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        • Casa Grande Ruins National Monument
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        • Jerome
        • Kaibab National Forest
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        • Painted Desert
        • Pipe Springs National Monument
        • Prescott
        • Quartzsite
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        • Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument
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        • Wupatki National Monument
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Category: RV life

31 December 2019

Ramble on to 2020 New Year ahead

I’m not one to make New Year resolutions but am ready to ramble on to 2020.  Big changes in life can happen any time I choose.  Well, almost.  Naw, what the hell.  Who am I to think I’m in control?  I AM!  Or at least I try.  Death occurs.  Accidents happen.  I have less control over them than they over me.  How I react is in my control.  Maybe not if clumsiness causes an accidental trip over a wire then falling down and breaking both wrists.  However, I did have control over my attitude about healing and tried to stay as positive as I could.  There were days when you wouldn’t have wanted to be a fly on my wall.  Yet I am healing.  Yesterday was my last PT and assessment with the left, and most severely injured, at about 65%, and the right at 85%.  I will keep working it completely on my own now.

Over the last decade just posted about, I feel incredibly fortunate having traveled so much, meeting amazing people along the way.  I am full of gratitude that I can still live the way I want in my nomadic lifestyle.  Though it is getting more difficult to find free, remote, uncrowded, boondocking on public land.  The word is out on how wonderful RV living really is.

I am rambling on and gone astray with this post, having lost direction.  Maybe that’s because I’m not sure what direction to go.  Wouldn’t be the first time.

Gaelyn's Disney glasses Never Grow UpMy Disney glasses

Still want to follow my travel dreams which haven’t changed much in many decades except the list keeps growing.  Although as I age my physical abilities change.  I recently slowed down but don’t want that to stop me.  I have gotten physically lazy.  The longer I sit inside, the less I want to go out.  Yet once outside, I am happiest.  What the hell is wrong with me?

There’s healing going on, physiologically, psychologically, emotionally, spiritually…

I turn 66 years young in March and start to collect social security, yet I don’t know about living on social security.  Seasonal Rangers don’t earn government retirement.  I really don’t have a Plan B.  And I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be if I grow up.

Now it’s time to look forward and ramble on to 2020.

tree boulders moon reflection Watson Lake Prescott ArizonaI want a new camera and not sure what the budget will allow.  Breaks my photographer heart to think of all the DSLR cameras that were bought and little or never used and probably sit in the original box in a closet.  Maybe after I get back to work.  I want to try more night photography.

I see some coddiwompling in the near future to enjoy the healing apricity found in the desert.

My rent at North Ranch is paid until January 2nd.  Though I could extend that.  It’s been nice here although I really didn’t mingle or get my lazy ass outside enough.  I’m thinking next stop will be boondocking on the Kofa National Wildlife Refuge south of Quartzsite, Arizona.  Perhaps for full moon. And if the nights don’t drop below 40°.  Then slowly work west to Joshua Tree, California to meet up with a friend during the third week of the month.  From there who knows.  Do I stay in expensive California?  I’ve become comfortably spoiled with electricity providing heat so will see how boondocking goes and how low temperatures go.  My mind and body don’t deal with cold.

As usual, I am open to suggestions, friendocking, and company.

Gaelyn at PT Wickenburg ArizonaMe at PT making a fist and twisting my wrist

Thanks for letting me ramble on.  And thank you for leaving comments so I know somebody is listening.  You long-time readers know a lot about me, and I a bit about some of you.  But if you’re not a blogger, I don’t know much about you.  Feel free to introduce yourself.  If not in a comment here maybe go to the contact tab for a private message to me.  Social media is a conversation which to me is easier if I at least kind of know who I’m talking with.

May 2020 bring the most positive energy to us all!

I like to save images from Facebook.

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life, New Year's Eve, RV life health, life, life journey, travel, winter 32 Comments
09 July 2019

Half-way through the season and where next?

About halfway through the work season and I’m thinking about where next.  That’s not because I’m anxious to leave Bryce Canyon.  However I am trying to think just a little ahead for a change.

Logistics

shed Art sign house Yarnell ArizonaI no longer have a home base in Yarnell.  Best friends are gone and property will soon be for sale.  I’m not looking to buy real-estate.  This special little town and it’s people will hold a place in my heart forever.  I’m just not ready to return anytime soon.  I won’t miss the scorpions.

truck 5th-wheel site #4 Bryce Canyon National Park UtahOwning two RVs I can’t move at the same time by myself no longer works.  The big 5th-wheel has been a delightful home for over seven years but it’s much bigger than I truly need.  Those who follow my life journey know I tried to sell it last winter with no luck.  Even with the troubles and expenses getting it moved last spring, it sure has been nice to live in the spaciousness compared to the truck-camper.

Sierra on hood of truck Marble View Kaibab National Forest ArizonaYet that truly is a large enough space for me and Sierra, just not for all my stuff.  I’m really not into paying for storage space which makes me question the need to be owned by some of this stuff.  I suppose the 5th-wheel could go into storage but I don’t want to pay for that either if I don’t need it any more.  I will try, but it’s not easy to sell anything from a national park.  Feel free to spread the word to folks that it’s for sale again.

Time to rearrange and downsize once again.  I think the next ideal combination might be a slightly smaller slide-in camper making it easier to tow a moderate sized bumper-pull trailer for longer stays.  Maybe with airbag suspension on the Dodge it could pull a trailer now with an extended hitch.  Why do I need two RVs?  Right now I don’t.  At this time, it’s all just a dream.

And I need a new address so am thinking about a mail service.  Been a while since I had to go that route.  Not like I get a lot of mail these days but need to keep licenses up to date.

