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Tag: RV life

05 April 2020

Full-time RVers with no home to go home to

Go home, we’ve been told, and stay there!  Definitely good advice during a pandemic.  However, some full-time RVers, like myself, have no home to go home to other than our house on wheels.

Go home you northern snowbirds who have spent the winter in warmer climes.  But then campgrounds started to close, public and private.  I’m thinking parking lots like Walmart were on overflow.  As states shuttered down and travel bans were more than encouraged some part-time residents of northern states were told not to go home, stay where you are.

I felt safe and comfortable in the Sonoran Desert, mostly boondocking on public land managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).  In fact, it’s the one time I was happy that BLM doesn’t spend a lot of time patrolling and enforcing the 14-day camp limit.  Maybe under the current circumstances someone decided to leave us boondockers alone unless we caused problems.  Most don’t.  But there is the issue of eventually having to dump holding tanks, take on water, and fill propane tanks.  I always paid for that by treating myself to an overnight at a RV park, that thankfully was still open.  I don’t want to see people forced to dump their tanks on the land somewhere.

Summer is coming and the southern desert will soon reach 90°F+.  Much like not leaving kids and pets in your car when the summer temperatures rise, you don’t want to be living in a RV without air-conditioning.  I personally don’t like AC as it tends to make me sick.  That’s why I spend summers at high elevation.  Some folks go north.  Some people can afford to live in a RV park, if it’s open, to plug in for that cool air.  But some people can’t afford that.  In fact, the reason some people live full-time in a RV is they can’t afford anything else.  So it’s not just old retired people.  With housing prices so high many young people are living on the road and some in cars.  I am thankful to have basic comforts.

While people were hoarding toilet paper I tried to figure out where I’d store more than 12 rolls at a time.  RVs are a tiny house with limited storage for dry goods and refrigerates.  I live alone and don’t eat much so I’m OK food-wise.  But I still have to shop and don’t like to do that on the best of days let alone now when I don’t want to be around people.

And that brings us to social physical distancing.  If you live with others in a RV it’s not always possible to be six feet apart.  I guess couples and families may have to deal with that in a house also.  When in stores some people are better about giving space than others.  I do a little, I-don’t-need-to-go-down-that-aisle-right-now dance.  Yes, I wear gloves and then wipe everything down before it goes in my tiny house.  I haven’t worn a mask yet and don’t sew.  However, a friend shared this idea and if I can find a clean T-shirt I may sacrifice it.

cut T-shirt for face maskwearing T-shirt face mask

We, not all, haven’t been living in reality, and this enforced time might be a HUGE wakeup call.  Parent’s trying to be teachers and nurses will better understand their important role in life. No human being can live and survive the way things “have always been” which really means, things need to change.  Change is hard.  We all have questions, maybe some answers and a few possible solutions.  I’m not going any further with that right now.

Like you, I’m doing my best to hold back fear of an unknown future.  Unless Bryce Canyon National Park closes before April 12th, I still have a, temporary, home to go home to.  I truly believe all our national, state, county, and city parks should be closed for the safety of staff even more than visitors.  I will be quarantined for 14 days while working in my RV and my duties will be a little different than the usual Park Ranger out roving and answering visitor questions. If the park closes, I just don’t know yet.

These are weird times, like nothing most of us have ever lived through.  We don’t know how long this will last.  Please, keep checking in with family and friends even from a physical distance.  Stay home as much as possible.  Be safe, be well.  And hopefully, you have a home to go home to.

Maybe it was time for the world to reboot.  I will hold on to the thought, this is not forever.

How are you doing?  If you’re a full-time RVer with no home to go home to please let me know what you’re doing.

Please remember, this is mostly my own personal opinion.

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CORVID-19, RV life boondocking, RV life, RV Park 37 Comments
25 March 2020

Day 17 of Social Distancing in the Sonoran Desert

desert mountain BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaYes, I’m still hanging out and practicing social distancing in the Sonoran Desert near Ajo, Arizona—thank you BLM—partially because I have no where else to go.  I am staying at home in my camper, and right now, this is home.  When I settled in here on the 9th the plan was not to be here quite this long.  But like everyone right now, plans have changed.  To what, I don’t know.  I’m just grateful to have a safe, and beautiful, place to be.  I know many full-time RVers that also don’t have a home base and that’s what I was going to blog about.  But it became a bit of a rant so I put it aside.  Here, neighbors come and go waving from a safe distance.  Instead I’ll share what’s been going on in the last week since I posted.

