Friday, March 25, 2016

Waiting for a rainy day

The two Thousand Trials campgrounds are about 70 miles apart in central Florida


I've been waiting for some inclement weather to write a blog posting. It didn't seem as if I had much to say and I waited for a rainy day, thinking having nothing better to do would motivate me. I'm always trying to think of something interesting to write about and sometimes that's not easy. The truth is, snowbirding is not that much different than retired life anywhere. This yearly mass migration of RV's is for the most part not seeking adventure, but simply escaping the cold winters up north.

Peace River Campground in Wauchula, part of the Thousand Trails camping timeshare


As you know Millie and I have the blog printed into a hardbound book every year and because of that I chronicle some mundane things. It's a printing of one book for our own reminiscing so don't worry, you won't get any ad's offering it for sale. Anyhow my dilemma as the author is trying to make a diary interesting for you blog readers. Sometimes when I finish a posting I think, well that's pretty boring and not something anyone would be interested in. Then I get some feedback, thanking me for writing the blog and I'm inspired to keep it going.


Anyhow, hang in there, spring has sprung, summer will be here before we know it and our trip to Canada will provide some interesting topics. 

Route for our caravan tour later this year.


As I write this we are sitting in site B24 at Orlando Thousand Trails after being gone for our mandatory seven days out. With timeshare camping after a fourteen day stay you must leave for seven, that's how they keep spaces available for the members. With the membership I have I can go park to park, meaning I must leave but can go directly to a sister campground. I can spend the whole winter bouncing back and forth between the Orlando Campground and a smaller park about 75 miles away in Wauchula.

Site B24 at Orlando TT


Millie loves the Peace River Thousand Trails campground in Wauchula. She's a country girl and is about as happy as can be when we can get a waterfront site. We spent a week in site P77 under a canopy of live oak and palm trees, our motorhome just feet from the Peace River.

Backed up to the Peace River in Wauchula


Because Peace River Campground is in a rural area with not much to do, I scheduled three projects for the week.

Project One: On nights that are cold our bathroom gets uncomfortable. This is due to the heat loss through the shower skylight and the roof exhaust fan. In the past when heat was needed we have used a small portable electric heater, but the bathroom has little floor space and there was just no good place for it. I installed a small wall unit in the vanity. It has both a 60 minute timer and an adjustable thermostat, it is just right for the space.

New heater in the bathroom


Project two: The vinyl graphics on our motorhome have deteriorated. From my observations a lot of Winnebago motorhomes from the early 2000's suffer from the same defect. While the vinyl outer surface has shrunk and cracked the adhesive is like epoxy and is near impossible to remove.

repainting a stripe


I tried adhesive removers, heat gun, rubber wheel, razor scraper, the new plastic razor blade scrapers, all to no avail. The daunting task of removal at the minuscule pace I was achieving with the aforementioned methods drove us to desperate measures. Last year we taped off the large graphics and painted them. We used exterior latex paint we had mixed at Lowes to match the original color. After we rolled the paint on with a trim roller and let it cure for several days we sealed it with acrylic floor Finish. I'm not going to sit here and tell you it looks like new but I will say we were quite impressed with how nice it looked. After a year of exposure and washing's it has no signs of deterioration so last week we did the small narrow stripe. It had the same cracked finish and was equally resistant to removal. Millie helped me tape the top and bottom edges if the stripe, all 87 feet, it ran all the way around the RV.

In case you're wondering about the floor finish we used to seal the latex paint, I will let you in on one of our maintenance secrets. Our coach exterior, like many old RV or boat finish's, after long expose to the sun oxidizes resulting in a dull appearance. Many companies sell “Miracle in a bottle” waxes, oxide removers, buffers, polishers, etc to bring the original gloss back. None of them work and any shine they do produce won't last long.

I learned of using commercial floor finish on the internet and we've used it on this motorhome as well as the previous one. With the present coach the finish has been on for three years now with no fading, yellowing, cracking or peeling. Strong detergents will mark it so after cleaning bugs off the front I re coat it. Applying the finish is very easy, no rubbing or buffing. You wipe on three thin coats with a microfiber cloth, it's that easy.



