The open road beckons:
a six-week odyssey, wending our way from Florida to the east coast of
Newfoundland. We travel in a Tahoe
towing a trailer, in the company of two dogs and a cat, visiting friends and
family along the way.
I admit to mixed feelings about this trip. On the
one hand, I am apprehensive and at times my anxiety rises to the level of a
sense of doom. But another part of me
says, “Hey, get a grip. How bad could it
be? Let’s just get it over with.”
The roots of my apprehension are my memories of a family
vacation in a recreational vehicle during the summer of ’63. I was twelve years old and paid close attention
during the orientation. One point that
particularly interested me was that you could hear the pump kick in every time
you turned on the water. If the pump ran
unceasingly, it meant you were out of water.
We spent our first
night in a campground in Bastrop State Park, in central Texas. There were no RV hookups. In those days, such things could only be
found in a trailer park. It was hot that
night and my mother wanted to run the air conditioner, which required running
the generator. This was not very popular
among the people around us who were sleeping in tents.
In the morning, my father announced that he was going to
take a “Navy” shower. “First you get
your body wet, turn of the water,” he explained. “After you get soaped up, you rinse off.”
He stepped into the tiny bathroom, with the shower head
projecting from the wall over the toilet, and we all listed as the water pump kicked
in for the first phase of his shower and then stopped. A few minutes later, the pump kicked in
again. But it didn’t stop. It droned on as he emerged from the bathroom
dotted with soap bubbles. He didn’t seem
that grateful to me when I reminded him of what the man had told us about the
water pump.
We did not have a hose to refill the tank. None of the people around us would lend us a
hose. Generator noise had made our
family a pariah. We drove to a gas
station where my father, still coated in bubbles, refilled our tank with
water. When he got back into the
driver’s seat, his hand was wrapped in a bloody towel. My mother asked “What happened?”, but she
could not understand his muttered response.
The third time she asked, he shouted, “I cut it on the license plate!!”
I wish I could say that the rest of the trip went smoothly,
but the best I can say is that nothing worse happened. Despite that negative experience, I am taking
the plunge once more. My husband and I bought
a third-hand trailer for this trip, and recently took it on a trial run go a
campground a few miles from our home. Facilities
for trailers and RV’s have come a long way since 1963. The sites have water, sewage, and even wi-fi!. The water hookup was on the wrong side and so
we had to run the hose over the picnic table and under the RV, but otherwise
things went smoothly. We only had to
return home twice for things we left at home, and then went out for
dinner. There was only one tense
moment: My husband tripped over the water
hose, and guess what—cut his finger!!
After a trip to the drug store for band-aids, we decided that one night
in the camp was a sufficient trial.
My parent’s marriage survived that trip more than 50 years
ago. With luck, Tom and I will stay married, too.
What a Trip!!!
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