Category Archives: RV travel

(Almost) blasé about bison

We got our first idea of the Yellowstone wildlife to expect back in Cody, WY at the amazing Buffalo Bill Center of the West. In the Draper National History section there were detailed explanations of the various landscapes that make up the Greater Yellowstone region – the more open Northern Range, the lodgepole pine forests (they cover 80% of the parkland), the plains (“where the buffalo roam”) and the mountain meadows. It was just the primer we needed before heading into the park.

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Signing into the Yellowstone campgrounds involves more than just site assignment. We had to initial a waiver acknowledging that we were in grizzly country. Huge metal food lockers for tenters to use. Lots of bear information – the what-to-do-if scenarios. Dogs are not allowed on the hiking trails (sorry Rigby) although it’s pretty easy to understand.

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Now that we’re here, we’ve seen lots of wildlife (although not the elusive gray wolf nor the grizzly). So many bison that after a day or two you start to get blasé about the experience. Ditto for the elk – although we did have a magical early morning viewing of elk silhouetted against the sunrise that will be forever imprinted on our brains. There have been many deer and a coyote snoozing in the field between the geysers. One, lonely bighorn sheep (“the master of the mountain”) nibbling on some grass and a flock of snow white pelicans fishing in the Yellowstone River. At the museum we learned that the bighorn sheep have air filled chambers in their skulls to absorb head-on-blows.

On the second day in Yellowstone, we set our alarm for 6am and were on the road 15 minutes later – freshly-brewed coffee in hand – for a day devoted to wildlife watching (gotta love the Roadtrek – it really is up-and-out in no time). Luckily, the day we chose was the one day we’ve had here with clear blue skies from start to finish.

We were barely out of the campground when we came across the harem of elk, with the sun just barely coming up behind the Absaroka Mountain Range to the east. We stopped and just watched for a good 10 minutes. What a way to start the morning!

Our goal for the day were the wildlife rich Hayden and Lamar Valleys – more open grasslands favoured by the larger animals, like the bison. And we wanted to get there early, before the car traffic started to clog the roadways.

It wasn’t long before we were slowed to a crawl by our first bison jam. These iconic symbols of the West can weight 2,000 lbs and charge at 30 mph (you and me can run – maybe – 10 mph, so you do the math). If they decide to cross the road, there’s no argument.

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In the early 1800s there were an estimated 60 million bison roaming the Great Plains of the West. They were hunted so intensely that they were almost wiped out – by 1890 there were fewer than a thousand left. The Yellowstone herd was protected in the early 1900s and has now grown to a herd of about 4,000.

The Lamar Valley and the Northern Range are much more open, fewer trees, more grasslands and high plateaus peppered with sagebrush. This open topography is favoured by the bison and by the grizzlies. Saw the former (in spades), still looking for the latter. Black bears prefer the mix of woods and meadows.

When you come to Yellowstone and are looking for wildlife, here’s where you want to go:

  • Lamar Valley and Hayden Valley – elk and bison
  • Yellowstone River – fly fishing (catch and release only) and white pelican flocks
  • Northern Range – gray wolves and bear (black and grizzly), bison, elk, deer and pronghorn antelope

We’ve posted a separate photos-only piece about Yellowstone wildlife. Have a look. Have you been to Yellowstone? If so, what wildlife did you come across?

www.nps.gov/yell/index.htm

www.YellowstoneNationalParkLodges.com

www.travelwyoming.com

www.visittheusa.ca

Yellowstone: An Acts of God theme park!

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Think of Yellowstone as an “Acts of God Theme Park.” It’s the most apt description we could conjure. There is so much to see and do in this mammoth national park that we’ve decided to write several posts – one on the geothermal activity in the park and another on the incredible wildlife. In addition, we’re going to create a few “photos-only posts.”

A bit of background: Yellowstone is the first U.S. National Park, established in 1872 by President Ulysses S. Grant. Pull out your map – you’ll find it in the northwest corner of Wyoming (although margins of the park cross over into Montana and Idaho).

