Skip to content

Posts from the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Water & Trees: The Pacific Coast

We left Gold Beach and actually headed south to our next campground in Brookings, OR.

Along the way we stopped at . . .

 

OTTER POINT STATE RECREATION SITE (Gold Beach, OR)

The Pacific

 

Walking from the beach cliff

 

The Beach Cliff

 

 

HARRIS BEACH STATE PARK (Brookings, OR)

 

Harris Beach from the Bluffs

 

Harris Beach Shore

 

 

 

 

JEDEDIAH SMITH REDWOODS STATE PARK (Crescent City, CA)

Redwoods

 

Jan’s taking it home

 

 

Smith River

 

Much of the river is emerald green

 

. . . and the river floods

 

 

AND NOW THIS . . .

 

 

Huckleberries!

Tillamook = Ambrosia

This post really has nothing to do with Tillamook ice cream (more on that later), but it does have something to do with huckleberries (more on that later too).

We spent our last night in Gold Beach, OR dining at Spinners restaurant.

I had Filet Mignon . . .

 

Jan had a Filet of Local Salmon

 

My Filet Mignon was to die for and Jan said her salmon was the best she has ever had, but the cherry on top was our dessert — a Huckleberry Ice Cream Sundae. Lord all mighty! We did not miss the traditional chocolate sundae. It’s the berries.

Finally, Tillamook ice cream is a recent discovery of ours. The closest quality ice cream to Tillamook’s was Gile’s Frozen Custard in Milwaukee, but Tillamook steps it up a notch by adding ingredients like huckleberries in their ice cream. We’ll be visiting Tillamook’s creamery at the end of June.

Lucky Lodge RV Park (Gold Beach, OR)

Emigrant Lake, CA to Gold Beach, OR

We’ve been at Lucky Lodge for about as week and have been checking it out as a possible monthly spot for next summer.

Our first impressions of the park and area are great.

Click on photo to enlarge

 

Our Site #9

 

View from our RV Door

 

Rogue River

 

Flirt’s Swimming Hole

 

A Best Buy – The Kamp-Rite Kwik Set Hammock

One of our neighbors at Emigrant Lake, our previous campground, had a portable hammock that we really liked the look of. So we bought one and had it sent to our next campground.

At under $100 delivered, the Kwik Set Hammock is one comfortable, but heavy, hammock.

Love at first . . .

 

 

Campground Internet Report 1

We’re about 1/3 of the way through our West Coast trip. I thought it was a good time to summarize our experiences with campground Internet, a service we depend on in our travels.

At a campground, we can get Internet services through one or more of the following:

  • Campground WiFi – if, and only if, it’s available.
  • Verizon – we have an old New Verizon 40 GB Plan and use a USB730L modem plugged into a Cradlepoint 1200B router.
  • AT&T – we have an Unlimited Data plan using an AT&T Mobley.
  • HughesNet Gen 5 – we currently have a 50 GB/month plan using a .98M HughesNet Gen 5 dish.

So how did each of these work out in the last 16 campgrounds we stayed?

Here are the results . . .

Click on graph to enlarge

 

MY CONCLUSIONS:

First, and foremost, any conclusions are tentative as 16 campgrounds is just not enough data. That said . . .

  • “Satellite Internet isn’t necessary because cellular reception is available at the vast majority of campgrounds” – this is a common statement found on web RV forums. Well, I had to use my HughesNet Gen 5 dish in almost 1/3 (5 of 16) of the RV parks we stayed because there was no Verizon or AT&T cell service available.
  • “Campground WiFi is crappy” – another popular web forum notion. Though I wasn’t expecting much, I found campground WiFi to be much better than I thought it would be. For example, half (8 of 16) the campgrounds we visited had at least “usable” WiFi, that is, you could use it for web browsing. Also, 4 of those 8 campgrounds had WiFi fast enough for streaming video on a regular basis.
  • “Verizon is better than AT&T” – I’m not finding that to be true. Based on these 16 campgrounds, I’d drop my Verizon data plan. However, I’ll postpone that decision until the end of our trip.