And then?
The next morning Julie and Alex woke up all raring to do something. We’d talked a lot the night before and, although we could have continued on by dragging the truck along on its front axle. It just didn’t seem like the right thing to do. That and, I was completely spent.
So Julie and Alex went off to go tubing down the river, while I took a long nap in the back of the truck.
Good lord! Once I’d given up finishing the WABDR, I’d lost control of the trip. They made go.. Hiking! How exhausting! How do they do it?
They make it look so easy.
Coolin’ our heels in the river. I gotta’ admit, it was really pretty out there.
Some cool waterwheel thing. You can’t see it very well in this picture. But it was still some pretty neat machinery.
Happy hour at the KOA, hanging out by the power plug charging our machines and snacking. Alex brought a bunch of Stargate Atlantis episodes and they were pretty fun to watch.
Playing around with NeoPixel strings. They put out a LOT of light!
I’d like to set up some camp lights with these. Hopefully for next time.
We got in touch with our son, Dan and had him bring our “modern” pickup truck.
He stayed for a night and we treated him and his buddy to a “Traditional German Dinner” in Leavenworth.
Umm.. We found that we are not fans of “Traditional German cooking” if that was really what it was. I think/hope the Germans cook better than that in Germany.
Interesting that this was some of the most enjoyable times of the trip. We were finally able to relax, see the sights and get some rest.
Trying to do the WABDR in six days was just too fast pace for us. Well, for me. I had no idea when we started what pace we could comfortably do. Now I have a better idea.
We learned a lot!
Three tote kitchen system? Two thumbs up!
The 5 gallon beverage cooler. That was a seriously great thing to have along. Fill it with ice, dump in a gallon of spring water and you are good to go for a day or so. Two thumbs up!
My oversized Hydroflask water bottle. When I bought it I thought maybe I’d made a mistake by getting such a big one. Used it all day every day. LOVED it! Two thumbs up!
Chase car? Saved our butts. Two thumbs up!
The camping table setup? Never ended up doing dispersed camping, so we were not able to test it. Maybe next time.
The CB walkie talkies? They were completely worthless! We tried and tried to use them, but they never worked further than maybe two hundred feet.
The truck? Its a really good size for a camper. Comfortable to sleep in and is really handy for breaking the ice and meeting people. Almost too handy. You have to teach yourself to slow down to really get it to perform. Major parts are old, suspect and few and far in between. The differential that failed was theoretically a new part. It had a little more than maybe 1,000 miles on it when it failed. I don’t know why it failed. That’ll have to wait ‘till I pull it apart and see. The vapor locking? I’ll have to figure that out as well.
The fuel gauge did not leak. Didn’t work either. It showed full or empty. Back to the drawing board on that count.
The cool WWII canvas bucket strapped to the Jerry can. This is such the common accessory with the army truck boys. Being tied to the Jerry can strap made it a complete pain in the neck. I ended up tossing it in the back of the truck. I assume its still back there somewhere.
Spare tire covering the driver’s door. Yes, it was a bit of a pain. But it wasn’t nearly as bad as I expected it to be. Packing the tire inside was much worse. You get used to it and it was extremely nice to have a spare when we needed it.
The WABDR map. Don’t rely on it by itself! Its little more than a “serving suggestion”. It has good information, but if Julie hadn’t brought along her Washington atlas, we would have been completely sunk. The WABDR map is missing a LOT of detail.
None of the people that signed up with us online made it to the trip. And, seeing how little we knew about what we were doing and how much we had to shoot from the hip, maybe that wasn’t a bad thing? I fear we would have just been in the way of anyone seriously doing the WABDR.
The truck’s packed away back in its garage. Its still nice out and Julie actually has her own 4Runner. She wants to do a road trip into Canada tomorrow..
-jim lee
The next morning Julie and Alex woke up all raring to do something. We’d talked a lot the night before and, although we could have continued on by dragging the truck along on its front axle. It just didn’t seem like the right thing to do. That and, I was completely spent.
So Julie and Alex went off to go tubing down the river, while I took a long nap in the back of the truck.
Good lord! Once I’d given up finishing the WABDR, I’d lost control of the trip. They made go.. Hiking! How exhausting! How do they do it?
They make it look so easy.
Coolin’ our heels in the river. I gotta’ admit, it was really pretty out there.
Some cool waterwheel thing. You can’t see it very well in this picture. But it was still some pretty neat machinery.
Happy hour at the KOA, hanging out by the power plug charging our machines and snacking. Alex brought a bunch of Stargate Atlantis episodes and they were pretty fun to watch.
Playing around with NeoPixel strings. They put out a LOT of light!
I’d like to set up some camp lights with these. Hopefully for next time.
We got in touch with our son, Dan and had him bring our “modern” pickup truck.
He stayed for a night and we treated him and his buddy to a “Traditional German Dinner” in Leavenworth.
Umm.. We found that we are not fans of “Traditional German cooking” if that was really what it was. I think/hope the Germans cook better than that in Germany.
Interesting that this was some of the most enjoyable times of the trip. We were finally able to relax, see the sights and get some rest.
Trying to do the WABDR in six days was just too fast pace for us. Well, for me. I had no idea when we started what pace we could comfortably do. Now I have a better idea.
We learned a lot!
Three tote kitchen system? Two thumbs up!
The 5 gallon beverage cooler. That was a seriously great thing to have along. Fill it with ice, dump in a gallon of spring water and you are good to go for a day or so. Two thumbs up!
My oversized Hydroflask water bottle. When I bought it I thought maybe I’d made a mistake by getting such a big one. Used it all day every day. LOVED it! Two thumbs up!
Chase car? Saved our butts. Two thumbs up!
The camping table setup? Never ended up doing dispersed camping, so we were not able to test it. Maybe next time.
The CB walkie talkies? They were completely worthless! We tried and tried to use them, but they never worked further than maybe two hundred feet.
The truck? Its a really good size for a camper. Comfortable to sleep in and is really handy for breaking the ice and meeting people. Almost too handy. You have to teach yourself to slow down to really get it to perform. Major parts are old, suspect and few and far in between. The differential that failed was theoretically a new part. It had a little more than maybe 1,000 miles on it when it failed. I don’t know why it failed. That’ll have to wait ‘till I pull it apart and see. The vapor locking? I’ll have to figure that out as well.
The fuel gauge did not leak. Didn’t work either. It showed full or empty. Back to the drawing board on that count.
The cool WWII canvas bucket strapped to the Jerry can. This is such the common accessory with the army truck boys. Being tied to the Jerry can strap made it a complete pain in the neck. I ended up tossing it in the back of the truck. I assume its still back there somewhere.
Spare tire covering the driver’s door. Yes, it was a bit of a pain. But it wasn’t nearly as bad as I expected it to be. Packing the tire inside was much worse. You get used to it and it was extremely nice to have a spare when we needed it.
The WABDR map. Don’t rely on it by itself! Its little more than a “serving suggestion”. It has good information, but if Julie hadn’t brought along her Washington atlas, we would have been completely sunk. The WABDR map is missing a LOT of detail.
None of the people that signed up with us online made it to the trip. And, seeing how little we knew about what we were doing and how much we had to shoot from the hip, maybe that wasn’t a bad thing? I fear we would have just been in the way of anyone seriously doing the WABDR.
The truck’s packed away back in its garage. Its still nice out and Julie actually has her own 4Runner. She wants to do a road trip into Canada tomorrow..
-jim lee
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