Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Sunrise and Giving Thanks

Its the day before Thanksgiving and we are off to my brothers for a week or so to enjoy some much needed family time! Maybe a quiet turkey as well! ;) Cant wait to see our little (or maybe not so little anymore) niece and nephew!

Hope you all have a wonderful Thanksgiving with family or friends or whomever you get to spend it with. We are always giving thanks for each and every day we get to spend together. We had an amazing sunrise at Assateague Island National Seashore in MD. So enjoy the pictures and give thanks for all that we have!


Happy Thanksgiving!

J&S

















All photos unedited

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Follow the Sun


                                                           Two Become One

How showksiers "put up" the solar panels :p The panels can angle either way (when we are stationary) to get the most sun. This is especially helpful to make the most of the low winter sun and the short daylight hours. Now that we've been on the road a few weeks we know we can rely on the panels for enough power for the lights, charging phones, computers, speakers & cameras, running the water pump, and the toaster :)
We don't have enough to run our small 1500Watts heater. But the independence the panels afford us is amazing! Our happy lil hippy camper ❤️



Sunrise Time-Lapse (35 sec)

November sunrise on Assateague Island, Maryland... It was nearly 7am, and very windy.  But beautiful and worth rising for! The National Park on Assateague has beautiful oceanside and bayside campsites. We stayed oceanside, so we could have a true mid-atlantic East Coast sunrise.  Loving being here in the off-season and just having the whole place to ourselves! Hashtag private island.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Massachussetts - Bumping Along the Colonial Timeline

We left Maine, and in 45 short minutes had also covered New Hampshire’s short coastline and pushed our way into Massachussetts right as the sun was setting.  It was pretty amazing how in such a short period on the clock, the landscape around us had changed so completely. From Maine’s jagged edges and crisp beauty to a much mellower, flatter, coast.  The Massachusetts coast was marshy and the sunset reflected oranges and yellows in the water inlets around us.  Many small water-way-tunnels reached like golden buttery fingers through the tall beachgrass of the Massachusetts coastline. It was incredibly beautiful.  We were on our way to the Beach Rose RV Campground in Salisbury for 2 nights.  At $45 a night it was a little pricey but after winging it in Bar Harbor, one night at a truck stop, and a few days parked in Larry & Jean’s driveway in Brunswick, ME, Rhonda needed a couple nights plugged in to power & water… We needed laundry & shower facilities… And J and Rhonda were still battling it out over the grey-water tank leak. Our little pod needed a some down time.  We arrived just after sunset, set up, and were ready for some glorious shower time…. at $0.25 per 2-minute increment. Much to my excitement, the showers were big and spotless. In I went, with my towel, shower kit, a roll of quarters, and big plans to wash, rinse, repeat.  The water for the shower was powered just like a 25c ride at the super-market, and there was no timer. It would be a big guessing game once you hopped in as to when your time would be up.  I momentarily paused, devising a plan of action. It was chilly in the bathroom, so I placed all my little travel-bottles in the shower, hung my towel, pre-set extra quarters near the machine. Feeling satisfied, I threw in a generous 6 quarters, tossed off my clothes, and hopped under the warm water…. Only to realize I had everything except my bar of soap!  Cursing, my mind quickly weighs my options: no soap & wash body with shampoo, or, grab my towel and make a dash through the dark campground for the soap. It’s my first shower in 3 days and my mind won’t compromise on the bar of soap so I grab my towel and streak through the campground, dripping and hopefully very stealth-like, grab a new bar of Ivory and race my goosebumps back to the warm water.  I throw in about  4 more quarters and get to work. 

The no-so-regular-showering ‘thing’ on the road has been one of my biggest hurdles.  I’ve set my goal to 1 shower every +/-3 days, with washing at the sink in Rhonda as needed in between.  But achieving my shower-goal can take serious planning, and can def be an inconvenience.  My tolerance for feeling ‘dirty’ is pretty low compared to J’s, and I get grouchy when I feel dirty, so plan we must!! Believe it or not, there’s an app for that (AllStays), and we use it often! 

Getting lost in the golden Massachusetts sunset... Om Shanti
We wake up to a beautiful morning in Salisbury and we get up and get right to it - J is to and from Home Depot, arming himself with epoxy and fiberglass for the ‘grey-water battle’.  I’m heading up about 4 loads of the laundry, and giving Rhonda her “Vintage Teal” make-over. At 3:30pm I hop on my bike - the shore is nearby and I want to take advantage of the warm weather for some outdoor, sunset, oceanside yoga. The sun goes down at 4:30pm  so the days feel short. With a few directions I find my way to a state park, with stunning sunset views. I start to breath & move, trying to find my way to the ‘here & now’. Trying to quiet my mind for an hour. Figuring out our life on the road, finding our new ‘normal’ has been a massive rollercoaster so far. My time on the mat is less soul-searching and more sanity-grasping that day.  Inhale, exhale, repeat. 


