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Monday, June 28, 2021

fixing reba

Definition of friend

 

1aone attached to another by affection or esteem
She's my best friend. link
For the second time in just a matter of months, Ryan has come to rescue us with his automotive expertise. Natalie's 'Mint Julep', the first car he fixed up for us, is now our only working vehicle.


My little red truck, Reba, is showing her age. Purchased new in 2005 as a 'gift' for our 23rd anniversary, my trusty little baby is showing her age. Sixteen years and well over 200,000 miles, Reba's days seem numbered. 



Today, we could do nothing but watch as Ryan and Landon work to remove the radiator, which seems to have exploded out the bottom and is pouring out fluids. What started out as a, "It'll take about forty minutes to remove" said radiator turned into hours of frustration. Reba was not quite so willing to give up her innards as was hope. Screws and bolts, and whatever else holds in car parts, are seriously 'welded' in place. No amount of yanking and cranking and swearing would convince the metal bits to give up their hold.



Twice, Ryan ended up with a mouthful of radiator fluid from the already drip drained radiator. Definitely not good considering how poisonous that stuff is. She may be old, but Reba is still a feisty little bitch. Thankfully, this was a mid 80 degree day and not the 108 degrees we were sweltering in just days ago.



About an hour into this adventure, Ryan mentions that Brett, the roommate that replaced us when we moved out of Ryan and Amanda's Home for Wayward Souls, has been sitting in his truck. Just sitting and waiting. Curiosity is definitely not gonna kill that cat. Once joining us, Ryan declared Brett would be his 'Heidi' for the rest of the day.

Unfamiliar with this terminology, I researched it's definition. Urban slang, of course.

HIGH-dee | /heidi/

To "heidi" is to be incorrect in the performance of a simple task. To consistently perform incorrectly. To be incorrect in the knowledge of a common fact. link



With Reba bleeding sick red fluid into the carport, there wasn't much for Natalie and I to do. We sat on the warm tar, just watching. After the two hour mark, we decided it was time to work on the food Natalie had offered during her first distress text. Having brought out numerous bottles and glasses of water, we prepared our grand meal. 


Actually, we had to wait for Papa Murphy's door dash to deliver the three large pepperoni pizzas we ordered. So very glad to have a usable oven to bake in, once again. It has only been a few weeks that we have been able to get these bake at home pizzas. One of our favorites from back in Minnesota, it was great to to find Papa Murphy's in the Bay Area.


Greg left in search of a replacement radiator for the boys to install. When he returned, the radiator inside Reba was still stuck in place. Three hours into the fixing Reba adventure, and it is decided to call timeout for the night. With a promise to return to this repair job on Wednesday, Reba is left dripping alone while everyone heads into our new apartment for food and drinks. 


So, with just under six weeks in our spanking new apartment, we are once again entertaining guests. Not counting the numerous visits for maintenance, this is the third time we have had actual visitors to our home. That is huge for us. 

Since leaving Minnesota a decade ago, the number of visitors we have had inside our home has been small. Living in a trailer park for many months meant we talked to many fellow RVers, but none ever came inside. 


 With bellies full of pizza, chips and soda, the gentlemen head home. The promise to return in just a couple days keeps hope in my heart that Reba will ride, once again. Sitting in my chair, I can see her shiny red metal glimmering just out of the sun. 

Parked solemnly right outside, I am reminded of the first night we brought her home. We stopped by at my parent's house to show her off.  My father sat in the front passenger side seat and hung a rosary over the rear view mirror. 

The thought of having to replace this red truck at some time in the future makes me sad. Being the last vehicle of mine my father ever sat in still keeps him close to me.  I can move my father's rosary to whatever new car we might get, but it will never be the same as him hanging it up himself.

Friday, June 18, 2021

A Whole New World

Way back in August of 2016, I learned I am allergic to wheat, milk, sesame and soy. Other foods like egg whites, peanuts, shrimp, walnuts were also on the foods to avoid list. Since then, it has been a journey of learning a whole new way to look at food and cooking.