Desires

Mount Adams & Takalak Lake Gifford Pinchot National Forest Washington 07-1996Mount Adams & Takalak Lake Gifford Pinchot National Forest Washington July 1996

I’m trying to plan a journey to the Pacific Northwest this fall after my season is over, a trip I’ve been wanting to do again for several years.  The current truck-camper is adequate for that.

map of western USAI’m looking at two possible routes north and inland, and a coastal return south, with many side-trips.  States I’m considering include Utah, Nevada, California, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.  All weather dependent.  Of course I am open to suggestions and visits along the way.

Speaker topic listI want to travel and make photographs.  Would dearly like to get paid for that.  Thinking about speaker gigs, prearranged while traveling.  That’s the tough part, writing and sending pitches, then committing to be somewhere on a specific date.  Think anybody in your community would be interested.  My list of topics is long.

Obstacles mostly of the self-made sort

Berta on beach Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge Bandon OregonMaybe I’m just feeling lost and alone right now.  Lost my best friend in the whole wide world a year ago.  The person who knew me best.  I could talk to Berta about my concerns and what to dos.  I still miss her every day.

view from Yovimpa Point Bryce Canyon National Park UtahView from Rainbow Point Bryce Canyon National Park

I’m not even sure I want to keep working.  This season of 40+ hours a week is kicking my butt.  I love being a Ranger, but I’m tired and think of retirement, if quitting a seasonal job can be called that.  I could always volunteer for shorter seasons.

And through all these thoughts, I am totally lacking motivation to do much of anything at all except get up and go to work in the morning.  Well, and play a little on days off as you know I love to do, but not until after staying home and resting first, and sometimes second.  And there are things to do.  Write and send those pitches.  Some minor work on both RVs.  Start making fall plans.  I have the “I don’t wannas”.

Sometimes solo is exhausting.

Where next?

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13 March 2019

My gypsy life moving to California mid 1970s

After my first solo adventure from Illinois to California and back I was sure I should move to California, the land of golden opportunity.  So I traded in the Vega for a 1968 Chevy camper conversion van to live in and moved west.

1968-chevy-sport-van-camper-conversionMy van was navy blue and no colored wheels but had the popup and looked like a VW bus camper inside

I was conveniently laid off from my job and collected unemployment for the first time.   Wasn’t so easy back then and I had to actually knock on doors to ask for a job, fill out paperwork that was signed by the employer who didn’t need me, then mailed in along with a weekly phone call.

My plan was to travel westward during late summer on the northern I90 route but my departure date was put off until October.

Chicago to Durango mapBadlands was bitter cold wind.  Mount Rushmore was fogged in.  Then it snowed overnight and I woke up afraid to crawl out of my gifted Alaskan issue down mummy bag.  Time to turn south.  Yet the under-powered 6 cylinder Chevy could barely climb the Rocky Mountains.  A mechanic in Durango adjusted the carburetor to get more air than was needed in the low lands of Illinois.  Still, there were times I could have walked faster.

Durango to LA mapI vaguely remember turning west at Albuquerque and I think I drove through Petrified Forest and maybe even Joshua Tree.  I was very sick with bronchitis on the verge of pneumonia by the time I arrived at relatives’ home in La Canada just east of Los Angeles.

LA to SF mapAfter visiting a free clinic for meds and convalescing for several weeks I started to look for a job.  Figuring I had experience as an office clerk at a seed company that’s the direction I took.  I was familiar with several seed companies in western California so I started applying and headed north along the coast.  Sure would have been nice to have a cell phone instead of saving coin and calling from payphones along the way.

Ferry Morse Seeds logo on thimbleI finally took a temporary job south of San Francisco in Mountain View at Ferry-Morse Seed Company in their seed lab.  Rented a room in a house for a couple months before getting an apartment with a lady I met through a mutual friend.  Within a year I’d moved from the Credit Department, to accounting and finally Lawn Seed.

St James Infirmary t-shirtI did own this shirt, pretty sure in another color

The clutch went wonky on the van so I rode my bike a lot until getting it fixed.  Was an expensive place to live and I struggled working two jobs.  Secretary by day and pizza maker at night.  I’d go out on a weekend night drinking with a friend at the St James Infirmary Bar where the beer was .39 a mug and mixed drinks were .89 each.  I could go with change, get others to fill my mug from their pitcher, and go home with a happy buzz.  Come to find out, the bar burned in 1997.  A real shame.  Inside was heavily decorated with props from Hollywood back lots, so the story goes.

Sometimes I would charge a tank of gas, buy a six-pack, and drive over the Santa Cruz Mountains to the free beach on days off.  I was rather lonely and wasn’t meeting people.  There was an attitude of many displaced people about not getting to close as you, or I, might move away.  I met one native Californian.  Everyone else were transplants like me.

After a year I finally figured I couldn’t afford to live there.  So, with tail between legs returned to Illinois on Mom’s Shell Oil credit card in the same ole van—clutch fixed—along the southern route.

SF to IL mapThat took me through Texas, which is huge to cross, and no Shell Oil fuel stations.  I did finally make it to southern Illinois where I lived with an old beau in Carbondale for about a year.  Then finally back north to the Chicago suburbs, took a job as a waitress, hostess, and eventually night manager and met my future husband of 15 years.  And although we raised a family we also moved across country and traveled to Mexico.  The gypsy life is in my blood.

12 round trip Chicago CA map - Copy-1Sadly, all photos from this time of my life were destroyed in a flood in my parents Illinois’ basement.

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Hi, I’m Gaelyn, the Geogypsy

I retired after 29 summer seasons as a Park Ranger, traveling solo for 40+ years. My passions include travel, connecting to nature, photography, and sharing stories.

I started exploring US National Parks in 1977 and 20 years later became a seasonal Park Ranger.  I’ve lived full-time in a RV for 30 years working summers and playing winters.  I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow old, other than grow up.

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