• Home
  • About Geogypsy
    • Herstory
    • Parks where I’ve worked
  • Places I’ve been
    • United States
      • Arizona
        • Antelope Slot Canyon
        • Casa Grande Ruins National Monument
        • Colossal Cave Mountain Park
        • Flagstaff
        • Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
        • Grand Canyon National Park
          • Grand Canyon National Park North Rim
          • Grand Canyon National Park South Rim
          • Toroweap
        • Havasu Canyon
        • Horseshoe Bend
        • Jerome
        • Kaibab National Forest
        • Lee’s Ferry
        • Meteor Crater
        • Navajo Bridge
        • Oak Creek Canyon
        • Painted Desert
        • Pipe Springs National Monument
        • Prescott
        • Quartzsite
        • Saguaro National Park
        • Sedona
        • Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument
        • Vermilion Cliffs
        • Walnut Canyon National Monument
        • Wupatki National Monument
        • Yarnell
      • California
        • Anzaberrego
        • Bakersfield
        • Death Valley National Park
        • Joshua Tree National Park
        • Redwoods NP
        • Salton Sea
        • Yucca Valley
      • Colorado
        • Mesa Verde National Park
      • Florida
      • Illinois
        • IL River
        • Morton Arboretum
        • Starved Rock State Park
      • Michigan
      • Nevada
      • New Mexico
      • Oregon
        • Crater Lake NP
        • Mt Hood
        • Oregon Caves National Monument
      • Texas
        • Alpine Texas
        • Padre Island
        • Port Isabel
        • Rio Grande Valley
      • Utah
        • Brian’s Head
        • Bryce Canyon National Park
        • Buckskin Gulch
        • Cedar Breaks National Monument
        • Cedar City
        • Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park
        • Dixie National Forest
        • Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument
        • Johnson Canyon
        • Kanab
    • World Travels
      • Germany
      • Mexico
      • South Africa
  • Tours
  • Photography
  • Work with Me
    • Sponsors
  • Contact
Geogypsy
Menu
  • Home
  • About Geogypsy
    • Herstory
    • Parks where I’ve worked
  • Places I’ve been
    • United States
      • Arizona
        • Antelope Slot Canyon
        • Casa Grande Ruins National Monument
        • Colossal Cave Mountain Park
        • Flagstaff
        • Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
        • Grand Canyon National Park
          • Grand Canyon National Park North Rim
          • Grand Canyon National Park South Rim
          • Toroweap
        • Havasu Canyon
        • Horseshoe Bend
        • Jerome
        • Kaibab National Forest
        • Lee’s Ferry
        • Meteor Crater
        • Navajo Bridge
        • Oak Creek Canyon
        • Painted Desert
        • Pipe Springs National Monument
        • Prescott
        • Quartzsite
        • Saguaro National Park
        • Sedona
        • Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument
        • Vermilion Cliffs
        • Walnut Canyon National Monument
        • Wupatki National Monument
        • Yarnell
      • California
        • Anzaberrego
        • Bakersfield
        • Death Valley National Park
        • Joshua Tree National Park
        • Redwoods NP
        • Salton Sea
        • Yucca Valley
      • Colorado
        • Mesa Verde National Park
      • Florida
      • Illinois
        • IL River
        • Morton Arboretum
        • Starved Rock State Park
      • Michigan
      • Nevada
      • New Mexico
      • Oregon
        • Crater Lake NP
        • Mt Hood
        • Oregon Caves National Monument
      • Texas
        • Alpine Texas
        • Padre Island
        • Port Isabel
        • Rio Grande Valley
      • Utah
        • Brian’s Head
        • Bryce Canyon National Park
        • Buckskin Gulch
        • Cedar Breaks National Monument
        • Cedar City
        • Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park
        • Dixie National Forest
        • Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument
        • Johnson Canyon
        • Kanab
    • World Travels
      • Germany
      • Mexico
      • South Africa
  • Tours
  • Photography
  • Work with Me
    • Sponsors
  • Contact

Category: RV living

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.]

Push my buttons!