My youngest daughter, Natalie has helped me create recipes that are, at times gluten-free, sometimes just wheat-free, and yes, there is a difference.



While this blog began as a food/recipe only blog, our life has changed 180 degrees in the past couple of years.


In September of 2019, we became a 100% RV living family of three. After just over a year and a half of both fulltime RVing and worldwide pandemic, we turned in our keys and put the trailer into storage.


This sunshiny blog records the craziness of our lives and is now the perfect place to document another momentous life change. As I write this, I am still surrounded by boxes, so many boxes. And so little furniture.


We spent 15 months being hotel nomads. 21 tucked inside an RV. What the future holds from here, it is hard to say. Today, I am watching a couple of house finches build a nest in my begonia plant hanging out on our new patio. Life is good.


As we lay our RV dreams to rest, I will continue to document the triumphs and challenges of downsizing from house to apartment to hotel to our successful goal of full time RV living and now back into an apartment.


There are plenty of trails to hike and oceans vistas to gaze upon.


As always, we will new recipes using our IP (instant pot) once I find the electric cord, missing from the move. And, for the first time in over three years, we have a real oven…macarons, corn bread, MEAT LOAF! Oh, so many possibilities. Recipes to come!


These first few days, we are enjoying just having space to breathe. Hope you enjoy this journey as much as we do. Time to get this show off the ROAD, setup and ready for new adventures.


By the way, I write as I roll, please excuse any misspellings. I will come back and fix them at some point. Life is busy, busy, busy.

Friday, June 11, 2021

This is Me



I am brave, I am bruised
I am who I'm meant to be, 

                                                       this is me
Songwriters: Justin Paul / Benj Pasek This Is Me lyrics © Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., DistroKid

Song begins at 58 seconds

Everyone makes choices everyday. Some of those choices are quick and insignificant. 
"A venti white chocolate mocha frappuccino, please."

Others you may think about for months, perhaps years. Plan and plan, organize and save, sure you have things figured out to the smallest detail. But, no matter how meticulous you are, one can simply not plan for a world wide pandemic. Nor the physical, emotional and financial fallout from said pandemic.  

One can simply not anticipate the fallout of living inside a 32 foot 'tin coop' for endless months, while the world around you is in complete lockdown. Needing papers to drive around. The endless search for toilet paper and disinfectant. Months of unbreathable air, caused not by the virus, but the California wildfires. 

Then, the inevitable funerals attended online, because we are locked in place hundreds to thousands of miles from so many family and friends. The smallest blessing is that we were able to attend funerals we would never have been able to go to if not for the COVID lockdown.

I don't know if our fulltime RVing experiment would have survived in a non-coronavirus world, but it did not survive COVID. In March, Natalie and I moved into a makeshift 'halfway house' with Ryan, Amanda and a group of weary wayward warriors all homeless for varying reasons.

Luci looking out at the Blood Moon Eclipse

After a very explosive beginning of the end of our RVing life, Natalie and I have spent the past three months living with eight foot high ceilings and flushing toilets. Perhaps, though, the most noticeable change is the entire world does not shake with every single move we make. Whatever our thoughts were at the beginning of March, it was clear by mid-May there was no way either of us could bear the thought of moving back into that tiny, tiny house on wheels.


As of now, we have rented a two bedroom apartment. It has been 39 months since we have lived in a place bigger than 300 square feet. While still in the process of clearing out the RV we were planning on living in for years, at a minimum, all I feel is relief. 

I never thought we would fail at whole fulltime RVing lifestyle.

But fail we did.

In a spectacularly explosive, fireworks type of a way. 

So now, as we work on what shape the future takes, I know that there will will be adventures to write about and worlds to explore. Right now, while I figure out exactly what direction those adventures will take us, I will enjoy sitting here writing in a chair. Not on a bed, because there was no other place, and appreciating the solid floor beneath my feet.