It’s a good thing I keep a daily journal as one day rather blends into another out here in the desert.  Sierra and I have a morning routine.  After the coffee is made she gets her morning treats then I sit down on the computer, with her curled next to me, and catch up with the news.  Lately that’s a rather sad and frustrating activity so as I feel my anxiety rise I change to looking at and processing photos taken the day before and usually share a few on Facebook, a place I spend waste way too much time.

mining equipment desert BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaIn the afternoon I usually go out for a walk and take more photos.  I try to head a slightly different direction from camp every day.  To the east along the dirt road I’m parked off of there is some old mining equipment.  With that large Palo Verde tree growing through I’d say it hasn’t been used in a while.

orange Globe Mallow flowers BLM Darby Well Road Ajo Arizonapink Fairyduster flowers BLM Darby Well Road Ajo Arizona

desicated Sonoran Toad BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaI spot a few flowers: Globe Mallow and Fairyduster.  Then the weirdest thing, a desiccated Sonoran Toad encircled with rocks which is the only reason I even saw it.  A friend/Ranger who works in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument says it’s not uncommon to find these carcasses as it doesn’t take much sun to dry them out.  This thing was as big as my outstretched hand.

two Saguaro cactus BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaA few new neighbors moved in, keeping a respectful distance.

Saguaro cactus mountains sunset clouds run rays BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaThat evening the clouds rolled in as a harbinger of predicted storms for the next several days.  I think clouds improve on sunsets most of the time.

Saguaro cactus Sonoran Desert mountain BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaGreetings from the morning sky brought more clouds.  I sent several Facebook messages and emails to people checking on how they are doing through these troubled days.  Felt good to get, and give, reassurances of wellness and safety.  I am practiced at self imposed isolation for most of the winter anyway.  Yet sure glad to have a strong signal for phone and internet to connect via social media.

red flowering Ocotillo desert storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaBefore noon the wind picked up a bit followed by intermittent gentle rain.  Moist enough that two Cattle Egrets found puddles on my roof.  Hours later the wind increased, temperature dropped, and rain turned briefly to hail blowing sideways.  The camper and Saguaros were rocking.

truckcamper desert rainbow BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaNot more than 30 minutes later, rain almost stoped, patches of blue showed as the clouds broke apart and that means look for the rainbow.

Sonoran Desert rainbow BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaSure enough, it’s a double.

Saguaro cactus desert mountain storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaAnother day of partly cloudy and cool had me climbing in and out of the camper to take photos of light and shadows.  Heck, I was still processing from the day before.

road desert mountains storm clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaAfternoon warmed up enough—with an extra layer on—to open the door and windows.  The spring bird songs are melodious and all the sound I need.  The current Sonoran Desert theme song on play all day by the Cactus Wren.  A friend from childhood, and also online, asked if I can record the song.  Hmm, I am not practiced at videography and suggested she google it.  Yet several days later I used my phone and although the image is fuzzy I caught the sound.  It’s on my YouTube, here.

desert Black Mountain sunset clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaSure is a pretty desert to live in for right now.

blue Lupine flowers Organ Pipe Cactus Palo Verde tree BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaThe following day, a light gray sky seemed to hold down the desert quiet even with no rain in the forecast.  Below, puffy clouds moved northward keeping distant from each other just like us folks.  A fine afternoon for a walk to the west of camp.  I followed a faded two-track or just wandered between the vegetation.  My pace was slow.  I looked ahead to not only find my path and next ten foot destination but search the ground to avoid potential critters.  Warming temperatures bring out snakes but so far I’ve only seen tiny lizards and active ants.  Butterflies flit about too fast to capture a pic.

orange Globe Mallow flowers BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaLovely wildflowers speckle the land without enough density for a carpet of color.  Makes it more fun to search for but difficult to photograph.  Along the edge of a now dry wash and under the shade of the Palo Verde trees moist ground produced clusters of brilliant orange Globe Mallow on their two foot stalks surrounded by lush grass.

Wildflowers Sonoran Desert BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaClockwise: Phacelia & Chicory, unknown, Globe Mallow, Phacelia, unknown, Lupine, Maidenhair Vine, unknown

Clumps of Lupine in various shades of blue are interspersed with deep purple Phacelia and other unknown whites and yellows.

flowers cactus desert BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaShades of yellow and green spread across the desert as Creosote bushes and Brittlebush bloom to steal the show.

yellow flowers Brittlebush Organ Pipe Cactus BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaFinally, a morning of clear blue sky and temperatures in the 70s.  A perfect day for another walk in the same direction as the day before but try to get a little further along.  I found myself inspecting Organ Pipe Cactus for crests, or cristates.  It was in this general area a few years ago, I took photos of the most magnificent example I’ve ever seen.  And though I haven’t found that one yet I’m not complaining as the views, scents, and sights are beyond beautiful.  I am beginning to run out of descriptive words.

