Thursday, September 29, 2022

29 Sep 2022 - Trip Completed! Arrived at Griff's RV Park (Home) - Final Stats

 29 Sep


Stick a fork in it.  This sucker is D.U.N done!  We had a fantastic trip and made it home safe and sound without bending any metal or losing any skin!  We departed the West Omaha/NE Lincoln KOA this morning at 0930 hrs and headed eastbound on I-80 towards Des Moines. 


We stopped once at Underwood IA rest area for a potty break and then hammer down into Ankeny.  West of Des Moines we decided to take I-235 through Des Moines rather than I-80/35 around Rider corner since it was in the middle of the day.  No issues.  At 1240 hrs we rolled into Griff's Valley View RV Park after driving 164 miles today.  We set-up quickly in site C8 and cooked up a late lunch.  
At 1600 hrs we headed home to exchange vehicles and we drove our Chrysler 200 to our grandson's baseball game in West Des Moines.  It was great to see Dan, Ashley and the family again!  Calvin had a great game with some time on "the hill" pitching, some time behind the plate catching, and he even smacked a three-bagger into deep center field!!  Nice to be home!

Our RV will be here at Griff's for the next 14 nights as we unload it, winterize it, repair a couple minor things and basically get it ready for it's long winter's nap.  We are sleeping here tonight, but after tonight we will move home and commuting our here each day as we work on getting it ready to store.

We had a fantastic RV travel year!  We are thankful our health allows us to travel.  We saw a ton of friends, relatives, military comrades and Alliance Allies, and we saw a lot of the great United States!  We won't regurgitate a lot about the trip as it is already documented in all of the blog posts. We had no ER visits, no veterinary visits, no truck issues and no RV issues to speak of.  I don't think either Doreen or I even had so much as a cough or cold the whole trip.  We are tired but a good "tired" and after a winter reset we will be ready to hit it hard again ~1 Apr next year!  Texas, here we come!!  For now it is back to reality, back to the gym, knock out the physicals, the dental appointments (coming to see you Carrie Ireland Deal!!), the dermatology appointments, the optometrist appointments, the veterinary appointments - you get the idea!

Thank you to everyone who we reconnected with during the trip.  Thank you to Alliance for building a solid coach and for the huge FamAlly we have joined!  And a huge thanks to our son Dan Schellhase who stops by our house weekly if not more often to make sure everything is OK on the home front. We could not do this without him!  

Thanks to all who followed along with us with the blog.  Writing a blog every night is a lot of work not to mention editing and cropping the pictures, and shrinking them so they will upload efficiently.  You are getting it uncut and unfiltered - what happens along the way you are reading about.  And now we are done, except for the final stats, and we "stick a fork in it"!  


Final Trip Stats:

This is campground #37 of 37 (last year was 35)
# States Traveled Through So Far This Trip: 20 (IA, IL, IN, MI, OH, KY, TN, AR, OK, KS, MO, IA, WI, MN, ND, MT, ID, WY, NE, IA)  (last year was 22)
# States left to visit on this trip:  0
Baseball Parks Visited So Far This Trip:  3 (Tulsa Drillers MiLB, Oklahoma City Dodgers MiLB, Kansas City Royals MLB)
Lighthouses visited:  2 (Hefner Lake in OK City and Raspberry Island WI)
Lighthouses climbed:  0
Point to point travel miles:  6559 miles (last year was 5847 mi)
  - Avg point to point travel miles between campgrounds:  173 miles
Vicinity miles:  3913 miles (last year was 7098 mi)
  - Avg vicinity miles:  109 miles
Total miles driven:  10472 miles (last year was 12945 mi)
Total point to point driving time:  143 hrs 51 minutes
Total diesel fuel purchased: 930.173 gals (last year was 1053.009 gal)
Total diesel fuel cost:  $4729.01 (last year was 3264.68)
Average diesel fuel cost/gal:  $5.100 (last year was $3.103)
Max diesel fuel cost:  $5.599 (Island Park, ID) (last year was $3.659)
Min diesel fuel cost:  $4.439 (Ankeny IA) (last year was $2.799)
Avg MPG:  11.43 miles/gal
Cost/mi of operation:  $0.46
# Nights at end of this stay:  189 (Includes Griff's start and finish)
Total lodging cost:  $8091.30  (includes Griff's start and finish)
Average cost/night:  $42.81 (last year was $41.94)





Wednesday, September 28, 2022

28 Sep 2022 - Last Day at the Omaha/Lincoln KOA and Dinner with Rusty & Lynn Rosenbaum

 28 Sep 2022


Low key day here.  We worked around the RV, finished up the inventory and discussed our return.  You would think things would slow down but just the opposite!  The plate is pretty full with grandkids baseball games, doctor appointments, dental appointments, optometrist appointments, veterinary appointments, etc.  We will be working hard to get the coach unloaded and get moved back into our house.  Then cleaning, maintenance and winterizing the water/sewer systems in preparation for the coach going to winter storage.  



