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agesilaus

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Posts posted by agesilaus

  1. Worthless list for 99% of us. Almost all those listed are impossible to visit for RVers.

    A list of the least visited parks in the lower 48 would be much more useful. Like this:

    • Wolf Trap NP for the Performing Arts. ...
    • Guadalupe Mountains NP. ...
    • Voyageurs NP. ...
    • Congaree NP. ...
    • Great Basin NP. ...
    • Dry Tortugas NP. ...
    • Isle Royale NP. MICHAEL J THOMPSON/SHUTTERSTOCK. ...
    • North Cascades NP. SOISUDAS/SHUTTERSTOCK.

    • And even that list is almost half impossibe with out a boat. We have not been to Congree, Voyageurs {which I think has parts on dry land}, or North Cascades. They are on our to-do list. And why is Wolf Trap even a NP in the first place, I smell the stink of politics.
  2. I heard at Yosemite that they lost want-to-be rock climbers who thought clothes line would substitute for the very price real climbing rope. And they lost hikers who would be hot and sweaty in summer and when the ran into a mountain stream jumped in. Only to discover that the stream ran off the 600 foot cliff not far away. That was decades ago, I'm sure people are more intelligent now days.

    And when taking a cross country skiing class the instructor said that that they found lost skiers occasionally when the snow melted. They had made the unhappy discovery that you can ski 20 miles in the deep snow, but after breaking a ski tip, you could not walk back that far. I always carried a emergency ski tip in my pack after hearing that.

    That was in the days of wooden skies tho.

     

     

  3. And these are not the ones you would expect, warning this is on FoxNews so avoid reading if that is a problem for yoou:

    Deadly Parks

    We have been to number four and five neither of which impressed us as having any major hazards, Traffic deaths was the number one cause, medical was high but animal attacks not on the list. Neither YNP or GCNP in the top five.

  4. My own experience is that I had a work related back injury and have been on workman comp for the treatment. I've been going to a Pain Specialist for the last ten or 12 years and saw a neurologist before that who used Botox injections. They slowly became less effective and I switched over to the other doc.

    He went thru a lot of different meds until we settled on the Tramadol and Lidoderm Patches. The Tramadol was a minimal dose that I took only at night. When this crack down began to clamp down he was going thru everything he could think of and could tell skating on the edge to keep giving me 90 day scripts. We started using teledoc visits at the end but that was a special dispensation during the plague.

    Finally I just decided to do without rather than let him get in trouble. Actaully ibuprofen works pretty well for me but I have to be very careful about taking it with food.

    The DEA makes no effort to distinguish whether you are on Morphine or Demerol or on a weak opioid like Tramadol. Nor do they look at the dose. It's all the same. There has been a lot of abuse of the opioid system  and the ham handed government  does care who the catch in their net.

    Video visits might be an option for you tho. Or you might look at Botox shots, they did a good job for me for years. Think they lasted 90 days or so.

  5. 38 minutes ago, JimK said:

    Two words:  medical marijuana. 

    There are all sorts of formulations and choices.  None are addictive by typical definitions.  Some are strictly for pain with little or no high associated with them.  Ideally you can find a doctor who knows what they are doing; otherwise, a bit of experimentation should do it.

    Just a guess but I would think that would greatly complicate state to state travel. y son, a LEO, tells me that the material is very pricey in FL. Does insurance cover it? And is it legal everywhere?

     

  6. 3 hours ago, SWharton said:

    Why don't you have the subscription with Walmart, Walgreen's or CVS. They are all over the place and should be able to refill the prescription if it is in their database.

    Ditto, we went with Walmart since they seem to be more common. However, at least in Florida, if you are talking schedule 3 drugs, then you have to see the physician every 30 days. I had to drop Tramadol which is a very weak narcotic since it was impossible to travel and see the doc every 30 days/

    Walmart and U assume the big drug stores will transfer the script around tho it will lead to confusion.

  7. Probably better to add a cup or so of bleach, fill the tank, and let it sit over night. Then drain and flush. This is superchlorinating the system and it can take awhile to do in biological films. Hydrogen peroxide works well too, but you probably don't have access to the 30% peroxide. Which is hazardous anyway.

    I generally dump half a bottle of bleach down the shower, and the same for the kitchen sink. Give it overnight in a fill gray tank, then drain. Do this every six months of so to kill odors.

  8. We stopped at over 40 spots this last year. We rarely had a problem finding a place but we did normally call ahead the night before. We started this when we cut the day's travel down to 250 miles, or less and had a defined area that we wanted to stop in. We do boondock when we can, mainly west of the Mississippi. But we also try to Famcamp or use COE parks. We stay at city/county parks when we find them but they are often first-come no-reservation.

