) will pick up at Great Falls.