Thursday, July 29, 2010

Another County Fair

We went to our second county fair in two weeks.  This fair is one of the largest county fairs in the country. There is a large Amish population here.  They are very involved in all phases of agriculture.  Consequently, the fair has very large livestock, craft, and project shows.

We went with the intent of taking the kids to kiddie day.  However, the lines were so long you couldn't get a ticket for any ride.  The place was a mob scene.  The day was also one of the hotter ones they have had here.  The kids were spent from the heat pretty early on.

Deacon could have sat on this tractor all day.

Jason and his partner showed up for awhile.  They are recruiters for the Marine Corps in this area.  Their job involves many hours per day.  Recruiting, transporting applicants to tests, paperwork and working out with the new recruits to help them get ready for boot camp takes about 18 hours each day.

Jason and Beth live on the Saint Joseph River that runs through the center of Elkhart.  It is very relaxing to sit there and watch the river go by.  The fishing is also very good.  John caught about ten fish in just a few minutes.
John escaping the Florida heat here in Indiana.


We have been having fun with the grandkids.  They like to sleep in the MH with us.  They are very well behaved and very good natured.  They also very lovable.  They love to be held, hugged, kissed and played with all the time.  They tell you they love you a dozen times a day.  It makes a grandparent feel pretty good.

We took the MH in for the appointment to have the windshield replaced.  They had to keep it overnight to allow the glue time to dry.  They have a campground at the repair facility.  We spent the night there last night.  Elkhart has always been the center of RV construction and maintenance.  Many companies have gone out of business because of the recession.  Elkhart still remains the center for getting things fixed on an RV, however.   We met people at the campground from all around the country.  They come here to get warranty work done and other more extensive repairs.  Few places are as well equipped to meet the maintenance needs of RVs like this place.

We will set out tomorrow for New York State.  Our next stop will be at Darlie's parents.  It will take us a couple of days to get there.  It is over 500 miles.  We seldom travel 400 per day.   We are starting to look forward to getting home.  There was a time when we didn't want to go home but as you get closer you start to look forward to home.  Darlie wants to do this again next year.  She usually gets her way so we will probably be on the road again.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Elkhart, IN

We picked up our son, John, at the Indianapolis airport.  He decided to take a week off and fly in to see his brother and family.  We were coming through the area so it worked out well for him.
John, Sarah and Deacon

We are staying a few days here.  We only get to see the grandkids once or twice a year.  This is a treat for us.  The kids are so lovable and friendly.  They have been looking forward to Big Grandma and Pop Pop coming to visit them.  They stayed overnight in the motorhome with us.  It was a big deal.

Tomorrow the old bread truck goes in for a new windshield.  We made arrangements last week to have it done.  Elkhart is where many of the camping vehicles are built.  I knew someone would have the windshield in stock.  I didn't want to have to wait to have it ordered.

We will also go to the county fair.  The kids are excited about riding all the rides.  It is forecast to rain.  I hope it holds off until we wear the kids out.
Beth fixing dinner.

The boys were out fishing last night.  They caught a couple of small bass which they released.  There are many young ducks swimming around on the waterfront.  One of them got tangled in the fishline.  They had to bring him in the house to safely remove the line from its wing.  It was tightly wrapped around a large feather.  After they got him free the kids pet him for a few minutes.  The duck seemed as interested in them as they were in him.  Of course they wanted to keep him as a pet.  We told them he would miss his family and needed to go back to the river.  They agreed.  The duck happily jointed his brothers and sisters on the water minutes later.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Expenses for Week 11

Gas:  $502.92    Gallons:  185
Campgrounds:  $85.78
Misc:  $26.43
Groceries:  $91.82
Total Expenses:  $706.95
Total Miles:  1508

If you could get the gas bill down this would be really cheap travel.   It is still a bargain when you figure the minimum you can travel in a car with gas, meals and motels is about $200.00 per day.  We have the advantage of our own bed and our stuff doesn't need to be packed and unpacked.   The MH really begins to feel like home.  In fact, we call it home when we are away from it.  I am going to miss it when we get back to that other home.  We like the small area we have to take care of.  We use fewer of everything.  The biggest advantage is being so close to each other all day long.  I know that might drive some people nuts but it is what we really enjoy.... each other.