sunset clouds BLM Darby Well Ajo ArizonaI’m not entirely alone out here.  Turns out one of my nearest neighbors is fellow blogger and winter desert boondocker Doug and his dog Yuma.  He wandered into camp when I was sitting outside reading.  Thanks to Al, Bayfield Bunch blogger, for recognizing that we took photos of the same scene and gave Doug a heads up.  Mind you, we spoke from a safe distance.

yellow Creosote flowers Saguaro cactus clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaSierra and I both bolted awake to the sound of loud tapping on the camper.  Seems drips of condensation fall on the bumper and provided a morning drink for a woodpecker.  It was time to get up anyway and start the day.

Sierra cat & Gaelyn selfie BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaA friend asked for a social distancing selfie, so we obliged.

A Cactus Wren sat atop the nearby leaning Saguaro and sang a varied tune for well over a minute.

desert mountain sunset BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaI puttered, as usual, resting up for town the next day.

desert BLM Scenic Loop Road Ajo Arizona

desert boulders BLM Scenic Loop Road Ajo ArizonaHaving made it eight days it was time to fill the propane tank before I ran out and the ice cream could melt.  Was on the road before 10am and decided to take the 4.5 mile Scenic Loop Road to Ajo.  I’d never been that way because I drive only a few gravel miles on Darby Well Road to find a camp.

desert mountain BLM Scenic Loop Road Ajo ArizonaIt was Gorgeous!  I probably won’t drive it again.  I really don’t mind slow but there were many rough spots and dips through dry washes and it took me almost an hour.  Truck can do it but sure shakes the shit out of my camper/house.

yellow Brittlebush flowers Saguaro cactus mountain BLM Scenic Loop Road Ajo ArizonaBrittlebush

That with barely stopping for a few photos.

desert view BLM Scenic Loop Road Ajo ArizonaSaw lots more nice looking camping areas near the town end of this road with boulders and flowers galore.  But located on the wrong side of too many washes for me to consider a move.

Happily, the grocery store was open and had most things I needed though I did forget to get myself some birthday cake.  I wore latex gloves and wiped down all my groceries before they went into the camper.  Then went to Belly Acres for propane and that Texas good ole boy doesn’t understand personal space.  I basically hope for the best being in this remote area with no known cases of COVID-19.  I’m good for another week, except for chocolate cake.

late light Saguaro desert BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaI returned to the same place to camp.  Why not?  Good neighbor, high ground, great views, and lots of desert to walk.

Saguaro cactus sun setting clouds BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaWhich I did that afternoon.

How much longer I’ll be here is currently impossible to say.  I still have a start date of April 12th at Bryce Canyon National Park, provided it’s still open.  Their visitor center is closed and entrance is free.  Please believe the reason for no entrance fees at park sites has more to do with protecting staff than getting more visitors.

Sonoran Desert rainbow BLM Darby Well Road Ajo ArizonaI’m doing OK as I now face Day 17 of social distancing in the Sonoran Desert, and actually I’ve been doing that most of 2020 so far anyway.  Hope you are all doing well whether it’s staying home or not.

Gail Lynn Olmsted hours old 3-26-1954March 26, 1954

Happy Birthday to me!

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Ajo, Arizona, COVID-19, Places I've been, United States boondocking, RV life, Sonoran Desert, wildflowers 49 Comments
25 February 2020

Change in scenery: from river to desert in Arizona

shallows Colorado River eddy trees reflection clouds Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaI started to think about a change in scenery a few weeks ago when I shopped in Parker and saw a sluggish Colorado River.  But instead I ended up back in Quartzsite for fridge repairs that this time are working.

camp view Colorado River Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaI had some business to take care of at the Social Security office in Blythe, California, just the other side of the Colorado River and stocked up on ice cream before heading down Ox Bow Road adjacent to the river on the Arizona side for a change of scenery.

outhouse cotton fields Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaSometimes I just have to stop and back up for a window shot

The major change in scenery occurred along the first mile with brilliant green cotton fields that to me look really out of place.  But of course there is water to pump from the Colorado River.

