It’s
now close enough to Christmas that Santa is saying it’s about time for a
Christmas blog or Santa can be naughty too and all the Welsh cakes will
disappear. Presently we are in Yuma, AZ, and it is so warm the inflatable Santa
Clauses are wilting. We were able to escape the Tucson Camping World after a
full day there and two new batteries. This truly has been the season for
giving. Tomorrow we move westward to CA to be in place early for our Rose
Parade gathering starting on the 27th of December.
But,
back to the Christmas blog.
We
needed to have a picture of the main principles in this blog. A selfie was
called for; a selfie with two wiggling dogs doesn’t always translate into award
winning portrait photography. But it’s us: Shannon, Tuzi, Lilly, and Alan
sitting in a deserted Pima County fairgrounds in Tucson waiting for some word
on the fate of our motor home. Merry Christmas.
Looking
backward at 2015 because we don’t have much cooking to look forward to in 2016,
it was a year filled with both routine and new experiences, renewals of former acquaintances
and adding to the list of friends made on the road, health scares, and travel adventures of the white-knuckle kind.
ROUTINES
AND NEWNESS: Volunteering, preparation for moving down the road, and motor home
components that fail are now part of the routine life of the RVer. The newness is
seeing mountains and sunsets and sunrises and deserts that look different than
any others we have ever seen, and waking up in different campgrounds not sure
if we are in Ypsilanti or Walla Walla. We started the year in South Carolina and
will end it in California. But that is what RVing is all about: a home on
wheels.
ACQUAINTENCES:
Shannon continues to expand her Face Book contacts with the always interesting
characters met on the road. There is a camaraderie developed among RVers who
are volunteering. Perhaps it’s because we experience similar things: most everyone
has had slide issues, tire troubles, wrong turns, and volunteer coordinators
from hell. But maybe too it’s because we know we will likely not see each other
again that maintaining connections are important. We visited with the A’s who
were loafing in Florida and the Horn’s who were working in Florida. We had
lunch with the Twomeys, our favorite MN volunteer couple, in a dingy, dusty
eatery somewhere in the desolate New Mexican desert that only the Twomeys could
ever find again. We were pleasantly surprised when we bumped into Greg and
Kathy at an Escapade event in Tucson in March. Visits are special and partings fill
us with conflicts: anxious to get going and heed the call of the road but hard
to say goodbye knowing the opportunities may not arise again to see each other
face to face. And so we have electronic media to keep us connected and always the
memories of the times we were together in the flesh.
This
year we were able to connect with members of Shannon’s family who we have not
had the opportunity to connect with significantly within the past. We were able
to visit with Shannon’s brother and sister, cousins, nieces and grand nieces.
We especially treasure the times we were able to spend with her cousin Joan and
her husband Ron and are still laughing remembering those visits. Shannon was
able to fly back to MN for a week to get a grand kid fix and to continue our
downsizing effort that we started more than 5 years ago. Our oldest grand,
Logan, got his driver’s license this year, and our youngest grand, Olivia, was
so excited to see her Nana for the first time, and now is a bouncing delight
when we Face Time with Rhys. Our downsizing was what was stored at Kedric’s before
his move to Portland, OR. In July Kedric and Paul stopped by to see us in
Colorado on their way to OR and are now settled in Portland
HEALTH
SCARES: I turned 70 this year. It’s a miracle every time I wake up in the
morning and an even bigger miracle when I can roll out of bed. Shannon was
hospitalized at the end of 2014 in SC for erratic heart rhythms. Her cardiologist
in New Mexico in March diagnosed it as a-fib. In September it was decided not
to undergo any surgery but to manage it with drugs for a year. She is generally
doing okay, but as we age, health definitely becomes a focus in our lives. As
of this time, our plan is to continue doing what we have been doing and see
where life takes us.
WHITE
KNUCKLES: The white knuckle travel adventures seem to be every time we get
behind the wheel of our big rig. Shannon worries about uphills, downhills,
curves, traffic, getting into and out of gas stations, and is terrified every time
I take over the driving. Our RV travel days are not contributing to our white
hair because it is as white as it will ever get, but our knuckles will be permanently
white and our steering wheel has permanent hand prints at the 10:00 and 2:00 positions.
So
we arrive back at Christmas. And all that can be said is once again “Merry
Christmas.”
1 comment:
Merry Christmas you two!! Can't wait to see where 2016 takes you!! XO April
Post a Comment