Showing posts with label Home in Ohio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home in Ohio. Show all posts

Friday, July 22, 2011

Mid summer Status Update


Home, Jamestown, OH



It has been a while since I last posted any status on our attempts to "change our lives". So here is the latest.
Trips under consideration at the last posting were Canada West, Canada East, and West by the southern route. They have all been shelved for "sometime in the future". I hate that phrase because when you reach a certain age that becomes a euphemism for “probably never”. Each one was deferred at a different time for a different reason – none of which is important here.
We are spending most of the summer at home preparing to leave. The bulk of our time and energy devoted to de-clutter. I’m declaring victory in that war, although we still have a couple areas of resistance. We had a massive garage sale, a few trips to Good Will, and rented a storage shed. Some stuff went via Ebay, a load went to the county recycle center, another to a construction dump site, and one to the county document shredding facility. Books, records, tapes (audio and video), CDs, and DVDs went to Half Priced Books. There were also many overfull trash days. Early last spring, we took a trailer full to Tricia in North Carolina and one to Adam in Denver. Naomi got some stuff too. I congratulate Michelle. I know this was hard for her but she provided the energy and tenacity to achieve the victory. Around the house, we had some landscaping done outside, and did some repairs and touch-up inside. Still a few things to do, but we are talking hours not days.

We squeezed in a one week trip to Myrtle Beach, SC and Fayetteville, NC at the beginning of June. Motivated primarily by a birthday party for our granddaughter Ava, we included some real estate shopping in the Myrtle Beach area and treated it as a shakedown cruise for the Cougar.

This was our first trip with the ‘big rig’ and most of the learning had to do with maneuvering – from backing into campsites to picking fuel stops that we could access and were spaced at a comfortable distance. Right now I am sold on Flying J. They are making a big push to capture the RV customer. I used the trip planner on their web site and their RV Travel Guide to select fuel stops and restaurants. It all worked out well. Check out their web site and signup for their RV Traveler discount card.

Selling the house is not going well. After one open house in early June, there has been only one showing. The same is true for the other sellers (about ten) around the lake. No one is house hunting.Our realtor has decided to make a major effort to reach military personnel moving into the area – not just for us but as a general population that represents a possible market for her. I spent an afternoon doing a web search for sites devoted to military shopping for houses. I found six and passed them on to her. There is some street traffic – people who drive by, stop and pick up a flyer from the box on the For Sale sign, and drive on, however, no calls for appointments to show the house.

There are a couple other items representing small movements in the right direction. We discontinued our land line telephone service. That felt strange. I have no love for ATT. It’s a fact that their service in our neighborhood has grown steadily worse over the years – mostly from overcrowded and deteriorating wires which they refuse to replace. However giving up the phone number that we have had for over thirty-five years does represent permanent change. We are also filling out change of address cards. The new address will be a mail forwarding service – yet to be determined. That is an interesting subject with a lot of ins and outs that I didn’t expect.

The overwhelming event of the summer was Thursday 07 July when we had to put our beloved Golden Retriever, Bailey, down. She had been diagnosed with cancer several months prior. We spent the interim appreciating her company and dreading the day we knew was coming. We miss her terribly and I don’t want to say any more about it.

On a brighter note, departure date is fixed – Monday, 29 August. I have been searching for opportunities to “volunteer” in exchange for a free full hookup campsite. This falls under the general heading of Workamping (go to www.workamper.com). All kinds of opportunities are available. If you do it for a private company, you are an employee, you get some dollar amount as wages, and the value of your campsite and hookups become barter income that must be declared at tax time. If you do it for a government agency, e.g., national or state park, or non-profit, you are a volunteer not an employee. There is no wage, the campsite and hookups are free, and are not considered barter income. Most places are looking for about 20 hours per week. There is a whole subculture doing this.

I found a place that fits, sent them an application (resume) with our availability, and got accepted. So we will spend September and October at the Panhandle Pioneer Settlement (www.ppsmuseum.org) in Blountstown, FL. Where?? Blountstown is in the Florida panhandle about half way between Panama City and Tallahassee. They are expecting ten hours of work per week from each of us.So we will depart here on Monday 29 Aug, take three days to get there, and “report for duty” on Thursday 01 Sep. On the other end, we will leave on Monday 31 Oct and take one day to reach our new winter digs at The Great Outdoors (TGO) (www.tgoresort.com) in Titusville, FL where we will stay until 30 Apr 2012.

That’s all for now. Let’s all enjoy the heat.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

It's Official


Yuma Trail, Jamestown, OH





Major milestone this week. On Tuesday 24 May, the sign went up. I guess it's official now.

I get the feeling selling a house is like trying to swim out of quicksand. Things that we haven't cared about for 30 years, now have to be done with great urgency. "Stuff" that we haven't seen for 30 years, now has to be carefully packed in case we might need it someday. I told both my kids that if they take the junk offered now, they can off load it at the nearest dumpster on their way home. If they wait until I die, the same stuff becomes "priceless family heirlooms" they will be required to keep forever.

Travel plans have changed. We are going to Myrtle Beach, SC for two weeks (May 31 to Jun 14), then returning home to continue working on the house until "the list" is completed. First order of business is the world's biggest garage sale followed by the world's biggest trip to Goodwill.

Monday, April 11, 2011

The Cougar Comes Home


Yuma Trail, Jamestown, OH


The Cougar has landed. Today was cold, windy, and rainy. We spent the day at Colerain RV in Cincinnati. After we signed our lives away, we got a complete instruction tour of the unit. Then had a fun lesson on "hooking up". Finally got the new toy home about 6:30PM. Tired but feeling great. I guess this is really happening.

The unit is a 2011 Cougar High Country Model 291RLS for those who care about that stuff.


Sunday, April 10, 2011

First Steps


Yuma Trail, Jamestown, OH


Two weeks ago we removed the cap from the truck and stored it suspended from the garage ceiling. Same place and arrangement that I stored the Miata hardtop for many years.

This past week we had the fifth wheel hitch installed in the truck. There was a bit of a hassle because the 18K hitch I ordered turned out to be physically too big for the truck bed. So we had to go with a 12K. No problem now, but if/when I move up to a bigger truck and/or trailer I will not be able to take the hitch with me. Shame because this hitch is over $2,000.

The SuperGlide hitch is made for short bed trucks. When you turn, the king pin moves rearward several inches. This prevents the front of your trailer from crashing into your truck cab -- probably a good thing. Other hitches require you to exit your truck and manually reset the hitch position to permit the turn and then manually set it back after you have completed the turn. Not a very effective arrangement.