A Great Visit With Great Friends

Hotdogs, cotton candy, sno cones, candied apples, funnel cakes, country music and goat milking contests.  Can you guess where we have been?  We went to the Montgomery County Fair with our good friends, Russ and Sue Winters of Bellflower, MO.   We had an extraordinary time.  We have not been to a county fair in years.
Sue, Russ, Darlie and Lady

Russ and Sue are our winter neighbors in Florida.  We made it a point to swing by here to see their farm. We have heard so much about it and farming.  We were looking forward to stopping by to see them.  They have a beautiful farm in a quiet, serene area an hour or so west of St. Louis.

We took a ride around the farm in the "mule".  An ATV type vehicle used to bop around the fields checking on things like crops and irrigators.  They have a 10 acre lake that provides irrigation water to the fields.  The irrigators are those big long things with pipes and wheels you may have seen in agricultural areas.  They are put together in sections like tinker toys to create what length is needed for the size of the area to be watered.  They creep around in a circle putting down the amount of water needed.

The crops and fields look green and healthy.  The sweet smell of corn in tassel fills the air.  Large ears are forming on each stalk.  If the weather holds, it should be a good year.  I have enjoyed talking with Russ about his business.  Farmers are probably the best managers of an economy there are.  To be successful requires diligence, financial judiciousness, knowledge of soil, seed, weather, machinery, mechanics, hard work and a ton of other aptitudes.  Russ clearly knows his business.  I wish we had people like him running the country instead of the long line of goof balls that get elected.

Sue has a beautiful backyard garden with vegetables and fruit trees.  She blessed us with some of the bounty including green peppers, huge tomatoes, onions, peaches and a couple of slices of homemade blackberry pie made from her own blackberries.
Sue got some wacky cucumber seeds this year.

Sue also drove a school bus for thirty five years for the area school system.  She has some good stories to tell about all the kids she drove to school over the years.  About everyone around knows her.  Probably because they all rode her bus at sometime.   She has also worked the farm with Russ, worked at all kinds of church benefits and community functions.  They also raised three daughters, all of whom she says were perfect little angels.  :-)
Sue and her daughter who lives at the site of the old homestead.

It was difficult to have to leave today.  We had so much fun listening to and telling stories about a whole array of topics.  We sat outside last evening in the warm evening air counting airplanes, stars and satellites.  Sometimes it is the little things you do in life that make lasting memories.  Our stop in Missouri will be one of those things.

We got on the road at about 9:00 AM.  We gassed up before getting on the interstate.  We paid the least for gas of anywhere on the trip, $2.49.9.   We paid a dollar a gallon more in much of the west.

Our son, John, is flying into Indianapolis in the morning.  We will go by and pick him up on our way to our son Jason's house in Elkhart, IN.  We will stay there visiting and making some repairs to the bread truck.  We will have a cracked windshield replaced and do some other minor fixes of things that wear or break along the way.  We also look forward to seeing our two grandchildren, Sarah and Deacon.

We made reservations for a campground in Indianapolis.  It is a good thing we did as there is a NASCAR race here this weekend.  We may not have found a spot with all the race fans in town.
Darlie is in for a nap.  I will go rustle around in the refrigerator and find something to make for dinner.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Horsefly Heaven

