First Quarter Report

Thank you for this opportunity to provide a report of the Jet Set Betties’ activities in their first quarter of traveling. This is widely considered to be a successful quarter, with an abundance of friends and family met, beautiful and important places visited, and wonderful cocktails and meals consumed. Let’s take a look at the numbers:

Miles Traveled: 6,500

Gas Expense: $1,485

While 6500 miles will take its toll on any vehicle (especially when towing a Bettie Mobile!), Twyla Von Wienerschnitzel, our 2016 VW Touareg, is holding up well. We’ve seen some cosmetic damage to the front from rocks and other road debris. We also significantly damaged some sort of plastic fairing on the front underside, likely after hitting a giant snow ball in the road in Somerset, CA. This was quickly repaired with Gorilla Tape and has caused no further issues. Twyla will be getting a full checkup in the upcoming week before the Betties set out for their next big adventures.

Route Traveled

Please refer to Map 1, below, for a detail of the roads taken. This map extends beyond the first quarter (spoilers!) which would have ended two weeks ago while the Betties were in Seattle. The visual below is compromised for easy web loading. If you would like the full-scale map please click here.

From the map we can see that the Betties traveled significant miles in few days during the initial phase of their trip in January. This is certainly not the Betties’ preferred pace, but due to delays in the construction of The Bettie Mobile (their teardrop trailer), the Betties needed to travel more quickly than planned to honor their late-January scheduled appearances in southern Arizona and California.

The route becomes more revealing when we look at weather data and overnight choices, in Graph 1, below:

Note that four of the camping overnights occurred in weather where the low temperature was below freezing (as low as 17 degrees Fahrenheit). The Betties were quite comfortable in the cabin of their camper during these low temperatures, however other basic camping functions such as cooking, eating, hanging out, and toileting were hindered by the extreme cold.

Please refer to Chart 2 for a detailed account of where the Betties spent their nights (in a total of 18 different beds):

The Betties were somewhat disappointed in the relatively low number of camping nights, given the anticipation of completing the Bettie Mobile. However, when we take into account the inclement weather during a large portion of the 1st quarter, we feel that this is excusable. And the unexpected addition of housesitting gigs has added new friends and countless curiosities to their stories! The Betties anticipate far more camping nights in the second quarter, as we head into the spring and summer seasons. Of note is the amount of time we have spent with friends & family, which met or exceeded our goals for this quarter – we’ve seen and hugged 30 of you so far!

Final Highlights

Below is a chart of some other highlights of the first quarter. These are not chosen for any particular merit or in any particular order, but serve to highlight the unexpected pleasures and discoveries of travel.

We thank you for your encouragement and support through this first quarter of our journey, and look forward to providing more facts and insights as our travel continues. If you have any questions or comments, feel free to use the form below or contact us directly. We look forward to hearing from you, and perhaps seeing you in the next quarter!

Sincerely (and with love from) ~ The Jet Set Betties!

Favorite recreation:

  • Hiking Chiricahua Mountains
  • Hanging out on Tourmaline Beach
  • The Slot in Anza Borrego
  • Biking around Mission Bay
  • Balboa Park
  • The Diaries of Leonardo DaVinci (play seen at The Old Globe in San Diego)
  • Point Loma
  • Hiking in Coloma CA (Marshall Gold State Park)
  • Rumsey Canyon
  • Throwing sticks for Chloe, and Lizzie + Molly
  • Bowling with Natalie and her family
  • Music nights with Bill & Poppy (+ friends)
  • Columbia River gorge, especially Vista House
  • Deception Pass – Whidbey Island
  • Ebey’s Landing – Whidbey Island
  • Jon’s senior recital & seeing Pericles at Cornish – Seattle
  • Centennial Park + Elliot Bay trail – Seattle
  • Big long walks all over downtown and Seattle Center
  • Seward Park – Seattle

Treacherous driving days:

  • Tucson to San Diego (Jan 29) – heavy rain/snowfall in San Diego Mountains
  • Redlands to Lodi (Feb 23) – severe weather warnings in the Sierra Nevadas, so we went west before going north
  • Day One in Somerset, CA (Feb 24) – winding hilly road in the snow!
  • Somerset to Placerville (Feb 27) – not a long drive but we had to stall for hours in heavy snowfall until our Airbnb was ready and then drive up some steep hills
  • Placerville to Ashland (March 5) – winter storm warning in I5 mountain passes, with warnings that we’d be turned back if we didn’t have chains (notably: 1-3 FEET of snow possible at Mt Shasta!) – once again, we went west before going north, all the way to Highway 101, but then found out the storm had passed and I5 was clear, so we backtracked and hightailed it north
  • Ashland to Bend (March 6) – unforecasted blizzard on a secondary mountain road!
  • Bend OR, pretty much every day – so much snow! Grateful for the use of our host’s Subaru with snow tires to get up and down their hills

Favorite Eats

  • City Taco – Pacific Beach, San Diego
  • Ambrogio 15 – Pacific Beach, San Diego
  • Ceviche and Beer – Mission Beach, San Diego
  • Aroi Mak Mak – Redlands CA
  • Pete’s Breakfast House – Ventura CA
  • Osteria La Briccola – Ashland OR
  • Muddy Rudder – Portland
  • Dim sum at Jade Garden – Seattle
  • Jackalope – Columbia City (Seattle)
  • Ribs smoked by Matthew on the Traeger grill in Placerville CA
  • Betty – Seattle

Best Drinks

  • The Tavern – Coronado Island, San Diego
  • El Prez – Pacific Beach, San Diego
  • Aroi Mak Mak – Redlands CA
  • Monkey Puzzle whiskey – McMenamin’s (Bend + everywhere)
  • Sapphire Hotel – Portland
  • Virginia Inn – Seattle
  • The Sitting Room – Seattle

Whidbey + Seattle

Trip Odometer: 7,400

Hi friends! Wow, the past few weeks have flown by! I’m happy to report that we finally found spring in Seattle (beautiful flower/tree blossoms!) and we’ve just arrived at our next housesitting gig near Santa Rosa CA, where the forecast calls for a week of sunshine and mid-70s!

Last weekend we realized we’ve been on the road for 3 months (!!!) so we’re working on a quarterly report. (Because, of course we are!) Stay tuned for that in the days to come.

Also, FYI: we just committed to housesitting in Portland, Oregon for FIVE WEEKS (June 25 – Aug 5)!! PLUS, we’re signing up to participate in the Milwaukie Porchfest on July 21 – the Jet Set Betties will perform a two-hour live show from the driveway of our host’s home! Let us know if you can stop by, we’ll make it a party. (Plus, that day happens to be Matthew’s birthday …)

For now, here are some photos and quick stories about our time in Washington.

Our original plan was to spend only a couple extra days in Seattle after Jon’s events. We thought we’d get back into camping, perhaps explore the Olympic Peninsula, or the WA/OR coastline … HOWEVER (and we were NOT surprised), weather forecasts once again looked miserable. So we decided to stay in Seattle, which was LOVELY on so many levels.

Lovely People of Portland

Trip Odometer: 6023

Once upon a time, way back in aught-8, we took a trip to the charming village of Yelapa, a small town in Mexico accessible only by water taxi from Puerto Vallarta. We brought a guitar and a violin with us, so we could strum some tunes in the heat of mid-day and after the sun had set. Shortly after our arrival, we spied another couple toting instrument cases up and down the beach … and they took notice of us as well. Before long, we were getting together after dinner and swapping tunes. We had so much fun with them, we planned another beach music fest in 2013, and again in 2016. In 2013, we even managed to play in a local bar!

Somewhere in Yelapa

This serendipitous friendship has endured, and Bill and Poppy were a big magnet drawing us toward Portland a couple of weeks ago. We once again spent the evenings enjoying delicious meals and swapping tunes.

We also got outside and enjoyed some natural beauty:

Plus a couple of days in the big city, where we met up with my dear college pal Jamie for dinner at the Sapphire Hotel!

Ok, and here’s the random story of the year: one Saturday afternoon, Bill and Poppy took us to a house/garage concert, featuring singer/songwriter Jim Faddis (member of the bands Prairie Flyer and FarmStrong, if you follow such things) and monster bluegrass guitarist Dale Adkins (who toured with Kate MacKenzie). What a neat opportunity – they were really amazing!

There were only about 60 people in attendance, and because most of them are part of the same musical circles as Bill and Poppy, we met several other folks. After the concert, one of our new acquaintances said to us, “You should meet Lee – she used to live in Alaska.” Here’s the rest of the conversation:

Lee (to Kayla): Where did you live in Alaska?
Kayla: Sitka.
Lee: Oh, Sitka! I had the best job for awhile in Sitka. I was the administrative director for a small little chamber music festival there – the Sitka Summer Music Festival.
Kayla (eyes widening): You’ve got to be kidding me. I WAS THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE SITKA SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL!!!