Exploring by water - our first paddle of the trip
The continuous planning, searching, and deciding is exhausting. All that uncertainty added to the pressure of planning, seeing, and picking the best spots has been the source of some major struggles. That, and since we want to see ‘everything’, we didn’t really plan ‘anything’. Planning, it seems, will take some of the pressure off, and allow us to relax as we follow the plan for a few days. This seems obvious, I suppose, but we’re learning as we go. So our last day in Salisbury we spend a few hours mapping out our next week - Salem, Boston, Plymouth, and Cape Cod, followed by New Jersey. Feeling good with our new plan, we dropped the SUPs at the State Park.  It was our first paddle of the trip and exploring by water for a few hours was a treat. Deep blue skies and a warm autumn sun made up for the chilly water, and only our feet and ankles got wet anyways.  We waved goodbye to the gals at the Beach Rose RV grounds - they were running a good operation there - and they even had recycling.  It has been near impossible to recycle on the road.  It’s hard to believe, in this day and age.  How do gas stations not have recycling bins? (I wonder this in Canada all the time too btw).  It’s 2015 people! 


Well we drove a few hours south, got close to Salem…  And then we had a trip first - our first night in a Walmart parking lot.  One of those moments where you can’t really believe you are actually going to spend the night “camping” in a Walmart parking lot, lol. And believe me, we absolutely prefer to stay in woodsier, beachy-er, more nature-like locations. But they don’t mind, we were arriving late and leaving early, and it’s free. We had fresh water in the tank (read “drinking, teeth brushing, dish-washing, toilet flushing”); solar power to run lights, water pump, charge phones, run the toaster; and propane for the fridge & stove. Feeling self-sufficient, and with a couple other RVs nearby, we had a pretty good night sleep. And we were even getting solar power from Walmart lampposts. Ha! 

'The Burying Point, Salem. I've fallen in like with the eerie colonial graveyards...
In the morning, we visited Salem, ‘The City Of Witches’. This town’s identity is wrapped around it’s role in the 1692 Salem witch trials that resulted in the hanging of 19, and the pressing-to-death of 1 (mostly, but not all, women).  Previous to the trials, 12 other women were executed on ‘witch’ charges and the last North American witch execution was as late at 1878 (in Salem actually). It’s crazy to think about what it must’ve been like in a very Puritan New England 350 years ago. A lot of the accused were convicted because they were a little bit different/outcasts, or less involved in the church, or voiced objections/doubts in regards to other witch accusations. 
We had Rhonda in tow, so parking was a bit of a mission. Even a police officer was no help with suggestions on where we might park. So we found a residential area with no visible “No parking” signs, and left a note… “Just visiting, and don’t fit in your Visitor Center parking garage. Please call us if there is a problem and we will come straight back.” When in doubt, leave a note! We hopped on our bikes and got some advice from the Salem Visitor Center, then made our way to the House of Seven Gables for a tour. It is a colonial mansion (built 1668), all wood, the largest of it’s type still standing.  The different rooms are made to portray how they would’ve looked at one era or another of the mansion’s history.  This house was made famous by the book of the same title by famous author Nathaniel Hathorne (also author of The Scarlet Letter) published in 1851. Funnily enough, Mr. Hathorne went to Bowdoin College which was down the street from our last boondocking spot in Brunswick, ME. The tour was interesting, but no talk of witches at all.  Back on our bikes, we stop at a Ye Olde Pepper Companie (the first candy store in North America!) where we pay almost $9 for two turtles. Oprah herself recommended them, and my mother probably wouldn’t forgive me if I didn't oblige to Ms.Winfrey's recommendations! They were pretty awesome. Then we visited the Salem Witch Trial Memorial - 20 granite benches inscribed with the names of the accused, and the means & date of execution. This is next to “The Burying Point”, the oldest graveyard of the town. Salem was a really cool town, and would’ve loved a proper tour had there been any going.  It was a great town to discover by bike, and the waterfront is beautiful too. We collected Rhonda, and drove out to Gloucester for a look. The sun was already setting, so we set out for the south side of Boston where we had another Boondockers Welcome spot lined up.  

Fancy night photography in our 'Autumn Wonderland'
We battled rush-hour traffic for over 2 hours to the south side of Boston.  This was plenty of time for us to determine that Massachussanites mustn’t pay any sort of road maintenance taxes as we bounced our way through massive potholes and giant cracks, cringing every time, silently pleading with Rhonda to just hold on…  We finally made it to Hingham. Even in the dark Hingham looked stately, and our next hosts had a 1850s farmhouse.  After a warm welcome, we parked out in the yard. Rhonda nestled in on a thick blanket of leaves, between the house and the stream. Surrounded by large oak and maple trees with spiraled strings of fairy lights wrapped around their trunks!  It was an autumn wonderland. We spent loads of time playing in the leaves and taking night photos… J adjusting the shutter speed, me trying to figure out backwards cursive writing with a flashlight, lol. The mood was a lot lighter than in Salisbury… and we were excited to take the ferry into Boston the next morning. 


