A little more Elko

From The Nevada Travel Network :

Elko retains its unique air of awkward splendor with a marvelous diversity of its population: cowboys and Indians, sheepherders, miners and railroad men, gamblers and whores, schoolmarms and ribbon clerks. Oh, and a few tourists.

Heh… I would be one of the few tourists…

Above, part of the Chamber of Commerce restored village. It includes a school house, dwelling, livery and blacksmith as a short self-guided walking tour. I walked around quickly after Karl and I had a walk in the park.

Then a quick stop at Cucina Fresca…

Like the proverbial kid in a candy store, I looked over the wares and came away with a few things for my motorhome kitchen. And this wine gift bag!

Meanwhile, clouds were building ominously to the west. I cut my exploration of Elko short and headed home.

The wind kicked up dramatically. It was so gusty that I pulled in the slides to save wear and tear on the slide toppers that roll out over the top of the slides.

I put Bob in charge of the weather radio.

We ended up getting a lot of wind, but no rain, no thunder or lightning – just a LOT of wind.

A tumblin’ tumbleweed – my storm souvenir.

To Elko

A wonderfully restful evening and night. It was cool and blustery last evening. Clouds moved in and it is a bit balmy this morning. Rain and maybe thunderstorms are in our path. It looks like an 8 a.m. departure will work best. Elko is to have some storms this morning, clearing and then late afternoon storms so leaving at 8 will hopefully get us there in the clear spot. As always, will just pull over and wait out anything unsafe to drive in.

I-80 East all the way from Fernley to Elko today.

Nevada morning…

…from this morning’s walk.

11:00 a.m. At a rest stop just west of Winnemucca for a break, walk and early lunch. Probably will not post another update until arrival as good signal, but “roaming”….and I’m only 150 miles from Elko. Will probably be leaving here 11:30ish, have a fuel stop at some point so hope to be parked 2:30-3:30 if no delays. So far weather looks fine and wind has not been bad.

3:00 p.m. We are arrived and plugged in. Today was the best travel day of any so far! Good roads, gorgeous desert scenery, cool air that smelled of sage and not too much wind. A little rain here and there. The wind is picking up now and dark clouds so will get final outside stuff hooked up and Karl for a walk in case we get thunder-lightning fun.

More sunshine

Busy work week for me, in fact, busy work month as the entire team is in a big push to get a lot accomplished in June. I have a short meeting this afternoon which will end the need for “face to face” work so we can start back to Montana on Saturday. Because of the work schedule, my current plan is to go halfway this weekend and on to home the following weekend – my usual work/travel scenario.

I decided to go the inland route taking me closer to the Rockies and back to drier air. My halfway pick is Elko, Nevada. If there are no glitches between now and Saturday morning, we’ll roll fairly early and take 2 hopefully easy days to get to Elko.

Meanwhile, Bob enjoys some sun on our little bit of grass. He has done much better than I anticipated as I do not let him out on his own here. He accepts the harness and leash and has been content with several outings during the day. Karl will go out with him late afternoon when there is shade but otherwise prefers inside when I’m working.

Keeping one’s eyes open in the afternoon, in the sunshine, is a challenge…

Off we go, then

If this is your first “ride-a-long” on From the Front Porch, here’s the drill: I post my planned route and departure time, just before I leave for the day. I usually post some log items through the day and then my arrival.

Later, I delete the route info and any boring bits and change the post to the story of the day, hopefully with photos.

The route and log is a safety thing – family knows where I am.

7:42 a.m. We are all aboard, the Jeep is hooked up, engine is running and we are ready to roll so…off we go, then!

I stopped in Plains MT for a walk and a break. There is an espresso stand and they had fresh bagels so I decided I was hungry enough for a mini-meal: 1/2 bagel with sliced tenderloin I roasted yesterday to go with my latte. Beautiful morning and the drive along the lake and then the Clark Fork River Valley was beautiful. The River was high, fast and a churned up brown from run-off which is a departure from its usual clear green-blue.

No prize winning photos today…

Out the window, between a few bugs…I-90 approaching Coeur d’Alene, ID. Lake Pend Oreille as well as Coeur d’Alene Lake were beautiful – sparkling water, a few boats and the surrounding mountains. But no turn outs and a winding interstate with too much traffic to try for a shot.

Spokane traffic was busy but there is just I-90 so no complicated interchanges or spaghetti junctions.
Past Spokane, WA flattens out and is desert open range. But this time of year there IS a bit of green.

This rest stop was about 70 miles from Connell, WA. Karl and I had a good walk and called Coyote Run RV Park to see if they had a spot for us, which they did and we pulled in about 4:15 Mountain Time, 3:15 Pacific Time. We are on Pacific time now.

It was 82 when we parked. I run the generator and house a/c down the road so we were relatively cool when we arrived and soon on park power.

A good first day although tiring. We are only 317 miles down the road in 8 1/2 hours – 120 miles of 2 lane, a bit of construction, a bit of traffic making for slower progress. It is supposed to cool into the 40’s tonight so we’ll shoot for an early start in the morning and hopefully get our miles in a bit earlier tomorrow.