When we pulled into Graham’s Cave State Park yesterday, I remarked to the camp host how empty the place was.  His excuse was the park has no swimming.  He lied.  The truth is many small children have been hauled off to the cave by horseflies the size of F-18s.   They have an arrangement with the troll that lives there to provide fresh meat.  The troll, in turn, who is a leather smith, provides new bridles and saddles for the peepers that ride them.
Now if all that sounds a bit bazaar, let me explain.  We tried to take a walk down to the cave last evening.  We were attacked by huge horseflies and other nondescript bugs.  We had to make a hasty retreat back to the MH while being buzzed and zoomed by these huge pests.
Once inside the MH, a squadron of kamikaze horseflies bombarded the windows in an attempt to break through for the whole regiment.  The sound was something like hail hitting the glass.  I went for the hornet spray just in case there was a breakthrough.
As darkness fell, the aerial attack ceased.  Peepers, that must be the size of your hand, took over with an attempt to use loud acoustics to force us out into the open.  The sound was deafening.  Fortunately, I am nearly deaf so the tactic had no effect on me.  Darlie, however, was ready to open the door to investigate the noise.  Though I couldn’t hear them, I knew full well what they were attempting.  I hollered, “NOOOOOOO!”  as she reached for the door handle.  Had she opened the door hordes of horseflies would have rushed in and the troll would have had some tough steaks for dinner.  
I convinced her the best tactic was to turn out the lights and go to bed.  Don’t let them know their psychological attack was working.  Let them think we are so secure in the MH that we are going to sleep.  We laid awake listening to things crawling around on the metal roof.  The peepers kept up their acoustic attack.  With pillows over our heads, we finally drifted off to sleep.

Nebraska to Missouri July 20-21, 2010

After a stormy night in the Fishberry Campground, we awoke to a beautiful sunny day.  We are in the part of Nebraska known as the Sandhills region.  The land is marked by small rolling hills of sand covered with green vegetation.  
We stopped in a local IGA store for some supplies.  Everyone was very friendly.  Typical small town atmosphere.   The store owner visited with us for a while.   He was pleased to hear we travel the back roads instead of the interstate.  He said most people miss what the area has to offer.  He went on to tell us about the various sights and area amenities available to the traveler.  
We traveled Routes 20 and 275 across Nebraska to Omaha City.  The fields were sown in corn, soybeans and alfalfa.  Everything was very green.  For much of the way the land was very flat.  At times I found myself drifting off to thoughts of Florida and home.  The flat land and straight roads that disappear into infinity are a familiar sight back home.  
Though the scenery is not the kind that brought out the camera every few minutes, it was still very pleasant to the eye.  We saw families of wild turkeys, various livestock and a flock of sheep stopping traffic oblivious to the danger they were facing.  Blowing the horn had no effect whatsoever.  They were busy munching weeds along the pavement and bounding around on the road.  They were like kids that got out of the fenced yard, experiencing freedom for the first time.  Several cars and trucks waited patiently for their frolic to move off the highway.  Such patience would not be found where we call home.
We stopped for gas in a small country village.  Trucks filled with cattle loaded for market were parked all around.  The rich smell of manure greeted me as I stepped from the MH.  I noticed the poor cows with big brown eyes peering out the slots in the trailer, totally ignorant of their fate.  I thought of my dog.  I miss her very much.  She must have wondered for a time where I went.  By now her life has gone on without me forgotten in her immediate memory.  Dogs are like that.  They don’t reason or reflect back on things.  They just live for now.  Like these poor cows.  Their days are numbered but they don’t have a clue.
While pumping gas, a young woman pulled into the pump next to me.  Rap music was pounding out its message from the radio.  She was covered with piercings and tattoos. 
She was wearing a pair sweat pants that said, “Dream On”, on the rump.  Believe me that wouldn’t be a dream.  It would be a nightmare.  It seems the ways of the city have effected the ways of the country.   I thought all the girls our here listened to country music, rode horses, wore tight jeans and cowboy hats.  Stereotypes often fail.
Something else I have noticed across the west is the many grades of gasoline and pricing.  Utah had the highest prices.  They, along with other states out west sell 85 octane as regular.  87 octane is the middle grade.  I had to buy the middle grade to meet the manufacturer requirement for my engine.  That added cost to my travels.  Also here in Nebraska, the plus grade is cheaper by a dime than the regular grade.  I asked someone about it.  The regular is more expensive because it has no ethanol in it.  The plus grade has 10%.  They also sell E-85.  Some stations have were you can select how much ethanol you want and it is priced accordingly.  E-85 was about a dollar a gallon less than regular gasoline.  I am told it gets about half the mileage though.
As we crossed over the Missouri River, we noticed it was very high.   We had looked up several state parks along the river for possible campsites.  When we exited for one, the road was closed.  I asked a man how I could get to the park.  He told me I couldn’t.  It was under many feet of water.  He said his home has been under several feet of water for a month.  They have had more rain than normal for this time of year.
Interstate 29 is about the only north south highway to take us into Missouri through Iowa.  A check of Woodall’s, our campground directory, had no listings for the entire stretch of highway down to Saint Joseph, Missouri.  This did pose a problem.  I had been driving for hours.   It was 6:30 PM and I was tired.  We ended up parking at a truck stop where they had an area for overnight parking.  We drove way off to one side and parked for the night.  The lot was large.  No trucks parked near us.  We had a quiet nights sleep.
In the morning rain was threatening.  Dark clouds hung low on the horizon.  It looked as though we were in for our first rainy day of traveling.  We got off the interstate at St Joseph and took Rt 36 across to Macon where we picked up Rt 63.  This was a very lovely highway along green fields and woodlands.  
Darlie was driving this morning.  When it came time to get gas, she pulled into a station.  All the lines were filled except the one next to the building which had a very narrow entry.  She thought she could make it in there.  I told her to try it.  I had a vision of her getting stuck, unable to go forward or back.  She maneuvered like a pro watching her mirrors and the clearance between the roof of the building and the top of the MH.  She made me proud.  Several people were watching.  You could see the look of amazement on their faces.  She was quite satisfied with herself too.
The rain we had expected seemed to be moving along ahead of us.  The road was wet in places but we never ran into the rain.  The rivers and fields are flooded everywhere along our route.  One stream we went over was up to the bottom of the bridge.  It didn’t look like it would be long before it was up on the road.
We had found an interesting state park on the map along I-70.  It is Graham’s Cave State Park.  We were surprised to find the place empty except for one other camper.  We had our choice of sites.  We thought about walking down to the cave but we were chased back inside by mammoth horse flies that buzzed and zoomed around us.
We are tired from a couple of days of long drives.  We will rest and go to bed early.  In the morning we will go over to our wintertime Florida neighbors house to visit.  They live near the small town of Bellflower, Missouri.  