This evening we drove into Gretna to refuel the big ol' brown truck before our trip home tomorrow, then we met our great friends Rusty & Lynn Rosenbaum for dinner there in Gretna at Langdon's Bar and Grill. We originally met Rusty back in the 1980's when he was a contractor at the Air Guard base.  His company was hired to install our telephone system  and Rusty came over from Nebraska periodically to do maintenance.  That was before the Air Guard bought the system out and we started doing our own maintenance.  Rusty was also an Air Force Veteran, joining in 1973 the same year I went to basic training,  and was in telephone maintenance then.  

We got to know Rusty quite well when he came over to the Des Moines Air Base, and when he came over he would come down to our house and play with our kids.  We would usually barbecue and have a few beers!  We have kept in touch all these years, in fact in 2015 he came over to my military retirement.  We love this guy like a brother!



That is it from the Lincoln/Omaha KOA.  We will pull chocks tomorrow morning and head east on I-80 towards Des Moines.  Short drive tomorrow at 166 miles.  Tomorrow afternoon we will land at Griff's RV Park and will stay there tomorrow night before starting to unload the RV and move back into the house. We will post one more summary entry after we get home with the final stats.  

Next report, Griff's RV Park!   

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

27 Sep 2022 - Lunch with Leo Kreifels

 27 Sep


This morning we drove about 30 miles SW to Lincoln NE to the home of Chief Master Sergeant (ret) Leo Kreifels (pictured above) and his spouse Phyllis.  As I explained last night, Leo and I go back literally decades.  We both served as Chiefs in communications maintenance at our Air National Guard bases - Leo in Lincoln and me in Des Moines.  I had not seen Leo in many years but when we were in Comm, we exchanged phone calls and emails very regularly. And that was not just Leo and I, that was Comm Chiefs from all over the United States, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.  Unlike many areas of the civilian sector, Leo and I were not in competition with each other, we were on the same team.  We would readily and willingly share ideas, share best practices, share equipment, sometimes even share personnel, and do anything we could to help each other and our units. Periodically we would travel to each other's units to see how they operated  and Leo and I did that many times. We were what I call "comrades" as we all served in the military but over the decades we became close friends, and we have these comrades/friends from coast to coast.  I am very happily retired after serving many years, but I truly miss all these great warriors with whom I served!

So we arrived at Leo's house and were greeted by Leo and his spouse Phyllis.  We talked and talked - lots of time to make up you know!  I deployed across the pond in 2006-2007 and Leo deployed in 2006 also, and we talked about experiences and leadership challenges deployed.  About an hour later we headed out to lunch and the discussions continued LOL.  We enjoyed a nice lunch at Don & Millies not far from Leo's house.  

After lunch we headed back to Leo's house and the conversations continued!!  It was so great to get caught up on what Leo and Phyllis had been doing and we vowed to stay in touch. 

We headed back to the campground and passed the lighthouse I mentioned last night, so we grabbed a picture. 

This is located at a campground just down the road from where we are camping.  It is a privately owned recreation area developed around an artificial lake in Sarpy County.  The site was opened in 1924 and in 1939 a 100-foot lighthouse was added to it.  It looks like there used to be maybe a concession stand or something underneath the lighthouse, but it is closed up now.  Anyway, it is pretty neat looking along side the road.  

That is about it for today.  We did work the inventory a bit more.  We also grilled the remaining meat that was in the fridge while we had the grill out, then I cleaned it up and stowed it for the season.  Cubs vs Phillies tonight at Wrigley.  Tomorrow's plan is undecided but tomorrow night we have dinner plans with our great friends Rusty and Lynn Rosenbaum not far from here, then Thursday we head for home.

Monday, September 26, 2022

26 Sep 2022 - Planning for Our Return and Dinner with Mark & Pamela Forster

 26 Sep


Today Doreen and I worked on preparations for our return Thursday and unloading of the coach.  We basically went room by room, cabinet by cabinet and drawer by drawer and created a detailed inventory spreadsheet.  Then we marked each item that will be removed at the end of the season (not stored in the coach) vs that which will stay in the coach (in bins) while in winter storage.  We also marked anything being removed as to whether or not it will be reloaded next spring.  After living in here for 5-6 months each year for the past three years you get a pretty good idea if the item is actually needed or not!  

