Left the Ponderosa Pine forest near Prescott to continue back to Bryce Canyon for summer and did a little shopping on the way to my next stop in Dewey before the final stretch.
Vickie has a nice Santa Fe style home she and her father built in Dewey with a RV full hook-up site next to the guesthouse. I met Vickie working at the Mule Desk at the North Rim Grand Canyon in 2008. Always a pleasure for me to chat with her when slipping through the Grand Lodge on the way to a geology or Condor talk on the verandah. Hadn’t seen her in a few years what with me loosing my job at the canyon in 2018 and COVID keeping her home last year and this.
I planned to stay one night, maybe two, and that turned into three. We had a lot of catching up to do. Plus a couple other mutual North Rim friends came over for dinner one night. I helped her hook up a new printer to a new Chromebook and because of the strong WIFI I downloaded a lot of stuff on the new laptop. A couple of old favorites, Picassa and Windows Live Photo Gallery are no longer available for download. Moving data no longer happens laptop to laptop with a cable on Windows 10. Love/hate relationship just like Google. Good thing I back up files at least twice on external drives. It’s a slow process.
Hummingbird building nest outside the door
I also finally received an email with the official job offer at Bryce Canyon and had a bunch of paperwork to do online.
Plan E included spending at least one night at Lee’s Ferry communing with the Colorado River. Took my life in my hands driving Interstate 17 north to Flagstaff followed by the bumpy SR89 through the Painted Desert. The wind was blowing hard on the side of the camper.
Sadly, by the time I got to Lee’s Ferry the campground was full. I wasn’t happy about more time behind the wheel but continued up onto the Kaibab Plateau where I saw little patches of snow and wasn’t going to boondock with lows hoovering around freezing.
So I kept on going for Plan F to the Wheel Inn RV Park in Fredonia where I stayed a few days in the fall. It’s not particularly pretty but reasonably priced at $30/night and provided electricity for overnight heat plus decent WIFI for more work on the new laptop. Dang, that takes forever and I’m glad not to have to do it any more often. Wind gusts full of dust kept me indoors. Wonder if wind is what tore off the shroud over the AC unit on the roof somewhere on the way. Sure hope it didn’t hit anybody. Another is on order.
Finally, Sunday I could actually move back to Bryce Canyon for the summer. I got an early start but the Mountain time zone worked against me and it was an hour later in Utah. Arizona doesn’t honor daylight savings. Why we still do that is beyond me.
Arrived before noon to my big house and with the help of a friend moved clothes and food from the camper to the 5th-wheel. Thank goodness I can park with the doors pretty close to each other. Got all the utilities hooked up but with that night going below freezing didn’t turn on the water so still jugging it like this winter. Didn’t feel settled in at all. Like confused a bit, not sure where things are or belong.
And Monday morning I started back to work at Bryce Canyon for summer. But at 24° it sure didn’t feel like summer.