Monday, July 19, 2010

Mount Rushmore July 19, 2010

We drove along Rt 34 and 24 leaving Devil's Tower.  It was a very pleasant drive.  Rolling hills, green fields and the smell of freshly cut hay made a very pleasing mix.  Hay seems to be a major agricultural product in the west.  Everywhere we have gone we see fields filled with large round bales.

We have been held up at many construction projects in our travels.  When we are first in line we always call the flagger over for a conversation.  They are more than eager to visit with you.  They have said they appreciate it because it breaks up their monotonous day.  Some of these stops have been for as long as twenty minutes.  We get to know our flaggers pretty well in that time.

On young woman we talked with today said she and her husband have a cattle ranch.  She said it takes all the hay you see to feed the stock during the long winter.  She works this flagging job in the summer to help make ends meet.  Raising stock is not that profitable for the small rancher.  It is the life they love and grew up with and will continue to do it.

We got to the Mount Rushmore area around noon.  The place is a huge tourist trap.  Miles before we got to the monument, there were all kinds of attractions.  The parking lots were packed.  There are water parks, gold mines, zoos, restaurants and shops of all kinds.  The little village of Keystone was packed to the walls.  You could hardly drive through town.  This is not our kind of place, as I have said many times.  However, for those who like this kind of thing for a vacation, you should put this on your list of places to go.

My first look at Mount Rushmore was moderately disappointing.  The heads looked much smaller than I imagined from photos I have seen.  Once in the park, you could clearly see what an endeavor this had been.  They have movies and displays that explain how the project was designed and sculpted.  One of the original drillers was on hand signing a book he had written about his days working on the project.