Of course, as soon as we arrived at our campground, the temperature plummeted and it snowed. We felt so sorry for the campers in tents but we stayed dry and warm. We stayed at both Grant and Madison campgrounds operated by Xanterra – if you visit, make reservations early as the campgrounds fill up (even in snowy and cold weather!). The sites were well wooded and – this was a first for us – on registration we had to sign an acknowledgement about bear activity, both black and grizzly. There are large metal food storage boxes for tenters to use and all sorts of signs about bear activity.

So, let’s start with the geothermal sights. Everyone knows about Old Faithful – it’s one of 10,000 geothermal volcanic vents in the park – it was great but not the most interesting by far. A park staff member told us it gets the most press because “you don’t have to walk far from the parking lot to get to it.”

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We couldn’t get enough of the other sites – we laced up our hikers and walked the boardwalks, paths and overlooks to see steaming hot springs, mud pots belching blobs of liquid clay, geysers that erupted columns of superheated water, green, yellow and blue hot pools. And everywhere, streams of steam rising into the air.

The park is actually the location of a huge collapsed volcano caldera, the remains of the last major eruption 640,000 years ago. The huge crater marks the volcanic heart of the park. Oh yeah . . . It’s due to blow anytime and the eruption would wipe out most of the Northern hemisphere – isn’t that a cheery thought?

A few facts to wrap your mind around:

  • Yellowstone contains more hydrothermal wonders than anyplace on Earth (10,000+).
  • Half the world’s geysers are located here.
  • Hot springs seep to the surface and form steaming and bubbling hot pools.
  • Yellowstone is connected to the centre of the Earth – the source of heat for these geothermal features is molten rock.y21

Here’s our list of the best of the best – geothermal features that really captured our attention:

  • Grand Geyser – about a 30-minute walk along the boardwalk trail from Old Faithful and worth every step. It blows about every 90 minutes (a guesstimate) and shoots seven storeys into the air. Bonus: it lasts quite a while, five minutes plus.
  • Castle Geyser and Beehive Geyser – also on the Old Faithful boardwalk trail.
  • Mud Volcano and the Dragon’s Mouth – luckily we arrived early (7am) and well before the tour bus crowds, so had most of the place to ourselves. Imagine what a dragon would look like with its mouth open, constantly belching steam and fumes from the bowels of the earth and you’ve got a pretty clear picture.
  • Artists Paintpots with its fascinating grey clay mudpots. Imagine mud in the top of a double boiler and you’ve got the idea.
  • Norris Geyser Basin and the Porcelain Basin boardwalk is filled with geysers, mudpots, thermopools, the latter is the home to extremophile and thermophile organisms that thrive on the high temperatures and acidity.
  • It is impossible to find words that do justice to how expansive and otherworldly all this geothermal activity is. So, we’ve added an additional “photos-only” post. If you’ve been to Yellowstone, we’d love to hear your impressions. Please share your link to our posts and let us know about your own adventures to this part of the planet.

www.nps.gov/yell/index.htm

www.YellowstoneNationalParkLodges.com provides info and online reservations for lodging and campgrounds in Yellowstone

www.travelwyoming.com

www.visittheusa.ca

Immersed (and very happy) in the Bighorns!

There were a couple of typical small Western towns we wanted to explore on the way to Yellowstone National Park – Sheridan and Cody, both in Wyoming.

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We stayed a couple of nights in the super tidy Peter D’s RV Park: walking distance from downtown Sheridan, very clean showers and laundry, Wi-Fi included (although the signal was slow when the park filled up in the evening) and very, very dog friendly. Pete met us with a couple of dog treats for Rigby and then showed us the four-acre, fenced off-leash dog yard. This was great – after being cooped up in the van with us, Rigby really needed to stretch her paws.

What we liked most about downtown Sheridan is the authentic Western town feel. No fancy airs, a beautifully restored, historic downtown main street, small independent shops and all set against a backdrop of the stunning Bighorn Mountains.