This list will be of great benefit when we get home for unloading, and next spring when we go to reload.  It would also be valuable in case we would have a catastrophic loss such as fire, etc.  We have a little bit to finish in the outside compartments but for the most part the majority is done.  We will take pictures of each compartment and drawer also so we know exactly how to reload next spring.  This was time very well spent.



This evening we met Mark Forster and his wife Pamela (pictured above) at a nearly barbecue restaurant for dinner.  Mark was a boom operator on the KC-135 refueling aircraft at Lincoln Air National Guard base before he was selected as State Command Chief (CCM) for Nebraska like I was for Iowa.  We served together for three out of the four years I was State CCM and we both served together on the Air National Guard's Enlisted Field Advisory Council in Washington DC. 

I retired as State CCM in 2015 and Mark in 2016.  Since then he has worked for the Veteran's Administration as well as Sheel's Sporting Goods.  Mark is an avid bicyclist and is involved with the Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing, Inc, which is "dedicated to the physical and emotional rehabilitation of disabled active military service personnel and disabled veterans through fly fishing and associated activities including education and outings."  What a great organization!

Reconnecting with military comrades, friends and relatives is one of the things Doreen and I enjoy most about our travels.  It was great to see Mark again and meet Pamela.  Tomorrow we will have lunch with another good friend for life, Chief Master Sergeant (ret) Leo Kreifels and his wife Phyllis.  Leo and I go WAY back as we were both communications maintenance technicians, Leo at Lincoln NE Air Guard base and me at the Des Moines IA Air Guard base.  We both saw so many changes in the communications field during our careers, including the arrival of the first desktop and laptop computers and the installation of fiber optic cables and local area networks at our bases.  Wow, how that changed the way our Airmen did business!  So it will be great to see Leo again.  It has been a long time!

Tomorrow we may check out the lighthouse on the way to Lincoln - YES I said lighthouse!!

Sunday, September 25, 2022

25 Sep 2022 - Arrived at West Omaha NE Lincoln KOA Campground

 25 Sep


We departed Kearney this morning at 1036 hrs and headed eastbound on I-80 towards Omaha.  Today's drive was only 166 miles and we could not check in to the West Omaha NE Lincoln KOA campground until 1400 hrs so we loitered a bit before departing.  I have not really talked about our departures much, but like everything else, we have a routine.  Imagine that!  One of the things we do before closing up the inside and rolling in the slideouts is to thoroughly clean the floors.  Besides just a good housekeeping practice, it is also another way to help prevent damage to the vinyl floors by sand, rocks and other items as the slideouts roll in.  The cleaner the floor, the less chance of damage.  We have found the easiest way to accomplish this is with a simple Swiffer.  We go over the floors from end to end with a dry Swiffer (or two if necessary), and then finally we go over all the floors with a wet Swiffer.  Then once the floors are done we basically back our way out and then take care of the outside chores before hooking up and pulling out.    

So away we went and passed under the Archway on I-80 that we had visited earlier in the week.  


We did not need to make a fuel stop for the short trip today, but potty breaks for both us and the pooch are always welcome. We tend to roll into either a rest area or a truck stop and then we are able to open our stairs and use our own potty facilities.  It also gives me a chance to stick my head in the coach and just have a visual to make sure all is well.  Today we stopped two hours into the travel at a truck stop near York NE.  I went inside and picked up some lunch while Doreen walked Liberty.  We were there about a half hour and then we on our way again.  

At 1410 hrs we rolled into the West Omaha NE Lincoln KOA campground.  Travel distance today was 166 miles and start to finish including our break was about 3-1/2 hours.  This is a KOA "Holiday" which is the middle of the KOA's from the standpoint of amenities. Most basic is the "Journey", highest is "Resort".  But basically it is just a place to call home for the next four nights, the last four nights of this trip.  We could have easily drove on home today but we had some folks we wanted to see while we were in the area.  

The office where we check in, and outside some golf carts positioned to escort us to our site.

Our site is marked with the arrow, in an area they call the "expansion", indicating it is fairly new

We were checked in quickly and escorted to our site.  The sites are close which is pretty common for KOA's, but tolerable for four nights.  The site is level and adequate length for our coach and pickup.

Breezy up here on the hill today.

Easy to pick out our coach with the colors flying high.


Verizon 5G ultra wide coverage here with smokin' speed!!  Looking at the proximity of the tower, it is no wonder LOL!

We have a few things we might see while we are here but more importantly we are looking forward with reconnecting with some friends and military comrades.  We will also start working on the "when we arrive home" checklist since that will occur Thursday.  Does not seem possible this trip has almost concluded already.  