Ummm … yup. Turns out that “Lee” is Wendy Kamras, who worked for the Festival for a few years in the late 90s (I believe). WHAT ARE THE ODDS? There are – literally – no more than 10 people in the world who have had this job, and two of them end up together at a small bluegrass house concert one Saturday afternoon in April … in PORTLAND??

20% of the Sitka Music Festival’s Executive Directors meet at a bluegrass concert in Portland OR.

So, Portland was lovely to us, through and through. Many, many thanks to Bill and Poppy for the generous hospitality, local touring, fun food & conversation, and allllllll the music. Already looking forward to next time with you!

High Desert Bends

North of Chico CA, heading towards the Mt. Shasta pass.

Trip Odometer: 5,194

Monday Feb 27 – Sat Mar 4: We departed our housesitting gig but couldn’t find anywhere within a day’s drive to camp without rain, snow, and/or 30-degree temps, so we booked a cozy AirBnB in Diamond Springs, just a few miles up the road. The first two days there were cold, with precipitation alternating between rain and snow. Later in the week we finally got some sunny days with a few nice walks on nearby trails. But by Friday we were back in the rain again. Our Airbnb came with a nice backyard and a Traeger smoker … Matthew tried it out and made a couple of DELICIOUS dinners!

All of this weather has revealed a slow leak in the camper roof (!!!) – looks like it is getting in where the roof panels butt together. It is too cold and wet to do much about it at this point, but we are keeping an eye on it.

Saturday, March 5: We headed out of Diamond Springs for Ashland, Oregon. Yet another drive where there was a winter storm warning for a mountain pass we needed to cross. In this case, Mt Shasta pass. The warnings were so dire in the morning that we decided to trade the straight-shot four-hour drive through the pass for an eight-hour drive along the coast that would skip the mountains and the storms.

Our route was Folsom, Sacremento, Woodland, then Hwy 16 through Esparto, Capay, Brooks, and Rumsey Canyon.

“Wow” for Rumsey Canyon. We don’t have a photo to do it justice. Is was just miles of windy road with these steep green hills and fast running streams. We’ve made a note to come back here and camp when we can.

Along Rumsey Canyon

Then we picked up Hwy 20 and drove along the shores of Clear Lake to reach Hwy 101, which we would then take north for the long drive to Ashland. At this point we called our Ashland host – she said the weather was blue skies! She had hung her laundry outside to dry! We had a choice to make – continue another five-plus hours on our current route, or backtrack for the shorter route and risk the mountain pass. Even with the backtrack, we would get there sooner, so we made the u-turn!

Back we went through Lucern and Clear Lake, then on 20 East to Williams, which was very beautiful with all the almond trees in bloom. Then onto good old I5 through Redding, Shasta Lake, Mt Shasta (by the time we got here the weather alert had been removed – the drive was fine), Yreka (capital of the State of Jefferson), Mt Siskiyou, and then Ashland!

We had a lovely evening with our friend, Alaskan-turned-Ashlander, the amazing Sandy Burd.

March 6: We had made the long drive to Ashland so that our last leg to Bend, Oregon would be a relatively short one. And, amazingly, there were no winter storm warnings when we set out this morning! We took what looked like a scenic route called Dead Indian Memorial Road.

It turned out that the road put us back up in the 4000 ft altitude! We saw very few cars, and these only at the start of our trip. The further we got down the road, the higher the snow, the narrower the road. And then there were intermittent blizzards.

During a non-blizzard part of the drive.

But we made it through, spurred off the road to Keno, then Hwy 66 to Klamath Falls and Hwy 97 to Bend.

Ice and road grit caked onto the Bettie Mobile.

In Bend, we met the folks we would be pet sitting for, as well as Mollie and Lizzie, the doggos. We settled in for a nice dinner together. Claus and Annette left at 3:00 am the next morning, and we had a fabulous week in their beautiful home, hanging out with Lizzie and Molly, exploring Bend, and staying out of bad weather!