This region is the setting of the Longmire book and TV series (Netflix) – author Craig Johnson is a local fellow who writes in details about the landscape and the people here.

Sheridan has long been a railway town – the tracks run a few blocks above main street – it was a nice stop to take a break and get settled into the Western mindset. Here were the highlights of our stay:

  • Main Street has beautiful architecture with dozens of brick buildings on the National Historic Register. At almost every street corner is a piece of public art sculpture, almost all Western themes.
  • The Mint Bar (Main Street) with its very cool neon sign and photos of cows alongside local celebrities blanketing the walls.
  • They have everything (and we mean everything, except the horse) you could possibly need for a horse at King’s Saddlery. It’s also prominently on Main Street, right close to the bookstore and the coffee bistro.
  • Just looking up and seeing the Bighorns. Sheridan is a popular spot for excursions to the mountains.
  • A five-minute drive from downtown is the Trail End State Historic Site, a beautifully restored early 20th-century brick mansion that once belonged to the prominent Kendrick family.

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Once we tore ourselves away from Sheridan, we went west along Highway 14 into the Bighorn National Forest and up and over the Bighorn Range on the Wyoming Scenic Byway. There was a dusting of snow on the trees at the 8,300-ft pass and we slowed down for a herd of cattle and wranglers making their way along the roadway. Outside temperature up top was just above zero Celsius. Back in Ontario they were sweating through an unusual September heatwave!

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What an amazing drive! One scenic vista after another and barely passed another vehicle the whole way (cattle yes, cars not so much). After the mountains and at the edge of the Bighorn Basin we passed through Shell: population 83 and home of two establishments, a campground and the Shell Beer-Café (guess they have to cover all the bases).

We arrived in Cody and were immediately taken with the main street – again, great, authentic architecture. Cody has a beautiful location, a rodeo grounds and lots to explore in town. We only had time to spend a few hours at the world-class Buffalo Bill Center of the West (a Smithsonian affiliate museum). It is huge – divided into five smaller museum galleries from natural history to the Plains Indians to firearms.

The museum aims to immerse visitors into the story of the real American West. William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody believed that by encountering authentic western things, people would come to understand and appreciate the West. He started as a scout for the U.S. Army but is best known for his Buffalo Bill Wild West Shows. Lots of archives on display like a cancelled Wells Fargo envelope, Pony Express saddles, telegraph equipment, etc.

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The part we liked the best was the natural history (the Draper Natural History Museum) on the sights, smells and sounds of the Greater Yellowstone region. It was very hands-on and touched all the senses. Howling wolves, bubbling hot springs, raging forest fires. Could have spent a whole day just in this section.

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It was a 90-minute drive to the east gates of Yellowstone National Park and another hour from there to our first night’s campground. So, more of Cody will have to be on the “next time” list. The drive east out of town is stunning – the beautiful drive up and over the Absaroca Range (a part of the Central Rocky Mountain Chain). We passed beautiful riverside campgrounds that are on our list for another time. We could happily be based in Cody for a few days to explore the town and the hiking/driving opportunities in the nearby mountains.

On to Yellowstone . . .

www.travelwyoming.com

www.visittheusa.ca

Wyoming … we’re here! Devils Tower is our first stop

After leaving the northern part of Custer State Park (still quivering after the Needles Highway drive!) we continued west and stopped for the night at a fantastic, secluded National Forest Service campground called Rueter, just north of Sundance, Wyoming (yes, the Sundance Kid was named after this spot). There was just one other set of tenters at the campground – a young honeymooning couple. We set up our new barbecue and grilled steaks for breakfast the next morning. Life is turning out to be pretty “rough” on the road!

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Our goal was Devils Tower National Monument, just north of Sundance. Devils Tower was the first National Monument in the NPS – established in 1906. It is still part of the Black Hills ecosystem. It’s also a popular spot for rock climbers. You may recognize it as Steven Spielberg’s location choice for Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

Devils Tower is a sacred butte to many of the Northern Plains Indian tribes (who oppose climbing the rock). Many Native stories involve bears – and at this site, the vertical lines look like a bear had clawed at the rock.

