I got the oven pilot light fixed and we have used it a couple of times with limited success. It seems that the temperature sensor may be faulty. If you set it at the correct temperature, the burner just stays on indefinitely and makes you some nice meal shaped charcoal briquettes if you don't constantly watch it. We found that turning the temperature about 200 degrees lower than what you actually want to cook at works a bit better. I will be looking further into this and possibly replacing the oven in the spring.
I took a 60 mile off road ride the day after the last blog post. Whit was still recuperating from her last ride so she did not join me. I came across some really cool rock formations but did not have the camera with me. We will be doing that ride again when we return to Quartzsite next week and will take the camera with us. A couple days after my ride we took a ride to a place called Dripping Springs. It supposedly has a spring coming out of a cave wall that drips all year long regardless of how long it has been since it has rained. There are also some very old abandoned cabins and Indian hieroglyphs. We made it to within 1/2 mile and it started raining so we high tailed it back to the rig. It was a ~45 minute ride back so we were soaked by the time we got back but it was warm so no big deal. We will also be doing this ride again and taking pictures next week.
The rain that started on that ride did not stop for 2 days, so we had 2 much needed days off :). After the rain stopped, we found that our black water tank was leaking. For those of you that do not know rv lingo, there are 3 types of holding tanks (fresh water, gray water, and black water). Fresh is obvious, gray is where the sinks and shower drain into, and black is where the toilet drains to. Of all the tanks to be leaking, black is the worst. It looked like it was just a hose coupling so I drained the tank and replaced the hose coupling with a rubber one so it would have some flexibility. That seemed to do the trick. About 4 days later, the tank started leaking again. The hose coupling was the lowest part on the tank so was the first thing to start leaking. Once I fixed that, the level in the tank could rise to the unseen crack in the tank where it began leaking again. Once again we drained the tank and this time I used epoxy and silicon tape to repair it. I do not enjoy working in poo and had to do it twice in one week. That was over a week ago and it has not leaked since. Hopefully that is the last of Bryce's adventures with poo (or is it?).
We were sitting having dinner one night when we heard a loud hissing noise coming from the rear of the rig. It turned out to be a broken coupling on a hot water line inside a wall. It had let go and sprayed water all over the inside of the wall. The previous owner made several repairs on this rig in the past and I guess the only tools he owned were wire coat hangers and string. He had broken all of the roof vents and wired them shut with coat hangers. One of my first repairs on this rig were the vents. The aforementioned coupling had ruptured in the past and instead of fixing it properly he had tied it back on with what appeared to be a shoe string... I was extremely surprised that it lasted as long as it did. I repaired it correctly and we have not heard from it since. I am positive that this is not the last I have heard from string or coat hangers in this rig.
Upon leaving Quartzsite we stopped at Mittry Lake just North of Yuma. It is a water fowl conservation area just off the Colorado River. The road getting to it from the North was 5 miles of washboard gravel - very annoying in an RV. It was so rough that it cracked a hinge on our fridge. Upon further inspection, I found that all of the fridge/freezer's hinges were plastic. What a stupid design. We had a ton of condiments and a half gallon of OJ in the door shelves of the fridge. That weight combined with the rough road were the culprits. They really should put a warning on the inside of RV fridge's not to put any weight in the door compartments. We moved everything out of the doors and started doing research and making calls to replace the hinge.
The site we found at Mittry Lake was pretty and right next to the spillway from the lake so had running water noise all night long which was nice. There was a quarry a few hundred yards away but there was no one there when we arrived (after 5 pm) so we hoped we were safe. They arrived promptly at 8 am the next morning and commenced to breaking rocks on our doorstep. We then realized why this was one of the only camping spots left open at the lake. We loaded back up and left through the South side of the lake. We hit paved road about 400 yards from the campsite so we decided we would come from the South if we ever came to Mittry Lake again.
We had decided the night before to take a bunch of stuff out of our rig and get rid of it. We called around and there were no used RV parts places or anywhere that wanted the stuff we were getting rid of. The city dump happened to be between Mittry Lake and Yuma, so it was our first stop that day. We removed the big chair that was behind the front passenger side seat. It was useless and uncomfortable and just taking up valuable space. We also got rid of the second mattress on the over cab bed (our bed). Over cab mattresses are really just 4 inch thick pieces of foam. We had gotten a memory foam mattress to put over the foam and had decided that it was all we needed and could ditch the foam. This made our bed much larger and 4 inches further from the ceiling (which was a lot). Now I can almost sit up in bed. Almost. We unmounted our awning and got rid of it as well. It was ripped and bent so of not much use anyways. Lastly, we got rid of the ladder that went up to the over cab bed. It was bent and annoying to store. The over cab was now lower so easier to get into anyways.
After our trip to the dump we went to a Walmart in Yuma. We replaced the chair that we removed with a couple of storage ottomans for added storage and somewhere to put our feet when watching tv. We had found after making a few phone calls that the fridge hinge could not be replaced without replacing the entire door which was quite expensive. I repaired the hinge with epoxy and a metal bracket in the Walmart parking lot and it in now stronger than it was before.
Next we headed to a place called Pilot Knob just West of Yuma. It is BLM land and is free for 14 days so we will be here for another week. We have to be in Phoenix on the 12th to get some warranty maintenance done on my Husky. Here are shots of our current digs.
The weather is in the mid 70's during the day and mid 50's at night, so pretty much perfect. I would not like to be here in the summer though. We have been training Ivy to run with the bicycle and it has been going pretty well. I trained Nala when we first got her and she took to it with relative ease. She stopped in front of the bike a couple of times and got ran over, but soon learned to stay to one side or the other. Since I trained Nala, Whitney is training Ivy. The first day Ivy was doing great at first running as fast as she could right beside the bike. She saw something off the side of the road and decided to jump in front of the bike to either get a closer look or end it all (the jury is still out on her motive). Whit promptly hit her and went over the handlebars. Thankfully neither had more than a scrape and both came away with a lesson. Ivy learned that if she tried to run over the bike, the opposite would happen. Whit learned to be more vigilant on the brakes and that if she tried to run over Ivy she would briefly get to practice flying. Since Nala and I had already learned these same lessons long ago we just tried to comfort/encourage them and tried not to let them see us laughing. The last two rides they did were much better.
We took a bike into Yuma on Sunday and watched the Super Bowl at a local Chili's. They had happy hour for the whole game so we stuffed ourselves on all of the greasy fried stuff we could handle (which we regretted later) and enjoyed the game. We took a great ride yesterday into some nearby dunes. We both got to play around in the dunes (and if I may brag a bit, Whit did great in the sand and is improving with every ride). Here are some pictures of the ride.
Haven't been able to convince Whit to try a wheelie yet.
Sand is great for roostie's.
This bowl is a lot steeper than it looks in the picture. We will get some better shots next time out.
Her first bit of air!
Concentration face.
Awesome post guys! I was wondering where you all had been. Glad Bryce is so handy at fixing things. Seems there is a lot to be fixed. Glad to see there is relaxation going on even with all the repairs. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat post! As I read it sparked many memories which I'll Email. Hope bike is fixed soon. Quartzite has not changed any. Played cards with Kati & Marsha last eve. We are going to miss that! U 2 may need to take our places at the table.
ReplyDeleteAnd, "Concentration Face"??? R U kidding? that's concentration face, hips, knees, hands, feet...!! I remember! I never liked sand...