Fresh off the ferry, ready to bike the Freedom Trail in Boston, MA

Boston - wow! Well, taking the ferry over was the way to do it! We just biked 20 minutes to the Hingham marina and hopped on the commuter ferry for $17 (each, round-trip fare). Feeling especially light & unencumbered  without Rhonda and Ruby for the day, we planned to tackle the Freedom Trail.  The Freedom Trail is a 2.5 mile (4km) path through downtown Boston comprising of 16 or 17  historic stops from the Boston Common to the U.S.S. Constitution (a ship) in Charlestown. Well, wouldn’t you guess, there’s an app for that! With the free Freedom Trail app downloaded, we could easily play our own tour-guide.  From the cemetery with John Hancock, Sam Adams, Paul Revere, and Mother Goose; to the Old North Church where Paul Revere displayed the famous signal “one if by land, two if by sea”, we stopped and read each entry on the app. Pausing at Faneuil Hall for the most delicious coffee I’ve had all year - a Blueberry roast, with half & half cream….. and culminating in a climb up the Bunker Hill Monument, 294 steps spiraling up the inside an enormous obelisk to peer out it’s tiny windows. It was a lot sweaty and a little anti-climactic, so we sprawled in the grass at the bottom of Bunker Hill as our “Trail Finale” to contemplate our lack of fitness. It was 3pm, and we thought we should spend the rest of the afternoon tackling recommendations from friends. First stop: Mike’s Pastries in the North End for cannoli & tiramisu to replace any calories we might've lost biking and climbing the insides of obelisks! We actually looked up an article online about which cannoli to order - they have 18 different kinds and they are massive, so it seemed important to choose wisely. The shop is packed with people pushing cash across the counter and yelling their orders.  We make off with our treats, to some picnic tables a few blocks away to get our sugar fix, plastic forks shoveling one sweet mouthful after another…. With guilty smiles, we start perusing Yelp for a dinner spot. There is an Italian spot right around the corner with rave food reviews, apparently always has a line, and opens in 45mins. We decide to walk past… and there is already a line - it must be good, right??!! Well… here we are 4pm with sugar-high giggles, waiting in line for dinner at Giacomo’s Ristorante. The servers at Giacomo’s don’t mess around. They came out early to get our party numbers, and as soon as the restaurant opened, they pointed each party to their perfectly set spot. ‘Newbies’ were given a run-down of how to order, we shared our table of 4 with another couple. Needing an extra minute with the menu was clearly frowned upon, so I didn’t dare ask for a substitution when our server came back. We ordered a bottle of wine. She filled our glasses within a centimeter (1/2 inch) of the top. She may have said “bottoms up” under her breath, I’m not really sure. Our seafood pastas were generous, and as delicious as the Yelp-ees led us to believe they would be…It was an impressive 5:45pm and we were completely done dinner (and the whole bottle of wine!) and ushered out the door where the line had since tripled in length! We stumbled upon a wine shop having cider tastings, then we rode past “The Bell In Hand” which had a band and claimed to be the first pub in North America. We had a couple drinks there, before stopping to checked out the bar that was the original inspiration for the famous TV series Cheers. Laughing at how we somehow managed to do it all backwards - dessert, dinner, drinks - we hopped on the ferry back to Hingham.  I had a very swervy bike ride back to our home base.... haha, I'm apparently a bit out of practice drunk bike riding.  The next morning we left our ‘Autumn Wonderland’ home.  I can’t tell you how grateful we have been to the ‘Boondockers Welcome’ network.  We have met the loveliest, kindest people - a true reminder of the goodness that is out there! We have gotten in the habit of leaving each host a thank you note and a polaroid pic with our contact info. 

Our next stop would be another Boondockers host in Wareham, Mass, from where we could explore Cape Cod. On the way, we stopped in Plymouth to see the pilgrim sights.  We saw Plymouth rock & the Mayflower ll, a to-scale recreation of the Mayflower. The Mayflower was the  110-foot dutch cargo fluyt that in 1620 sailed 102 men, women and children (plus 30 crew) 66 days to “the New World”.  Two women gave birth en-route; one youth died just 3 days before they spotted land. Some migrated to avoid religious persecution, some for business opportunities. Plymouth Rock was on the beach as the  passengers disembarked.  It may have been their first step on land in a strange new world.  I’m sure after 66 days at sea they would’ve been kissing this rock, grateful to be alive.  The poor rock has an interesting history. It’s top half was cut off and moved around a little, here and there, on display in town during one era or another. It has since been reunited with it’s base, back on the beach, and they have built a big protective shrine around it, that looks kind of like a prison. The rock also bears the time-stamp ‘1620’.  And our pilgrims? Well 1/2 of them didn’t survive their first winter.  But it was the start of what would become the USA, and with here and Boston I feel like I’ve learned so much about the start of ‘Merica. 