If you research online, there are several articles about it, they name the product as Red Max Pro.
It was marketed under that name at Lowes Home Improvement stores. It is now sold both at Lowes and Home Depot under the manufacturers name Zep Wet Look Floor Finish. $25 a gallon and that will last a long time.

Project three: My last project while at Wauchula was to refinish our camping sign. Funny, I just wondered why I didn't just coat it with Zep. I guess I never thought of it because I was taught to only re coat lacquer finish with lacquer. Anyhow, it had a few dings in it and the wood underneath was darkening. I didn't want to completely strip the finish because I would have lost the painted portions in the process. I lightly sanded the damaged areas and resprayed with clear lacquer. It's not perfect but like a lot of my handy work, looks great from about fifteen feet away!





Millie bought herself one of those wrist ban gadgets that monitor steps, miles, pulse, etc. In addition to her morning power walks she joined the dance exercise group at the campground. Millie and Rebecca, who also has one of the Dick Tracy devices text-ed results to each other daily. That lasted for a week or so until Millie's back started complaining. She was laid up for a couple days is now just doing the morning walks.



home made vests for the grand kids



While she was recuperating she completed a sewing project, and as usual it came out perfect. When we were in the Everglades our tour guide gave everyone a sew-on patch from the Everglades National Park. Having two of them Millie started thinking of what she could make with the patches for the New Mexico grand kids. She designed and crafted “Wilderness Vests”. Evan and Marcus are typical six year old boys and I know they will like them, especially knowing they were made by “Grandma”!


Maggie in the pool with baby bubble bath


Our dog Maggie is well, she's still terrified of the hot air balloons that pass over the campground, doesn't care for big dogs and is obsessed with playing in her swimming pool.

In another week or so we'll head towards home, I have a couple stops I'd like to make along the way, stay tuned!

Monday, March 14, 2016

582 ceiling tiles

March 14 2016

Tuesday morning is the end of our 14 day stay here in Orlando so I figured this is a good spot to bring the blog up to date. It's been a whirlwind of activity around here, entertainment, flea markets, a little work and an exciting RV fire!

Another of the dreaded RV refrigerator fires


I guess I better explain the fire first, no it wasn't our motorhome. A motorhome in the park was pretty much toasted the other morning. The fire started with a malfunction in the ammonia gas absorption refrigerator. This is the third frig fire I've seen here in Florida, very scary stuff that's why I have a HALON fire suppression system in my refrigerator compartment. BTW, the unlucky owner of the destroyed RV is from Milford Delaware, I've spoken to him in the park before, but never knew him when I lived up that way.

Halon fire protection for my frig
 
Flea markets and yard sales; I'm blaming most of it on Millie, I rarely buy anything. Luckily she doesn't either as we have very little storage in the RV. Mostly we walk around and look at stuff, it must be in the retired snowbird rule book because cotton-tops is about all you see walking around the markets.

At the Webster Flea Market


Shortly after our arrival here in Orlando we went to the huge Webster Flea market with Clay and Rebecca. Clay and I walked at least 10 miles thru the vendors looking for an electrical connector we needed for an Ahooga horn we were installing on his coach. Don't ask, I think Clay spent too many frozen winters in Upstate New York. Anyhow, we could have bought it from autoZone for $3.59 but what fun would that be, we found one at Websters for $1.




You never know what you will see at a Florida flea market, in past posts I've told of Blingo the used car salesman, Deep tissue massages right out in the open in a vendors stall, pretty near anything you would want to buy, switchblade knives is the latest contraband item I've seen openly displayed. The other day as I passed booths of salesmen selling “Miracle” products that cure everything using magnetics or copper, or mystery metal from space I was reminded of the miracle I witnessed last week at Renningers Market. In the time it took for me to walk past a booth, the proprietor who was some kind of faith healer cured a man of Bi Polar disorder. I'm not kidding (wink), I don't think she would lie about something like that and the man said he felt better!

