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Category: RV

17 March 2020

Waiting out the storm: rain and COVID-19

desert mountains storm clouds sun rays BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaI originally thought that waiting out the storm meant four days of rain in the desert.  Yet over those days, and more, as I followed reports on social media—some more reliable than others—realized people around the world are waiting out the storm of the rapidly spreading COVID-19.

road desert mountains storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaSo thankful I have no place to be in a hurry.

By now we should have all gotten the message and know what to do to reduce chances of getting this latest virus.  Actually, things we learned in kindergarten, wash hands, cover mouth when coughing, blow nose, and stay home when sick.  Nobody wants a hug if you’re sick except your Mom, and right now even that’s a bad idea.

Sonoran Desert light Black Mountain storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaGo outside to non-congested areas.  Give people space.  Quarantine doesn’t have to lock you into the house.  Yet if it does, make the most of that time doing something positive.  This is not forever.

I think their will be a lot of December babies this year.  I hope their parents teach them well.

Sonoran Desert mountains light clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaI will continue waiting out the storm boondocking in the southern Arizona desert in as much social isolation as possible.

desert mountains sunset clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaIn the meantime, I will try to keep bringing you stories and photos from the Sonoran Desert while waiting out the storm.

window view RVs desert Black Mountain storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaSeeing predictions for four days of rain sent me back to boondock on BLM Darby Well Road just south of Ajo. I found a high place with firm ground speckled with tiny, white, daisy-like Desert Star flowers and a familiar view of Black Mountain.  My window view also included a leaning Saguaro and two other RVs at a relatively respectful distance, and they both left within two days.

desert mountains light clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaThe little rain that fell overnight didn’t even dampen the ground.  Clouds danced around all morning creating patches of light and shadow.  A military jet scared me by breaking the silence of the desert.

desert mountains storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaBy mid-afternoon I smelled the rain and felt the temperature drop as the sky turned a steely gray.

desert mountains storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaRain in the desert seems like a special gift to this otherwise arid environment.

desert mountains storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaA gentle rain became more steady and I heard thunder and saw lightning.  I enjoy listening to rain on the roof.  Sierra, it seems, not so much.  She becomes more needy and lies closer for comfort and consoling.

desert Black Mountain storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaAnd so we greeted yet another drizzly desert day with gentle rain intermittently all day.  The desert is happy, I can feel the plants growing.

road desert mountains storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaBy noon it was warm enough to open doors and windows.  Petrichor!  I’ve heard people talk about the creosote smell after rain.  I smell cinnamon.  Yet the ground was soft enough I barely wanted to walk on it let alone drive.  Glad I didn’t have to go anywhere.

desert mountains storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaTwo more jets flew low and banked around Black Mountain interrupting the more pleasant song of the Cactus Wren.  A Gila Woodpecker landed on the step and pecked loudly catching both of us off guard.  A hummingbird came by. They seem to like the red light covers.

light Saguaro cactus desert storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo Arizona

Saguaro cactus BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaAnother day of gray sky has me wondering if I’m getting enough charge from the solar panel to light the fridge.

Sonoran Desert mountains rainbow clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaThen later in the day, clouds move around enough to let the sunshine through with just enough rain for a wide-bowed rainbow to the east.  What you don’t see is the RV at each end.

truck desert mountains storm clouds rainbow BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaAnd the camper made a good cover for me and the camera.

Sonoran Desert Black Mountain storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaRain really is a special gift in the desert.

water drops Ocotillo leaves BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaWater drops don’t hang very long.

Sonoran Desert mountain storm cloud sunset BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaThe air almost sparkles with fresh scents.

puddles Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaFigured I had one day left to lay low and let the ground dry a bit before I’d have to head to town for propane and dump holding tanks.  And even then there were puddles.