We arrived in Wareham, late afternoon and were greeted by Linda and her 3 small pups.  She helps us fill our water tank and get plugged in.  We do some groceries and call it a night.  The next day is gorgeous and sunny, and we are off to Provincetown - the very last town on the Cape Cod “hook”. There are still some bright oranges and reds in the trees, and it feels like we could spend 3-4 days looking around the towns of Cape Cod.  Seems like there would be tons of paddling spots too.  But, we only have one day, so we pick Provincetown where we park the car. We decide to go our separate ways for a couple hours. Me to walk the pier & beach and do yoga, J to take photos.  Another post-card-perfect sunset, and we drive 2 hours back to our home-base.  In the morning, Linda generously sends us off with freshly baked whole-wheat bread.  We have a big driving day ahead of us: leaving the bumpy roads of Mass to cross tiny Rhode Island, then Connecticut, and NY at rush hour (we really must work on our timing!), before finally reaching the Jersey Shore and big hugs from my acro yoga friend Sandy! I can’t tell you how great it is to see a familiar face, and spend some time in a lovely beach house…. But this edition has gone on long enough, so we will continue next time! 

Massachusetts has been chock-full of facts and history. J has loved visiting places he learned about over and over in school. I loved learning the stories of how America came to be, always trying to imagine what life would’ve been like in those times, for those people. If you made it to the end, THANK YOU for reading as I ramble on…. as I  sip a yummy ‘Raspberries of the Lost Tart” a dark session sour beer from Burley Oaks Brewery in a location yet to be disclosed to our blog…… 

Big love, 

S
A little S&J 'pub history' timeline - some of the MA history we covered this leg... Plus some of our own <3

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Deuce 5000

Lets talk about Poo….

Anyone who knows us, knows it comes up from time to time. Poo does. So if your squeamish and dont wanna talk about it, best to close the page now, or check out another post (they're good I promise). Cause its about to get real.

 So were running on our first month in Rhonda. We have a toilet. Which we ‘had’ to have.  However, one of us, I wont say who, doesn't like the idea of us “carrying around” our poos. I dont share this sentiment. If I gotta go, I gotta go. Where I run into a problem is; is the actual act of doing it. Our ‘bathroom’, is also the size of a box of wine. I am, however not. We finally got the ceiling vent actuator working, which has been an added bonus. There is also a small fart fan working as hard is it can to remove the delightful aromas that reside in the wine box. Before, it was a small chamber of death, in which you felt like you were choking on a poison you had given yourself purposefully. 

The bathroom is literally a 2ft X 3ft space, thats about 60x90cm for all the others out there, just enough room for me to feel as though I am part of some 3rd world torture chamber. Not enough room to do anything properly, but just big enough to think you can, every time. But hey, its there and I can ‘use’ it. Barely.

Breakfast is an exciting, Russian roulette game, of how much, if any, coffee do you dare to drink. Lets face it, we aren't the best morning people. We have however been rising fairly early, and for me, its more comfortable to just get out of bed and sit, then it is to remain curled in some sort of cruel yoga position, in a bed made for a hobbit. So drinking some coffee or tea is a normal morning task to start the day. Its a delightful pleasure, much like drinking, and, much like drinking you are rewarded with a painful endeavor at the end of it all. A hangover; or, having to poo, when you can't go comfortably. Still not sure which is worse. So this is the dilemma you face every morning. Coffee/tea and the uncontrollable bodily function that follows.

So picture me, climbing into a phone booth and having to do all the required tasks involved with evacuating the bowels. Beauty image, I'm sure. Hope you're not having that morning coffee right about now. Its not fun, but on the other hand its one of the most gratifying experience by the end of it all. It turns into a whole new day! Man, you climb out of that box - hopefully no more wet then you came in, as you never know when some plumbing might have its morning burp, another fun possibility. Nothing like a little blackwater in your eye to start the day. Or maybe the grey water tank is full and since the bathroom shower drain is the lowest, it is conveniently the first one to back up. So you very well might step barefooted into last nights dirty dish water. Fucking cute. Rhonda trying to defeat us at every turn. In the end you can wipe up (or down, depending on how you like it) everything you need to, with very little room to spare and doing it all a little more gently and precisely then ever before. Emerging with an even more satisfied and conquering persona then you would otherwise. As you flush however, and have a last glance down that black tunnel of bodily excrement and realize, shit, its time to dump this shit.

So then, for any avid “RVers” out there. What do you do about black water dumps??? Our first one was the definition of a disaster. Black water everywhere. …. a shower in bleach was about the only thing that could have cleaned us. AND, that one, was part ours and part the last owners. UGH. Its one thing when some of your own stuff gets on you, but someone else's.…? Makes you not feel too bad about cutting a limb off. I can learn to write lefty, my brother does it, can't be that hard…. ;) But really whats the protocol? Gloves, what kind?? I feel bad using latex gloves and throwing them out every time. So if you use reusable thick ones, where/how do you store them??? Its not like I have a utility sink at my disposal to quarantine and clean the biohazard off them. So a ziplock has worked, kinda, but you can't just throw the whole glove in there, cause what if something infects the inside? Then they're useless…. you also you have feces on you hands and rechecking your life choices up till now. 


