Columbus Day or Halloween?

In all my 37 years of living in Seattle I have never celebrated Columbus Day.  Our kids have never had the day off school.  The New York Stock exchange is not closed.  To me it has only fine print at the bottom of a calendar.  Like Boxing Day or Flag Day.  A holiday that someone, somewhere else, celebrates but has no special meaning to me.

This weekend my eye have been opened to a new culture in my our country.  The busy celebration of Columbus Day.  To start, a three day weekend for the folks living here in Maine.  The camp site that we are at, filled to overflowing with excited holiday goers, escaping the rat race for one additional day.  A city on the coast, Moody Beach, bumper to bumper with vehicles traveling to their favorite vacation destinations.  The side walks packed with tourists.  The atmosphere of the bustling town contagious.  We took a scene bike ride through town and landed at the beach.  Who knows, I may decide to start celebrating Columbus Day from this moment forward.

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And Halloween everywhere.  Every business, every street corner, decorated top to bottom with pumpkins, spider webs, skeletons, and tombstones.  In Seattle we celebrate Halloween on October 31st.  Here, it seems, maybe all month long.

The camp site we are staying at, Moody Beach RV Resort, also participates in this early celebration of Halloween.  The kids woke me (Josh) up early this morning so we could carve pumpkins.

Our family, thoroughly unprepared to dress up for Halloween, scrapped together some select articles of clothing, and, with some creativity and imagination, didn’t allow our ignorance to stop us from going in on the fun.

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But Halloween had just begun.  Next, it was the afternoon tractor ride.

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And, of course, trick or treating- with more candy than our motor home has shelving space to hold.

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In Seattle, that would have been about wrapped things up.  But oh, no- not around here.  After dinner the festivities continued with Halloween games including a doughnut eating contest and a dance party.

So that, my West Coast friends, is how they party it up over here on the East Coast.  A fun filled East Coast treat that will forever change the way I view Columbus Day.

Monthly Report for Sept. (Josh)

Another month gone by?!  Though we traveled 1500 miles less this month than we did last month, we saw just as many states plus three Canadian Provinces.  This, I can only assume, is due to the larger sized states on the west side of the country.  We visited many fewer national parks this month.  I suppose the larger and more attractive national parks are also on the western side of the country??  We are considering investing stock in Walmart as we spent nearly 1/3 of our sleeping nights in their parking lots.  Many Walmart locations we saw were flooded with both RV’s and commercial truckers spending the night too.  We cut our spending by almost 25% compared to last month.  This was largely due to less money spent on gas, though we did reduce our spending in most every category of spending.  I was able to ride my bike 75% more this month than last.  Not only are we touring the country by RV, but I have the unbelievable privilege of touring our beautiful country (and now Canada) by bicycle.  Last month I rode along side the Great Lakes, through the White Mountains, sea to summit in Acadia, on the trans-Canadian trail in Moncton, along the most breath taking coastal views on Prince Edward Island, and around the Halifax Citadel in Nova Scotia.  My only response to this is to pause…. to count my many blessings.

Monthly Report for Sept 2018
General Summary:
States Visited: 8
(Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York,
Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine)
Canadian Provinces Visited: 3
(New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia)
National Parks Visited: 3
(Niagara Falls, Acadia, Prince Edward Island NP)
Distance and Gasoline:
Miles traveled: 2,575 Miles
Gallons of gas used: 398 Gallons
Cost of gasoline: $1,255
Average cost per gallon: $3.13
Average miles per gallon: 6.5 MPG
Where we slept: # of nights:
National parks: 2
With friends or family: 7
Camp grounds (non-national parks): 12
Rest stops along the highway: 0
Walmart parking lots: 9
30
Expenses:
Food: $1,220
Gas: $1,255
Camping: $216
Eating out: $117
Attractions: $146
Laundry: $14
Propoane: $66
Parts: $280
Tolls $106
Non-Catogorized: $538
Total Monthly Expenses: $3,957
Work outs (Josh) # of Miles:
Biking: 240
Jogging: 2.3

October-November Itinerary

Another month has gone by and we still have not realized that we are crazy to be on this trip.  We are getting more comfortable with the smaller living accommodations and are beginning to feel a “new normal” to the rhythm of life.   I (Josh) am also beginning to feel more comfortable without having everyday of this trip planned out in detail.  You will notice that in the coming month we have an outline of where we will be going, but in some states we do not even know the cities we will be staying in yet.  Nomadic living does not come naturally to me, but I can be taught.