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We approached via Highway 14 from the south, came up over a ridge and there it was in the distance. Even though it was still quite far away, it was much more sudden and breathtaking than either of us expected.

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Up close, it is even more impressive: 1,558 metres high with sheer sides. Jo hiked the 2-km Tower Trail circling the base. The first half of the trail was busy but the last part was almost deserted – the lovely sound of the wind whistling through the ponderosa pines, chipmunks scurrying everywhere, birds chirping. Along the way, bright prayer flags or bundles were tied to tree branches.

Here’s your geology primer for the site: The tower is composed of igneous rock formed 1.5 miles below the surface, when the magma pushed up through the sedimentary rock layers about 50 million years ago. The rest is erosion, which stripped away the softer layer of sedimentary rock, leaving the cylinder-shaped igneous intrusion.

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Fun fact: Parts of Close Encounters of the Third Kind were filmed at the grassy knoll close to the boulder field at the base of the tower. But, most of it was shot inside a Goodyear hangar in Mobile, Alabama.

Did you know: A National Park is established by an Act of Congress; A National Monument is established by Presidential order?

www.travelwyoming.com

www.visittheusa.ca

Black Hills, Bison & Custer

We travelled further west along I-90 into the South Dakota Black Hills, an area best known for wildlife and Mt. Rushmore (did the obligatory stop; it’s striking, but it didn’t hold our attention for long). The Black Hills tend to get overshadowed by the “wow” factor of the dramatic Badlands but we found it just as beautiful and just as wild, in its own way.

We camped (at the lovely Stockdale South Campground) and explored the Black Hills’ Custer State Park, South Dakota’s first state park and a don’t-miss stop. If you go this way, head into the excellent Visitor Center for information and a breathtaking widescreen movie about the region (got lots of background that helped us map out the next few days). Kevin Costner narrates, which doesn’t hurt things either!
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Over the following days, we drove all the major scenic roads (which is, like, every single roadway): Iron Mountain Road with its pig-tail bridges (held up en route by a bison jam), Wildlife Loop Road, the drive to Wind Cave National Park and the nail-biting, hand-wringing, seat-clutching twists and turns of the narrow Needles Highway to the north. The latter involved three low and narrow tunnels cut into the rock that had us pulling out a tape measure first. Not kidding.

The Lakota called this land the “hills of black,” hence the name. There is a beautiful, pleasing roll to the land; the hills are covered with dark green ponderosa pine, the air is sweet with its fragrance and around every turn you’re likely to see deer, prairie dogs, elk, prairie dogs, pronghorn antelope, bison and maybe even . . . prairie dogs.

Custer State Park protects the American prairie bison. In the early 1800s, there were an estimated 30 to 60 million of the massive creatures. By the 1890s they’d been hunted down to near extinction – fewer than 1,000. Now, protected, there are 400 bison born at the park every year. The numbers are climbing and the main herd struts down the roadways like they own the place. Rigby was very interested.

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Further to the south, Wind Cave National Park is “one of the biggest pieces of Swiss cheese you’ll see.” The park protects the underground cave environment known as one of the few places in the world where there are large rock formations of boxwork. To the Lakota, Wind Cave is a sacred spot – the place marking the emergence of their people into the world above.

People kept telling us not to miss the Needles Highway. This would be immediately followed by clucking about how low and narrow the rock tunnels are. This was followed by the tape measure. In the end, we decided “nothing ventured, nothing gained” and it turned out that we made it through with no problems.

It is a spectacular drive. Twists and turns, lots of lookouts and drop-offs. Beautiful views of the Black Hills and towering granite spires that give the roadway its name. We stopped and did a hike along the Cathedral Spires Trail. Most of the way in the weather started to turn (that happens incredibly quickly here) and we cut it short and went back to the van. Getting caught in the mountains in fog and rain . . . not such a good thing.