The saga will continue. Learning as we go. In fact, one of us has “learned to go”, just today, again I wont mention names. But she did a great job, even if I was banished to the car for the duration of it. As for me, I will still keep trying to avoid the dish water, making myself as small as possible, and having a couple wines to forget about it all.


Heres to pooping where its comfortable!

J

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

It's not easy, but it gets easier

OH RHONDA!!!  Feels like we are saying that every day.  What needs fixing now?!! She has been behaving like an ailing, old, crazy aunt.  At first, seeming so sweet & willing, and then she gave us that huge scare/near accident that has had us dotting on her every whine & complaint ever since.  “Dear, get me some new window sealant”, she said, “I’m leaking rain all over your front benches”.  And then “Darlings, I’ve nearly tossed my center roof vent off completely! Don’t you love the new sky-light I’ve created?” Or “Oh dear! I seem to be dribbling your grey water everywhere we go! Jason, be a doll and try to patch that up?” She’s been  saying that last line for days and poor Rienks has been under there with epoxy, putty, and anything he can think of attempting to patch up Rhonda’s persistently leaky grey water tank.  And here’s the thing - J and I just don’t have any live-in experience with ailing, old, crazy aunts…. We are struggling daily to meet Rhonda’s needs!  And the tensions can run high, if you know what I’m saying… care-giving can be very stressful on a relationship!

Ol' Aunt Rhonda - she can be a little demanding
It’s been 1 week since we crossed into the states. Sitting here putting “1 week” on paper, I had to check the calendar to be sure it wasn’t two… It has felt much longer than 1 week.  The thing we are seeing the most of in every town is Home Depot & Walmart.  Like we are on some disturbing tour of hardware stores & cheap stuff.  “Adjustment” would have to be the one word to describe the first week.  Adjusting to J & I being back together - like 24 hours a day, in 97sq ft of space. Adjusting to life on the road - read “spending massive amounts of time figuring out where you will sleep, eat, shower, and be safe”. Adjusting to life with Rhonda.  She’s just like all of us, the ol’ girl - lots of imperfections. In the beginning, when we first met, we didn’t notice most of them… and as people tend to do, and we saw a lot of what we wanted to see in her.  Now, we are getting intimate, real fast, and the cracks (literal cracks) are starting to show.  Here’s where the lesson is - we have to STAY; no choice but to get to know her better, and accept her imperfections, try our best to make the most of each situation.  And, we loved her from the beginning.. our eyes shining with adventure, her promising to house not just us, but our dreams & hopes of what this trip would be.  And now? Well, we must love her anyways.  We are here, on the road, thousands of miles from our respective homes. As for "our home", J & I together? We don’t have one (yet!). Rhonda IS our home. So we don’t have a choice.  I think the lesson is beautiful all the same - us being forced into it and all. How many times do we first meet someone (acquaintance, romantic, co-worker, teammate, whoever!), and at first they are the most amazing/friendly/interesting/hilarious person we know.  Then, after a few days, or dates, or weeks of working with them (when you get to know them more) you start see a few of their faults.  Maybe they have a short temper, or can be petty.  Whatever it is, their faults and imperfections peek through.  What is your first instinct then? Phase them out? See less of them? Talk about them with someone else who knows them and has surely noticed “X” about them?  

Well what would happen if you stayed? If you saw those faults and instead of turning away from the person, you tried to like or love them anyways? What would you see if you looked a little deeper? We are all different, and none of us are perfect…. And just like Rhonda, as we age, we all have our own cracks, dents & weak spots - places where pain, or past insults have made our structure less strong, less shiny, with spots that creak and whine under pressure. 

Our “Rhonda Metaphor” had us thinking. And me being a woman who enjoys her “beauty-time”….. Well, what if we gave Rhonda a mini-makeover??!!  A little injection of fun, to lift all of our spirits and raise the general vibration… I know I feel like I need one and I’ve only been on the road one week - Rhonda has been for over 30 years!!  Something cosmetic and frivolous, after all the structural poking & prodding she has been subjected to? A little pampering.   

Today we gave Rhonda a new stripe.  We did away with the burnt-orange of the 80s in favor of a pretty “Vintage Teal”…. from Home Depot, of course. 

-S


**Update: This was written about 5 days, 7 towns and 5 states ago, and I am pleased to say we haven’t seen the inside of a Home Depot since! (Everyone knock on wood…. )

'After': Rhonda feeling fresh in Vintage Teal


Sunday, November 8, 2015

Maine, a story about trees...