Saturday, September 24, 2022

24 Sep 2022 - NSTR Last Day at Kearney

 24 Sep


(NSTR = Nothing Significant To Report)  Last day at Kearney (pronounced car-nee, not keer-nee or ker-nee) Nebraska.  We had a good time here and would definitely stay at this campground again.  There are a couple things we did not see that were on our list, but overall our fun-meter is just about pegged out, though.  This retired / 'vacation for 5-months' life will wear on you after a while.  We are both ready to get home and reset a bit.

So today was a down-day.  No museums and no prairie towns.  We slept in a bit, had a nice leisurely morning coffee, went to Hy-Vee grocery store and restocked provisions, stopped at Casey's General Store and refueled the big ol' brown truck, redeeming the $0.76 off at the pump Doreen got at Hy-Vee.  That brought our diesel in at $4.039/gal but that is still way too damn high.  

Today we tuned in to three of our grandson's little league baseball games live stream, the Iowa State Cyclones vs Baylor football game was on ESPN2 at 1100 hrs, the Chicago Cubs vs the Pittsburgh Pirates were on Marquee network at 1730 hrs and the Iowa Hawkeyes vs Rutgers are on FS1 now.  

In between all that, when the sun started going down, we washed the fifth wheel again.  The wash job we did in Alliance was terrible because of the extremely hard mineral water which left spots all over the coach and I wanted to get that off there.  I also greased the suspension (14 zerks), inspected the tires, checked the battery(s) water, emptied/flushed the sewer tanks and stowed the hoses.  I have been fighting a sensor issue with the 1/3 full level on my black tank.  So today after flushing and re-flushing, I concluded the sensor must be bad, so I opened the flap I had previously created in the underbelly material, and I removed the malfunctioning sensor. 


Yep, it was bad.  Luckily I had a replacement, so we are good to go now.
The left one is the bad one, the right one is new.  The discolored plastic is not the issue.  The problem is the degradation of the Teflon coating on the center probe.

I am a bit disappointed as these are replacement sensors called "Miracle Probes".  I had really good luck with them on my Jayco fifth wheel, but these sensors are only about 16 months old.  I may look at a different system.
So, that's a wrap from Kearney RV Park.  Tomorrow is a short travel day, only about 161 miles east on I-80 to the West Omaha/NE Lincoln KOA Holiday campground. We will be there four nights.  That is the last stop on this 2022 trip before we get home on Thursday 29 Sep.  

Thanks for tuning in!

Friday, September 23, 2022

23 Sep 2022 - Fort Kearny, Pioneer Village

 23 Sep


Today we visited Fort Kearny State Historic Park which is just a few miles southeast of Kearney NE.  On the way there we passed a historical marker for Dobytown, which is was Kearney was called initially.  Dobytown was just west of Fort Kearny.  It actually grew out of the demands from the thousands of soldiers assigned and westward travelers passing by.  According to the marker, "gambling, liquor and disreputable men and women were it's principle attraction"!   One famous general who visited there from the fort described the terrible whiskey as "tanglefoot".  Dobytown thrived from 1860-1866 as it was a supply source for those heading west and also a pony express stop.  Once the Union Pacific railroad was completed in 1869 the flow of visitors slowed until the town was finally abandoned in 1871.   So now you know!


Back to Fort Kearny, we stopped at the visitor center to pay our admission and our one day state park fee.  Inside the visitor center is a small museum with artifacts found not only at the fort, but by local farmers who's property surrounds the area where the fort used to stand.  Some pictures:


Bottles and dishes found

Padlocks and various building hardware

Cooking and eating utensils


A stump from the original Fort Kearny 90 ft tall flag staff and a hand-sewn flag that was made by residents of a local community for the 1876 Centennial of the United States.  It has 13 starts and stripes and was unfurled at their 4 Jul 1876 picnic

After finishing up in the visitor center, we headed outside to look over the grounds.  Based on old pictures, drawings and archeological digging, in 1964 they built a recreating of the fort's blacksmith / woodworking shop and in 1962 they reconstructed the East Fort.  They also reconstructed the powder magazine and they placed posts in the ground to indicate where the other fort's buildings were located.  At a future date they intend to reconstruct them also.
The blacksmith's shop, reconstructed in 1964


Inside the blacksmith's shop

Inside the woodworker's shop and supply area

Old Fort Mitchel also called the East Fort, reconstructed in 1962


Posts marking the officer's quarters

Replica of the flag staff.  The "crows nest" was used daily by the bugler.