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But those Black Hills – they are high on our list of places to visit again and again.

www.visittheusa.ca  

 

No, they don’t paint the rocks here!

Some things are worth getting up early for – and watching the first morning light wash across the rocks at Badlands National Park in South Dakota is one of them. We set our alarm and were into the park in time to sit and have a picnic breakfast by the rim. Wow. So beautiful and so serene that it’s impossible to find words. Hopefully some of our photos will give an idea.

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We were beat to the overlook by a couple of serious photogs, who’d settled in with their industrial-strength coffees, tripods and lenses the size of small bedrolls.

Badlands National Park protects the largest expanse of mixed-grass prairie in the U.S. It’s prairie dog heaven and at one time these grasslands were home to tens of millions of bison. In the space of less than a century the bison had been hunted to the edge of extinction (from 30 million to fewer than a thousand). Now they are protected, procreating and numbers have been building.

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Caution: not to scale.

The grasslands are just beautiful but the real star of a visit is the spectacular rock formations – pinnacles, canyons, rock outcrops with vivid coloured bands marking the different geologic eras. (According to the Park Ranger, they often get asked: “Who paints the colours on the rocks?” Sheesh.)

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The Badlands are also known for rich fossil beds, but not those of dinosaurs. This was an inland sea environment, so the fossil remains that have been discovered are water creatures like alligators.

We spent most of the day meandering along the park’s Scenic Loop Drive. It skirts the jaw dropping geologic feature of the Badlands – the 80-km long Wall, a formation that is still eroding (albeit very slowly) and divides the park into upper and lower prairie regions.

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This is the ancestral home to the Lakota who consider the land to be sacred, a living, breathing entity. It was also here that Lakota leader Bigfoot and his people were killed at Wounded Knee.

At the western entrance to the park is the famous Wall Drug (you can’t miss the billboards that hock the spot for 200 miles in either direction). If you like tacky retail, restaurants, more tacky retail, this is your place. We’re glad we didn’t give it more than a stop for an (overpriced) ice cream cone.

Westward to the beautiful, beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota. More on that next time.

www.travelsouthdakota.com

www.visittheusa.ca 

WARNING: “Guitar porn” below

Just when we were beginning to think Iowa was nothing but corn fields, we crossed into South Dakota (more corn but also enormous fields of bright yellow sunflowers) and stopped in the college town of Vermillion.

Had never even heard of Vermillion. Another surprise – who would have thought that it’s home to a world-class collection of instruments at the National Music Museum (NMM)? The billboard coming into town was a clue: “Les Paul, More Stradivarius.”

WARNING: Guitar porn below!

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Set aside the sheer beauty of this massive collection: 13,000 instruments are in the archive; just 1/3 are rotated out on display at any one time.

There are many one-off instruments – experiments tried and abandoned because too expensive to produce or too specialized for the market of its day. Over the years, the NMM has acquired numerous instruments from various musical icons – Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash – and it’s just very cool to gaze upon the guitar on which Dylan wrote “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” or on which Johnny Cash performed at Folsom Prison.

What’s clear is the dual influences of art and commerce on the progress of western culture.

We were knocked out by the tendency of instrument makers to consistently push the limits of their craft to perfect, innovate, improve and modify their designs. There was more than just art happening – there was the necessary money-making part of the equation. The instrument makers needed to satisfy their existing customers and grow their customer base.

Each designer pushing his own talents into new territory and challenging his peers to do the same. This seems like the grand energy that propels this art and commerce linkage: it’s not enough to make one lovely, ringing tenor banjo if you’re Orville Gibson. The world is going to beat a path to your door – if it’s any good – and you’re going to have to incorporate the design and artistic suggestions of your clients if you want to sell to them.

For one thing, you have to recoup your costs of production. But what good is it if all you do is recoup your costs? How are you going to make the next one if you don’t turn a modest profit?

The result is a virtuous circle that is on full display from exhibit to exhibit, through handcrafted Violas da Gamba from the 16th century to the Golden Age (before World War II) of Martin acoustic guitars.

