Monday, January 13, 2014

Hot Springs and Hail!

Since our main purpose in going to Jemez Springs was, well, the springs... we tried out several that were nearby.  Our ratings:

(1) Most Convenient & Grossest (as in, so nasty we didn't dare even dip a toe in for fear of a microscopic lethal toe-eating pathogen): Spence Hot Spring

Here is Nate checking out the lower pool at Spence (note the sopping wet discarded towel... blech): 
 
 There is a nice big paved parking lot right on Highway 4 between the towns of Jemez Springs and La Cueva, which is apparently how Spence went from being one of the best hot springs in the area to the most crowded and disgusting.  Note to self: NEVER provide parking to any free, wilderness hot spring!  We hiked up from the parking lot one very chilly morning, only to find the springs littered with broken beer bottles, caps, cans, plastic bags, and even a left-behind (how, I ask you, HOW?) bikini bottom, pathetically floating in the lower pool (yes, the one in the pic above: we just couldn't bring ourselves to take a picture of it).  Blech.

(2) Coolest Mineral Formations, but not for soaking (the pool was way too tiny and fragile to even think about getting in): Soda Dam.

Here is what it looks like from the highway:

 You can see the river that flows through the right side of the dam, which creates an incredible roar that you'll hear in the video that follows.  The long gap right in the center of the dam is the entrance to the cave that contains the tiny warm pools and beautiful intricate, scalloped mineral formations.  Here is a closer view:






And, now, let's go inside for a little video (that gets cut off at the end... meh):


And just a couple more pics of the formations around the pools inside... because they are gorgeous!


(3) Easiest, but Most Expensive: Bodhi Mandala Zen Center.

For a suggested donation of $20 per person, the Zen Center's hot springs are nice, but they were just a bit too much for our budget line item entitled "Soaking Our Buns."  ;-)  We went twice.  Here are the pools, which ranged from "lobster pot" in the tiny one to the right of the statue to "too cool" nearest the river (at center top).  The two large pools in between them were, as Goldilocks would put it, just right!  You definitely come out stinking of sulfur, too... but in a nice sort of way.  :-)



(4) Perfection, if your car can handle 7 miles of rough forest "road" (each way) or you can handle a 7-mile round trip hike:  San Antonio Hot Springs.

Our first foray to San Antonio was by car.  Honda Civic, to be specific.  A tried a true 4WD vehicle.

What?  The Civic is *not* 4WD, you say?

Whoops.

The forest road to the spring is seven miles long and took us 49 minutes to cover, and apparently we were lucky to have missed Donkey Kong lobbing boulders at us!


We made it in one piece, and thought the car did too... though, after we had to replace the front right axle in December, we're not quite sure.  :(

Here we are, basking in the sun, and soaking in the natural springs that cascade down the mountain, starting with the hottest pools at the top and gradually cooling as they flow down through each successive pool.  Can you tell Nate was happy?



We made it to San Antonio one more time, the "honest way," as we like to say: on foot.  Going was great, soaking was fabulous, but the return trip left us wishing there would be another hot spring at the other end of the hike... if nothing else, for our weary feet.  ;)


 Yes, yes, we know: total Corona commercial.

After all our lovely soaking throughout August and September, we got a wake-up call on September 22nd that fall was abruptly ending and winter would be fully upon us sooner than we thought:  a hailstorm!  Time for some sensible RV footwear!


Here's a sample of the hail (it was so big and loud, we covered the Civic's windshield with a tarp to protect against cracking!):

Rather than having another month to laze about in hot springs, we suddenly found ourselves in a panic over things like winterizing Baba G for the first time ever... while we were still living in her!  You see, the geologist from Arizona who was living in the little cabin we were going to move into (at least temporarily) had not moved out in mid-September, as was his usual schedule.  So, we were about to be up the creek without a paddle...


Up Next: It's All Fun and Games Until Somebody Puts An Eye Out...


Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Arriving in Jemez Springs!

So, how on Earth did we decide to go to Jemez Springs, NM?
(Even the town's residents seemed sort of perplexed that we had found our way there...)

Well... before we left the Solar Ark, Nate and I had spent a goodly number of hours at the Three Ravens Coffee House in Tierra Amarilla, using their wifi to figure out an escape plan. 

This is Paul, the owner, who is also a professional musician, drum builder, joke teller, foodie (he was finishing construction on his new brick pizza oven when we were there last), perfectionist in all matters, and defender of Tierra Amarilla real estate interests from big-haired, loud-mouthed Texans (of course, there is a story behind that one...):



Our escape plan was not elegant, nor long-term: (1) run from the Solar Ark; (2) go somewhere with natural hot springs (Nate's idea) where we could soak our disappointment away and feel like we we at last having something resembling a honeymoon; and (3) stay somewhere cheap.

Nate zeroed in on Jemez Springs for its hot springs, and then I found an RV park called "Trails End" that looked more like a tent-camping park in the nearby town of La Cueva.  I emailed asking about site availability since the website said the park was for sale and only open on a very limited basis.  Steve, the owner, emailed us back within a day, said we could stay for the weekend (I told you it was a short-term plan, right?), quoted us a price we could handle, and we said we'd see him Friday (August 9th) afternoon.

We made the drive from MadDog Andy's place to Trails End, which took all of Friday.  Now, on the way from Key West to the Solar Ark, we had had plenty of long driving days that were long and torturous: mile after mile of asphalt with nothing much to look at, and almost constant hills to overheat our poor old Baba G.

But, this drive was spectacular!  Pictures don't do it justice, but here goes anyway:









And then once we turned off of I-550 onto NM-4, the scenery was even more spectacular as we drove past the high desert "Red Rocks" region,

 


a winding roadside river lined with aspen and cottonwood trees,


the Jemez Pueblo,


the quaint little town of Jemez Springs itself (no pics, somehow...), and then up up up into coniferous forest that surrounds La Cueva:


And, at last, we arrived at the camp (with cows, to the chagrin of the cats) that would be our home, not for the next two days, but for the next two months!


Up Next: San Antonio: The Hot Spring on the Hillside

Sunday, January 5, 2014

After the Ark: Touring Two Sustainable Homes

At long last... the blog is back!

Hope everyone had very Happy Holidays!

I am going to try to catch you all up on the last three months... in short order.  So, without further ado, here is what we have been doing since our hasty retreat from the Solar Ark in early August:

(1)  During and immediately after our stay at the Solar Ark, we toured two very cool hand-built homes in Tierra Amarilla.  Sadly, we took no pics of the first (and I can't find my handwritten notes... sheesh), which was an incredible strawbale house built onto an existing tiny two-room home.  It was a veritable cathedral in strawbale, absolutely breathtaking.  The owner/builders Chris and Amelia built it themselves, in under two years, having designed it with the help of Amelia's brother, an Oregon architect.  Chris and Amelia were incredibly gracious, inviting us to tour their home after meeting us just a couple of times, first at the Chama Farmers' Market and once again at the Three Ravens Cafe.  We learned a lot about the building process from them and they, importantly, shared their mistakes with us so we wouldn't have to make them too!

(2)  The day we left the Solar Ark, we visited MadDog Andy's Log Cabin in the hills.  Yes, hills.  You know, those things Baba G doesn't like.

Having being reassured by Andy that the (forest) road to his place was fairly well-groomed and (maybe) passable in an RV when we talked to him a few days earlier, we fled the Ark and hung out in the grocery store parking lot in Chama, waiting for his call to let us know we was home and we could start out toward his place.  We were so eager to escape from the Ark that we took off right away in the morning, so we waited several hours before Andy called.  We were starting to think he might not call at all.  But, at last, the call arrived around 5:30pm.