Posts that mark locations of the fort's buildings

It's amazing these structures were only active for just a few years!  It's also amazing how the railroad drastically changed things.  The majority of people did not use animal-drawn wagons traveling the Oregon, Mormon and California trails once the railroad was complete.  Fast-forward to the automobile era and the completion of the Lincoln Highway connecting the east coast to the west coast.  Then eventually came the interstate highways connecting the coasts with higher-speed byways!  Doreen and I keep talking about the changes we have seen in our lifetimes and the huge changes our parents and grandparents have seen.  


Speaking of "progress", after leaving the fort we drove about 10 miles south to Minden NE and the Pioneer Village.  If you have kept up with our blog on this trip and past trips you know we have visited many, many places that could be called a "pioneer village".  My comment to Doreen on the way down to Minden was, "I'm not paying $20 or more per person to see another 'pioneer village'.  I am about 'pioneer villaged-out!"

Well, soon we arrived at Minden Nebraska and their "Pioneer Village".  The place is huge from the outside and I qualified my comment that, "Well, I might go $20 but that is it!" LOL  As soon as we stepping through the door I knew that we had stumbled on to another "nugget"!!  I just kept saying "WOW" as we headed to the window to pay , and it was only $15 minus our military discount.  I would have paid $30!

So, the Pioneer Village in Minden NE was the brain child of Harold Warp, pioneer of a plastics product called Flex-O-Glass where he made his fortune.  In 1948 he purchased the country schoolhouse he attended as a child and it grew exponentially from there to 28 buildings on 20 acres with more than 50,000 items displayed.  Now his son runs it.  It is described as "the story of America and how it grew".  In summary, it is a village of acquired buildings full of stuff!  Each of the 28 buildings is basically focused on one topic.  There is a firehouse with old fire equipment.  There is his schoolhouse completely equipped.  There is a church, a china shop, a hobby shop, farm machinery, bicycles, a train station with locomotives, and on and on.  So through the turnstyle we went and HOLY COW!

The first area was entitled "transportation" and the items in there we unbelievable.  There were row after row of carriages and automobiles and aircraft hanging overhead, but here are a few pictures of the unique ones:  

Carriages of all types

Conestoga wagon

1910 Hartman biplane.  This specific plane was the first to fly from New York to Philadelphia round trip, and also the first to carry air mail.  

Beautiful old automobiles

This is an exact replica of the 1903 Wright Brothers flying machine

1916 Red Bug, Smith Motor Wheel Speedster.  It was purchased by Frank B Miller in Cedar Falls Iowa.  In 1933 it was reconditioned and sent to the Miller's grandson in Illinois.  Pioneer Village acquired it in 1953.  Notice the motor in the rear wheel!

Extensive telephone collection

A traveling salesman wagon

A horse-drawn hearse

Clocks, shavers, typewriters, and on and on!!!

If I post pictures of all the "out" buildings and their contents you will be looking at this for the next hour, so I will try to be selective!
Original Elm Creek Indian Stockade

A general store completely stocked with items

An original land office where people applied for homestead land

A firehouse with equipment

Train station full of equipment and trains outside

His original building, the school house he attended as a kid

Old baseball equipment



This is so awesome.  Recreated pictures of the teacher and the student (Mr Warp) in this building!

Actual sod house

Building full of antique china and glassware


1884 Church - first one in Minden with original pews, pulpit and organ.  Still used for weddings and baptisms

This area was under reconstruction but contained antique farm machinery, tractors and trucks, livery stable, more automobiles, blacksmith shop, steam engines, 1879 steam-powered merry-go-round

An actual pony express station

Household appliances of ALL types!

Refrigerators, freezers

All types of stoves and ranges

Antique hand appliances

Building full of "collections"

Collections of salt and pepper shakers, pencils, pens, buttons, etc

An old style café which serves food and ice cream in the summer.  Closed now.

Back in the main building - overhead is the first jet-powered airplane! A Bel P-59 1942

Cessna NC-8141 1929 Monoplane.  The first Cessna to have internally braced (cantilever) wing

Chicago horse-drawn fire engine #17 

A "Amphicar" amphibious automobile.  Built between 1960-1965.  Travels across the highway and travels across the lake!

Propellers in the back!

Hundreds of very old outboard motors

Beautiful weapons collection

I own a Remington Model 11 like the fourth from the right!

A whole building full of women's wear, by the decade

Racks of camera equipment.

If you are in this area we highly recommend visiting the Pioneer Village, and suggest allowing a couple days if you are able.  They have a motel and a campground adjacent to the museum.

So, successful day.  Tomorrow we will likely get groceries, fuel and do all those "day before" tasks in preparation  for our departure Sunday morning.