The park was packed with visitors.  Mothers with kids clinging to their shorts,  Dad's carrying screaming little ones, Grandmas and Grandpas, foreigners and natives, all shapes and sizes made up the crowd.  If each photo removed a little portion of the rock, there would be nothing left to photograph today.  How many photos can you take of the same thing?  I would have to go to Darlie for that answer.

Once we made the rounds we were on our way.  The crowd and traffic doesn't suit us.

We drove along Rt 44 east out of Rapid City, SD.  Green hills and valleys, covered with freshly baled hay, seemed to go on into infinity.  Then quite abruptly we entered the bad lands of South Dakota.   The land is indeed very bad but we found it to be very beautiful at the same time.  The sandy soil has eroded away leaving odd shaped hills and formations.  Had there been no green plant life, you would assume you were on the moon.


There was very little traffic on Rt 44.  At times we were over a half hour without seeing another car or a human being.  This is very remote country.  We saw no houses, buildings or farms for miles.  The land was monotonous and rolling.   We went through little hamlets that had few people left in them.  The stores were closed, buildings boarded up.  Boom towns of another age, I presume.

We crossed the state line into Nebraska on RT 83.  We found a quaint little campground just north of Valentine.  Soon after our arrival some very severe weather set in.  The blackened sky fell to the ground.  Rain flew, hail hammered, wind rocked us around like we were in a washing machine.   The air smells so fresh now that it has had a good scrubbing from the rain.
We saw this thing miles from anywhere.  Why it was built is a mystery.

Devil's Tower July 18, 2010

Today would have been my Dad’s 99th birthday.  We all thought he would make it to 100.  He died peacefully six months after his 97th birthday.  He is missed and thought of often.
As we cleared the rise in the road, Darlie exclaimed, “We drove all the way out here to see that!”  That was her initial reaction to laying eyes on Devil’s Tower for the first time.  After seeing Bryce, the Oregon coast, Glacier and Tetons, it does look a bit puny.
The northeastern Wyoming landscape left much to be desired.  It is very bland and colorless.   We did see many prong horns in the fields and along the roads.  It was so lack luster that Darlie didn’t take the first photo.  
Dropping down in to the valley near the Tower, revealed a very green colorful terrain accented by red rock cliffs.   Darlie’s camera came out of hiding.  The Devil’s Tower is framed by this very beautiful topography. 
I have to wonder why so many things out here are named for the devil.  There is devil’s tower, devil’s gate, devil’s creek, devil’s canyon, and so on.  Nothing is named for the one who created all of it.  The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof.   Why not the Lord’s Tower or the Lord’s Canyon?  Man refuses to acknowledge the creator. Instead he worships the creation.
Today we saw signs in the national monument asking us to respect the religious values of the Indians and others who hold this place as sacred by not walking off the path or disturb prayer cloths tied to trees.  What about the establishment clause everyone hollers about?  People would try to justify respecting the Indian values because they were here first.  Again, the earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof.   The Lord was here before he entrusted anything to us.  I think this is quite hypocritical of the government to protect religious values here while forcing the removal of Christian symbols that have been here since the founding of the country.  
Prayer Cloths

The Indian legend about the creation of the Tower is cute, however.   Legend has it that some girls playing in the forest were chased by a bear.  They jumped up on a rock and the rock grew higher and higher carrying them away from the bear.  The vertical lines on the Tower are the marks left by the claws of the bear.
We walked the trail around the base of the Tower.  High up on the Tower sides you could see people climbing.  A permit is required to climb the Tower.  No one is allowed to stay up there overnight, however.  
Can you spot the climbers?
We were pleased to see the rangers here enforcing the RV ONLY parking areas.  So many times we have had to move on because people parked their car in the middle of an RV spot.  One car taking up the room of a bus.  Some people just don’t give a hoot or are plain stupid.   When I parked today, I had to parallel like you would a car to wedge myself in between an RV and some idiot that parked in the middle of an RV spot.
When we came back to the RV, there was a ticket on the windshield.  That is a first for us.  What really gripes me is there are nearly always several spots open for car parking.
Sometimes I feel like doing a Smokey and the Bandit move like the trucker in the movie when he ran over all the motorcycles.  Just crunch them right up and drive away.
There was a ticket on the window.
The campground here is small having only 50 sites.   National Park campgrounds usually fill up early this time of year.  This morning before church, I prayed that the Lord would hold one open for us.  We were able to get a beautiful shaded site when we got here.  

