Camp Congress is a comfortable place to spend time, not far from my Skull Valley home but at least 2000 feet lower in elevation and thus warmer without yet being HOT.
I hid out for five days over Easter weekend hunkered in at one of my favorite camps looking at the Kofa Mountains and chasing shade as the temperature pushed past 95° it felt like time to head a little further north.
After a couple hour drive I settled into camp Congress and was soon joined by a local friend. Gypsy brought banana bread, a cute magnet, camper napkins, some magazines, and best of all her company along with the lovely four-legged Sandy. Don’t ask why I don’t have a photo.
Sadly the air was heavy with smoky haze from the Tunnel Fire northeast of Flagstaff and the Crooks Fire south of Prescott, both human caused.
After a move, long drive, and shopping I like a down day where I don’t have to go anywhere. So even though the signal is worse than iffy at this camp Congress off Ghost Town and Cemetery Roads on BLM I stayed in place. I made a 360°-video of camp, wrote a blog post, sat outside reading but mostly listening and watching birds.
I love this location for birding.
The next day I thought about doing laundry, not. OR, just move to the other camp Congress site where I have strong reliable signal and keep working. Hmmm… OR, not move at all. The last seemed the right choice. I am lazy sometimes. So it was much a repeat of the previous day minus the 360 video.
Friday morning felt cold at 58° so when I couldn’t get online at all I battened down and left camp Congress.
Filled propane in case the predicted cold snap lasted then went to Stanton Road looking for camp Congress 2. The main reason I didn’t just drive the hour home was the overnight low close to freezing. No thanks.
Sadly, when considering one site I backed into a tree and now have a hole through the aluminum skin that will have to be patched. One more thing for the growing RVs’ repair list.
Made another 360°-video of camp Congress 2 fighting the wind. In fact wind with blazing signal kept me indoors working on the computer.
Smoke obscures Vulture Peak to the west
And that’s what I did over the weekend, worked on the computer. I took 55 minutes of video driving from Kofa to Congress, edited and cut it to 31 minutes for my first Rambling Road Trip video. My brain never stops while I’m driving so I can always find something to talk about. Hope you’ll check it out. I am totally experimenting with this new medium of video.
After a two-day video editing marathon, brutal wind, smoke filled sky, and temperatures rising, I finally felt like completing this five month road trip and heading home. Time to leave camp Congress.
The drive north along SR89 is familiar. I did something I’ve thought about for many years, took video of the entire four-mile drive up Yarnell Hill. Then I continued to film the rest of the drive home through Peeples Valley, Kirkland, and onto Iron Springs Road to Skull Valley, and made another Rambling Road Trip video.
Blown glass sea turtle suncatcher (sitting on an envelope for scale)
Made a quick stop at the post office where a birthday present awaited. The son of a long-time friend blows glass under the name Wildfire Productions (please check out his website and work).
And, finally, home to my other wheelestate. I took another 360°-video and a short walk before even looking inside the 5th-wheel/Big House where, as I expected, there was mouse poop which meant cleaning before moving back in.
Yet I was in no hurry and simply enjoyed the sunset before making dinner in the truckcamper.
Lesson learned this winter as I readied for retirement, slow down.