Panoramic coastal views
We have finished our time in Maine. What a time it was… Lets start from the beginning.

The “Border Crossing”! It actually ended up being way less dramatic then we were anticipating. Which was a very welcomed experience, since it seems everything else is full of unexpected surprises. We were in and out, in about 40 minutes. However, the first question out of the guys mouth, when we pulled up was: “Where are you from?”… Well thats a loaded question for us, I mean, I’m “from” Glen Ellyn. But I’m also from “TL” which is what my license says. But my last mailing address is North Hollywood. We are coming literally from Moncton, NB. But the car is registered and “from” Ottawa, ON, which is where Steph is “from”, but she also lives part of the year in Muskoka. So yea I panicked and rattled off a few places and ended up spitting out, “We really don't have a home”, as I was thinking in my head, we are going on this trip to; “find our home, buddy”. So as soon as the “don’t” hit my lips I realized I probably shouldn't have said that. As he came back with, “You don’t have a home?”, and I came back with, “Twin Lakes, I’m from Twin Lakes.” He walked back into his booth for more typing and I received a strong elbow to the side, “We don't HAVE a home?!?!” “Yea, sorry….” He returned with a “You’re ok here, just pull up to the left and finish her packet inside. Thanks.” Stunned, I drove forward and parked.

We got inside, started filling out custom forms. We only needed to fill out one, and Steph had already started it, so I told her I was going to the bathroom, and had to go #1. I was however, told from the gentleman dealing with our situation, that I could not go the restroom and would be told when I could. Well played sir, I will however, be informing you, when you will be cleaning pee off your floor. 

Steph finished our customs stuff. The gentleman that was there before us got processed. A mom and daughter returning to the States from a Canadian shopping spree entered and were processed. Steph did her fingerprints and was told to wash her hands off in the bathroom. Cute. No service on my phone either, to distract me from my situation. She returned. Finally, they ask me a question, I answered and the officer goes, “Oh, did you go to the bathroom yet sir?”. Yea cause thats what I’m gonna do. Do something I have been told not to do, while you process my wife's Visa (that’s been in the process for over a a year now). “No I haven’t, may I?”. “Yes, of course.” She replies. Pfft. “Of course”, like I was an idiot for waiting.

I return, after looking at the dozen or so convicts, terrorists, and missing persons on the cork board in the hallway, convinced I’ve seen at least 2 of them, somewhere.  They call her up, finish everything, tell her all is well and we can go. 

Its a walk you only do when you're leaving, that situation, not fast but not slow, casually glancing at the hall walls and photos, giving a nod to the gentlemen coming in with their hunting trophies and firearms in their trailer, getting in the car and casually driving off. Or maybe it’s like when you didn't get charged for something at a grocery store, you know its not your fault but still wanna just GET OUT OF THERE, before they realize what happened. Either way there is huge fist pumping and raising of the roof, when you're out of visual site of the border. We weren't breaking any rules at all and should never have been nervous for leaving, but its just, SO many hours of stuff and money went into that: “Ok they will mail you your Green Card”, that you just want to get the f%#* out!

Ok now were in, first thing we do, miss the exit for a grocery store and Walmart. Next place to turn around is in 15 miles. Which is basically to where we are staying that night. So lets get there unload and level and then lets go back and get food and supplies.

That first foggy morning in
Island Falls, ME
We did and spent our first night in USA in Island Falls, ME., on Lake Pleasant. It was quaint. The place was a little creepy as it was a cloudy, fall, rainy, foggy evening, making it reminiscent of a Steven King novel. Im sure in July, with tons of other campers, boaters, sun and vacationers, it would have been perfectly normal. We survived, woke to more rain and fog over the lake. Ate, packed up and started the journey south!

Our first stop, Bar Harbor. I’ve been told again and again that Bar Harbor is a “must” by everyone who’s been to Maine. We drove through Bangor, it looked beautiful from the bridge going over the river! The drive out to the islands that make up Acadia National Park was slow and foggy, with intermittent rain. As we emerged onto Desert Island and into Bar Harbor the sun started to peek out and the rain stopped.

We found a place to park, got out to make a bit of lunch/early dinner. Oh Rhonda. I got inside to the center roof vent, off and flapping in the breeze. I could only just barely grab it from inside and hold it while Steph got in position to catch it as I flung it into the wind. ARG! Seriously? It couldn't just be easy could it. Also the “battery low” light was on. All the clouds the last 2 days had not done much to charge the batteries. So we would have to be very careful with the power we used tonight.  So, now what!? We need a ladder, we have a gaping hole in our ceiling! Ok, the YMCA is across the street from us, lets see if the good people there would let us borrow one. They would have, if only, the one person with keys to the work-shed was there, but alas he was gone for the day. Probably enjoying a delicious beer; even more aggravating to me. Ok, so I come outside to break the news to Steph, all the while watching snobby soccer moms scoff at Rhonda as they walk through the parking lot to their Zumba class.

