The good bad and the UGLY

I just want to start by saying how kind and friendly I have found Montana people to be. Everyone has been so helpful to us.

Circular Story: We leave Billings the 1st time and make it 30 minutes out of town and pull over at a rest area to check some plugs. While we are stopped and in the midst of our crisis (taking everything out of the back to get into engine) a nice woman comes over and precedes to tell us her bus cross country story.

Normally, we love these stories, we have several of our own. However, we aren’t particularly interested at the moment because of our failed attempt to leave Billings. She reminisces a moment too long then leaves. We pack back up the back and determine we should head back to Andy at veewee. We think it’s the air flow meter and he has tracked one down for us.

Trial two fails. It was not the bus flow meter. We circle back to pick up Andy so he can feel it now that she’s acting up. He does a roadside replacement on the ignition coils and Veronica is purring again at 6:30 PM, so we take off to Bozeman.

Remember my phone was busted? The ubreakifix repair guy in bozeman comes in after closing (830 pm) and works until after 10 on my phone so we can leave the next morning… Then, literally stops the phone off at the restaurant he’s recommended. #5stars.

We wake up, spend our am at the hot springs spa. As we leave the spa at 8am, we run into the lady at the rest area who says she was worried about us outside Billings and is glad we’ve made it to Bozeman. Small world.

We keep running down the road and get to a rest area in Taft, MT. We have experienced no issues, and have no second thoughts about stopping. When we come out, the bus won’t start. Literally tried a jump, a roll start, (4 guys out there pushing Veronica) and she won’t crank. We are in a dead zone. No cell. So this nice couple from New Jersey takes our number and copies of our AAA membership and goes to the next exit, and calls AAA for us. But we have no idea if they are actually coming. Then, this nice couple circles back around to let us know they have called (they went out of their way nearly an hour) but it’s still going to be about an hour. They leave and say they are going to call a state trouper to check on us later. We wait about 1.5 hours, and suddenly Veronica cranks. We are in a dead zone with no idea if AAA is actually coming and when? We make the decision to leave and try to get out of the dead zone. We have enough gas to get to the next bus repair shop in Spokane, WA. So, we don’t stop at the next town because we aren’t sure if they can fix her anyway. Next stop euro union.

#don’thydrate #straightthrough #nostopping

We love Veronica, but don’t trust her to get the remaining 750 miles to the coast and certainly not home. Hard decisions may have to be made today. She wouldn’t start after we stopped this evening. Today was stressful on many levels. Several kind people checked on us but it’s been a week and we still are waiting on Veronica.

Bozeman hotsprings
All happy before the breakdown.
MT
Lunch in Missoula
Veronica took a 3 hour sabbatical in a cell dead zone.
Spokane

Day 5, Poo brown bus has a spa day in Billings

Just sitting here at the Yellowstone River Campground waiting on the bus to get her checkup done. Likely we’ll be on the road again but Andy at VeeWee couldn’t replicate the problem. (Veronica is being evasive and not being transparent with her issues.) Recovery is only as good as what she’s willing to put into it.

Follow up, VeeWees got us back on the road. Big thanks to Andy and family. We had a great time but we’re glad to leave. Bozeman or bust…. Literally

I wish we could relax. ;0

Hardin time getting over the hill

  • Had the best night of sleep so far and the worlds best cup of coffee on our travels at the KOA in Kennebec, SD.
  • Made it through South Dakota, Wyoming  and into Montana
  • Midway through our portion of MT, Ringo barfed up a hair scrunchy that he attempted to digest unbeknownst to us. #gross
  • 75 miles deep into Montana and the bus started sputtering. After stopping at the Loves in Hardin, MT we figured it was better to be towed to VeeWee’s Air Cooled in Billings from the Loves, rather than from the side of the I90 with people driving 80 mph beside us.
  • Having Ringo in tow seemed like a bad idea until the tow driver said it was cool for him to ride in the tow truck with us (Ringo was the most comfortable in the air conditioning since leaving AVL). We even had a pet friendly room lined up but passed a Campground (Yellowstone River Campground)  literally a football field away from the fixit shop. That’s 100 yards. I’m not sure what that is in meters. But like I said, we’re broke down in Montana USA. So we’re just starting our vacation earlier with a different agenda.
  • I broke my phone screen, so this post was harder than normal, but the park has WIFI and we prevailed.
  • I’ve commenced relaxing.
  • Is there any whiskey in this bus?
Yellowstone River

Reminiscing my 2011 This I believe

I wrote this 10 years ago and found it for this post. It seemed like a good time to post my musing from a decade ago. Maybe I’ll work on a revision now that it’s just us. Seems weird to take a trip without my girls. It’s the first time I’ve ever been the outnumbered gender.

This I believe:

In 2002, a lovely couple sold our family Veronica. It has dawned on me since then that it was the best money we ever spent. She’s a member of the family that we dote over. We’ve had to nurse her back to health on occasion, because she struggles with a little gas problem; if you move her too fast, a little slips out, and that might even cause her to catch on fire …well, just that once.

