Thursday, 3 September 2015

Day 50


Date: Monday August 24, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Beavertail Hill State Park, Butte Montana

Distance to drive: way too far (626 miles)

Hours to drive: 9 hours and 54 minutes

Destination: HOME

Planned activities: get home

Quote of the day: “Where are we now?”  “Are we home yet?”

Here goes epic… Today we will drive 9 hours and 54 minutes to get home.

So far all stops have been decided upon by adults.  We have only added on 45 minutes in the first seven hours of driving.

Needless to say we made it home, but I don’t have the energy to write anymore.  I have reflected back on the trip and there are many things I would do the same and other I would change.  Unfortunately, I have more pressing issues, like my children and getting ready for the school year, so I will be keeping those to myself.

This is my final post.  I am finishing this and publishing all my posts over a week after we have been home.  I am proud of myself that I have managed to blog for the entire trip.  Chad and I have both written blogs, but neither one of us has read the other’s blog.  I plan on reading his blog and being able to relive the trip through his eyes. 

Day 49


Date: Sunday August 23, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Beavertail Hill State Park

Distance to drive: 0

Hours to drive: 0

Destination: the river about 50 feet from our campsite

Planned activities: hang out and relax

We spent most of the day in our campsite relaxing.  We played some board games with the girls and eventually made our way down to the river so the girls could splash in the water and play on the beach.  Chad wished that we were staying longer so that he could get a fishing license and fish in the river.  We had our final fire and marshmallow roast

Day 48


Date: Saturday August 22, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Grant Village Camprground

Distance to drive: 300 miles

Hours to drive: 5 hours

Destination: Beavertail Hill State Park, near Missoula Montanta

Planned activities: drive, grocery shop and relax

Today is a sad day.  We have officially confirmed that Lake Chelan State Park is closed until after the 26th of August due to a forest fire and we will now be ending our trip 3 days early.  I hope that the fire can be contained quickly and safely and that the damage to homes and businesses is minimal.

We managed to only add on an hour and a half to our driving time and an hour of that was our grocery shop.  We arrived and the Park Ranger asked Chad if he had been to this park before.  The Ranger was curious because, yet again, Chad had reserved the best site in the park. 

Day 47


Date:  Friday August 21, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Grant Village Campground

Distance to drive: 78 miles (round trip)

Hours to drive: 2

Destination: the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone River

Planned activities: a few hikes down the Canyon to see the Upper and Lower Falls from different vantage points (neither hike is recommended for people with heart lung or other health conditions)

Quote of the day: “A hiking we will go! A hiking we will go! There’s lots to see when you hike with me! A hiking we will go!” (That’s right we were singing and supposedly this is the version on Daniel Tiger)

Today my girls were rock stars.  We hiked down to the brink of the lower falls, a steep trail, with switchbacks, which descends 600 feet over the course of 3/8 of a mile.  There we were at the top of the falls that we could see the water plummeting 308 feet into the river below.  After checking out the two water falls from a couple of look out points and traveling along the rim of the canyon by truck we took Uncle Tom’s Trail to see the Lower Falls from part way down on the opposite side of the canyon.  This trail consists of steep paths and 328 stairs that go down the side of the canyon.  I now know that neither of my kids of issues with height, but there were moments on the way down where I was definitely outside of my comfort zone.  Most people were impressed to see my two girls going up and down these trails on their own.  We spent some time singing and observing our surroundings to keep their minds off the effort they had to exert, but they managed both trails with little difficulty and very few complaints.

Day 46


Date: Thursday August 20, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Grant Village Campground

Distance to drive: 70 miles (round trip)

Hours to drive: depends on how many times we stop (about 2)

Destination: Firehole Lake Drive, Firehole Canyon Drive, Lower Geyser Basin and Midway Geyser Basin

Planned activities: check out the four different thermal features of Yellowstone National Park (fumaroles – holes in the ground that emit steam and sometimes noise, geysers – holes that emit steam and water, but not constantly, hot springs – pools that often appear to be boiling and mudpots – bubbling mud)

Quote of the day: “After we use the outdoor bathroom (outhouse) do I need to use some san-appetizer (hand sanitizer)”

Nature is truly amazing.  We saw all sorts of really beautiful and fascinating thermal features today that are caused by the lava under Yellowstone National Park.  By the end of the day we had seen over a dozen geysers, a few mudpots, a bunch of hot springs and countless fumaroles.  Neither girl liked the sulfur scent emitted from many of the thermal features, but enjoyed the warmth of the steam when the wind picked up.  We walked around the boardwalks at the different destinations and by the end of the day we were exhausted and geysered out.