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...
Arizona, Places I've been, Quartzsite, RV living, United States boondocking, Dome Rock BLM, RV Park, RV repairs 24 Comments
07 May 2019

The mishaps of moving two RVs

snow hoodoos valley Table Top Mesa Bryce Canyon National Park UtahI know it’s crazy because I travel solo and it isn’t easy moving two RVs but one is my home and the other my glamping toy.  Thus the tale of mishaps moving to Bryce Canyon National Park for the summer.

truck 5th-wheel leaving Yarnell ArizonaAt first I tried to find someone local to move the 5th-wheel but eventually called the person who lives in Utah and had moved it before.  He and his wife have professional and personal experience with RVs so I trust them.  The original plan was they would pick up and tow the 5th-wheel on Wednesday from Yarnell to their property in Kanab, Utah.  They only made it as far as Flagstaff and after fueling at Sam’s Club, on the way out of the parking lot heard a bang and saw a rear tire smoking so pulled back in the lot.  A rear spring had broken, or exploded into several pieces.  The local mobile service couldn’t get the part until the next day so they spent a chilly night.  Repair happened Thursday and just after noon they were on their way.  I am terribly sorry this happened to them, or at all, but am glad it was them and not me.  I’d have been totally stressed out.  Plus so grateful that it didn’t happen on the highway.  Why did it happen is difficult to say.  I’ve been bouncing that RV on roads for seven years.  Maybe it was an unavoidable pothole on I40.  Yes even though it’s under construction and being repaved it has almost more holes than before.  Was truly a relief to me these competent people had the problem under control.

propane tanks truckcamper Peeples Valley ArizonaI rolled out of Yarnell as planned on Thursday morning with a stop in Peeples Valley to fill propane tanks on the truck camper.  These are the new horizontal 5-gallon tanks I had to buy a few months ago because the originals from 1998 could no longer be re-certified.  However, this new design is a nightmare.  They are impossible to fill while in the camper even with my 90° adapter, the guy tried.  Finally called where I bought them and was told they have to come out and be filled vertically.  That is truly a pain in the you know what and I’ll never be able to lift them out and in because of my bad shoulders and lack of upper body strength.  Bless this guy’s heart he stuck with it.  But they won’t even fill all the way full.  Took him over an hour to sell me four gallons of propane.  That’s total in two tanks.  Not going to work.  I am not happy with this arrangement and now far away from the B&B Auto where I bought those in Congress.

sign leaving Prescott National Forest SR89 North ArizonaAfter a brief shop stop in Prescott I hit the road north about the same time my 5th-wheel left Flagstaff.

truckcamper treees clouds Coconino National Forest ArizonaMy thought was to camp at Sunset Crater’s Bonito campground but it was still closed for the season.  So I went boondocking not far away along with a few others who had the same idea and camped just out of sight of each other.

trees sunrise clouds Coconino National Forest Arizona

trees Sunset Crater sunrise Sunset Crater National Monument ArizonaAwoke in time to catch a soft sunrise in camp then buzzed to a trailhead in the national monument to see the sun rise over Sunset Crater.

Wukoki ruin Wupatki National Monument Arizona

Echo Cliffs clouds SR89 North to Page ArizonaAfter breakfast in the parking lot, I drove the loop road to Wupatki National Monument.  Stopped at Wukoki ruin then onward to Page where I dropped off some outgrown uniform pants for a friend.

sign Welcome to Utah SR89 Utah

Escobars Kanab Utah

Next stop, Kanab and an early dinner with Bill at my favorite restaurant in town, Escobars.  Mexican food that can’t be beat.

Later, while admiring the pruned fruit trees in Bill’s back yard I notice three flowering lilac bushes, lavender, white, and deep purple.  I love these and grew up playing under large hedges of them in Illinois.  So I buried my nose and breathed deep.  Might have been a mistake as I woke in the middle of the night unable to breath through my runny stuffed up nose.  Even allergy pills didn’t help the next day.

Saturday I blew through at least one box of kleenex and took a two hour nap.  Before the nap I called my tow people and was told the 5th-wheel would need three new tires as this break had screwed them up badly.  That couldn’t be done until Monday morning and afterwards the 5th-wheel would be towed up to Bryce.

sign Forscher German Bakery Orderville Utah

trees red cliffs SR12 East Red Canyon Dixie National Forest UtahRed Canyon Dixie National Forest

I left Kanab still sniffling on Sunday about 10am.  Made one stop along the way at the Forscher German bakery in Orderville.  I was starting to feel a little better but looked forward to a nap once parked in Bryce.