Looking backward

Reader Melissa in El Cajon, in an email to me, commented that her vet said that “orange cats make the best pets”. I remember thinking that was funny-odd in that most of the vet clinic cats … in my experience, have been calicos. And then I had to laugh as I was thinking that I have been, with Bob (my orange cat), in a LOT of vet clinics… And this led further to the remembrance of our – Bob and my – “many clinic” experiences between Iowa and Montana in the summer of 2006 and how that changed Bob, Karl’s and my life.

Martha Beck, in a her book “Steering by Starlight (How to live your best destiny, no matter what)” has a chapter with an exercise on “telling your life story backwards”. Simplified, it entails looking at an event or outcome that you consider wonderful and working backwards over the events that led you to this wonderfulness which often begins with a “Supposedly bad event that eventually supported my favorite thing”.

It is an interesting exercise.

One of my stories involves my orange cat, Bob.

One of my favorite things: my little house on its 8 plus acres of woods on a foothill of the Continental Divide

The supposedly “bad” event that eventually supported my favorite thing: Bob became very ill in Iowa

2006…Iowa, in the motorhome, wending my way back to Montana after a 6 month cruise cross country and back. It was mid-July. I had stayed in the mid-west to attend the wedding of my best friend’s son. Right after the wedding, I pointed the beast west. I stopped in Iowa to attend to some motorhome problems – Iowa is home to Winnebago as well as to many things RV related. I landed at a wonderful rural RV park: Colony Country Campground , in Iowa City, Iowa. I based here for 7 days – getting the RV maintenance done and then just as I was set to leave, Bob became ill.

As a side note, the extra time spent in Iowa was instrumental in the beginning of a wonderful friendship with the daughter of the campground owners – she manages the campground. I stayed at Colony Country again in Spring of 2008 as I returned to Montana from Florida. A wonderful spot and I’m grateful to have found the spot and started the friendship.

Bob was lethargic, not using the litter box, and had a temperature…the fact that he allowed me take his temperature was very telling. He spent the night at the clinic, which is a teaching clinic and staffed 24/7. The owner/vet phoned me at 11:30 p.m. to tell me that he was very worried about Bob as he was not eating. I had a mostly sleepless night. But when I got up at 5 a.m. I did a bit of a doubletake – he was not eating???? Well, he wouldn’t – not his dish, not his food. I was at the clinic at 6 a.m. with Bob’s dish and some tuna fish. He ate, he had used the litter box. I returned after 8 and picked him up over the objections of the clinic…but with antibiotics. We stayed in Iowa a few more days – all was normal with Bob and he was tolerating the antibiotics. We proceeded west.

Backing up a bit…while in the mid-West, awaiting the wedding date, we were in northern Michigan – Traverse City – near where my family vacationed when I was growing up. I have a great-Aunt who lived there at the time. I enjoyed visiting, was working, and also was extremely homesick for Montana. I perused the internet for Montana property. I found the listing for the place I now call home. It was listed at a price above my range. I asked my friend Kris to look at it for me and let me know what she thought. She looked. She phoned me after and said: “Ann, this place is you!”. I was on the internet, making air reservations to fly back, but it all felt wrong – leaving the pets, disrupting my work schedule, the cost… I called her and said that I couldn’t do it. I said that if it was right, it would be there when I returned.

Fast forward to Spearfish, SD. Spearfish was a place that I had liked on a previous car trip east. I wanted to take some time to look around. I also wanted to look at the Red Lodge, MT area.

But Bob became ill again in Spearfish. The Spearfish vet did extensive blood testing and came up with some disturbing results which pointed to a condition that would require long term treatment. I made the decision to head immediately for “home” and for my home vet.

We saw our home vet upon arrival in the Flathead Valley. Bob seemed fine. The home vet blood work showed no abnormalities. They ran it twice to be sure. Bob continued to seem fine and normal. $1000 in vet bills later and I had a well cat with no explanation.

Back in the Flathead Valley, I felt at home and started looking for a place -not on wheels – to call home.

The first thing I did was to look at the place that I saw on the internet from Michigan. The price had been reduced. I decided not to buy it. I could see the work that would be involved. I had been a bit overwhelmed at my last house which had 2 ½ acres of yard to be mowed and trimmed. My handyman from there walked this house and property and we talked about the driveway (good news privacy, bad news maintenance and snow removal), the flat roof, the woods…

I looked at a lot of “subdivision” places – more $$, less work … kept coming back to this place in my head. It was my birthday, I was looking at yet another house and suddenly said to the realtor – “I’m going to take Karl to La Brant and just spend some time”..it had been empty for months. I walked around the woods with Karl, sat in the back of the open Jeep and just took in the stillness and made up my mind that I wanted this. I made an offer in my price range…

So, the supposedly “bad” event that lead me to getting the “good” thing, was Bob becoming ill. After getting settled in the house, I found 2 mostly healed wounds on Bob – large wounds on either side as if an owl had tried to pick him up. This probably happened in Ohio, when I was parked at my friend’s, as this was the only place he was out early or late. Bob’s illness sent me straight back to Montana in perfect time to get this place, which is perfect for me.

Looking backward. The more experience I have at the way supposedly “bad” events turn “good”, the better equiped I am to deal with and in fact be grateful for the “bad” events, even while enduring them. In the midst of a challenging or difficult time, there is that knowledge that somehow, somewhen, something wonderful is likely to happen or be learned.