Memories of Craig’s high school band days came roaring back (Jo … not so much!). The brass band section, particularly some of the designs by the C.G. Conn company of Elkhart, Indiana. Who didn’t play on a Conn instrument? These were simply fascinating as they tried to create instruments that produced more than one timbre for orchestras and players looking to enlarge the palette of sonic possibilities at their fingertips.

A terrific feature of the NMM is the iPod and headphone audio tour. You can listen to the instrument inside a glass case along with a short commentary on its features, design and manufacture.

We needed a couple of hours (and could have stayed longer). Get the iPod and headphones. They are included with admission and more than worth it. Wander through the exhibit rooms full of instruments you erroneously think you have no interest in.

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Highlights:

  • BB King’s Black Gibson ES-355 (Lucille)
  • 5 Stradivari instruments
  • Gibson Guitar Style 03 (1902) made by Orville Gibson
  • Mint condition D-28 Martin (1941)
  • One of Stevie Wonder’s Hohner Blues harps
  • Trumpet used as a prop in the film Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
  • Martin D-35 used by Elvis Presley (1976-77)
  • The Fred, Gretsch – Chet Atkins electric guitar
  • Martin D-28 used by Johnny Cash for the last 30 years of his life
  • Kay guitar played by Muddy Waters
  • Very rare Jacob Stainer violin in mint condition (1668)
  • Theremin – the world’s first electronic musical instrument NMM1

National Music Museum, on the University of South Dakota campus. www.nmmusd.org/

www.travelsouthdakota.com 

www.visittheusa.ca

“They built it & we came”: Jo, Craig, Rigby visit the Field of Dreams

Well, we are in Iowa.

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The Field of Dreams movie site is a little off the beaten track but well worth the trip if you are a baseball fan or a movie fan. It’s just a few kilometres outside Dyersville, Iowa (home of the National Farm Toy Museum!). Iowa is a beautiful state, often overlooked (it is part of “flyover country”). Think corn fields. Great swaths of them. But the land gently rolls, is spotted with neat and tidy farms, the roadways are great and the vistas beautiful. That being said . . . there are a lot of miles of corn fields!

We arrived on a picture-perfect September 1st: sunshine, lush green grass, corn high and thriving. For Jo it was a trip down memory lane – a previous visit with her family in the late 1990s; both boys are big baseball fans and both have found successful careers working in athletics.

The family that owns the spot (corn farm, farmhouse, baseball diamond) have stayed true to their commitment to keep commercialization to a minimum. They see approximately 55,000 visitors a year from all over the world. Admission is free and there is a modest gift stand. Visitors come to play a little pick up on the field, walk out from the rows of corn, sit on the bleachers or have a picnic lunch. They want people to revel in “the magic” of the place.

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The scene is supernaturally serene. A combination of dads and daughters or sons playing catch on the field, the absolute quiet, the unaltered landscape.

A few fun facts:

  • The film is based on the book Shoeless Joe by Canadian writer W.P. Kinsella (born in Edmonton).
  • Filming took 15 weeks in the summer of 1988. Cast included Kevin Costner, Burt Lancaster, James Earl Jones and Timothy Busfield.
  • Kevin Costner (who played Ray Kinsella) carved a heart with “Ray loves Annie” into the top wooden bleacher. It’s still there.
  • The corn was an issue during the film shoot schedule. The scenes were filmed in late June and the corn needed to be high but it was much too early in the season. So, water was taken from the creek to irrigate the crops and the corn grew taller than needed. For the scenes where Ray walks through the field of corn, a 12”-high wooden platform was built for the actor to walk along so he’d be above the tall stalks.

www.fodmoviesite.com

www.visittheusa.ca

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Hitting the road in our “new” Roadtrek 210 for a trial run …

Summer is a crazy time for us both – Craig is gigging and we both have all sorts of writing assignments on the go. This translates into very few available days for our camper van travels. We always try to head out for several long (6-8 week) trips in the delicious fall and spring “shoulder seasons” when campsites are only half-filled and the weather still tempts. Shoulder season works the best for our lifestyle.