We also had the good fortune to spend time with dear friend Natalie – one of Kayla’s first and enduring Sitka friendships. Natalie and her family now live in Bend, so we could meet up for walks, dinner, river sauna, a quick trip to Sisters, and even a bowling birthday party for Nat’s daughter!

Bend is just under 4000 ft above sea level, and we’re here to testify: altitude is no joke. Though we spent a week there, neither of us ever felt like we acclimated to the altitude. We would get out of breath just doing simple things.

And all that changed on March 16! We pointed the Bettie Mobile downhill and headed towards Portland! And that’s a post for another time.

Into the Storms

Diamond Springs, CA Feb 27, 2023.

Trip Odometer 4425

We still weren’t finished with San Diego. Let’s not forget that the Bettie Mobile still isn’t finished. Matthew took a sunny day to do paint touch up and some more galley work.

We also had a huge Saturday with our friend/host, Candace:

Even with all the fun we were having in San Diego, there comes a day when it is time to go. On Wednesday, Feb 22 we headed north. By now we were getting steady winter storm warnings for all of California, especially at elevation.

We had our first pet sitting gig in Somerset, CA in two days. It would be about nine hours total driving, so we broke it into two days, with our first stop in Redlands at Dynasty Suites. This place was sandwiched between two fast food restaurants, but clearly from another era.

Thursday, Feb 23

The storms were predicted to get worse in the mountains, leading us, despite our best efforts, to drive around LA, rather than take smaller roads and mountain passes. We got up at the crack of dawn and got through the worst of the stop and go traffic. The mountains to the west were clearly socked in. But still, we got through the worst of it before breakfast.

The same thing Guy Fieri ate at Pete’s Breakfast House in Ventura.

At around 1:30 pm we decide to save some drive time and cross a mountain pass from Highway 101 to Paso Robles. The weather doesn’t look too bad from where we are, but is predicted to get bad by the evening. We took Hwy 46 from Paso Robles and then picked up I5 in Kettleman City. By the time we pulled into Lodi we were starting to get into the weather. We stayed at a crappy Motel 6 by the interstate.

The next day was just a short drive in grey weather to Somerset and our first pet, chicken, and housesitting gig. We stayed the weekend tucked in from the weather with some goofy dogs and a warm fireplace.

Over the weekend we saw that the forecast for the entire next week was going to continue to be winter storms. We canceled our plans for camping on the coast in Arcata and instead found a sweet little Airbnb in Diamond Springs for the week. Kayla is digging in to work, Matthew is working on getting a Bettie Mobile Canopy designed and fabricated, and everyone is staying warm, dry, and muddy-chicken free for a week.

Postcard from San Diego

Trip Odometer 3603

We’ve been enjoying 18 days (mostly) in San Diego, and still have some more to go! We had aspirations for doing some camping in deserts and canyons, but the truth is, it is cold out there. We are comfortable in the camper at colder climes, but the making dinner in the evening and coffee in the morning can be challenging. So, we’ve been taking advantage of our friends visiting and residing in San Diego to find shelter and adventure in this fun town.

We spent the first week plus with Grace and Charlie (and Good Dog Chloe!) just a short walk from Pacific Beach. There’s a string of different beaches along the San Diego coast. Each beach has its own style and flavor. Pacific Beach is clearly the laid-back surfer-forward beach, and that suited us just fine.

Feb 2: We took a day trip to Torrey Pines National Reserve. It was no fun to drive there, but the hike and the views were really nice.

Feb 3: One thing we love about San Diego is there are so many places that are straightforward with their name. Like, right down the road from where we are now there is a place called San Diego Chicken Pie Shop. What do you think they serve there? We took a nice bike ride around Mission Bay that included a stop at a great place called “Ceviche and Beer”.

Feb 4: To help get the Betty Mobile designed, I used an online service called Upwork, and wound up working with architect Aaron Jarrett, who lives in San Diego. He was thrilled when we met up so he could see the thing we had both labored on.

Feb 5: We took a day trip to the slot canyon at Anza Borrego with Grace and Charlie. This was a beautiful drive through mountains, grassy valleys, and then straight-up desert. On the way back we stopped at the small town of Julian, which is apparently famous for their apple pies. Now this is a town of just 1300 people. And somehow, even though it was a late Sunday afternoon, the place was packed with tourists. And they were all standing in lines 20 people deep at the five or six different apple pie shops on the street. Now you do the math here, and it would seem that just about every adult resident of Julian must somehow be in the apple pie business. I wonder if the teens in Julian must feel resigned to their fate of spending their days churning out pies for the masses.