Lakefront at Howie in the Hills


Our discovery tour to Mt. Dora was such a success Millie and I went on another one to Howey in the Hills on Saturday. That's about the coolest name for a town as I've ever heard, so we decided to give it a visit. It's a sleepy village on Lake Harris but it had a few interesting surprises. First, this was town wide yard sale weekend and we stopped at every one. I'm thinking maybe I was hoodwinked into this trip on this particular weekend! The second good discovery was Boondocks Bar and Grill, we enjoyed an excellent lunch there overlooking the lake.

Boondocks Bar and Grill


The final and neatest discovery was an old mansion we found on the edge of town. It was built in 1927 by William John Howey the founder of the town. An entrepreneur born 1876 he was in many ventures before settling in Florida. At one time he started his own car company, Howey Automobile Company. He only built seven cars before closeing the company and moving to Perez, Mexico. There he bought a large tract of land, hoping to develop pineapple plantations, but the Mexican revolution forced him back to the USA. Eventually he relocated to Florida where he became a citrus grower and land developer. His widow lived in the house until her death in 1980, it has gone thru several owners since then and is presently in receivership, waiting for someone to restore it to its former obulence.

Millie at the Howie in the Hills Mansion



At the campground this week we've attended a couple music acts, neither of them really very good. That's IMHO of course. Mercy Seat is a gospel trio, I liked the first few gospel standards done in three part harmony, it went downhill for me after that with contemporary church music. Windswept is a couple who played music from the 1920's on a variety of woodwind instruments, and that's all I'm going to say about that.


L-R Clay, Rebecca, Millie, Larry


Wait, I do have one observation from the Windswept performance, there are 582 ceiling tiles in the activity center ballroom. 

Millie and I returned to the Strawberry Festival to see Martina McBride in concert. I had selected the Charlie Pride concert last week and this was Millie's choice for our second show. To be honest I was being the dutiful husband, but wasn't expecting any wow factor from Ms McBride. I was pleasantly surprised, it was a really good show. She has a great band which includes not only the standard guitars, drums, and keyboard but also a four piece brass section. Martina's and her three backup singers not only did some of her hit songs but also covered popular music. It may sound strange, but mingled in with Broken Wing, This ones for the girls, Wild Angels and Independence day, they did Come see about me (Supremes), Wild Night (Van Morrison), Prefect (Pink) and Bring it home to me (Sam Cooke). The whole show was a mix like that and it was a huge success.


Martina McBride at the Plant City Strawberry Festival


That's about it for this blog, Tuesday we head south about sixty miles to Wauchula, home of the sister Thousand Trails campground here in Florida.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Orlando Thousand Trails, almost like going home


Manatee Hammock to Orlando Thousand Trails



March 1 2016

We drove 65 miles up rt. 27 to the Orlando Thousand Trails Campground. The 850 site campground was nearly full but we have reservations and had no trouble picking out a spot (B-31) to park for our fourteen day stay.

I have to say I like this campground. The campsites are spaced well apart, it is well maintained and there are lots of activities. Thousand Trails is a time share membership, having over 80 campgrounds throughout the US. Millie and I have been to about 25 of them and so far as we've experienced, Orlando is the crown jewel of the system.

We spent a couple days settling in, making the obligatory Walmart run, getting some coffee from the new WaWa and greeting our friends Clay and Rebecca. They arrived the same day as us, them coming from the west coast of Florida.


At the Plant City Strawberry Festival



On Wednesday March 3 the four of us went to the opening day of the Plant City Strawberry Festival. We spent a couple hours of the gloriously warm and sunny day walking through all the exhibits and vendor areas. We had a carnival food lunch from one of the many food trailers, I had Chicken on a stick and French Fries, mighty good eating!

Charlie Pride


At three o'clock we filed into the Wish Farms Sound stage to our seats about 15 rows back from the stage. During the festival they have two headliner shows everyday, one midday and one evening. The show we had selected was country singer Charlie Pride. He has been performing for fifty years, in fact I had the pleasure of seeing him perform in Savannah Georgia way back in 1971. While we did enjoy the show, Millie and I agreed that it's probably time he thought about hanging it up. There's a lot of truth in the saying about quitting while you're on top. There were more than a few times Charlie forgot the words and his band had to help him out.

