Week 158 - Missoula, North Idado - 08-23-2009
Another great week, relatively speaking
Back from Alaska and Canada, everything seems "normal" again. You can
drive through a town and pick which fuel station you want to use. In
CaAlaskaDa, in many of the towns, you ask "Where is
the fuel
station?" or "Is
the fuel station open?". So we are enjoying
normality and headed off to visit relatives and friends.
Our first visit was to Pete's brother Mike. We met in Missoula,
Montana and headed for the Clark Fork river to enjoy seven miles of
kayaking.
1) Ellen waited with the kayaks as Mike and Pete dropped off Mike's
jeep and came back on the scooter. 2) We're off!
We started at Tarkio. Upstream from Tarkio are some aggressive Class
III and Class IV rapids where every year many are injured or even
killed. We kayaked a fun section of the Clark Fork from Tarkio to
Forest Grove. Mike has hundreds of hours of canoeing experience. This
was his first kayak run and it was enjoyable right up to the point
where he got dumped! But he was able to recover his hat and we all
enjoyed his little splash. Pete was too busy trying to avoid the same
fate so there are no photos of the big crash.
As you can see the float was not only fun but beautiful, complete with
bald eagle sightings.
Saying goodbye to Mike, we continued West to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho to
meet Ellen's cousin Sylvia and her husband Larry.
They have an awesome cabin on Lake Coeur d'Alene. Nestled in the
trees, it sits on Rockford Bay.
The cabin sits high above the lake on a very steep embankment. There
are 60 steps to take you from the road to their house and 86 more to
get down to the boat dock.
On the lake they keep a full assortment of water toys. They need them
all as they frequently invite dozens of guests from their church to
come over eat, fellowship and enjoy the lake. Larry and Sylvia have
the gift of hospitality. As seen from the boat, their cabin is barely
visible from the water level.
The lake is 28 miles long and you can travel up the two feeder rivers,
Coeur d'Alene and St. Joe, and have access to several other lakes
connected by canals. 1) This bridge was used by the railroad. More
recently an elevated pedestrian and bike path was built over the
railroad. 2) These Ospreys built their nest on the "Slow, No Wake" sign.
1) The Coeur d'Alene River lead us to a quiet little lake that is
connected by a very secluded canal. 2) Hospitality included good
conversation, refreshments, a day on the lake and BBQ chicken dinner. We appreciated the beautiful day we shared.
A short hop north from Coeur d'Alene is the quiet little town of
Blanchard. Just outside of town is the Golf Community StoneRidge. Our
Atascadero neighbors and traveling buddies, Ben and Sid have purchased
an RV lot at StoneRidge. This is an "Ownership Park". Let us
explain. Unlike most RV parks and campground, you don't have to rent
your site. 1) You can purchase a undeveloped site like
280 where the MotherShip sits. 2) You can enhance it as you like. Ben and
Sid added the storage shed, patio, and pergola (the sun cover).
An ownership park is a HOA (Home Owners Association). You buy your lot,
pay the utilities, taxes and HOA fees. We have visited a dozen
ownership parks across the USA. StoneRidge has the largest lots and
the lowest HOA fees that we have seen.
Some of the facilities are just for the motorcoach owners and others
are to be shared with the house owners, condo owners and timeshares.
1) The Grill has meals available daily. 2) The motorcoach pool and spa.
1) The motorcoach lounge has the sitting room, satellite TV, free
WiFi, fitness room, showers, free laundry and a fully equipped
kitchen. Currently there is no Verizon connection so we could only
stay for the weekend. We fellowshipped, dined, played pickleball, had
dinner in Priest River, more pickleball and attended a motorcoach
park-wide party. Everyone was so nice and we had a wonderful stay.
They are "promising" to have a Verizon tower next year, so we could
stay longer. If you do not own, you can rent by the day, week or
month. Thank you Ben and Sid for a fun weekend.
Next week promises to be slower paced as we hunker down somewhere to
stay cool in the 80-90 degree heat!
Be blessed, love, Pete and Ellen
Photos from Aug 2009