Feb 9-10: We moved from Pacific Beach to our harpist friend Candace’s little hideaway up in Hillcrest (we have the Betty Mobile stashed at her mom’s house next door). Candace had a busy weekend coming up, so we decided it was time to hitch up the wagon again and do some camping in nearby Ramona. It felt good to pull the camper again, and once we were parked in our little spot at Dos Picos County Park, we got lots of nods about how cute our camper was. This was also our first opportunity to get our tent out and experience the full set-up.

We didn’t do much exploring over the weekend, instead focusing on getting the camping part of our traveling sorted out. The weather even gave us an opportunity to experience how our camp handles the rain. At some point there will be a fully designed and fitting tarp solution for the Betty Mobile, but for now, we are using the tried and true tarp method.

One other thing we learned from the rain (not pictured) is that with the galley hatch open, water can find its way into the top shelf of the galley – the one with all the electrical wiring. That wiring passes through holes in the shelf (which haven’t been properly sealed). Those holes lead into Mathew’s clothing closet. Luckily his base layer of t-shirts soaked up all the water, and we had a pretty dry night.

Over the course of our San Diego adventuring we’ve also been making connections for an exciting twist to our traveling adventure: pet (and other animal) sitting. We are using two online services, Trusted House Sitters and House Sitters America. We’ve lined up FOUR sitting jobs already, and have turned down as many offers from folks who are cold-contacting us with offers! This is going to work out great for us, as we need to start heading northward to catch a nephew’s college recital and connect with friends and family along the way. With the consistent cold this season, house camping is going to be preferable to outside camping until we get to a proper spring.

Spoiler: there will be dogs, of course, but also goats, chickens, and at least one house-pig coming up.

We aren’t done with San Diego yet. Stay tuned!

Big Weather to San Diego

Trip Odometer 3384

Outside the Cowtown Tavern in Stanfield, AZ. “Population 480 Humans, plus 250,000 cows”

January 28:From Portal it was just a hop, skip, and bump to Bisbee AZ to meet some Sitka friends who were on their own traveling adventure. We made had time for a nice bite and a walkabout through the town. This was once a big copper mining community, with the scars to prove it. The mine crashed in the 50’s and in the 60’s the town was repopulated by “Hippies and the the counter-culture.”

What we found was a funky town with a strong artist and visitor community but without too much pretense. The people were friendly and the prices were fair. The former mining town felt like a drier version of Juneau, AK: Wooden houses stacked against steep hills and winding streets that turn into steps. The hotel where our friends were staying, The Inn At Castle Rock, was like a a little maze of rooms and cozy meeting spaces. The reception desk is right next to a deep rock well!

For those keeping score, our route from Portal was Rodeo, Apache, Douglas, Bisbee, Tombstone, St. David, Benson, and with a concession to interstates, I10 into Tucson.

And before we knew it we were tucked away in Tucson with our Sitka friends Judy and Stef in their sweet little desert getaway! We enjoyed some Alaskan fish for dinner and a dip in the community hot tub before a great (and warm!) sleep.

Roughing it in Tucson with Stef and Judy.

Jan 29: With a delicious breakfast we said our goodbyes and pointed westward. Our plan was to find camp on the east side of the San Diego, which would make it an easy evening, and an easy drive to San Diego the next day. We had as a potential camp the fabled Slab City, but there were many other options for boondocking in the AZ desert.

We did a bit more interstate, just to remind us of why were vowed never to drive interstate, through Marana, Piccacho, and to the big dairy cowtown of Stanfield, where we had a parking lot lunch. A fellow pulled up in his truck and asked us what we had for sale. Our askance looks had him quickly explain that this lot is kind of an informal flea market, and folks park there all the time to convert their trash to some lucky buyer’s treasure.

GIla Bend, Dateland, Yuma (appears to be nothing but miles of parking-lot-in-a-dessert RV parks), and then off the interstate and onto barely-there roads and increasingly sandy desert. By the time we get to Glamis, we are looking at hard-blowing sand dunes all the way to the horizon.

With the hard winds we decided that any spot in the desert wasn’t going to be any fun, so we steered away from Slab City etc and headed toward Bradley to look for a more sheltered site. That’s when we got the Severe Weather Warning that the San Diego Mountains were going to expect heavy winds and snow at high elevations that evening, and could be impassible for two days!

