Friday, January 31, 2020

A New Home - A Little Different Blog Post

For almost 8 years, Walt and I have enjoyed a really fine travel trailer to go out traveling.  For me I thought it was like the Taj Mahal, however, Walt is a little larger, OK a lot larger, than me, and he was always hitting all four walls in the bathroom every time he took a shower.  So we had started looking almost 3 years ago for something larger.  We had both thought that a fifth wheel would be just our cup of tea.  We'd been inside a lot of them and there was always something amiss.  Some were used and some were really used and some were simply cheap and showed it from the get-go.  So last month when we were in Port Aransas, Walt was on his trusty computer and was searching on one of the better known RV-for-sale sites, and found a fifth wheel that was made by our favorite company.  He mentioned it to me, and I looked at it and it looked really well maintained, and the price was sweet.  So Walt called the guy and they almost immediately struck up a great conversation.  As time went on, both of us decided it was time to go home, clean out our own trailer, put it up on the market and see what we could get for it and do some more investigation on this fifth wheel.

This trailer was made by Northwood Manufacturing and known by the trade name of Arctic Fox.  This is one of the best-built RVs around and this is exactly what we had been looking for.  As Walt got to talking with the guy, they had done some mighty excellent modifications and kept up their trailer as well as we had kept ours.  Now, I'm getting excited.  The trailer, however, was in California - Sacramento, California, but we got so excited, that I started plotting how we could get out to get it, and how we'd get back towing our new Foxy Okie right behind us (I'm the navigator of the team!).  And before you know it, we're on the road.  Two hard 12-hour days of driving and we're there - even earlier than we planned, and met them to take a look at the trailer.  It was everything we'd been promised and we were in love!  So the generous owners let us stay Sunday night in the trailer, we would meet for breakfast the next morning and then after breakfast do the transaction at their bank.  Done deal.  Only there was a slight hitch in the deal.

Now, Walt had told me before we started out that I was going to have to keep my big mouth shut and that I shouldn't, couldn't, wouldn't even think of saying anything political.  This was California after all and we weren't sure who these people were.  They seemed level-headed and very nice, but as Walt as impressing on me, they lived in California and therefore might be of a different political mind, and Walt didn't want me to mess up the deal before he could get them to sign the bill of sale! So I promised I would keep my trap shut - hard, I know, but Walt's a good guy and we've been together for a long time and we travel so well together, I thought it was worth me keeping my mouth shut for this short trip.

Well, that all ended on the morning we had breakfast, and not only did we like them, but we found we were of like mind.  We started breakfast at 8am and finally at 11:30 Walt said we needed to get to the bank before it closed so that we could complete the deal because Walt was convinced that these nice people would like to be paid!!!  The deal completed, we sat around the RV that afternoon while the guys hooked and unhooked the fifth wheel.  Walt hasn't done anything like this since he was a kid with a gooseneck so he felt he needed a little practice. 


Ain't she sweet - we haven't named her yet, but she's getting a name.  What makes the fifth wheels so nice is that that overhang over the back of the pickup is a bedroom, and this bedroom has a slide.  A slide is a part that extends out so it makes the room wider than the road.  The bedroom is really luxurious with a full hanging closet, gobs of cabinet space and a spacious bathroom with a really nice shower that Walt doesn't have to bang against all 4 walls to enjoy.  Just below the bathroom area and just behind the truck bed is wonderful storage for all that man-stuff that men need to be manly!  Tools, hoses, metal mechanical type gadgets and more tools.  All I know is that when men see it, they respond the same way I do when I saw the galley with all its storage and even a pantry.  This was better than the Taj Mahal - this was like  Buckingham Palace on the road!  Not only that but it has a huge back window with luxurious chairs to sit in that you can enjoy the view of wherever you are traveling.  There are two additional luxurious chairs and a table with an extension and four chairs.  


And here's our new Arctic Fox.  These RVs are made for colder climates which means they are very insulated and well-built.  Sealed and having double insulated windows makes for an RV that is not only well-built but can survive almost any weather conditions.  So whether we're in Yellowstone messing around in an early-spring blizzard, or in an eastern Oklahoma swamp-ish summer, this RV can take it.  Walt and I both love well-built, well-constructed products, whether it's my sewing or his furniture making, we both strive to do the best, and know that the best-made products are actually cheaper in the long run cause they last and last and last. 


Finally, after a whole day with the kind folks who were the previous owners, we said goodbye and promised to meet up again.  Chances are good too, cause their daughter resides in a neighboring state!  After many lessons on the fifth wheel (and listen this whole fifth-wheel business is way over my pay grade, but right down Walt's alley), they departed, with Walt wondering whether he could get connected and disconnected without major injury to himself or the RV!

Here's the proof.
What you may not be able to see in this photo is that Walt has all 10 of his digits and the truck has been successfully disconnected from the fifth-wheel trailer without damage to the RV storage facility and the 5W!

What you may also not see is that Walt successfully backed the trailer into the appropriate space, with enough room on both sides to enter on one and push out the slides on the other when need be.  But you can also see that the truck is successfully disconnected from the 5W with no damage to the truck too!

If you ask me - it looks like a pro did this.  


Monday, January 6, 2020

Beautiful Birds

So the first day we're here, I go out reconnoitering for good bird spots and hit upon one with these flamingo-type birds and I'm thinking, "Are we in Texas or Florida?.... Do flamingos come this far west?  No one told me we were going to see flamingos here?"  So couldn't wait to get back to this spot.