When I got to Belly Acres RV Park I asked if they had spaces and they did.  Guess I shouldn’t be too surprised as many RVers have headed home in a hurry because of CORVID-19.   I paid for a space then dumped, filled water, took a shower, and charged everything I could because I had electricity.  But hey, civilization is so noisy I could barely hear the birds.  Several neighbors gathered on the nearby Community building porch.  Voices rose and fell.  And although I couldn’t hear words it felt like some subtle disagreement was going on.  And then there was singing.  Maybe I should have just joined in but I am social distancing and already felt like I’d been too peopley.

desert hills BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaIn the morning I was more than ready to return to the peace and quiet of the desert, deserquies.  I went to the grocery store in Ajo, not really needing much, and the shelves were as stocked as ever, they even had toilet paper though I didn’t need any.  Milk and a couple avocados were enough for me and I headed back to Darby Well Road and parked in the same place by five feet.  Not suppose to see more rain until Wednesday.

dead & live Saguaro cactus Black Mountain BLM Darby Well Road Ajo Arizona

inside dead Saguaro BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaInside dead Saguaro Cactus

I will probably just stay here and continue waiting out the storm, whether that’s rain and/or virus.

Like many full-time RVers, I don’t have a home to go to as I’m already in it.  Guess that’s not entirely true, as my other home on wheels should be going back to Bryce Canyon National Park next month.  If they’re still open.

desert mountains storm clouds rainbow BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaMany difficult times around us, label them as you may. Yet the reality is life of the possibly kindest species on the planet. We are capable of love, giving, and kindness even on the worst of days. Crisis sets us all atwitter, no tweeting needed. Yet under the worse of crisis we come together.  Keep taking care of yourself, and others if that’s possible, while waiting out the storm.

Lucky Leprachan

May the luck of the Irish be with us all.

Happy St Patrick’s Day!

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Ajo, Arizona, Places I've been, RV living, United States boondocking, Coronavirus, COVID-19, rain, rainbow, social distancing, social isolation 29 Comments
18 February 2020

Frozen ice cream in a warm desert watching for wildflowers

light Saguaro cactus spines Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaI wouldn’t have frozen ice cream in a warm desert if the fridge didn’t work on propane.  Or, I’d end up plugged in to electric in a RV Park.  I’ve done more of that this winter than usual.  I want to be out boondocking in the desert while watching for wildflowers.  It’s a prickly situation.

light glow Saguaro cactus arms Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaLast week I returned to Quartzsite from a brief boondock at Kofa NWR south of town when the fridge wouldn’t stay on.  Back to Shady Lane RV Park, a delightful place really.  I called a local recommended mobile RV tech who was busy and referred me to another tech.  Has to be one of the best skills to make money in Quartzsite over the winter.  I had diagnosed the problem as a faulty thermocoupler.  After looking at it, a neighbor thought an electrical circuit board issue.

light glow Saguaro cactus arms Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaRV tech Mark arrived in the afternoon, adjusted the regulator, cleaned the burner area, and seemed to solve the problem.  Fridge stayed on using propane.  Once that was established I returned the fridge to electric as I’ve paid for that in my rent in the park.

desert mountains SR95 North to Parker Arizona

heart rock Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaThe next day I headed north to Parker for some groceries.  I considered traveling further north to boondock near the Colorado River south of Havasu City.  But then I remembered, it was a long 3-day weekend plus Valentine’s Day.

And as I loaded the ice cream, the fridge turned off.  I waited while eating lunch.  No go.  I can’t eat four pints of ice cream at once.  So I called tech Mark and returned to Quartzsite.

Doves mating Quartzsite ArizonaDoves mating outside the window on Valentine’s Day

Plugged back in at Shady Lane RV Park in the same space as always.  Mark needed to check on parts and I hope it is only a thermocoupler as a circuit board could cost multiple $100s.

In the meantime, something (I’m going to blame all the Valentine cut flowers in the Parker stores) set my nose to tickling, sneezing and head stuffed up that felt like a cold for two days and could have been a never experienced before allergy.

fridge panelTurns out Mark has the correct thermocoupler and once replaced all again seems in working order.  I stay overnight using propane for the fridge.  I should be thankful the repairs didn’t cost more than $180, plus five nights at $22.58 each.  It’s really cheaper to rent by the month or entire six-month season.

mountains sunset clouds Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaI want to boondock, eating frozen ice cream in a warm desert while watching for wildflowers.  Yet not to far from town right now, just in case.