With that news we hot footed it back to I8 and drove over the mountains to San Diego and Sitka friends Grace and Charley for a surprise early visit. The drive starts, appropriately, at Devil’s Canyon. It was bleak, curvy, dark, torrentially rainy, and absolutely no fun. And it didn’t get any better from there. When we at last got to the other side of the mountains, suddenly we were in busy California city and a whole different vein of multi-lane driving terror! But cool heads and white knuckles got us to our destination safe and sound and just in time for dinner.

Jan 30: That bad storm led to solid rain the next day, which was perfect. We spent a day lounging on couches and doing very little. We are enjoying our days in (now) sunny Dan Diego and will write up a full report next!

Charlie and Grace slumming it in a North Pacific Beach pizza joint.

High Altitude and Work Horses

Trip odometer 2689 miles.

Boondocking on the LBJ Grasslands in Texas.

Jan 21: From Texarcana (for those of you tracing our route) we crossed a big hunk of Texas, including Learn, Hooks, New Boston, DeKalb, Avery, Clarksville, Detroit, Reno, Paris, Sherman, and Gainesville. We made camp at the LBJ Grasslands on the Tadra Trailhead. We had called the Forest Service that morning just to be sure we were heading to the right camp spot (there are lots) and the kind gentleman told us what we needed to know, and then excused himself, as he had a fire to manage. Sure enough, about an hour or so from LBJ Grasslands we saw the smoke. It was a controlled burn, but I guess there have been some wildfires recently in the area.

Outside of Archer City. So many cows.

Jan 22: LBJ Grasslands was a place we could have easily stayed for another day or two, but we were still on a tight schedule to get further across the country. The next day we passed through Alvord, Barrie, Vashti, Windhurst, Archer City, Megargel, Throckmoprton, Haskell, Roby, Snyder, La Mesa, Seminole, and then into New Mexico and Hobbs and landed in Carlsbad.

We had a bit of a nailbiter finding gas at one point. When we finally got to a gas station we put in 24.5 gallons into our 25 gallon tank. Whew! Carlsbad was another just-passing-through town. It was getting pretty dang cold in the evenings, so we found a unique place to stay amidst all the hotel chains in the city.

The Karbani Inn.

This felt like a very Alaskan experience. The rooms were all what looked like pre-fab storage containers – what you might see a construction company install on a job site for a long term construction gig. And it did seem that most of the folks there might have been working on nearby hotel construction. All the other guests were gone by 7:30.

Jan 23: Out of Carlsbad we passed the salt flats and Guadeloupe National park, then entered Texas again and had to pass through El Paso. I hope to never have to drive through El Paso ever again in my entire life. Traffic (and computer guidance through it) was absolutely awful. No doubt we earned a few new gray hairs getting out of that city.

And it was in El Paso that we first experienced traveling so close to the Mexico border. I mean, here we were at a stoplight in El Paso, and Juarez was just over there. The contrast was stark. I regret not having a picture to help tell the story, but, as you now know, the stress of navigation overtook the documentary narrative at this point.

Moving past El Paso we travelled parallel to the Mexico border. We crossed back into New Mexico and and through Columbus, Hachita, Animus, and finally Rodeo. Most of the cars (trucks, actually) that we saw on the road were Border Patrol. At different points on the road, a truck would be parked with some sort of high-tech equipment in the bed, pointed at the border. The road was strewn with empty water bottles, and sometimes full bottles tied to a fence by some good Samaritan. At one crossroads, there was a fence that someone had decorated with items found from immigrant crossings: shoes, blankets, and the like. I was struck by two things I saw on the fence: a child’s backpack and a teddy bear.

That black line on the horizon is border wall.

Once we got to Rodeo we stayed at the fabulous Rusty’s RV Ranch. Amid the hundreds of RV parks we’ve passed, Rusty’s is something special. First there’s Rusty’s Round Up, a nice community space that was blissfully warm when it the outside elements weren’t. Then there was Rusty’s menagerie of exotic birds, goats, and other oddities. This is dark sky country – a place where folks flock to haul out their telescopes to look at a night sky not faded from lights. In fact, there were stern warnings throughout the park that one would be asked to leave if they were putting out too many lumens.

Just a few of the avian wonders of Rusty’s RV Ranch.

