Wednesday, November 10, 2021

An eventful displacement to Arizona after hiking in the Gila NF

I woke before sunrise as usual and captured it through the port window of the VRRV:


 I also happened to see a small herd of Javelina Pigs stroll on by the campsite, crossing the entrance road like it was nothing:


Just look at the mean face being made by the Javelina on the left, I wouldn't want to be near it when its mad.

I also drove the Sammy over to the other side of the lake to get the reflection:

I would end up doing an earlier than expected displacement to Arizona today; the replacement oxygen sensor for the VRRV wasn't expected till sometime this afternoon in Safford, AZ.  It was delivered before 9am instead!  The original plan had been to overnight one more night then head to Safford on Thursday morning.

Where was I at that time, not at the campsite I'll tell you!  I was out of cellular signal range, hiking the Sanctuary Trail in the Gila National Forest.

I only hiked about 1.75 miles of it, the below pic being the furthest point I made after arriving at a gate that lead to trail 859B.

Here's some views as I hiked back to the Sammy:




I then meandered with the Sammy, checking out the same trails I'd seen yesterday, but this time under bright sunshine:


Around 11 AM, as I was parking the Sammy for more pictures, I heard my phone go "Ting!".  Surprised that I had signal, I checked out the message from Martha and responded.  I took the opportunity to check email as well and there it was, the notice from Amazon that my part had been delivered to the Safford Main Post Office!

I got back to the campsite by 1130 and by Noon I was ready to go!  

I used US180, which transits the Apache National Forest.  I must go back and check out the campgrounds there some day soon.  Not because of the campsites, but the awesome looking large rock formations visible from the highway as one drives along!  Very nice.  I was almost tempted to turn around and find a campsite but continued on instead.  The thought was, there's better chances of getting a good campsite in the middle of the week, the closer to the weekend one is, the more weekenders abound!

Got to Safford shortly before 2 PM and picked up the part from the Post Office and the supplies/tool from Napa within 30 minutes!  I would then waste over an hour trying to find a campground which would allow me to dump tanks and take on water!  I must have used nearly a quarter of the tank crisscrossing the town in heavy traffic doing this.

The one advertised on Allstays.com as doing this, didn't do it anymore.  I couldn't find the one recommended by them and then called a third site.  The Safford RV Resort said sure!  But cash only and if possible, in quarters.  Huh?

So I spent more time tracking down a bank for its ATM then walking inside to get said quarters.  A few minutes later I was dumping tanks and getting water, finally.

On the way to gas up, I was driving slowly (luckily) through town when I felt a bump from behind.  I looked on the rear camera monitor and the Sammy was out of position!  I was at a stop sign so I slowly turned right and parked the RV.  

I found the Sammy had somehow lost the port side pin that secured the tow bar arm to the port side tow point!  The bump I felt/heard had been the Sammy bumping against the now collapsed tow bar when I had come to a stop!

Dammit.

As I was doing initial assessments, a passing motorist who'd seen all this happen stopped and offered assistance.  Anthony L. helped me get the Sammy out of the traffic lane and then generously offered to take me to the Ace hardware store for a replacement pin.

I found a suitable replacement pin with built-in locking bar which fit nicely.  Anthony helped me hook up the Sammy once more, I ran through the towing checklist with his help and was soon on the road again.

My thanks to Anthony L.!  I tried to give him money but he said: "Just pay it forward...." .  A man after my own heart!

After getting gas for the VRRV, it was 4:15 PM and I was about 50 minutes from the Hot Well Dunes Recreation Area campsite!  Sunset was at 5:20PM so I raced the sun to the site.  I would have made it with more than 10 minutes to spare but ran up on a convoy of three other RVs, driving VERY slowly.

I finally got past two of the slower ones when they stopped at the registration point.  The other RV and I continued onwards, leaving the slow bastards in our dust.

Found a site near where I'd stayed before.  The place seems to be more full than ever.  Especially for a Wednesday night!  What the hell.  Still, I found a good spot, got camp set up in the gathering darkness and could still see outside when finished.  What a drive!

Still, I'm here safely.  I met a Good Samaritan, got everything I needed for the repairs and planning on a few days of dune riding ahead!

4 comments:

CCjon said...

Javelina are good eating, but.... it's getting past the odor coming from the musk gland high on the rear quarters when you try to skin them. Most people toss the carcass once that smell hits them like an assault on their senses.

One has to be pretty hungry to eat one of those critters.


redlegsrides said...

I got to say CCjon, the thought of eating one did not even cross my mind!

SonjaM said...

You strike me the kind of guy who helped others out of a jam in the past, so meeting this good Samaritan was your payback.

redlegsrides said...

I have, and it was....SonjaM. it's always best to be building up some positive karma in one's life eh?