truckcamper trees site #4 Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

RV window view trees horses corral Bryce Canyon National Park UtahMy new home RV site was plenty big enough for the truckcamper but looked small and a tight fit for the 36-foot 5th-wheel with three slide-outs.  Thank goodness someone else was backing it in.  The forest view includes a corral with horses, mules, and at least one donkey.  The signal was just OK and intermittent.  I took a nap and didn’t go out until work in the morning.

truck 5th-wheel site #4 Bryce Canyon National Park UtahTwo motorhomes parked to my right, one where my truck was

Around 10 Monday morning I received a text that the 5th-wheel was pulling into the park so I left work to lead it in.  Took almost two hours to get the beast into site #4, an up-size from from my originally assigned #2 which is impossibly small.  Once in, it fit fine.  There are six sites, only four filled so far and the rest will be also.  Most national park site campgrounds, public and staff, were built long enough ago when RVs weren’t the beastly size of today.  Sadly, there is no money to update.  On the upside the site is level and has 50amp service.

After work I moved Sierra inside the 5th-wheel closing her in the toilet room so she couldn’t get out with open doors needed to transfer stuff from the camper.  I hooked up the fresh water dreaming of a shower in my own house.  But before I even turned the water heater on I saw water dripping from the bottom front and sides.  I opened the basement doors looking for pipe leaks and didn’t see anything obvious so turned the water off and went inside to find wet floor by the door and base of the stairs.  A very unhappy Sierra let me know she wanted out of the closet-sized space and when I opened the door I saw water flowing onto the floor instead of into the toilet.

That night I watched a couple of YouTube videos about repairing and replacing RV toilets and decided it was time to change this one out so ordered a new one from Amazon.  That means no running water until the new toilet is installed.  Also ordered a cat tree for Sierra.

snow trees corral sunrise clouds Bryce Canyon National Park UtahAwoke to a light dusting of snow on Tuesday and complete ground cover Wednesday.  Welcome Spring at 8000 feet.

inside 5th-wheel Bryce Canyon National Park UtahToo tired after work to unpack the house, I lived with the mess for several days.  On the weekend I made the space livable and discovered I own way too much furniture.

It is a lot of work moving two RVs but will be so worth it when I explore the area on my weekends.  Which, BTW, after another week of training is over will be Monday & Tuesday one week, and add Wednesday the next week.  Sure hope these are enough RV mishaps for a long while.

Push my buttons!

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...
RV living Arizona, Bryce Canyon NP, moving, moving RV, Utah 34 Comments
08 May 2017

Made the move to the North Rim

April 27 – May 1, 2017

Winter semi-retirement is over and I’ve made the move to the North Rim of Grand Canyon for my 10th summer as a Park Ranger at Grand Canyon National Park.

A neighbor helped get the camper off the truck on Wednesday and he will be doing some work on it until I can pick it up in about a month.  He also helped me load the 5th-wheel hitch along with the small freezer and the spare tire.

Couldn’t pull in until April 29th so my original plan was to leave Kirkland the 28th and drive to Flagstaff then on the next day to the North Rim.  Yet there were concerns if the government shut down I couldn’t enter the park.  I was packed and ready to roll but Friday the wind gusts were predicted up to 50 mph so I waited until Saturday with less wind.

Stayed overnight at my usual Flagstaff KOA but at $45/night with discount because of not using their sewer I won’t be staying there again.  Too bad because it’s nice park with lots of big pines.  In fact maybe too many pines as I almost clipped one with the 5th wheel.  Went to dinner with a friend at the Taverna Greek Grill and had the best Greek food since living in the Chicago area many decades ago.  Saganaki appetizer complete with flame and a big “Ompah” from other dinners, Souvlaki for main course (photo on link), and Baklava for desert.  Of course more than I could eat so had leftovers for two more nights.

truck & 5th-wheel #9 Abbey Way North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaSunday rolled into the North Rim about 1pm.  I asked Dave our head of maintenance to spot me backing into my site and instead he did it for me.  No complaint as I’m not good at backing the 36 foot monster.  Getting level was another issue, side to side being not too bad but front to back was way off.  I dropped the front jacks, raised it a bit to get off the truck, then couldn’t lower enough to get even close to level or raise enough to get re-hitched to the truck.  Honestly, I didn’t know what to do.  Good thing I carry around two one-ton bottle jacks and had help.  Finally got it leveled, put out the slides, and unpacked enough to be comfortable for the night.