The road was pretty twisty-turny and steep, so Baba G was having a pretty awful time climbing it.  At one point, there was a fork in the road that Andy had not mentioned: of course, we took the wrong tine and, suspecting as much, I drove the car up the other tine to do a little recon.  In the mean time, Nate and I lost walkie-talkie contact and he decided to back up and follow me... except that he backed right off the road and into a ditch.  By the time I got back to him, he had whipped himself into a pretty good tizzy.  Fortunately, I have had lots of *ahem* inadvertent off-road experience, driving in snow and ice in winter, so I talked him right through a pretty easy extrication.  :)

Then, we decided it was time to call Andy and ask him how much farther we had to go.  Instead of just giving us a simple answer, he came riding down to us on his mountain bike!  We all drove up to his place together, with him hanging on to the driver's side window and talking to Nate the whole time-- a bit of a maniac.  Of course, we liked him right away!

Here are Nate and Andy, at the start of our tour of his place:



Andy gave us such a great tour, regaling us with the tale of how he built his cool log cabin-- himself, with almost no help-- in a SINGLE SEASON!  Since he finished the cabin, he has also put in seating for an outdoor drum circle (he is a professional drummer), with the seats all made from cement-enclosed recycled tires:


At one end of the circle, he has also built a horno (oven) made of red brick pavers covered in stucco.  His cat, named "Bat," loves to sleep in it because it even retains the solar heat it absorbs each day:


He also put in a root cellar and it was full of canned vegetables for the coming winter:



It was really inspiring to see just how closed-loop Andy been able to become: in addition to growing and canning his own veggies and fruits, he also employs a composting toilet (which makes a lovely stuff called "humanure") and has a recycling shed where he collects all his non-compostable trash and turns it into useful and, in many cases, really beautiful fixtures.  Check out the beer bottle-cap lined door of the shed:


And here is his newest pride-and-joy fruit tree, a dwarf Russian giant purple crabapple (wearing jeans and flip-flops... I guess he paid extra so it could have legs!):

 
Once the sun went down, we were forced to conclude the outdoor portion of the tour and head inside.  Andy had spent just as much attention on the internal details of his cabin and it was really beautiful and artistic.   This is the zia symbol (also on the NM state flag) he inlaid into the tile entryway floor:


We ended up hanging out with Andy, getting quite an education about New Mexico history, sustainable building, and-- importantly, for our next destination-- what to do and see in Jemez Springs, where Andy had grown up!  At 2am (!), we headed out past the anti-bear spikes on the front door frame and past Andy's awesome bear-guard-dog, with Andy's warning still ringing in our ears that if we heard a bear while we slept in the RV (a little way down the road... as far as Baba G could climb!), we should just lay on the horn in several long, loud blasts... and he would come out with his bear gun and his dog and rescue us.

Andy, you are just the BEST host ever!  :)

Up Next:  Eight Weeks in Jemez Springs, NM, Part 1.



Monday, September 16, 2013

Our Not-So-Sunny Experience at the Solar Ark


OK, so clearly I have been stalling this post for quite some time now and driving you all mad wondering "What is going on with those two?"

"Have they fallen off the grid entirely, never to be seen again?"

"Are coyotes still savoring the last fleshy bits of them?"

"Do they just suck at blogging?"

Well, there is certainly some truth in that last one.  Sorry.  :(

But, really, the long delay in making this post is mainly the result of needing some time and perspective in order to write clearly about our great disappointment in our experience at the Solar Ark.

After all the trials and tribulations of our journey halfway across the country, 
we finally arrive and set up camp at the Solar Ark:



A mere week later, here we are fleeing (if one can call it that, at 12 mph):



Let's back up just a bit, shall we, and figure out this tragedy/travesty happened.  To really begin at the beginning, we have to go back a bit more than a year ago to when we first contacted Arvo, the owner of the Solar Ark.