Veronica is our 1978 VW Westy – more often we call her ‘the bus’

It all started when I came across an …‘older’ picture of my sister (8) and me (3) in a photo op on the top roof of my parent’s hippie van. My sister is in her jazzy bus-appropriate apparel. I matched (of course), and yes, we both matched the VW. It must have been around 1976. From this, an idea started to formulate. I love being in the woods, to smell the earth, walk in the rain, take a dip in a river, and camping under the stars with the sound of nature around me, but  I seriously value my sleep. At the time of the great bus idea, our first born was already impeding our sleep schedule therefore; sleeping was a central part of the new camping plan. Thus, I set forth to convince my husband that we (not I) needed a hippie van. Luckily, he didn’t take much convincing. With Veronica, it was love at first sight. We would have probably paid an arm and I leg, but, honestly, I feel like we ripped them off.

On our first trip out, we sat high in those bouncy seats with our 1& ½ year old daughter (Sadira) in the back counting tunnels (9) up to Mt. Pisgah. It was September. That was the first time that we entered the bus nirvana. We left work and the world behind us. It was the way it has been every trip since then, the feeling that all we need in the world fits into veronica. We built a fire and watched the light dance on the leaves above us. Sadira fell right to sleep. George and I stayed up talking by the campfire, sang songs, watched the stars, we even peed in the woods and then made plans where we would go next. The daily mundane had turned into a weekly adventure. The following morning, Sadira even slept in past 7, it was (at that time), a small miracle.

The beauty of Veronica is how she always works mysteriously to get to the core of what I think is important – what I don’t (shamefully) make time for everyday.

Here is what Veronica/the bus has taught/reminded me

●   To slow down… considerably, literally. Slowing down let’s you stop along the scenic routes, and the trip always ends up more meaningful. My parents were onto something, getting there IS half the fun – especially since the bus enables a good time, but you certainly don’t make good time.

●   To be flexible, to change my plans or NOT make plans – expectations are overrated and not having them is quite liberating.

●   To let fate lead you, like when you are out in the middle of nowhere and you bump into old friends – friends you may have just been talking about, well -you’d sure better invite them to dinner. Moments like that can be sacred. Friends become strangers too quickly. Sometimes the friendships you have to work the hardest to keep are the ones that are the most special.

●   National & State parks are the American pie – you meet all walks of life visiting them. If you are enjoying the park, you’re all right by me. I’m not too proud of our government expenditures most of the time – but in the park, I am very patriotic. 

●   To romp these beautiful mountains that I take for granted every day. I should know the swimming holes and sliding rocks and be able to share these treasures with my friends and family. And I have no excuse not to get in the water because there is always an extra change of clothes in the bus.

●   To share your food with others because it’s true that food brings people together. For that matter, sometimes a little thing like a salt shaker or a can opener can open the doorway to a new friendship.

●   Music is the heartbeat of life and for some reason it is always better outside. You should always carry a music book with a variety of songs on every trip, because I have never met a single person who hates all our campfire songs.

●   To live unplugged and only use the Internet to find the local brewery.

●   To let the kids get bored, so bored that they remember how to explore and play.

●   Veronica brings my family together and allows me to be present in my family by helping me forget the petty bothers of everyday life. She helps me show my kids the how and where I find meaning because trips in the bus are like going to church, I am closer to god in a poo brown bus.

Today’s bullets

We managed to sneak Ringo into a non pet friendly room after legitimately booking a pet room online that wasn’t available. Lesson learned. Call first.

Saw my first legal 80 mph zone, and drove #60mph..

We crossed the Missouri River 4x. Went through Missouri, IA, and half of SD. In those states, we encountered the strange assortment of MO billboards in 2 strict categories: repent and be saved OR adult superstores. ( correlated?) In SD now, and have entered the wall drug signage. 

Saw this strange… Jackalope?
Last pass on the Missouri river

Day 1: Ringo and the #pooBrownBus have left eastern daylight time.

We did our packing right this time, by interspersing a few minutes of friend time between packing shifts. After I dropped my equipment at 4, we had a fabulous banitsa made by Michael Shore on the porch formerly known as the covid Cafe.

We packed for a few more hours then met with Michael, and Craig, who sent us off with a 12 pack of hop juice for our roadtrip. We stayed up past 1130, but we managed to leave the house this morning by 9 and have officially entered central time @ #60mph in the #PooBrownBus

The morning was beatiful, and honestly it’s still pretty nice. We haven’t hit the heat wave yet, but the first song to play in the bus today was highway to hell (#plaidSeatSweat).

Three and a half days to the Oregon Coast. 100 miles to Illinois.

Departure
Chronicle:160880 miles at start
Traffic, but went ahead and knocked out the Hawaii license
It’s a bad day when you wreck into a semi.
Moving again.

Yeah, I quit my job…

Through a series of fortunate events, I’ve managed to acquire nine and half weeks of vacation. Long story short, I knew it was time to start a blog to recover from this past year (#politcallycrazy, #skincancernose, and #covidsux) and Zen out with our travel journal. I’m going to post the good bad and the ugly and those of you STILL working for the man can tag along. I hope to not miss any days and count my blessings along the way, starting now before my last day at Vaya.

Veronica, George and I launch next Thursday, but we are in Virginia celebrating a birthday with a grand on the VA creeper.

Bike ride along Virginia Creeper Trail
Along the route
Doesn’t get much better.
Starting out on a gorgeous day
Llyod always delivers.