It is warm but a cool breeze is blowing.  We sat outside.  Cooked a meal over an open fire and visited with some of our neighbors.  Very severe weather is predicted for this area tonight with winds up to 60 MPH, hail and lightening.  We already had some rain and hail.  Hopefully, we have seen the worst of it.  Once more, I feel sorry for the tent campers.  They are a hardy bunch.  They seem undaunted with everything they have sopping wet.  

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Expenses for Week 10

Gas:  $368.80   Gallons:  122
Groceries:  $161.33
Campgrounds:  $70.00
Misc.:  $332.55
Vehicle Maintenance:  $27.94
Restaurants:  $62.00
Total Expenses:  $1022.62
Total Miles:  1123

We spent more money this week on tourist type things.  That is under misc.  We also traveled a ton of miles which ran up the gas bill.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Haircut Day July 17, 2010

I didn't tell you about my last haircut.  It was a couple of months ago in Wichita Falls, TX.  A half crazed Comanche, using a stone tomahawk, scalped me so badly I didn't think my hair would grow out all summer.  Today, I noticed it was getting a bit long so it was time to try again.

I stopped at a Walmart store cause I know they have beauty salons there.  I figured on a quick in and out haircut.  I was at the shop when it opened.  The lady, a blond, asked me how I wanted it.  I told her to trim it up.  While she cut away, she told me how life for a woman in rural Wyoming is not good.  She said women do all the work.  I asked what the men did.  She said a man in Wyoming only needs to know how to do three things: drink, spit and ride.  I hadn't heard that one before.  She said it is a very common saying in and around Cody.

She whacked away while gushing with talk. After a few minutes she asked me if it was short enough.  Without my glasses on, fearing it was already too short, I told her it was fine.

When I got back to the MH, Darlie said it was a mess.  She said it looked like she used a rabid beaver to chew it off.  There were huge gouges all over.  It really looks pretty bad.  I will have to wear my hat for a couple of weeks.

We headed off for Buffalo, WY and the Bighorn Mountain Range.  We headed up Shell Creek Canyon on Rt 14.  The valley is brown and dry, typical desert.  Shell Creek creates a green riparian zone that support many kinds of wildlife.  Along the canyon wall you can see a trail that is still used today to drive cattle from their winter range in the valley to the green mountain tops for summer grazing.



We stopped at Shell Creek Falls.  The state has constructed overlook platforms and walkways all along the falls area.  Shell Creek Falls is about 80 to 90 feet tall.  Several smaller falls below add to the roar heard from above.  It is a very beautiful place.

The mountain top was rolling green hills.  So different from the valley below.  Cattle grazed on hillsides. Cowboys, dressed like out of a western, were along side the road checking their gear preparing for the day's work.

Flocks of sheep crossed the road stopping traffic, seemingly unaware of the cars they had inconvenienced.  We rounded a bend and found a young bull moose quenching his thirst in a ditch by the road.  We stopped for photos.  He never looked up or stopped slurping up the water that had collected in a rut.

The top of the Bighorn Mountains is a mecca for ATVs and four wheel drive vehicles.  We passed several lodges cater to them.  Dozens of muddy trucks and ATVs were parked all higgledy piggledy around the parking lots.

Descending the mountain required low gear most of the way.  It was very steep and winding for ten miles.  You could look down and see the road winding around, back and forth around the mountain below.  There were many turnouts for taking photos and allowing faster moving vehicles a chance to get by.  I seldom use my brakes going down long descents.  It is very easy to overheat them and be in a very dangerous situation.  In Yellowstone I did overheat them one time.  I was following another camper who was going much slower than necessary even in low gear.  I had to constantly brake to keep from running in to him.  Before long I noticed my brake peddle going to the floor before I felt it braking.  I found the first pullout and sat until they cooled.  It doesn't take all that much to overheat them with a large heavy vehicle.