He had placed an ad in caretaker.org for work exchangers (or "wexers", for short) to come and learn-while-doing solar, wind, water catchment, chicken poop methane production, and permaculture.  During our initial phone conversation, we made it clear we were looking first-and-foremost for an opportunity to learn solar energy systems, but were basically interested in everything EXCEPT permaculture (since we felt we already had a pretty good grasp of that); Arvo made it clear that he would teach us about all the Solar Ark's systems as we helped with them, but there would be some requirement for us to help with the gardens.  We assured him we would be happy to do some gardening, as part of our work responsibilities, in order to get the incredible education we were certain we would get from him about solar energy, etc.

Red Flag #1:   When a person with whom you are going to work-exchange  recommends-- in the initial phone conversation-- that you do a "pre-visit" or have a Plan B, and complains that the wexers they get are often lazy and cannot handle doing a little physical labor, RUN!  What we do instead: smugly think of how we are totally going to knock his socks off and start making plans to go.

Besides the red flag (which we only identified in hindsight), it sounded like a fair work exchange and a great opportunity, but we were not yet financially or mentally ready to take the leap-- primarily because my contract at the college was renewed, so such a leap was not yet being thrust upon us!  We had told Arvo we would get in touch if and when we could give him a more solid time frame for our visit.

So, fast-forward to February of this year, when the college informed me (yes, a month before the wedding) that my contract was not going to be renewed for this fall.  After the wedding fun/madness had passed, we again contacted Arvo to ask if he was still hosting work exchangers this summer, and he replied in the affirmative.  We told him we were looking for an RV and would make contact again once we found one and had a reasonably certain E.T.A. at the Solar Ark.


After buying Baba G ("The Beast"), we called Arvo to let him know we could be there by late July or early August.  But he insisted that "earlier was better than later"-- in fact, he made it clear that it was very important we get there by July 1st.

Red Flag #2:  When someone for whom you are going to work-exchange pressures you to bump up your time schedule, JUST SAY NO!  What we do instead: tell Arvo we will do our best to get there by July 1st.

So, instead of taking our time and behaving like somewhat sane newlyweds about to become unemployed, completely turn our lives upside down, and move halfway across the country-- in an RV!  With problems!!--, we RUSH RUSH RUSH to try to adhere to someone else's time frame.  Never again.

Looking back from a survivor's perspective, I can see now (of course, Nate saw it then) how completely insane it was to try to (1) wrap up our jobs; (2) move out of our apartment; (3) move into the Bowdens'; (4) sell or donate most of our belongings, including Nate's beloved Boston Whaler "Delores";
 

(5) clean and repair and prepare an RV in desperate need of major TLC for an ultra-condensed version of our life with three cats (and their litter box... blech); and (6) drive away from everything and everyone we had been attached to, and off on a road trip with a steady stream of necessary repairs... in FIVE WEEKS!

To make matters worse, for nearly the whole prep phase, it rained and rained and rained some more, making us feel like we were headed for Noah's Ark, instead of the Solar Ark.


When it wasn't raining, it was threatening to rain, so we had to keep tarps and bungees at the ready at all times.  Looking back, we still cannot fathom how we got everything done-- in the rain-- in a mere five weeks.

But, recall, Gentle Reader, that five weeks was nowhere near within Arvo's desired time frame for us.  On the phone, when we (ok, I) had agreed to "shoot for July 1st," I was saying we would try to do all of the above in TWO WEEKS.  By now, you might be wondering what the hell I was thinking.

Yeah, me too.  Where were you people, when I needed an intervention?!  =:-O

My best and most honest answer is that, in a year-plus of scouring the web for an opportunity like the one at the Solar Ark, I had not found anything even close.  So, I was thinking that, if we couldn't hit Arvo's deadline, we might lose the whole opportunity and have a major setback before we even got started with our big plan to start a school for sustainability (more on that in a future blog).