Then days passed, and some rain off and on, and doing some clean-up and fix-up on the RV after our tumultuous trip here, and finally got to the birding spot, and boom - no flamingos - nothing.  We trek around and I find out that these aren't flamingos but Roseate Spoonbills and we see them at various spots, but they're about 100 yards away - a LONG way away. I'm bummed.

Then we get a couple of days of rain, and I remember the night we drove into the park here.  It was raining cats and dogs, we weren't sure of the layout of the park, we were getting drenched and both of us were pretty cantankerous.  Then it cleared up beautifully the next day and that's when I saw those bright pink birds, so after the rainstorm, we trekked back out to the birding location and BOOM!!!  There they were.

 These are from the ibis family and considered frequent residents of the Gulf and Florida coast regions.  The pinker or redder birds are breeding.  Click on any of these photos to see them larger.  These really are gorgeous birds.
Because of their coloring, they were harvested for their feathers, but now because of protective laws, the populations have come back. 
 Using their bills, they work through the water by swishing their bills back and forth using smell to find shrimp and other small aquatic life.

For more fun, here's a great video of these birds in action on Walt's great camera.




As if this wasn't fun enough, we trekked over to another location (east of the Aransas Pass where the ships come into the Aransas area to get to Corpus Christi port), with birds of their own.  This seems to be where the Brown Pelicans hang out.

This one is the Port Aransas Chamber of Commerce pelican who will sit there and allow you to get really close so you can take lots of photographs.  All the while looking at you as if to say, "Did I give you permission to take pictures of me/"  or "Are you getting my good side?"  Well, Walt got both so I'm sure he's happy!




And I think this is what I love most about Port Aransas is what this picture shows - the Chamber of Commerce Pelican - always available (albeit begrudgingly) for a photo or two, a huge tanker coming into the Aransas Pass into the deepest port in the Gulf of Mexico (Corpus Christi) and just below the surface of the water, being a little shy of the camera is a porpoise who love to play and race the boats in and out of the pass.  Walt shot this a little ahead of the porpoise making its appearance! 

But no matter, because we caught the porpoises earlier during the day at a different location of the pass.  Look just ahead of the tug boat pulling that LNG (Liquid Natural Gas) tanker out of the pass and into the Gulf of Mexico headed to Antwerp, Rotterdam - providing fuel for the world while nature is running amok all around them.  Who says commerce and nature can't exist together?!








Saturday, January 4, 2020

All Sorts of Waterfowl

The Texas Gulf Coast is full of all sorts of waterfowl and migrating birds in their winter home....snowbirds!  With the intercoastal waterway that runs around the Atlantic Coast to the Gulf of Mexico Coast so that commerce and recreational travel can be accomplished without having to withstand the wiles of the larger ocean and gulf.  What this ICW also provides is amble swamps, ponds, sloughs, and other bodies of salt, fresh and brackish (being both salt and fresh) water sprinkled throughout the ICW.  And the Port Aransas area is rife with this sort of coastal waterways and a very happy balance between nature and commerce.  

One of the natural phenomenons is a freshwater area that houses most of the wintering whooping crane population in the US.  But these cranes also bring a ton like around 360 different coastal and waterfowl to the area.  The space is so crowded that for a photographer it's a bonanza of shots.

For the wildlife though, it can get a little crowded, and when a snowy egret and tri-color heron get in each other's way, there can be some squawking and definite territorial discussions going on.  These two pranced around for most of the morning with the egret getting the upper hand, and a goodly amount of fishes to gulp down as well.  


And of course with a lot of birds, come a lot of varieties of similar species, like snowy egret, great egret, cattle egret, great white heron, great blue heron, tricolor heron, on and on.  This one below is a Little Heron in blooming plumage (or rather breeding plumage).  No matter, they are all still beautiful birds.

For the last couple of days it's been rainy, and being from a relatively dry climate, I'm not used to all this moisture and humidity!  But being on the coast it's really damp down here.  Like we humans, the birds love the sun coming out and the birds showed up today!.  


These are cute little Stilts that like to poke around in the water.  All I can imagine is that there must be lots of food there, cause this is what the birds do most of the time - poke around in the water!

This is a tri-color heron which is very common in this area of the Gulf Coast.  It's really a beautiful bird.





Then there came a huge conversation about a fairly non-descript bird if it was a juvenile heron or bittern.  I took up the argument for the juvenile heron - black-crowned night heron to be exact.

The confusion was if this was a bittern which has a completely different look
They look alike, but this was definitely a juvenile.  

There were so many, that's a whole other post tomorrow!








Wednesday, January 1, 2020

How to Admire A Pelican's Tenacity


One of the favorite things for me to watch is the launching of the pelicans.  They are the most beautiful flyers and floaters and are excellent fishermen, but to watch them take off is like watching an overloaded plane and knowing that they're never going to make it.....
 No matter how big those wings or any amount of lift, those dragging feet are not adding to any lift and offer no help toward wind efficiency.
 The feet are still dragging and the lift the bird gets from those big wings just isn't enough....
 Once again a large wingspan with a huge range of motion, but those feet are still a huge problem and this bird isn't going to make it, but you gotta give the bird A for the effort at least....
 Well, this looks like it might be a little bit better, but those feet are still a problem....
 You gotta give these birds praise because they do not give up, and maybe that's the secret to them getting into the air......
 Well, look at this, the feet might offer something more than a complete hindrance to the take off.....
 And finally, all that flapping finally worked because once these birds are in the air....
These birds look really beautiful in flight.
And his pal is working like crazy to get in the air right below him.  Having seen his pal's success.  It may take him 4 or 5 flaps to get into the air, but he's somehow going to make it!