I think my favourite would have to be the Red Spouter (unfortunately at this time of year you do not see the red).  It demonstrates all four thermal features at different  times in the year, dependent upon the amount of ground water present.  In the late summer, when there is not much ground water, it is a fumarole that whistles.  Although the most beautiful would have to be the Grand Prismatic Spring, with its array of colours caused by the different minerals and temperatures.

We headed back to the campground for dinner, a marshmallow roast and bed.  We need our energy for our adventures tomorrow.

Day 45


Date: Wednesday August 19, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Grant Village Campground

Distance to drive: 40 miles

Hours to drive: about an hour round trip

Destination: Old Faithful and the Upper Geyser Basin

Planned activities: shower (it is going on 5 days since we have showered), check out Old Faithful and walk around the Upper Geyser Basin

Quote of the day: “Look at that smoke!”  I think that I hear this about a hundred times between the two girls.  I then had to explain that smoke comes from a fire and what they see is steam that is from the really hot water that is exploding out of geysers.

We made and ate breakfast in the trailer, which quickly warmed up.   Now our trailer smells like bacon. 

It has officially hit the point in the trip where I have no idea what day of the week it is or what the date is.  I know how many days we have left here and where we go next, but the reality of date and time is completely gone.

At Old Faithful we watched the famous geyser erupt and then wandered around the boardwalk (about 3 miles).  In the visitors centre we learned about all the thermal features in the park as well as how they work and how the hundreds of earthquakes around the Yellowstone area affect them.

Day 44


Date:  Tuesday August 18, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Sheridan Lake Campground

Distance to drive: 500 miles

Hours to drive: 9 hours (our longest drive of the trip)

Destination: Grant Village Campground, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming

Planned activities: drive

Today our girls were spectacular travellers.  We set an alarm for the first time on our trip and we were pulling out of the campsite by 6:30am.  We were dressed in our regular camping attire, shorts, t-shirt and flip-flops.  The rain started to fall before we were out of the campground and it seemed to follow us most of the day.  I sloshed through many puddles while racing into gas stations to get coffee or taking my kids to use the facilities.  Despite the weather and many slower sections of highways with construction, we managed to only add 2 hours and 15 minutes onto our driving time. 

We have already had two up close encounters with bison.  One was walking down the middle of the highway as we drove to our campground and the other was hanging out in the grassy area (with a Park Ranger keeping people at a good distance), next to one of the visitors’ centres where we stopped to go to the bathroom.

We rolled into the campground a bit before 6pm.  We ate dinner in the trailer and spent very little time outside because the temperature was dropping quickly and it was supposed to dip below zero overnight.  Sorry for not letting you pack long underwear Chad.

Day 43


Date: Monday August 17, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: inside the trailer

Distance to drive: 0

Hours to drive: 0

Destination: inside the trailer

Planned activities: stay dry

Last night the rain fell, the lightning flashed and the thunder shook the trailer.  This morning it is cold and the storm last night has left it wet outside.  We have had a lazy morning.  Everyone slept in and we hung out in the trailer.  In the afternoon Chad put together his spin rod and took the girls fishing.  The big one really enjoyed it and was a part of catching her second fish, a small mouth bass.  We needed a relaxing day because we have a big drive tomorrow.

Day 42


Date: Sunday August 16, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Sheridan Lake Campground

Distance to drive: 30 miles

Hours to drive: about 20 minutes

Destination: Mount Rushmore

Planned activities: check out Mount Rushmore

Quote of the day: “It is not what I expected.” This seems to be the common theme on our trip.  This time it was Chad talking about Mount Rushmore, but the big one has said it regarding more than one thing as well.

I find history very interesting, so I learned (I am sure that I knew some of the information that I read, but the filing cabinet is full and unorganized and there is lots of information that is lost and other information that will soon be lost.) a lot at the monument.  Chad took a ton of pictures and we walked the Presidents’ Trail.  If we ever return we will check out the monument lighting ceremony.  I am always impressed by people’s visions and how they manage to accomplish it with a lot of hard work, versus the machinery that is used now a days.