(And why was July 1st so crucial, anyway?  We never did get any solid answer from Arvo about that... and we certainly didn't find any evidence of tardiness-related disasters when we got there.)

So, I said we'd shoot for July 1st.  We shot for it, all right.  And missed.  Several times over.  And hit each other with all the misfires.  :(  By the time we hit the road on July 19th, we were exhausted, exasperated, and extremely grumpy.  Not the way to start a once-in-a-lifetime road trip we had been referring to as our "Honeymove."

And, right up until we got there, we thought the Solar Ark was totally going to be worth it.

Let's just say, we do believe if we had gone there a few years ago, we might have had a very different experience.  Back then, Arvo was teaching organized classes on solar, etc. to groups of students from a nearby community college... and getting paid for it.  So (we are guessing), the whole gestalt of the Solar Ark would have been more organized, more peaceful, more financially secure, and more of a real learning experience.

But, alas, we arrived on August 1, 2013.  Thank goodness a couple of fabulous college girls (majoring in permaculture/horticulture) from Arkansas arrived just after we did: we don't think we would have made it as long as we did without Olivia and Danielle!

Here is Danielle at the Farmer's Market in Chama, NM:


(How do I not have any pics of Olivia???  Olivia: send me a pic of you at the Ark so I can include it!)

Red Flag #3:   When your first instinct, upon getting the full tour of the facility you intend to live and work at-- potentially for several months-- is to run back out the way you came in... RUN!  What we do instead: switch ourselves into some kind of mental "safe mode" which dampens our senses a bit and allows us to get through the one week we did make it through.

So, c'mon, you are probably saying to yourself: what could have been so bad?

Firstly, the greeting committee at the gate is a fleet of beat-up, non-to-semi-working vehicles:


Secondly, the non-human animals at the Ark, with the exception of one flock of truly free-range chickens, were underfed and overexploited. I have no pictures of them: it was just too sad. All the cooped hens were so stressed out, they were missing LOTS of feathers: this is a well-documented stress sign in birds.  The dogs, whose job it was to guard the chickens at night, also seemed to be kept in a constant state of near-starvation, so much so that two of them got in a vicious, bloody fight that left Nate with a nasty bite mark on his calf from trying to break it up!

Thirdly, the human population of workers at the Ark was also overexploited and stressed out, though quite well-fed.  One intern, John, who returned for another go after being at the Ark last year, seems to be running the place mostly single-handedly: he knows all the systems (yes, the ones we wanted to learn) very well and was pretty much in constant motion for the whole week we were there.  As we already mentioned, Olivia and Danielle arrived later the same night we did, so the four of us were beginners at everything except the gardening.  In other words, we did not need to learn a whole lot about the gardens, but that was the task we were assigned to, roughly 95% of our time.  We had all come to learn solar, and none of us were doing anything but gardening... until Danielle confronted Arvo and basically demanded some solar lessons.  You go, girl!

After a week of gardening and collecting eggs from stressed out chickens (to make money for Arvo), going mushroom hunting (which sounds lovely, doesn't it?  Sadly, it was more of a forced march with shouted orders and very little education from Arvo...), impromptu moral support powwows with the girls, a couple of begrudging solar lessons, and ultimately just trying to avoid the negativity cloud that surrounds Arvo, the girls said it was time for them to be on their way back toward home... and we decided that was our cue to leave, too.

We really hope the Solar Ark makes a comeback: it has so much untapped potential and is in such a beautiful place in the high desert of northern New Mexico, that it is just heartbreaking to see it in its current state.  In the mean time, though, we really hope the website will be updated (it was already supposed to be, but it has not been) to more honestly reflect the internship/work exchange opportunity, which is essentially to learn to garden using permaculture principles and to make money at farmers' markets.

Up Next: Two Fabulous Natural Home Tours!







Wednesday, August 14, 2013

The Many Trials of Baba G

As promised, a bit of back-blogging about our road trip from the Keys to New Mexico...

