Monthly Archives: March 2008

We got our wings!

Solar Panels

It is fitting that our new solar panels look like wings since our solar power system will free us to camp off the grid (like the S. Fork of the Umpqua River pictured below) and still decadently run our laptops, connect to the internet and do web updates. Of course, a little bit of sunshine would help! Even with the cloud cover and rain, we were keeping our batteries topped off operating in conservation mode. It will be awesome when we get a clear sunny day!

This morning finds us camped along the Rogue River in Valley of the Rogue State Park. It’s a bit more crowded than I prefer (unlike the Whistler County Park on the Umpqua which we had entirely to ourselves) but beautiful, and the solar is redundant since we have hookups. The sun is starting to shine and we’ll be able to run the fridge on solar while we drive today! Fingers are crossed that chain restrictions will be lifted before we cross Siskiyou Pass as we don’t have any, and we need to cover some miles today and tomorrow in order to be back “home” for Noche’s next vet appointment.

camping at Whistler Park, Roseburg, Oregon

Heeere we go …

Whenever we set out on the road we say “heeere we go” with a particular inflection. Our tradition originates from a bus driver named Gene who, before taking off from a stop, called this out to alert passengers that the bus was going to move so no one would fall. I rode his bus sometimes and Steve knew him, of course, from work. That was only a few years ago but Gene has left this earth. His premature passing was one of many nudges (along with some other pretty hard kicks) behind our decision to sell our house, quit our jobs, and set off on the road trip adventure that both of us have dreamed of seemingly forever.

This manifestation of our journey began almost a year ago on our annual anniversary vacation and it is auspicious that we finally set out on the 22nd anniversary of the day we met. The past year hasn’t been much fun what with lawsuits and work difficulties, the work of prepping our property for sale only for the housing market to go over the edge of awful, and worrying about anything and everything. But now is not the time to look back … we are moving on. Separating from people we love has proven to be the hardest part. I cried my way through my last 3 weeks of work and for Steve, leaving Nicole, just as their renewed daddy-daughter relationship grows into something very special, is wrenching.

I realize though that, even as we drive away, our Santa Cruz family is still part of us. Things will never be the same but they will be good. My morning started with a smile when I checked email (in the parking lot off I-5 where we slept last night) and found I had been cc’d on an emailed “difficult person alert” from the Community Center. The last line is my theme for today … “hope springs eternal” (thanks, Jack!)

Heeeeere we go!