Monday back to work.  A new schedule to get used to getting up in the morning.  After work I put the booster up and was amazed with myself when the first throw of a small hunk of wood tied to rope went over the tree branch I aimed for.  Wasn’t perfect and still needed a ladder the next day to bungee the booster to the tree.  But when I plugged it in I had 4G and four bars.  Happy camper.  However the signal is still intermittent.

Worked on this post that night for a couple of hours then all open software started to act up giving me the “no response” message.  So I shut it down for a re-boost and got the black screen of death.  NOOOOOOO…….  Thank goodness I have a laptop for backup.  However the posts were not accessible along with all of April’s photos I hadn’t yet saved to external drives.  I will take the PC to the Old Geezer in Kanab one of these weekends and see if it’s really dead.

Yet even with all the trials and tribulations, it feels really good to be back at the North Rim.  Although I haven’t spent much time on the rim to take photos.  Soon.

Save

Push my buttons!

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...
Arizona, Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, RV living moving RV 22 Comments
← Older posts
Newer posts →

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.

Let’s share our stories.  Here’s more of mine…

My wheeleastate

I am currently…

…boondocking somewhere in southern Arizona.  In the area, give a shout.

Geogypsytraveler on YouTube

Follow my journey on YouTube. Just click the pic. Hope you’ll like, share, and subscribe.

Click image for 7 minute documentary (Password “geogypsy” lowercase)

Making the Gypsy documentary is a story of its own.  Click below for the rest of the story.

Living nomadically & connecting to nature documentary

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Photos available for sale include prints, greeting cards, coffee mugs, tote bags, phone cases and more

Reflected Wave 24X16 metal print under $100

Custom Coffee Mugs

Many items to choose from including prints

The Last Blast 24 x 16″ metal print under $100

Need a signal boost? When I boondock on public lands sometimes signal is weak or intermittent and a booster helps. Click the pic to visit WeBoost.

Connecting to nature and the rest of the world too.

Please contact me for photo purchases not seen at GLOlmsted Photography

Order fulfillment is by Fine Art America. If you’re not happy with your purchase, for any reason, simply return it within 30 days, and you’ll receive a full refund of the purchase price.

Why read Geogypsy?

The gypsy life spring-summer 1998 - "You were a real pioneer. RV'ing before it was cool." ...Yogi

How do you process photos? - “Your photographs create an Emotional feeling in the viewer...that they become One with You.” …Cindy

Life’s transitions between travel and work play - "I know you love your job as much as you love travel -- it shines through all your posts." ...Sallie

Lions at Kruger National Park - “Wonderful post, thank you. I was hooked start to finish!” … Peter B

11 lessons looking back 2013 - “A great post -- made me think, made me smile, made me want to cry." ...Sallie

Wildlife video Kruger National Park - “Gorgeous, this makes me want to go straight to South Africa now.” … Ayngelina

Living nomadically & connecting to nature documentary - “What an experience you had and gave to the "crew." Sometimes I think you don't realize how unique and inspiring you are.” …Alan

Search

Popular Posts

1. Prioritize the well-being of nature over photography. 2. Educate yourself about the places you photograph. 3. Reflect on the possible impact of your actions. 4. Use discretion if sharing locations. 5. Know and follow rules and regulations. 6. Always follow Leave No Trace principles and strive to leave places better than you found them. 7. Actively promote and educate others about these principles

Categories

Archives

Sites I follow, read & recommend

  • A Full-time Life
  • A Yankee in Belgrade
  • Bob's Eyes
  • Box Canyon Blog
  • Camels and Chocolate
  • Dawns bloggy blog
  • In the Direction of Our Dreams
  • Jane in her infinite wisdom
  • Janie and Steve, Utah Trails
  • Kathie's Birds
  • Las Adventuras
  • Memorable Meanders
  • Oh, The Places They Go
  • On the Road Abode
  • Port Elizabeth Daily Photo
  • Stillhowlyntravels
  • Take to the Highway
  • Technomadia
  • the good luck Duck
  • Travel with the Bayfield Bunch
  • Wandering Earl
  • Wheeling It
  • Yogi's Den

Caught in a Slot 9×12 canvas print under $50

If you don’t like what’s going on in your government, contact your Congress

Directory of Senators

Directory of Representatives

Lijit

© Copyright 2008-2024. Geogypsytraveler.com
%d