Gaelyn Dome Rock BLM camp Quartzsite Arizona

late light desert mountains camper Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaDome Rock BLM is really too close to town, airport, and freeway to enjoy my desired deserquies*.  But the nearby mountains and desert terrain are gorgeous, the neighbors few, and the signal great.  I’ll take it, at least for a few days.  The fridge turned off and back on a few times the first night out.  Since then, just fine.

Saguaro cactus sunburst Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaThe kind of characters I hang out with in the desert

Palo Verde tree desert mountains sunset clouds Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaAs I try to do at every new camp, walk to the nearest points/plants of interest.  Here, that’s just slightly downhill.  Always good to park high in the desert so no chance of flash flood in a dry wash washing your RV away.  Don’t laugh, it happens.

Palo Verde tree Saguaro cactus Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaTo discover where water flows in this desert, head to the neon-green Palo Verde trees. Even naked of leaves the shiny slick bark stands out in an often brown Sonoran Desert environment sparkling under the sun.  Don’t be fooled, it grows spikes.  I approached and saw perfectly framed in the branches another Sonoran desert icon.

Palo Verde tree Saguaro cactus desert mountains clouds Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaPalo Verde means “green pole or stick” in Spanish, referring to the green trunk and branches, that perform photosynthesis. It is a nursery tree providing shade and water to growing Saguaro cactus.  The Palo Verde was designated the official state tree of Arizona in 1954.

purple Phacelia flowers Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite Arizonaunidentified yellow flowers Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite Arizona

Last week’s rain brought out a few tiny flowers, purple phacelia and something yellow I’m still trying to figure out.  I downloaded an ID app on the phone but am still struggling to use it.  Practice makes better, so I need more flowers, and maybe better pictures.

rock spiral Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaOne evening along my saunter during that golden hour before sunset I found some human constructs.  Not ancient or particularly offensive, the desert varnish indicates it’s been there for a while yet indeterminate amount of time.  Is it just me?  I am often baffled by people’s need to leave their physical mark on the land.  I caught some flack, and some support, commenting on a RV Facebook group about an artist’s very pretty painted rocks when I asked her not to leave them on our public land.

Saguaro cactus desert Kofa Mountains Earth Shadow sunset clouds Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaKind of a drag when there are limited clouds at sunset to provide an iconic Arizona blaze of colors.

Saguaro cactus desert mountains sunset clouds Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaBut I will continue to walk when the temps are comfortably warm and the light is good.

Palo Verde tree mountains sun Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite ArizonaAnd frozen ice cream in a warm desert, seems a perfect combination after an afternoon walk watching for wildflowers.

ice cream in freezerMy favorite flavors often difficult to find.

Saguaro cactus desert sunset sunburst Dome Rock BLM Quartzsite Arizona*deserquies – silence only found in the desert. [I made up this word from the root of desert and quiet.]

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22 January 2020

Roaming the desert

light creosote bushes Blue Water Casino Parker ArizonaI spent the last week roaming the desert with only a few days camped at each of several locations and ended up back where I started, more than once.

Sierra cat at windows Palm Canyon Road BLM Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaAfter almost two weeks just outside the Kofa NWR I rolled north towards Quartzsite to visit Paul.  In past years there has been a retired Grand Canyon employees gathering here during the Big Tent RV Show.  There’s always some RV trinkets you didn’t know you needed.  Plus we’d do big community meals and sit around the bonfire visiting.  People come and go during their stay and many have quit coming at all.  I don’t blame them.  So far this year, it’s just Paul and me.  And we sat outside moving our chairs out of shadow to follow the apricity.  Then disappeared into our respective RVs after sunset and temperature drop.

It’s generator noisy on the short-term BLM in La Paz Valley, especially mornings and evenings.  I find the need for so much power rather amusing.  Some of these over $200,000 motorhomes have 4-5 solar panels on the roof and probably a huge bank of batteries.  They are set up to be self-contained.  Hard to see the surrounding mountains for too many RV roofs and antennas.  Plus the bandwidth sucks because of too many people.

sign Blue Water Casino boondock Parker ArionaI arrived needing to grocery shop, and Quartzsite is not the place for that with only tiny over-priced stores.  So the next day I went roaming the desert northward about 30 minutes to Parker for a SaveWay and WallyMart.  Because of my late start and too much time in each store I decided not to drive back in the dusk.  The Wally’s lot was looking crowded with RVs so I went down the road to the boondocking by Blue Water Casino.

dust trail mountains sunset clouds Blue Water Casino Parker ArizonaGreat sunset and view, very few neighbors, and less noisy than Quartzsite even being within view of SR95.

desert Whipple Mountains late light Blue Water Casino boondock Parker Arizona

Nice view north across the Colorado River to California.  Plus such an excellent signal I stayed another day and put out last week’s #FotoFridayFun.