Oct. Location # Nights City
1-3 West Quoddy Head 2 Lubec, ME
3-4 EconoLodge (Mel) 1 Portland, ME
3-7 Moody Beach (TT) 4 Wells, ME
7-8 Walmart (Portland, ME) 1 Scarborough, ME
8-9 Rochester, NH 1 Rochester, NH
9-10 Boston, MA 1 Boston, MA
10-14 Cape Cod RV Park (TT) 4 Rochester, MA
14-17 Boston, MA 3 Boston, MA
17-19 Providence, RI 2 Providence, RI
19-22 Connecticut 3 ?
22-29 New York City, NY 7 New York City, NY
29-31 New Jersey 2 Port Republic, NJ
Nov.
1-4 Philadelphia, PA 3 Philadelphia, PA
4-6 Delaware 2 ?
6-13 Wash DC.  & Pennsylvania 7 ?

Go East Young Man!

In the first month of our travels, we raced across America.  In the second month we can’t seem to leave Maine, where I (Josh) write to you now.  What is the logic behind this plan? (Yes, it is a plan).  We figured that since we expect to live in Seattle for the foreseeable future, we wanted to spend the majority of our time in the parts of the country that would be the most difficult (furthest away) to visit.  Being that we live on the West Coast, one of the most difficult points for us to visit in the future might be the most Eastern point in the continental U.S.  So we set sail (figuratively I mean).

You may have never heard of this place.  I hadn’t either, till now.  It is called “West Quoddy Head” in Lubec, ME.  As we drove up to the site, I guess I was expecting it to be more touristy.  Our navigation system told us, “You have arrived”.  I saw nothing but a few private homes and the continuation of the road.  “We must have the wrong address,” I told Mel.  Driving a bit further we found a small parking lot.  No camp sites.  No large sign or flashing lights.  A small light house could be seen in the distance.  The wind was fierce and the rain relentless.  As we walked towards the light house, our umbrellas were useless in the wind, our faces unprotected from the raindrops that bombarded us.  Walking down a forested path, the wind hollowed though the trees.  Up ahead we can see the light house and the visitor center.  We were greeted warmly by two women as we found refuge in the walls of that shelter.  A few small rooms with information about the light house.

 

Almost no mention in any of the visitor center literature that “WE HAD ARRIVED AT THE EAST MOST POINT OF THE USA.”  No bell, no whistles, no American over stimulation.  Just the wind, the rain and a light house.  As we exited the visitor center nothing outside had changed.  The wind continued it’s never ending tournament.  But something inside me had.  A quiet calm of warmth filled me.  I felt a peace despite the harsh conditions.  I felt inside myself that I liked this place.  A location of extremes that few would visit.  An unknown place to me formerly.  The East most point of our country that was beaten day in and day out by the extremes one might expect along the sea without the protection of anything else to shield it from nature.  Yes, a place of nature.  Simple, yet profound.

I smiled as the wind pushed violently against me.  I felt the joy of the simplicity of nature.  A rugged landscape formed by the elements.  A land of inner peace.  I was glad that we visited that spot.  Not because I could now check off another box of the places we had been to, but because I found much more than I expected to find.  Beauty in the harshness of nature.

 

Interpreting Dreams

Though I (Josh) have never learned a second language, I have been told by those who have that a sudden phenomenon occurs after gaining some fluency in the language.  In fact, an article I read recently stated that those studying a foreign language almost always begin dreaming in the target language after some time of studying.  It is one of the signs that your mind is understanding the bilingual change.  It is as if the subconscious mind is giving its seal of approval for the change you are working toward in your life.