    A long rig like you describe could be tough to take boondocking down moderately rough and twisty roads. Make sure you have good ground clearance. And being out on one of those roads could spell trouble if you don't have 4WD and it rains

  9. Well a business, if it wants to be successful, needs to maximize price vs sales to maximize profits. If they can raise their price while still filling the park then that is what they need to do. Econ 101. They aren't running a charity. If they have shareholders, then they are legally required to do so, as I understand it.

     

  10. If you want reasonable rates (1000/mo or less last year) then you are looking at parks north of Orlando/I4, there are several big parks around Chiefland, one near Archer. I Others down US 19 south of Chiefland. Many parks in the Ocala National Forest east of Ocala. There is a very highly reviewed campground called Rock Crusher Springs, west of Ocala. Near Crystal River IIRC. We've driven past but never stopped in. The Village south of Ocala is a pickelball hotspot. No beach swimming along the west coast until south of Tarpon Springs. With a few small local spots the exception. Lots of major springs tho.

    The weather won't be swimming weather tho for much of the winter, not by Floridian standards. But much warmer than up North. It has like the rest of the country been record cold here, lows in the 20's or even below for almost a week. Most winters, spring arrives in February tho.

    I'm sure there are many along US 1 but the will be more expensive. Rule of thumb, price goes up nearer real beaches and the further south you get of Orlando. Well above 2000 a month.

  11. My son recently became a LEO and I asked him a question. I have heard over the years that police give you a 5  mph buffer over the speed limit Before issuing a ticket. Well in Florida only, do not depend on this ib other states, the fine for 1 to 5  mph over the limit is zero dollars, most police will not bother stopping you unless they have some other reason.

    The local department, he works for, usually will not definitely issue a ticket for less than 15 mph over. 10-15 is optimal and you may get either a ticket or a warning. So once again FLORIDA ONLY.

     

  12. 1 hour ago, Randyretired said:

    We have boondocked in AZ, NM, WY, NV, ID, UT, CO, OR, NEB, and AK that I can remember. We haven't been east much. 

    Boondocking spots are rare east of the Mississippi. Florida has some and so does MN and I think MI.  COE is you best bet in the east.

    1 hour ago, Randyretired said:

     

     

     

     

     

  13. 9 hours ago, 2gypsies said:

    Not every forest service or BLM road is bad for RVs.  You just have to do your homework, pre-scout it, if possible and most importantly, drive slow.  We've gotten off pavement approx. 20 mi or so with our motorhome & our 5th wheel.

    That is absolutely the case. We use BLM and FS camps all the time. Tho I have to say the worst road to an established camp was to the FS Camp outside the Idaho entrance to Yellowstone.  It was a wonderful campsite tho with sites right on a whitewater river. But the road was 10 miles of the deepest potholes we have ever seen. A ranger told us that the USFS allocates no money for road maintenance.

    One thing to be ultra cautious about is the fact that many of those roads have no turn arounds. Once you are on them, with your fiver or TT, you are stuck unless you can back up for miles. Ditches on both sides with trees right up to the two track. We got on one at Hungry Horse reservoir in MT only to find a big dirt pile blocking the narrow road five or six miles in, Geez that was something you won't forget. So drop the camper and drive the road out in your truck FIRST.

  14. 10 minutes ago, sandsys said:

    I have a few friends with tow behind AF trailers and they have been very happy with them. They hold up well. But two of those friends are now looking to downsize because they are tired of towing as they age. I looked at your choice of unit and liked it a lot. My only question is how much room there might be for solar panels?

    Linda

    Well we have 4 100W panels on the roof of our 25Y, and there is plenty for 2 more maybe 4, I'd have to measure. A fiver would have more room.

  15. We have an AF Travel Trailer and not a fiver. In general the brand has a very strong reputation for being higher quality and heavily insulated. Not perfect of course but good. We boondocked with a couple AF fivers at the south rim last year and they were quite happy with their units.

    Northwood makes a line of off road campers but no surprise they are extremely expensive.

  16. We drove I10 east from Livingston to the Tallahassee FL area a month or so ago. No problems seen, even the Louisiana section was OK and that usually has some sort of construction going on.

    There really isn't any sort of practical, southern, route that you can take to avoid I10. You can divert up to I20 but that will be way out of your planned route. US90/98 is deadly slow with innumerable small towns west of Eglin AFB. East of that it is good and fast to Perry, 4 Lane mostly empty.

    We didn't drive thru Houston this trip but have many times in the past and yes it is the bottleneck in the route, even without construction. Texas has lots of surface roads and I suppose you could bypass Houston. We came into Livingston via Bryan Texas(from Lubbock and New Mexico). The roads were good but of course much slower going thru many towns. It depends on your time available for the trip.

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