OK I admit it: I'm a bit sad to leave Yuma tomorrow. That's probably a "first" during 15 years as a full time RVer. If a place is worth going to, it is worth staying at -- until something goes wrong. Usually the weather becomes uncomfortable, or you've used up your time limit, or you've acquired a noisy neighbor. It's fun to leave when you really want to leave. Otherwise you are just wasting money on frivolous sightseeing -- the thing that some internet-wit or other called "channel surfing with gasoline."
Don't think that I've gone soft in the head. Yuma itself is not interesting. But I hope to long remember how pleasant it was to get back into club road bicycling. The moral of the story is to stay flexible when "lifestyling".
Once again the upward and northward migration starts. Once again I yearn for some way to start a loose caravan or club of outdoorsy RV campers -- as opposed to mainstream, sedentary, portable suburbanites. Nothing will probably happen until somebody else joins minds with me. My friend Mark, of Box Canyon blog, is probably correct in recommending that I stay flexible if there is to be any chance of success.
Don't think that I've gone soft in the head. Yuma itself is not interesting. But I hope to long remember how pleasant it was to get back into club road bicycling. The moral of the story is to stay flexible when "lifestyling".
Once again the upward and northward migration starts. Once again I yearn for some way to start a loose caravan or club of outdoorsy RV campers -- as opposed to mainstream, sedentary, portable suburbanites. Nothing will probably happen until somebody else joins minds with me. My friend Mark, of Box Canyon blog, is probably correct in recommending that I stay flexible if there is to be any chance of success.
Comments
See you in Virgin, Utah, in November? Us in the RV Resort... you nearby on fabulous BLM ground chock full of biking and hiking and wash wandering.
mark