We are camped at Indian Campground in Buffalo.  The place was a bit expensive at $40.00.  It is very nicely shaded with large trees.  They have a clean modern laundry which was the reason for our visit here.  This is the first time we have been connected to electricity since Philipsburg, MT over two weeks ago.  We love to dry camp in the forest.  From here on east we will probably have to use more commercial campgrounds.  There is not as much National Forest land or many state parks.  On top of that it is hot down here.  Darlie wants to run the generator all night in the dry camps so she can have A/C.  I can't sleep with the racket it makes.   I will spend a couple of bucks to keep her cool though I am going to miss the wild places.

We will continue east now stopping at points of interest along the way.   We already miss the Rockies with their snowcapped peaks and cool temperatures.  We talked with a couple this morning returning from Alaska.   They said it rained most of the time up there but they loved the trip.  Maybe next year we will head that way.

Friday, July 16, 2010

July 16, 2010 Cody, WY

Our neighbors were up early and gone.  We were sorry we didn't get to say goodbye.  We finally got around by 9:00 AM.  We decided to go to Cody, WY to see the Buffalo Bill Cody Museum.  We heard it is a fabulous place.

This change in plan required us to drive back up through Yellowstone Park again,  This time, however, we drove the east side of the park to Rt 14/16 to Cody.  We passed some more bubbling pools and steaming basins.  Seen one you have seen them all.  We were surprised to see more wildlife today than we had when we were here before.  We saw an elk and a buffalo alongside the road.  We stopped for a quick photo.


Our route also took us around Yellowstone Lake.  It is an immense lake that you can't see across in places. This would be a beautiful place if all the trees had not been burnt off in a forest fire.  The fires have really destroyed about 90% of the forests in Yellowstone.  Everything is new growth or burnt woods.
Yellowstone Lake with the Tetons in the distance.

A bay on Yellowstone Lake

Leaving the park required a long crooked descent of a mountain pass.  It was very steep with a sheer drop off on our side but there were guardrails to mark the edge.  Some people had hit the guardrails so hard on some turns as to break them off.  We wondered if they went over.  We crept down in low gear much of the way.  Most of the turns were 25 MPH turns.

Once in the valley, the scenery changed dramatically.  The mountains looked like hardened heaps of mud that the wind had worn away making strange shapes.  The Shoshone River rushed along its course.  Fishermen were wading, casting flies to waiting fish.  It was a pleasant drive.
Shoshone River

The temperature began to rise as the day wore on.  It was in the 90s by the time we reached Cody.  This is the first hot weather we have experienced in a couple of months.  Looking at weather reports across the country made us think about turning around and heading back to the mountains.  We think we rushed our departure by a couple of weeks.

Cody lies in a desert area of Wyoming.  We don't like this kind of countryside at all.  Deserts are brown, drab and hot.  Already we are longing for the mountains of the northwest.  They are so green and picturesque.

Once in Cody, we went to the Buffalo Bill Museum.  It was well worth the ticket.   It is a prodigious building.  It is divided into several sections including: firearms museum, western art gallery, plains Indians museum, Buffalo Bill and Associates Museum and a museum of natural history.

We spent the entire day there until closing at 6:00 PM.  Our pass is good for two days so we can return in the morning if we desire.   As we entered the property, we ran into none other than Buffalo Bill himself.  Darlie had to have her picture taken with him.

Though it is hot here, we don't regret making the trip to see the museum.  We stopped at a BBQ place for dinner hoping it was nice and cool inside.  It wasn't.  We are camped now with the generator running to keep the air going to keep us cool.   We couldn't find a park with hookups tonight.  We are dry camped again.  I did find a good internet connection here though.  We don't have a clue where to go from here.  We really don't want to head to the east where it seems to be very hot.   Tomorrow will take care of itself.