Saturday, 29 October 2016

Fountain of Youth, Salvation Mountain

Well, we survived a minor mechanical problem, hopefully the first and last of this trip. When we pulled into Barstow, California we realized that there was a scattering of oil all over the car – not a good thing indeed! Unfortunately this was a Saturday so first thing Monday morning we were at a diesel mechanic shop, Robin had already figured out where the likely leak was in the RV engine, the mechanic agreed,  the part was ordered and by 2:30 Tuesday we were on our way, only $420 poorer! While we waited in Barstow we did some rockhounding & touring – to the Calico Mountains, where we collected lots of chert, jaspers and maybe it’s petrified wood,  thru Rainbow Basin and out searching for white onyx. We spotted a snake, probably a Colorado sidewinder and 2 different tarantulas!


Colorado sidewinder

ugly tarantula!

Rainbow basin



a very large Joshua tree

Robin, wandering looking for shiny things
It is rather depressing to see so many poor and homeless folks, our “neighbors” in Walmart were a 60+ couple living in the back of their truck. They had to empty out lots of stuff so they could fit to sleep. More poverty than we see back home, we felt very blessed to have what we have.
We travelled south thru San Bernadino, more orchards and huge fields of vegetables and grapes and date trees. The 12 lane hiways were actually OK, we try to not hit rush hour!  We stopped at a Costco in Palm Desert to stock up on liquor for the winter and home – 5 bottles, all 1.75 L for $100 total! Crazy! Inside the store, near the entrance were a bunch of big jars of coconut oil (which is solid back home) – it was liquid, so I guess we are far enough south for the butter to melt! But still not far enough south for us!
 
miles and miles of wind turbines


date palms

We arrived at the Fountain of Youth Spa & RV Resort, very close to the Salton Sea on Oct. 26. We had heard about it from fellow RVers and there was a rep from there at the Edmonton RV show, handing out coupons for 4 free nights, so we decided to check it out. (Never turn down free stuff!) It is a lovely place, at the foot of the Chocolate Mountains, an 800 site park with mineral spa, pool, salt water pools & spa, friendly folks and more activities than you could want. We may want this “when we get old” but it’s not for us yet. But the full hook-up site is very nice – the daytime temperature has been 30-34 so the A/C is definitely warranted and we have gotten good use of the pools (and hopefully shed a few years of age!)
 
view of the pool area from our site

Fountain of Youth park


We did some touring, of course - first to Slab City. This is a former naval base that was abandoned, leaving the slab floors of many of the buildings that have been taken over by all sorts of campers. Many of these people have been here for years; many have left behind trailers that nature is retaking. At the entrance is a spectacular sight – Salvation Mountain, a lifetime project of one man, a religious monument. He created the hill and attached “cave-like” rooms and painted it all with donated paint, others have added to it and “maintain” it. I climbed to the top, on the “yellow brick road”, you can see me in one photo. Also in Slab City we found an area called East Jesus – “folk art”?? – Everything from cars covered completely in computer parts to odd sculptures to a wall of TV screens with slogans painted on them. It made for some strange photos but not a place that we would want to camp! It is in our camping book though as a boondocking site.
 
me on the top of Salvation Mountain by the G

Salvation Mountain

view from the top

the creator of Salvation Mountain

typical "campsite"


East Jesus

We also visited the Sonny Bono Salton Sea wildlife refuge, saw flocks of Sandhill cranes, 3 kinds of egrets, snow geese, Great Blue Herons and lots more.

Sandhill cranes



The Salton Sea is over 200 ft. below sea level, we can see it from our RV site, which is also well below sea level. Unfortunately the water is contaminated by agricultural run-off and the lack of any incoming fresh water so it is no longer used for recreation. The shore is littered with dead, dried up fish and shells and the water is tea colored. Surprisingly the birds still stop here and some fish still live in it. Bombay Beach is a small town on its shore that was very popular in the 50’s & 60’s, now it is full of empty trailer homes and salt eaten remains of buildings. So we still need to continue south to find the real seashore. We leave here in the morning, after one more soak in the spa, off to dry camp in the desert near Quartzite for a few days – no power, no WiFi, no A/C! Then to Yuma and on to Mexico, we can almost taste the fish tacos!

Salton Sea

Sunday, 23 October 2016

Oregon Coast and on to California

Still on the Oregon coast, spent a day checking the sights of Newport, watched people crabbing off the pier, collected driftwood and seashell fossils on the beach and had clam chowder & fish and chips at Newport CafĂ©. Finished the day with a long walk on the beach where it, of course, began to rain and blow so we returned to the RV soaked and sandblasted. Found out that there had been 2 tornados not far north of us; luckily we just got the wind. Spent the next day storm watching, couldn’t travel due to wind warnings.








We left Oct. 16 to continue our journey southbound, first stop at Heceta Lighthouse viewpoint where we were excited to see sea lions in the ocean 280 ft below us – and you could hear them barking that far away. We passed Bandon, Oregon’s cranberry capital, and fields/bogs of cranberry bushes.
sea lions, 280 ft. below us


cranberry bog

one of many tsunami warning signs



 We stopped for 2 nights in Gold Beach, parked on the street as we are too cheap to park in an RV park when we don’t need to. Saw many flocks of Canada Geese flying south along the coast. Drove to see one of the oldest Myrtlewood trees, 88 ft. tall, 42 ft. circumference, trunk about 400 years old! Checked out a Myrtlewood factory and store, beautiful things for sale.  Saw some wild turkeys and of course collected more driftwood and interesting agates and beach rocks.

Myrtlewood tree



Left Oregon and travelled briefly in California to a casino in Smith River – good safe place to park and we found coupons in a pamphlet advertising $20 free play in the casino! Spent time on the beaches, hopefully Robin has learned to never turn your back on the ocean – a wave snuck up on him so he jumped up onto a large driftwood log but the wave was too big and caught him above his knees. He dropped like a rock and was completely dunked. Scary for him, a bit entertaining for me once I knew he was OK!
 
Robin, soaking wet!
Found an interesting antique mall and scored quite a find – I love malachite (green swirly gemstone) and I purchased a lovely heart shaped box for $14, quite a steal! Visited a Farmers Market and collected ideas for several new crafts to make.

my Malachite box


Visited Crescent City and were directed to a spectacular, breath-taking drive – the Jedediah Smith Redwoods. A dirt road through a dense forest of 2000 year old, massive redwood trees! Pictures don’t do it justice, definitely a highlight so far. Stopped at the Klamath River overlook where sometimes gray whales are seen feeding, but no luck for us – we will wait to see them on the Baja.



a very large redwood tree & us



Spent an evening listening to the final Hilary/Trump debate, surprisingly there are very few election signs to be seen. Not sure if we want to be in the US come Election Day.
Continuing south, drove through Bigfoot country; no sightings and stopped at the last beach that we will see for a while. Drove through more Redwoods, impressive but not as “up close” as the dirt road drive. Spent a night at another casino, only $10 free play here, again, we are no richer – but the weather finally got nice, 20C in the afternoon!


black oystercatchers


October 21 took us quite a ways south, through Lake Country, crossing the mountains, then into miles and miles of vineyards, orchards and cropland. We stopped to pick up some huge pine cones but when a big black & red spider crawled out of one they got left behind! Diesel is a bit more expensive here, $2.89/gallon but beer is about $1 per bottle! When we stopped to refuel we were surprised by the TV screen on the front of the gas pump – displaying clips from MSNBC & the weather! And we actually complained to each other about the temperature – 84F!!! Finally!!! But the butter still hasn’t melted.



miles and miles of orchards

 And the journey continues.