Last night, I (Josh) had a dream.  It was the first of its kind for me.  In the dream, I was driving my motor home through a large city.  Mel and the kids were inside.  As I drove, pedestrians stood talking in the middle of the road, paying no attention that I was coming on the very road they were standing on.  I was forced to slow down and wait.  Then, one of them noticed the large motorized house and began gesturing to the others to move along.  They all watched us as we drove by.  I was forced to make a difficult turn, just barely dodging obstacles on both sides of the RV.   The watching crowds of people began talking among themselves and I could hear them speaking.  They were in awe of how well I could drive such a massive machine through the tight turns of the city.  They commented on how great it must be to travel together as a family the way we were doing.  As we passed them by, I watched for parking spots that might be large enough for me to park in.  I looked at a map and tried to find the best route to drive through the narrow streets of the busy city.  Then I awoke.

Driving a motor home through the city may not be the same as learning another language.  But now, after embarking on this journey for over two months, my subconscious mind has begun including it in my dreams.  A sign that I am becoming fluent in driving a motor home through tight turns and parking in difficult spots?

The other day, I had a man stare wide eyed and mouth opened as I parallel-parked our RV in a small downtown touristy city.  Just a few days ago, I drove the motor home through the heart of Halifax, the capital city of Nova Scotia.  Next week we drive to Boston. Later this month, New York.  I believe my mind is telling me something.  I believe this is a sign of approval that we are driving along the right road and that our journey is moving in the right direction.  If I told my dream to Daniel, old testament Jew, I believe he would say the same thing too.

 

Oh, Canada!

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When Mel and I originally planned this trip, I had no thought of staying over night in Canada.  One of the advantages of our flexible schedule is we can make sudden, spontaneous choices and change our plans as we feel free to do so.  As we talked about our travels up into the state of Maine, we began discussing the options we had to travel into “Atlantic Canada” as I found out it is called.  I also discovered that when we crossed the U.S.-Canadian border into New Brunswick we crossed over into another time zone, the Atlantic time zone.  We now found ourselves four hours ahead of our Seattle-Mother-Land.

Mel had stars in her eyes as she told me how romantic it would be to travel to Prince Edward Island.  As I looked at the map, I also discovered a province close by called Nova Scotia.  I had heard of Nova Scotia before, but I thought it was some forgotten island in Europe abandoned by the vikings in the 1000s.  Turns out people actually live there.  I told Mel I wanted to go there, too, because I wanted my friends to think we drove our motor home to Europe.

As we traveled from Calais, Maine to Prince Edward Island (P.E.I. as it is called by the locals), we landed for the evening in a town called Moncton, New Brunswick.  Turns out some other Europeans landed at this very same spot and homesteaded the land in 1766.  I greatly enjoyed our stay here as I discovered the Trans-Canadian trail, a biking trail that connects Canada coast to coast.  The Canadians have definitely one-upped us on that.

As we traveled towards P.E.I. we had to cross a giant, 8-mile long, bridge.  After finding a local R.V. Park called the “Marco Pollo” we spent the rest of our day at the north island ocean beach on the Gulf of St. Lawrence.  I learned that the Marco Pollo was the fastest ship during its time and that it was ship wrecked during a fierce storm on this same ocean coast.  The beach was well worth the visit and the kids left reluctantly even as they shivered, wet and cold.

Mel informed me that some famous children’s book (which happens to be Mel’s favorite series from her childhood) called Anne of Green Gables was also written on P.E.I.  The Canadian government liked the book so much they created a National Park to celebrate Canada’s greatest literary contribution.  We found ourselves in a town called Cavendish, the city where L.M. Montgomery, the author of Anne of Green Gables,  was born.  We visited the historic “Green Gables” house, once owned by the author’s family, which inspired her in the writing of her book.  We hiked through the “Haunted Woods,” and visited the grave site of the famous author.  We continued our hike through the land the author grew up on and the church she attended.  At the end of our hike we took a romantic walk down “Lovers Lane,” where Mel and I were caught kissing on a bridge.