For pictures of this and other parts of our trip see Chad's blog epicorzenroadtrip.blogspot.com
 

Day 41


Date: Saturday August 15, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: a rest area near Chamberlain South Dakota

Distance to drive: just over 200 miles

Hours to drive: about 3.5

Destination: Sheridan Lake Campground, Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota

Planned activities: shopping and arrive at the campground

Quote of the day: “Why are there state troopers on the highway.  The speed limit is so fast nobody is speeding!”

South Dakota, the land where you can get everywhere quickly and everyone wants you to visit their tourist trap.  The speed limit here is 80 m.p.h.  I don’t know if we have managed to hit that speed yet.  The highway is lined with cow filled fields and almost constant roadside signs advertising some kind of tourist attractions.  We are driving so fast on the highway that when trying to read some of the signs I miss some of the information.  I am not worried because every attraction has dozens of signs along the way to attract you to their locations. The first tourist attraction to start advertising on the side of the road was Wall Drugs.  Their signs started before we even entered South Dakota.  The cows like the signs because it gives them shade.  Who can blame them it is currently 42 degrees Celsius according to the truck. 

We could see the Black Hills in the distance as soon as we started driving in the morning.  They truly look black at a distance.  This is because of the dark green needles and dark brown bark of the Ponderosa pines that cover them.  We crossed the Missouri river and arrived at Sheridan Lake Campground by early afternoon.  We have a beautiful and fairly private site overlooking the lake.  It is beautiful!

Day 40


Date: Friday August 14, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Rock Cut State Park

Distance to drive: 525 miles (plus an additional almost 100 miles to make the next day’s drive shorter)

Hours to drive: 7.5 hours (plus 1.5)

Destination: a rest area on Interstate 90 just inside the South Dakota border close to Sioux Falls (We ended up at a rest area just before Chamberlaine)

Planned activities: drive

Today we drove through Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota and South Dakota.  We spent most of the day in Minnesota, the land of never ending cornfields and roadwork. 

Today I am thankful for flushing toilets, clean bathrooms and a little one whose tummy is feeling a bit better.

After stopping for dinner we decided that we would drive a bit further, so that the next day we would arrive at the campground earlier.

Day 39


Date: Thursday August 13, 2015 (Our 10th Wedding Anniversary)

Location at the beginning of the day: Rock Cut State Park

Distance to drive: 0

Hours to drive: 0

Destination: the outhouse L

Planned activities: play at the playground and go to the beach (two of us were not feeling great so we ended up showering again instead of going to the beach)

Quote of the day: “I have to go to the bathroom!”  My poor little one.

Life has taught me a lesson in gratitude today.  While visiting random public restrooms with my little one, I should have been grateful for flushing toilets and running water.  This morning the little one has woken up with a nasty case of diarrhea and at Rock Cut the only bathroom within walking distance is an outhouse.  We have a bathroom in the trailer, but the rule is ‘pee only’. 

Today marks ten years that Chad and I have been married.  Throughout the day we reflected upon what we would have been doing ten years earlier. Behind the trailer there was a patch of grass that quickly became the dance floor for the girls’ dance party (consisting mostly of ‘Royals’ by Lorde, ‘Radioactive’ by Imagine Dragon and ‘Shut up and Dance’ by Walk the Moon).  On occasion the big one would suggest that they do the wedding dance (They mean dance the way they saw Auntie Sue and Uncle Darren dance at their wedding.  The girls constantly wanted Auntie Sue to play the wedding song in the weeks leading up to the wedding.).  We had to explain that the type of dancing you do, depends on the kind of music that is playing.  I thought it was fitting that I play our wedding song and that Chad and I show the girls how it is done.  We spend part of the song dancing just the two of us and part of the song having a four person family dance.  That moment was the best part of my day and everything that I would have wanted on my tenth anniversary.


Day 38



Date: Tuesday August 12, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: rest area near Gary Indiana

Distance to drive: about 200 miles

Hours to drive: 3

Destination: Rock Cut State Park (near Rockford Illinois)

Planned activities: get to the campsite and pick up beer (to maybe or maybe not drink because alcohol is not permitted in state parks in Illinois)

Quote of the day: “Oh my!!!” said by some, but felt by all as we drove through Gary
Indiana.  Due to construction there was a very unclear detour and we ended up taking a cruise down one of the main streets of Gary.  It is very run down.

I woke up this morning with a sore throat, which means I am getting a cold.  I should have known it was coming.  Suzanne was sick the last week we were in Montreal, the big one had it and the little one was so sick one night that I ended up having to sleep with her. 