So we chat trying to figure out what to do next ,as we are standing around…Pow! A ladder. Next door behind a community center. Just laying there. Its half an extension ladder, WAY to big for what we need, but who cares. So we set it up, toss the piece back up and  duct tape it into place, so at least the rain stays out.

Ok overnight parking. So the point of this trip is to “see towns” so staying in a  National Park campsite miles away from town, paying entrance to the park and then the campsite is not ideal. We want to stay somewhere where we can hang in town and bike around a bit. So we go in search of the perfect spot of “Urban Boondocking” (“boondocking" basically means just parking “somewhere” and being self-sufficient - not needing power or water hookups. This is where having the solar panels is going to help us a lot). We find it, perfect to us, right by the main dock, close to a few parks and all the pubs and restaurants. We park, level and leave for a bit of food and drinks. We find a restaurant and enjoy ourselves whilst trying not to think about the broken ceiling vent and low battery. Come back, brush our teeth and clean up for bed, when a cop pulls up. A champ of a guy! He did tell us we weren’t allowed to park there, but let us park in a different lot on the other side of town, pretty much where we were earlier - even though that lot wasn't meant for overnighting. He said he would tell the guys on the later shift know not to bother us. Awesome. So, left there,  parked again, and got rugged up for the night without heat, as to conserve the batteries, and passed out.


Coastal walk in Bar Harbor, ME
Woke up to beautiful blue sky. We moved to where we could park for the day with no dramas, set the solar panels up for the low sun and explored the town! It really is a cool place. The colors were beautiful, a little late in the fall  for the color prime-time, but awesome none the less! It’s a small quintessential New England town. Seaside, a few parks, lots of restaurants and hotels. A lot was “closing for the season” so not sure how much work would be around during the winter months. Also would be very touristy in the summer I’m imagining. Good for business though! Some beautiful homes and great scenery.

We leave that evening on our way down to Brunswick and Portland! Overnight at a Truck Stop. Our first time!! $10 for a shower, total for us both. Pretty clean facilities actually. Filled our fresh water tank. Found a spot in the lot with a plug, so we had power all night with heat! We set the solar panels up for the morning sun, made dinner and went to bed! Got up, ate and made our way to Brunswick, ME. Diving through some cool river side towns, Augusta, and the Capitol building!

So this whole time we have had this weird thing going on with the grey water tank. Side note: the grey water tank is the one that catches water from the sink and shower. The white water tank is the fresh water, and the black water tank, as you might guess, is the toilet. Back to our grey water tank - I’m not sure what the previous owners did to it, or why they did what they did, but there is some illogical drain plumbing going on. Also, someone before us bottomed out pretty hard I guess, and there is a few big cracks that have started to leak pretty bad at this point. So we find a Motor Supply Company and grab some fiberglass and plastic epoxy. We arrive in Brunswick and Steph goes off to find us some
costumes and candy to give out for Halloween! I talk shop about solar with our Boondocker Host - Larry. Larry and his wife Jean are retired and live in a quaint 1950s-era neighborhood, and we are parking in their driveway for the next 2 nights. Back to the grey water tank! I finally get to work on it. On my back under trailer with about 10 inches of clearance from the ground and I get what I believe is all of the leaks with all the epoxy and fiberglass I can. We eat candy, hand out candy, drink beers and wine and enjoy all the kids coming by for Halloween!

Rising Tide Brewery - "A rising tide lifts all boats"
Sunday is Portland day! We first headed “Land’s End” on Bailey Island. Awesome drive! Really cool island grouping, small towns and homes. Then South to Portland. We found a cool breakfast place, The Portland Pottery Cafe. We smashed some food and made a plan for the day! We found a good central place to park (we are without Rhonda today, she is safely parked in Brunswick) and headed out walking for the afternoon! Portland, is kind of how I imagined it. Looks like it was a very gritty, industrial city with lots of fishing; now, taken over by artists, foodies and breweries, with I'm sure tons of fishing still at its heart. Our kind of place! Spent the day checking it all out. Easy city to walk. Lots of brew pubs and found Rising Tide Brewery. Which was in a bit of an industrial area and next to a distillery. We went in and got 4 x 4oz glasses of our choosing and one full size. Great beers and cool people! Then a bright green "brewery tour" bus showed up and some people got off. We both looked at each other and immediately went to our phones. It’s exactly what it sounds like. A company, The Maine Brew Bus, that basically takes you around to all the breweries and some food spots for an afternoon, and is your DD. Pretty cool idea.  Also the #1 attraction on Trip Advisor for Portland! They all got a little tour of the brewery as well. All in all a cool city and one that I would love to get back to! 

The town of Brunswick where we were staying was beautiful as well, we didn't get to go out much there as we were a bit busy with Halloween and such. It has Bowdoin College which has a really cool campus and vibe to it. The town itself is very green, with lots of trees and a river through it. Seems like a great place as well. 