Act I Scene I: The protagonists are heady with optimism about the journey ahead.

Act I Scene II: The shit hits the fan.
So, let's just suffice it to say that the rain that was plaguing our preparation efforts in the Keys somehow followed us all the way from our temporary home at the Bowdens to the Solar Ark in New Mexico.  (Thank god we got the roof sealed BEFORE we left!)

We stopped to see Art & Barb in Naples, FL (causing what we are certain must be quite the "buzz about town" in their peaceful, quiet neighborhood).  At least we only stayed, leaking various vehicular fluids onto strategically placed cardboard, for one night.  Art was quite the trouper, waiting up for us until the wee hours of the night (3am, if we recall correctly), and Barb fortified us with an awesome breakfast the following morning before we unceremoniously ate and ran!
Then, having bailed out completely on our plan to swing east to Melbourne to visit Marianne (sorry, Baby Bird), we pointed ourselves straight for Bainbridge, GA to see Ace & Kathie.  Again, we arrived incredibly late, ruining the fabulous seafood feast they had planned for us.
(that, by the way, is a real, unaltered image of a deep sea fish called a blobfish 
(Psychrolutes marcidus), which looks about as sad as we felt!)
But, we managed to squeeze in a nice visit the next day, touring both our RV and theirs (a much younger Winnebago with slides... slides!!!).  They gave us several incredibly useful RVer things, including a pair of walkie-talkies that have been saving our tails ever since: we really don't know how we got along without them for that first little bit of our journey.  Thanks so much!
Then, it was off to Saltillo, MS to visit my brother Curt and his wife Teresa (and see my mom and dad, who drove down from Ohio to bring Curt a trailerful-- that's a word, right?-- of stuff he has been storing at their house for, um, well... who knows how long).  I have not seen my brother in eight years, which I still cannot quite fathom.  Tempus fugit.   It was so nice to catch up a bit, and we ended up actually spending a few days there, instead of the less-than-24 hours we had initially planned.  I also got to hand off several boxes of stuff (mostly holiday decorations... ok... mostly Christmas decorations) that I just couldn't bear to part with, and I am hopeful we will be able to use once we build a house.  Thanks so much to Curt and Teresa for graciously letting us spend a few days parked next to their house, shamelessly sucking their power and even more shamelessly working on the RV in the driveway of their new home!

 Act I Scene III: The protagonists believe the worst of their troubles are behind them, but the RV gods have more in store for them on their cross-country odyssey.

So, yes, that is Nate with Baba G at a Cummins/Onan generator service facility just outside Little Rock, Arkansas.  As we drove from Florida to Arkansas, and despite the constant rain, the outside temperatures continued to climb, which meant we needed to run the generator for the roof AC (since the dash AC is totally frozen up... and not in the good way). Nate had already disconnected a terrible Hades-like underbed heater that was piped directly in to our engine cooling system and was broiling the cats as we drove, so at least we didn't have a heat source inside the RV.  With that evil thing disconnected and the roof AC running, the temperature inside the RV was quite pleasant.  But, alas, the generator died after a very brief run, and we could not get it started again.

So, we found the Cummins/Onan place and made a beeline for it from Saltillo.  And, what a break!  Two great things happened: we found ourselves in the hands of a fabulous mechanic, who gave us a little "Generator 101" lesson, which revealed that our set-screw was simply cranked down too much, so the generator was putting out 75-ish Hz alternating current, instead of the 60 Hz all standard electrical devices, including our roof AC, expect and need in order to run properly.  Oops.  Thank goodness the AC simply shut down under the incorrect electrical frequency: it could have died for good.  :(

The second great thing that happened is that we got to spend a free night camping-- with water and electrical hookups, no less!-- in their parking lot for the night!

Our Cummins campsite.

The next morning, with renewed optimism, we pulled back onto I-40 W and headed for Oklahoma.