We enjoyed a symphony of creatures fireside.  There were cicadas, crickets, frogs and many others. 

Sorry that is all I have for today.  Feeling tired and sick!

Day 37


Date: Tuesday August 11, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: a rest area just inside the Pennsylvania border

Distance to drive: 400 miles to where we actually stopped

Hours to drive: 5 (but when we arrived at the ‘travel service area’ at 4:30 we decided to continue) In the end it was more like 7

Destination: a travel service stop on the Indiana Toll highway (it was supposed to be at mile marker 156, but instead we stayed at the final one at mile marker 22).

Planned activities: grocery shop and drive

Quote of the day: “Are we there yet?” For some reason today the little one really wanted to be somewhere, even if it was just the next travel plaza.

We started out the morning by grocery shopping in Erie Pennsylvania at Wegman’s.

We took the Ohio Turnpike and Indiana Toll highway today.  Both are toll highways, but they saved us many hours driving, which meant less gas and more sanity.  The Ohio Turnpike was awesome.  Let me rephrase that…the Travel Plazas (rest areas with gas stations, fast food restaurants and bathrooms) were spectacular.  They were clean, had WIFI and seemed to show up every time we needed one.  The Indiana Toll highway was not so wonderful.

Overall the day was uneventful.  The moment in the day that stands out was when we were in the travel plaza just outside of Toledo Ohio.  We saw the most diverse groups of people wondering around.  There were the Amish women, the nuns, the ethnically diverse travellers and my favourite would be the trucker from Georgia, who looked more like a rapper, that we chatted with, while standing in line for a coffee.



Day 36

Date: Monday August 10, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Dorval Quebec

Distance to drive: 750 km

Hours to drive: 7.5

Destination: a rest stop just inside Pennsylvania (on the New York border)

Planned activities: driving

Quote of the day:  “I am sad!” Both girls told me many times how sad they were to
be leaving Auntie Sue’s house. 

It was hard leaving Montreal!  I know that I will be back again someday and next time there will be more time to relax and enjoy all that Montreal has to offer, including of course Suzanne and Darren, our amazing hosts.

Our trip is now 2/3 over and we are now onto the sight seeing and camping portion of the trip. 

Our crazy weather experiences continue.  While driving on the I80 in the state of New York we saw signs that said that you needed to use your hazards if you were traveling under 45 m.p.h.  We didn’t really get it, until we hit the wall of rain.  It went from overcast to crazy downpour and we could barely see the car in front of us.  We went from 65 M.P.H. to less than 30 m.p.h.  The windshield wipers were going as fast as they could, but it wasn’t making a difference.

Sunday, 9 August 2015

Montreal!

Days: 19 to 35

Dates: July 24 to August 9

Wow how time flies!  At some point I will post some pictures of our time in Montreal, but being a Matron of Honour means that there was no time to even think about blogging.

Day 18


Date: July 23, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Waterloo Ontario

Distance to drive: 620 km

Hours to drive: 6

Destination: my sister’s house in Dorval

Planned activities: reach our furthest destination

Quote of the day:      “Here we come Montreal!”
                                    “I hate Toronto traffic!”
                                    One quote by the oldest person in the truck and the other by
the youngest.  I am sure everyone can guess which is which.

It was bittersweet leaving this morning.  We are on route to our furthest destination, which involves all sorts of exciting events including Suzanne’s wedding, but we had such a great time with Chad’s extended family in Waterloo.  They were so welcoming and hospitable.  It was amazing to get to know them! We look forward having them out to our place and to visiting them again in the future.

Traffic in the Toronto area was crazy.  We were bumper to bumper, surrounded by semi trucks, going less than 30 km/h at 10:30 am. 

We have now entered Quebec and we all can’t wait until we reach Suzanne and Darren’s.

Day 17


Date: July 22, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Waterloo

Distance to drive: 0

Hours to drive: 0

Destination: probably another visit to Jen’s pool

Planned activities: another family dinner because we all had such a great time the night before

Quote of the day: No words just laughter!

Today (okay yesterday because I am writing this while traveling to Montreal) we spent more time in the pool with Jen and Kelly’s son and then we had another family dinner.  The whole group managed to Skype Chad’s parents after dinner and it was a full Wagner reunion.

After the kids went to bed, Chad, Jen, Kelly, her son and I sat out on the back deck.  We talked about all sorts of things, but what I will remember the most is the laughter.  I can’t remember the last time I laughed so hard. 