Gaelyn & camper shadow RVs Blue Water Casino Parker ArizonaHad a nice chat with Joann and finally came to a decision about what to do with two RVs.  Right now, nothing.  It’s OK to make a decision not to make a decision.  There is nothing I can do about the 5th-wheel right now so let go of that until spring when back up in Utah.  Enjoy my life now in the camper.  Feels good to let that go.

Saguaro cactus RVs mountains sunset clouds La Paz BLM Quartzsite ArizonaGathering of Newmar motorhomes

Saguaro cactus RVs mountains sunset clouds sunburst La Paz BLM Quartzsite ArizonaOn the return to camp Quartzsite I dumped tanks to the tune of $15 not including taking on fresh water.  The big rigs pay the same, that’s not fair.  I did the whole thing myself for the first time since the accident, and even got up off the ground with no trouble.  I did have employee Ray to call for backup if needed.  Next time I will treat myself to hookups in a RV park somewhere.  Accomplished PT goal #2.

Two more noisy nights in crowded Quartzsite and I ran away back to the quiet of Kofa.  Sadly, it’s much busier than it was but not as bad as Quartzsite plus the signal was weak to nonexistent.  It was windy out so I was in and thinking about my next move possibly near Yuma to take care of some business and last minute shopping before another boondock south of Ajo.

When the one propane tank emptied that afternoon, I slowly turned the valve and switched over to the other tank, and it worked.  But only for a few hours and I barely heated dinner before having no propane at all.  The tank is not empty.  The fridge turned off just before an early bedtime because it was chilly as I had no heat.  Sure glad it hovered above 50° over night so an extra blanket, and kitty, kept me warm.  However, my brain kept me awake trying to solve this problem.

desert Kofa Mountains mourning light clouds BLM Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaFunny how no coffee in the morning can motivate me to move.  I was back in Quartzsite by 9am at Lifestyle RV to ask questions. They couldn’t look at it until next week.  In the meantime, my ice cream is getting soft.

There is definitely something wrong with one of the tanks and has been all along.  I called B&B in Congress where I bought the tanks last March to tell them I was on my way. This has to be solved somehow. Sure glad they agree.  He thinks the valve is bad.  Every time there’s an update for “safety” the parts get more complicated.

truckcamper #14 North Ranch RV park Congress ArizonaFilled the tank that does work and talked about some options.  Then I drove out the old Ghost town Road thinking I’d boondock for the night.  But the signal was non-existent and I wanted to do some propane tank research.  Plus the sky was gray with rain predicted for the next day.  So, instead I went to North Ranch RV Park and signed in for a few days of electric comfort in Congress.  (Seems to becoming my recent home base.)  Turned out to be a wise choice as the rain came.

new propane tanks truckcamper

propane regulator and tank truckcamperAnd I was able to learn enough to make a decision about the propane.  With the bogus tank out of the compartment it won’t be so hard to pull the working tank out for refilling.  Plus I now know how sensitive the valve is and the correct way the tank should be filled.  Though I fear some of the people who do fill them don’t know.  The ideal fix is a permanently mounted ASME tank like motorhomes have but I’m not spending $500 minimum for that—if it would fit in the hole—when a portable upright 5gal/20lb tank is $35 brand new.  And It will fit in another storage compartment with a longer hose.

I hope this resolves running out of propane with only one tank working.  Whenever I’ve had two working tanks, when one empties and I switch over, within a couple days, it’s time to look for a refill on the empty.  During chilly weather I’m going through about one tank every 7-9 days while boondocking.  And that’s what I really want to be doing, boondocking and roaming the desert.  I hesitate to say where I hope to be headed next so let’s settle with a coddiwomple southward.

clouds Parker Arizona

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Cin0QzuEss&feature=share     White Bird by Beautiful Day, my theme song since 1968 release date.

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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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