It’s a firm packed sandy drive with a few RVs pulled off the road onto a flat and sparse landscape that is out of sight of the river.  I may have gone five miles before finding an extra-wide space parallel to the road and above the river.  Thank goodness there was never much traffic.

trail to river Ox Bow Road camp Ehrenberg ArizonaBending over was needed but no crawling

beach Colorado River backwater Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaA nice trail lead to a shallow sandy beach along a backwater with a sandbar in the river.  Rather fun to see a change of scenery with such different vegetation than the desert.  Other than the tamarisk that is invasive and a few cottonwood trees, lots of plants I don’t know.

sunsetting through tree clouds Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaI saw a few clouds before sunset and hoped for some color and possibly reflections on the water.

trees Colorado River sunset clouds reflection Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaLet’s just say it was pretty, but not spectacular.

camp view bushes Colorado River tree reflection clouds Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaI walked a little ways down the road looking for another river access to the sand bar where I’d seen a few people walking.

Wasn’t far to a steep sandy slope down just in time to have a guy on a bike careen down that sandy hill which is obviously driven on by at minimum OHV (Off Highway Vehicles).  He came from an old noisy small white pickup truck parked across the road that I’d heard drive past a few times.  Then I heard voices from the beach.  Suddenly I’m feeling a little weird about this place.  I’ve learned over the years to listen to my intuition.  I didn’t feel in peril yet felt a slight sense of unrest and returned to my own camp.

trees reflection Colorado River clouds Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg Arizona

dry backwater Ox Bow Road camp Ehrenberg ArizonaThree days later

The river level dropped daily revealing another sand bar and eventually eliminating the backwater completely.

OHV in Colorado River Ox Bow Road camp Ehrenberg ArizonaI dislike this activity

dry backwater with marks Colorado River Ox Bow Road camp Ehrenberg ArizonaYou may remember me mentioning how human marks on the land last a very long time.  Imagine my surprise to see these circles that had been underwater a day before but obviously around for a while.

trees Colorado River mountains sunset clouds Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg Arizona

trees Colorado River mountains sunset clouds Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaI took care of business all day on the computer and that night enjoyed another change in scenery with constant color and pattern changes in the clouds.

trees Colorado River mountains sunset clouds Ox Bow Road Ehrenberg ArizonaI could smell rain coming and figured this sandy location wasn’t where I wanted to be.

hill bathroom graffiti Ehrenberg Sandbowl ArizonaOn the drive back to the highway I pulled into the signed Ehrenberg Sandbowl, a designated landscape that BLM encourages OHV to tear up to their hearts delight.  Kind of gave me the creeps.

truckcamper desert sunset clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaSo time for yet another change of scenery.  Well kind of a change.  The nice thing about wheelestate is the ease of moving.  Yes, I returned to the desert about 30 bird miles away.  Back to Palm Canyon Road south of, you guessed it, Quartzsite near the Kofa National Wildlife Refuge.  Been here so much I probably should have just gotten a job here this winter or at least volunteered.  Well, maybe next year.

Saguaro desert mountains sunset clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaA storm was approaching and the clouds added to the sunset show for another change in scenery.

Saguaro desert mountains sunset clouds crepuscular rays Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaShimmer like satin.  That night the wind rocked us a bit and rain fell.

desert Kofa Mountains low clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaThe morning clouds looked like cotton balls reaching for the ground.

desert Kofa Mountains clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaFemale rain fell on and off all morning revealing a patchwork of light and shadow.

desert Kofa Mountains low clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaThe clouds moved and changed so rapidly I bounced in and out of the camper all day to take photos.

desert last light Kofa Mountains clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaMoving so frequently makes it difficult to keep up with processing photos and writing stories.  But I try, and I sit at the computer and look out the windows thinking, I could live here.  Then I smile, because I do.  So even though I couldn’t build a house right here,  I am grateful to BLM and USFWS for sharing access to these lands they manage for us.  I am happy to know there are many more landscapes and environments available on our public lands even if I haven’t seen them yet, or ever will.

window view desert Kofa Mountains clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaOnce again I smile each time I look out the dirty window and see some change in the light and shadows, then reach for the camera and step outside for a least a photo from the open door.  As much as I like to go outside and be outside, I don’t live outside, not any more than anyone in a S&B (stick and brick = house).  Our species is rather soft, or at least I am.  Hiding under cover during wind and rain, seeking heat when it is cold and cool when it is hot.

desert mountains sunset clouds crepuscular rays Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge Arizona

desert sunset clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaBut that didn’t keep me from going out and taking more sunset shots, because, ya’ know, no two are alike.

last light desert Kofa Mountains Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaMy exercise for the day became turning 360° in awe.  Maybe I should take up spinning.  LOL!

desert Mountains sunset clouds Palm Canyon Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaIt’s windy so I sit inside enjoying the view, working on this post, and not ready for another change in scenery, yet.

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Arizona, Kofa NWR, United States desert, rain, river, RV life 21 Comments
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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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