Cape Elizabeth Lighthouse, ME
Our last day in Maine was spend driving quite a bit. We got to Cape Elizabeth which was awesome! Lots of little inland streams and rivers that would be great for paddling if it had been a bit higher tide… and warmer! We did stop for our last Maine Lobster. We had a Lobster Roll and Crab Cake Sliders with some Roasted Butternut Squash & Maple chowder at Pine Tree Seafood & Produce. AMAZING!! Then off to NH and Mass!

Maine in a nut shell.… Man I really loved it! I am more blown away by how much forest there was! I never really thought too much about it before, but the whole state is a giant forest. Literally. I mean being from Illinois, we have “forests” here and there, but nothing like it is in Maine. Haha, maybe that sounds weird or obvious to some but it wasn't to me, and I love it.  I do love the architecture here as well. I’m sure that will be a theme throughout our drive of the NE coast, as I love all of the Colonial, Cape Cod and Georgian style homes. The field-stone fences and house facades are some favorites as well. Anyways, I'm no architecture major by any means, but I like what I see! Maine will definitely be someplace I would love to come back and explore further! We live in a pretty amazing country!!

Uff, well Im sitting here in Hingham, Mass, writing this, enjoying a Harpoon IPA. We are bit behind the blogging 8 ball as you can tell. Lots to do everyday, and it kinda feels more and more like we aren't really staying and enjoying one place very long. I hope that changes. We got a bit of a later start so I think we are trying to stay ahead of the freezing temps, so as not to have any more plumbing or heating problems… RHONDA! 

Ok kids, Thanks for staying till the end!  If you want more pics, we started an IG to photo-journal our trip - @_theroadtohome_ - check it out! 
Cheers!

J

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Hello East Coast - New Brunswick

Our last post from Canada! 


Waking up in Moncton, N.B. on a crisp Sunday morning, after a very comfy, deep sleep, we stumble upstairs to the TV room to be greeted by JP and three pairs of sweet eyes & curious smiles.  We meet Gabbie, Alex, and Éliane who are 7, 5, and 3.  Of course we get a tour of the house, and their playroom which would leave any girl in heaven - full of dolls, games, stuffed animals, and an overflowing trunk of princess dresses!  The girls each have a birthday party to attend today, so it’s going to be a busy day in the Arsenault household! JP has made us the most delicious frittata, and coffees are waiting… Rachelle comes home from a 10K race, medal hanging from her neck, and I swear that in under 15 minutes she was showered and heading out the door with Éliane for “birthday party #1”.  Rienks and I observe this well-oiled machine with silent admiration - JP & Rachelle getting it all done seamlessly! 

We have some damage control to do on Rhonda, so Rienks makes a few stops at the shops, and I’m cleaning out the burnt, wet cupboards and washing all the dishes…. All windows open, putting Lavender oil everywhere to battle the campfire smell and restore some sort of “zen” to our “home”. 

That night JP treats us to a proper East Coast treat - lobster! Now we have both only ever had “restaurant lobster” - never “homemade lobster”. JP was showing us the ropes, teaching us how his family does it, and telling us heaps of “lobster stories” the whole time! It was amazing & succulent - no butter needed!  It’s early in the trip but this is one meal that will be hard to top! 
N.B. craft brews, lobster dinner, family time <3

The next day we tackle repairing the melted plumbing from Rhonda’s little “incident”. While I don’t even know where to start, J has it all figured out already, and doesn’t seem worried at all about hacking out the 2 sections of melted plumbing. Some of Rhonda’s past owners seem to have been pretty “handy”… it feels like we are always discovering their “handy work”- messes of wires that lead nowhere, extra panels and covers, securely obstructing us from the very spots we need to work on…….. But it was a successful day, and we made a yummy slow-cooker dinner for our gracious hosts! 


Hopewell Rocks at high tide - 14m that day
Feeling like we haven’t looked around Moncton much, we spent a day at Hopewell Rocks. “The Rocks” boast one of the highest average tides in the world - sometimes changing as much as 16m in one cycle.  The location of these giant rock formations known at “the flowerpots” in the upper reaches of the Bay of Fundy are in such a spot that at low tide you can walk the ocean floor amongst them.  At high tide they are basking in 14-16m of water.  The park was “closed” for the season when we went, but visitors are still welcome to go in and walk around at their own risk.  We enjoyed being nearly the only people poking around in the middle of a sunny afternoon….. That’s when it happened…. I got the email saying my passport & visa were ready to be picked up!!!!  That night we had a yummy dinner and celebratory bottle (or 3!) of wine with JP & Rachelle.  The next day we would make our way to the border… For the amount of times I have entered or travelled through the USA, the dozens and dozens of custom slips I’ve filled out over the years…. This time is different. This time is “the crossing” we have been working and waiting for…  This time I will get to stay. This time WE will get to make our lives. I’m not just a “VISITOR”. I get to be a “Resident”. And it feels good.