I can’t believe I had so little to write about today because it was such an amazing day.  I guess that words just can’t describe it.  I will have to try to attach some pictures.

Day 16


Date: Tuesday July 21, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Waterloo Ontario

Hours to drive: about an hour of touring around

Destinations: two of the houses that Chad lived in as a child and then his cousin Jen’s house

Planned activities: a trip down memory lane for Chad and then a pool party at his cousin Jen’s house with a bunch of his cousins

Quote of the day: “Why don’t we have a pool?’

Late morning we packed the kids into the truck and started our tour.  First we drove past a house on Highpoint Avenue in Waterloo where Chad lived from when he was four until nine.  Next we took a trip into the beautiful countryside.  I never realized how much of Canada’s produce was grown in southern Ontario.  We drove through small communities that still have a sizable Mennonite population.  We saw more than one horse drawn buggy driving down the street and there is even a designated lane for them. 

When we arrived in Nithburg (not much more than a street) Chad could suddenly remember everyone that lived in each house and could tell us what was the same as when he left in 1986 and what was new.  I could envision a ten-year-old little boy running through the fields, fishing in the Nith River, playing in the rapids or knocking on his neighbour’s door to ask if he could fish in his stocked bass pond.  A very cool childhood!

Now off to the pool party at Jen’s house!  We were the first to arrive.  I put lifejackets on the girls and then the little one hoped into a pink Hello Kitty inner tube and into the pool they went.  They spent most of the next seven hours in the pool.  The little one even jumped off the diving board a handful of times.  We were quickly joined by Kelly and her son, as well as Chad’s other Glen and his wife Kristen and their son.  A great time was had by all!  


Day 15


Date: July 20, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: 9 Mile Hill Rest Area in Michigan

Distance to drive: just over 300 miles

Hours to drive: just over 5

Destination: Chad’s cousin Kelly’s house in Waterloo Ontario

Planned activities:  cross the border and successfully back the trailer up in Kelly’s driveway (only the second time that Chad will be backing up the trailer)

I have to give the state of Michigan credit for the most amazing rest areas I have even encountered.  Their rest areas are more like parks.  They have beautifully maintained gardens, trails and some even have playgrounds.  You even have to enter a building to get to the bathrooms, which were incredibly clean.  This is a far cry from the rest areas in some states that had no potable water, no soap and in order to wash your hands you had to try to catch the couple of trickles of water as you pumped a button.

Whichever government built the between bridge Port Huron Michigan and Sarnia Ontario saw an opportunity to make money.  They built a toll bridge with a border crossing at either end.  In order to get in or out of the country in that region you have to use the toll bridge.  After waiting in line for the toll bridge and then the border we had an uneventful crossing into Canada.  I wish I could say the same about the adventures of backing a trailer into a driveway.  I will let Chad tell you in his own words www.epicorzenroadtrip.blogspot.com .

Luckily we were greeted by Chad’s cousin Kelly and her son who had made us a delicious dinner and prepared their basement for us to sleep in.



Day 14


Date: Sunday July 19, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Gogebic State Park

Distance to drive: between 600 and 700 km (depending on how the day goes)

Hours to drive: between 6 and 7 hours

Destination: our final stop ended up being 9 Mile Hill rest area in Michigan

Planned activities: drive

Quote of the day: “Krist! Good thing we need gas!”  Check out the picture of the gas stations (I don't have time to post the picture right now.  Krist is a gas station chain. Someday I will update this post with the picture.)

We bid goodbye to Gogebic State Park.  We will miss the view, but I think that we have donated plenty of blood.  Good thing the wedding isn’t for a couple of weeks because my legs are covered in bites and both of my girls have them pretty much everywhere including their faces.