Act I Scene IV: A riddle: what goes up and down hills, from dawn until midday, and then won't start again once you've stopped to pee at a rest area?  The answer: Baba G.

Yeah, so apparently the Chevy 454 Big Block is a unforgiving, hot-ass beast.  Thank goodness for our little Honda Civic (not being towed: we now know that would NEVER EVER work), which Nate drove to several nearby-ish (heavy on the -ish) parts stores to procure a new starter and a new relay solenoid.  We (ok, mainly HE) replaced them both, and still no ignition: just that terrible, dull click that tells you something is still wrong in the circuit.  So, Nate was at his wits end and then I had the genius idea of taking the (very shiny, rust-free, and generally new-looking) solenoid he had just swapped out from under the hood and using it to replace the (rusty, old, beat-up looking) one under the doghouse (in between the front seats inside the RV).


And, then, the old girl started right up!... a mere four-plus hours after she died.  I think we win the award for longest rest area stop ever.  :-{  In any case, we were back on I-40 W and made it to a cool little campsite on a river island somewhere in central OK... neither of us remembers quite where.
The next morning, we hopped back on I-40 and headed for the Texas border, where we stopped for gas, and... (do you have any awful guesses about what happened next???)... Baba G wouldn't start.  Again.  Holy hell.
On the bright side, we knew exactly what was wrong.  We were cooking starters to death, primarily because the start is located (you are going to *love* this) DIRECTLY UNDER the exhaust manifold.  For those of you who are not vintage 454 afficionados, this is the hottest place next to the engine block and an absolutely asinine place to put a(n apparently) temperature-sensitive starter.  So, off went Nate again, in the Civic, to get ANOTHER starter.  And, after he brought it back, and installed it (next to one of only two RV/truck pumps that we blocked for well over two hours), we were once again on our way west.

The funny thing about all this is that there IS a heat shield made for this starter, which totally makes sense, given its location.  There is even a part number on file just about everywhere.  But, Nate could not find one ANYWHERE.  12 NAPAs in three states: every parts store had the starter, but no one had the heat shield that would prevent one from needing replacement starters insanely often.  Hmm... can anyone say "planned obsolescence?"

Finally, we made it out of Oklahoma (which we now believe might just mean "death to starters"), lighter in the pocket, but with two starters (yes, we kept the one we swapped out as a spare, believing it could come in handy once it cooled off enough), and jaws clenched waiting for the next challenge.

We were certain that challenge would come from our first real camping adventure, at a place Kathie had recommended, called Palo Duro Canyon (a Texas State Park).  While it was a crazy steep grade for Baba G (when you mention "10% grade" in front of Nate, his eyes still get sort of crazy and distant and he breaks out in a barely perceptible sweat), she got in... and more importantly, OUT, without a hitch!  The campground was beautiful, but we still felt the intense pressure of being THREE WEEKS LATE to the Solar Ark, so we took off the next day without really spending any time de-stressing at all.

NEXT UP: We FINALLY make it to New Mexico!








Saturday, August 3, 2013

We hit the road... and the road hit back (aka "The Long Road to Chama")

Baba G chugging her way uphill in New Mexico, near the Solar Ark!


Apologies for the long delay between posts, but Nate and I (and our feline RV prisoners Tigger, Pete, and Fink) have had quite the wild ride over the past month.  

I have already overstayed my welcome at the Three Ravens Cafe' this afternoon, fighting two interconnected viruses on my computer (boo) for the past three hours and now 50 minutes past closing time.  :(  So, for now, just know we are alive and well and parked at the Solar Ark.  The nearby town (Chama) is incredibly quaint and cute and the Solar Ark is amazing in so many ways, including its eccentric owner Arvo and his ravens.

So, I promise to post more on Monday, when we will be back to the Three Ravens for a bit of a breakfast treat.

Until then... hugs and kisses to you all!
~Sherri and Nathan