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Read below for two parts: 1. Our Vermont camping trip and 2. What we learned about Class B travel this time around.

1. VERMONT IN THE SUMMER

We’ve been itching to do a trial run in our newly acquired 2006 Roadtrek 210 (we are carrying over the van’s nickname – High Cotton), so we blocked off four summertime days and crossed the border into Vermont. We have a long trip coming up in the fall – exploring U.S. national parks in South Dakota, Wyoming, Utah and Colorado – and really needed to get acquainted with the workings of the “new” van before departing on the Big Trip. 2016 is the centenary of the U.S. National Park System.

The Vermont state parks are lovely – no hookups, so the big rigs stay away and the campgrounds are small, nicely wooded with nightly rates that are very affordable (even with the dollar exchange). It’s Class B heaven.

We hopped around the state, starting with our all-time Vermont favourite, Silver Lake State Park in the hamlet of Barnard, just north of beautiful Woodstock, VT. Silver Lake is compact, the swimming in the small lake is perfect, it’s a 10-minute stroll to the quintessential VT country store in Barnard, a five-minute drive to the trailheads of the Appalachian Trail, and just 15 minutes into Woodstock, home to beautiful New England architecture, the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historic Site and the time capsule at the Billings Farm & Museum.

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From there we travelled east, stopping at the Cabot Cheese outlet – loved the Alpine Cheese and the Special Reserve. Then north to Stillwater State Park, which was nice but a lot like our Ontario Parks, so we are not likely to travel there again, given that we have something very similar (and nice) just down the road from home.

Our final stay was at Grand Isle State Park, on Lake Champlain. It is one of Vermont’s largest state parks but did not seem huge or crowded. The sites were nice, clean and private. But the real find of the trip was the day-use park at Niquette Bay State Park (about 20 minutes north of Burlington, VT). What a fantastic find! It’s a one-mile hike through mature woods to the two swimming spots. We opted for Calm Cove: less crowded, slab rock shoreline, more secluded and – wait for it! …- off-leash dog friendly! Rigby had a blast jumping into the water and swimming about (as did we). There were three of four dogs there at a time – all well behaved with attentive owners. Not a single issue or problem. Niquette Bay is a bit off the beaten track, so fewer people go there, but it was the highlight of our travels.

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2. THE CLASS B LEARNING CURVE CONTINUES …

Vermont has hills – small by the Rockies standard but pretty big by Ontario stats. We learned that a Roadtrek 210 is not a car; it is more like a truck so it needs to be driven like one. On the long, winding downhills, this means being judicious with the brakes (or they will overheat – very scary) and shifting to low gears to use the engine to provide some of the braking needed. The advice we received was to power down when cresting a hill to be at the speed you’d like to drive down the hill at – then use the lower gear and brakes to maintain that low speed.

All in all, we are in love with our new High Cotton. It performed flawlessly and we had fun learning the new, upgraded systems – water, dump tanks, sleeping compartment, etc. We also added an external Coleman camp stove with a combination grill/burner bought at Canadian Tire. Our van has an external propane hookup to go directly to a BBQ, so it was super easy. The camp stove is more compact and more versatile than the larger barbecues. Loved, loved, loved it. Cooked and ate outside every day. And we happened to be in Vermont just as corn season was beginning.

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Jo talks travel on CBC’s Candy Palmater Show

P7190240Wow … that was fun!

This afternoon I got to sit in the studio and talk about my favourite Canadian destinations on The Candy Palmater Show on CBC Radio.

It was tough to whittle the list down (I could have gone on – and on – for an hour rather than the 12 minute time slot I had).

You can find the link here to the CBC spot and the audio: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/candy/the-candy-palmater-show-for-june-30-2016-1.3659588/workin-for-the-weekend-getaway-travel-writer-shares-her-favourite-canadian-destinations-1.3659697

Thanks CBC. And Happy Canada Day!