But the big draw of getting to Rodeo is that it was just a few minutes drive over the border to Portal Arizona, and our dear friends Becky and John!

Portal is right at the entrance to Cave Creek Canyon, which is all kinds of beautiful. It is one of those birder’s life-list kind of places, and we saw plenty of birders swooning about. It is about 5000 ft altitude at the base of the mountains. There had been a snowstorm three days before, and plenty of snow remained in the shady parts of the canyon. We spent our days hanging out and hiking with Becky and John, and our nights back at Rusty’s in the cold, cold camper. We spent five full days in Portal before continuing West.

One thing we both agree on is that we are looking forward to a slower pace of travel once we get to San Diego. We have some urgency to meet some of our Alaskan family there, but it has meant driving longer hours and passing by places and things that we would normally spend some time getting to know. Still, even at this pace we’ve managed to pack in some great experiences. In the next days, we will catch up with some other Alaskan family in Bisbee AZ, Tucson AZ, and get ever closer to our goal of reaching the West Coast!

7 days, 1400 miles

Hello from Wright Patman Lake in Texarkana, TX! The Bettymobile has been on the road for a week already! And we’re doing just fine. For the most part we’re avoiding interstates, and really enjoying the quirky sights of rural towns.

We spent last weekend making tracks to Oxford MS, opting to stay in hotels the first two nights because A) we wanted to keep moving, and B) it was cold at night!! Our route took us through Greensboro and Asheville NC (we had a really hard time not stopping in Asheville to enjoy their beer district!), Waynesville NC (where we accidentally got in with a funeral procession), then Young Harris–>Elljay–>Shannon GA (home of the Frisky Biscuit), landing in Rome GA at a comfy hotel and some Thai takeout.

Victory pose after making it to the top of the Appalachian Mountains!

On Monday we drove across Alabama and landed in Oxford MS. As soon as we crossed the state line into Alabama, the road was literally lined with cotton! (It had come loose from the bales in recent windstorms and got caught in the roadside.) We found an excellent family restaurant in Snead City and had a delicious lunch of BBQ and dirt pudding. YUM. After crossing the Mississippi border, we hopped on the Natchez Trace Parkway – a beautiful scenic drive maintained by the National Park Service – which took us into Tupelo, and then it was just another 45 minutes to Oxford.

Our connection to Oxford is my friend Deb, who I met in the summer of 1995 when we both worked in Grand Teton National Park. She had a remarkable impact on my life that summer; we had a soul-sister type connection. I’ve seen her only once since then – in the fall of 2000 – so it’s pretty amazing that we have stayed connected! It was excellent to see her again, and to meet her delightful family. Oxford is a really interesting town! Deb’s husband Mike is a phenomenal tour guide, and a professor at Ole Miss, so we got the VIP campus tour (in a golf cart!) plus the opportunity to meet a few locals as we enjoyed the downtown square. We were also able to use their driveway/garage to finish a couple of details on the camper and reorganize our packing a little bit, plus I was able to work from their back porch. We are so grateful to them for being the first stop on our shake-down cruise – it was a perfect combination of catching up with friends, learning about a new place, and problem solving.

We left Oxford on Thursday morning, but we couldn’t venture *too* far because I had a spate of meetings starting at 11 am! Matthew’s becoming an expert on the Dyrt app – which helps locate campsites and has a bunch of filters so you can screen for things like cell phone coverage, wifi, bathrooms, and high ratings from other campers. His research led us to a casino near Tunica MS, right on the Mississippi River (although you couldn’t actually see it from there). It was awesome! I found a quiet corner of the casino (it was difficult, but I found it!) where I worked all afternoon and even had a couple of video meetings, while Matthew set us up in the parking lot campsite. We had access to the pool and fitness area (although we ultimately didn’t use them, but what a nice perk!), and we grabbed dinner in a perfect southern diner.

Yesterday we drove all the way across Arkansas and ended up here, just outside of Texarkana. It’s a beautiful campground, and I wish we could stay longer! But I need to wrap this up and grab a shower so we can get on our way. Our ultimate goal is to get to Portal AZ by Monday evening, so there’s still some ground to cover. We’re planning a shorter day today – aiming for a spot north of Decatur TX, which is apparently all grasslands! We’re looking forward to a slower traveling pace, where we’re not on the move so much, but we’re trying to get to warmer weather and meet up with some pals in the western states. So, off we go!