We were on the road by about 11:45am.  I passed the girls their present bags (each day we travel the girls get some new or borrowed books and a little activity to keep them busy) and they were happy.  I decided that now that my speech for the wedding is complete and my blog entries are up to date, I could work on my knitting project.  I will need three balls of yarn to complete the project and I am about ¾ of the way through the first ball.   I was a hoping to complete the project on the road trip, but I have lots of time.  I am not going to share with you what I am making because it is a present and I want it to be a surprise.  I figured I would finish my row and then take a picture of my progress.  I have been trying to take a picture after each day I work on it.  Three stitches in I saw a loop off the side multiple rows down.  Oh no I dropped a stitch (or something like that)!  I don’t really know because I am not much of a knitter.  I have yet to complete knitting project and the furthest I have even gotten is the scarf that I started knitting while on strike.  I have discovered that knitting is very therapeutic.  You can still carry on a conversation, while knitting.  Most importantly when sitting around for long lengths of time you can feel like you have accomplished something.  Back to the dropped stitch: I know that my mom or other avid knitters would take out their needles and have the problem solved within minutes.  I am not an expert knitter.  In the past, if I have made a mistake, I have stopped and taken it to my mom to help me fix it.  If I opted for that I would be waiting a week and a half before I could knit again.  I decided to try to fix the problem by myself.  Well… four 60-stitch rows and an hour an half later (I took off one stitch at a time to make sure that I didn’t drop any stitches), I discovered that the yarn had split and that the loop was actually only half a stitch.  The important part is that I managed to fix the problem and by the end of the day I was further along then when I started. 

Chad and I are now finishing my birthday bottle of wine and sorting out the details for tomorrow.  Two more driving days before we reach our furthest destination and we get to rest in Waterloo with Chad’s cousins for a few days first.  It was crazy to see a sign for the route to Detroit.  We are soooo far from home.

Day 13


Date: Saturday July 18, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: Gogebic State Park

Distance to drive: 0

Hours to drive: 0

Destination: nowhere

Planned activities: relax

Quote of the day: “I don’t think this is what I asked for, for my birthday!”

I have officially decided that I am no longer celebrating my birthday on July 18.  It has nothing to do with getting older, it just seems that over the last few years, when I decide to celebrate my birthday things don’t turn out.  My day started at 3am when it started to rain.  I got out of bed to close the two roof vents and windows so that we wouldn’t get wet.  The people next to us started up their motor home to warm up before they left at 5am.  Soon after that the rain really started coming down, so I had to go outside to pull the towels in so that they didn’t get soaked.  Upon returning to bed I realized that the artificial grass that we have at the entrance of the trailer is larger than the awning and was currently getting wet.  Once I folded in the grass, I returned to bed and realized I had just received my first birthday present: a massive mosquito bite on my cheek.  The sun was barely up and my day was off to a spectacular start.

My wish for the day was a relaxed day at the campsite.  I don’t think I got to sit because the little one was crabby and demanding most of the day.  My only reprieve was when Chad took each girl out for a boat ride in the seven foot inflatable zodiac.  Not a problem I had dinner to look forward to.  Chad was making steak, potatoes, Caesar salad and we had bought a nice bottle of wine.  I read my book by the fire, while Chad cooked dinner.  By the time we were ready to eat the mosquitos were so bad that we couldn’t even eat our food without eating them.  We decided to continue our meal in the truck because we had already collapsed the table in the trailer and the girls were asleep.  We jumped into the truck to realize that it was crazy hot from the sun beating in the front window all day.  Unfortunately we didn’t have a choice.  I took off my hoodie and rolled up my sweatpants. 

Quote of the day: “Not exactly what I had envisioned for your birthday dinner dear!”

Don’t worry folks it gets better.  About half way through dinner, it was so hot and steamy (think hot yoga) that I suggested that we open and close the doors a couple of times to try to drop the temperature.  As I closed my door to continue eating, I knocked over my glass of red wine.  It splashed all down the dash, but mostly into my lap.  I got to enjoy the remainder of my birthday dinner in sauna conditions with soggy from my k

Day 12


Date: Friday July 17, 2015

Location at the beginning of the day: a rest area outside Superior Wisconsin

Distance to drive: 140 miles

Hours to drive: 2.5

Destination:  Gogebic State Park in Michigan

Planned activities: grocery shopping and checking out the campground

We had a short distance to travel today, so we took our time in the morning and when we went shopping.  Our campsite is right on the lake and the girls are very excited about the mallards and their ducklings that keep swimming past.  This is the first time that we have really settled into a campsite.  We pulled out the awning and put the artificial grass down on the one side of the trailer.  Within minutes the girls were asking for their bin of toys and they staked out a shady spot on the turf.  I offered to set up a blanket for them, but they were happy where they were.  I sat down in my chair and let out a deep sigh.  Some people dream of living in a big house when they grow up, but when I was younger, I would dream of getting to go camping all summer because that is what I did in my childhood.  I never thought it would come to fruition because most people don’t get the summer off and even fewer want to spend their entire summer camping.  Magically somehow, here I am and I couldn’t be happier.  The campground is far from perfect and we will probably not return, but none of that matters.