Local entertainer Lou Renshaw at Thousand Trails CG


Back at the campground on the next two consecutive days we saw two shows. Lou Renshaw is a troubadour who makes the circuit down here in wintertime Florida. He puts on a good performance playing a variety of tunes, most of them dance-able.

The following night we saw Then and Now, a female singer (I forgot her name) and Mike Thomas on Keyboards. It's an OK show, I've seen it before, too much Neil Diamond music for my tastes.

At Mt Dora flea market


On Saturday morning Millie and I drove up to Mt. Dora, a town about 30 miles north. The primary objective was Renninger's Flea Market, Lake county's largest with 1000 vendors. We walked and walked and walked, I don't remember buying anything, but it was interesting. 

 

Many years ago I visited downtown Mt. Dora and remembered it as having a quaint little village atmosphere. The tourist area is larger than I remember but it was very vibrant with lots of activity. We enjoyed lunch at a Victorian (circa1883) hotel on the bank of Lake Dora called the Lakeside Inn. 

The front lawn of the Lakeside Inn


 
After our meal we meandered the manicured lawn past a family playing ball and further on, workers setting up for an outdoor wedding. At the waters edge a group of about 12 senior ladies was boarding the lake tour boat. This was the same group that was seating near us in the restaurant. They had a great time during their meal and was sufficiently lubricated for continued merrymaking on the lake tour.

Larry and Millie after our ride in the seaplane



We walked on to the long dock where the seaplane was tied up. It was there that we met John Justad, the owner and pilot of the 1957 Dehavilland Beaver. You would never guess its vintage because it is in pristine condition. 

 

He usually makes customers wait until he has five or more passengers but it was a slow day so he agreed to take a flight with just Millie and I. He explained that it would be a shorter tour than if the plane was full. We were genuinely interested in the airplane and his tour commentary so we kept asking questions and he just kept flying and talking. As I had said it was a picture perfect day for flying and I think John wanted to be up there as much as we did, it was a great experience.




After the airplane ride we walked to a small park and caught the end of a car show, most of the cars had left, but they didn't charge us anything to get in. 



Check out these beauties!

 
It was later on this same day that we met up with Clay and Rebecca for the evening campground entertainment (Then and Now) I spoke of earlier. 

Local entertainers left=? right=Mike Thomas

 
Snowbird life, sometimes I think I should give up this life of leisure and do something productive......that thought passes very quickly!

See you down the road. 


Migrating north

The scenic route to Orlando Thousand Trails


February 28 2016

We wrapped up our stay in Florida City by taking the jeep back to the dealer to have a second air bag recall fixed. They had to remove the console and replace the air bag module. Hopefully this part will be the final solution to the problem. (Note: after one week, so far so good.)

On Saturday we made one last trip to Redland's, the predominately Cuban market. We didn't buy much, bananas is all I remember. We decided to eat lunch at a Mexican restaurant in Homestead. It is called Casita Tejas and with a name like that I expected authentic spicy Mexican food. It was a weird culinary experience because it was the blandest food I can remember eating in a long time. The spiciest ingredient was the onions in the salsa and that's not an exaggeration. They didn't even have any hot sauces on the table, it was all very strange.

Sunday at nine AM we pulled out of Southern Comfort RV Resort. We will be back next year, having reserved our site for January and February 2017. We drove north on rt. 997, avoiding the mad cap traffic up thru Miami. Junctioning with rt. 27 we followed it around Lake Okeechobee and on up to Highlands Hammock State Park near Sebring.

Fuel in Lake Placid=Raceway fuel
27.122 gallons
$1.71 per gallon.
Total $46.62
Mileage, 71543
Miles driven today approximately 180.

Millie at Manatee Hammock State Park



Our stay here was for two nights and we never left the campground. We hung around the RV, relaxing, reading and riding our bikes on several of the park trails.

Bike trail in Manatee Hammock SP



Riding the trails is like stepping back in time to old Florida and indeed it is, these trails were cut in the Hammock by Civilian Conservation Workers during the great depression. It a nice place, we will definitely return to Highlands Hammock if it fits in our travel plans.