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After our two days of nostalgia and romance ended, we traveled to Nova Scotia to a city called Halifax.  It sounded like a name that the Vikings would have given to a city, but to my delight we found a British fortress on a hill called the Halifax Citadel.  This was by far my favorite attraction we saw in Canada.  This “Castle” was equipped with tall stone walls and a deep and wide moat which we crossed to enter the fortified city.  The inter walls of the fortress formed a giant eight point star and large black cannons faced in all directions on top of the castle walls.  Tall watch towers gave unobstructed 360 degree views of both the sunny harbor and the heart of the city.  Inside the second stone wall was a “city,” a large multi story European building that was once the home of officers, noblemen and the social elite.  The castle was even decorated with authentically dressed British guards.  I was so impressed with the entire experience that I told Mel I wanted to buy a Castle after we made it back to Seattle.  She smiled.

We rode our bikes through the city visiting attractions such as a Public Gardens from the 1800s, “The Oval,” a skateboard/bike park, and a city playground.  And what trip to a foreign country be complete without tasting the local ice cream.  By recommendation of our Canadian pastor friend, Pastor Blake, we visited “Cow’s,” and enjoyed flavors named Messie Bessie, and Caramel Moocchiato.  Our trip to Canada was complete.  Much fun, learning and culture.

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Though I enjoy Canada immensely, I was overly glad to cross over the border last night, back into the states.  As we landed back in America (the U.S. I mean) I no longer had to think about how many km/hr I was traveling, I didn’t have to figure out the exchange rate, and I didn’t need to guess how many liters of gas I needed to buy.  I entered back into a U.S. time zone.  Also, my cell phone started working again and I gained access to the internet, my means of connection to the friends and family I know back home.  I have been looking forward to connecting with you all again through this blog today and I am proud to say I find my home in the United States of America.

 

 

Acadia National Park, ME

Yesterday, marked our 4th, and final, night’s stay at Acadia National Park in Maine, where our family continued our exploration of the wonders of our nation.  The first compelling adventure was to scale the tallest peak on the East Coast’s Shores (Cadillac Mountain).  Though 1,530 ft may not sound like a mountain for those of you reading this in Seattle, this unobstructed vista of the East Coast was well worth the climb.  And it was a climb.  1530 ft in 1.5 miles with 4 children is a true challenge.  The trail included 3 iron rod ladders (yes, real metal ladders to climb the mountain) and 1215 rock steps (counted by Caleb) and elevation gain and loss of 2100 ft. total to the summit.  It was cloudy and extremely windy, but the views more than paid for the challenge.  In an effort to motivate the children to not give up and to make it back before sundown we created a song of food we would eat once we made it back down the mountain.  The final lyrics are as follows, “Tuna, and mashed potatoes,  and cheese, with hot water and honey and ham and tootsie rolls.”  We sang this song over and over again in order to “give Eva strength” to continue the hike down the mountain.  The food in the lyrics of our song ended up becoming our dinner for the night.  The strangest combination of foods we had yet put together for our evening meals.

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And of course, what would a trip to the coast of Maine be without visiting one of the 70 light houses that adorn it’s coast line.  A much shorter 1/2 mile walk lead us to Bass Harbor Head light house where we discovered the word “occulting,” which means to momentarily darken (referring to the blinking light of the light house).  The kids played on the rocks below and found snails, crabs and sea monkeys in a sea water tide pool.

If that was not enough, Acadia also has a unique attraction that we had not seen at any of the other 13 national parks we have visited so far.  In the 1930’s, the parks department, under the leadership of John D. Rockefeller Jr., installed an elaborate system of carriage trails that today is still used to pull tourists through the park, powered only by the trotting hooves of horses.  The trails are now accessible to the public, also, by way of foot and bicycle.  No motor vehicles are permitted.  So the Miller family embarked on an epic, 4.8 mile bike ride on the historic carriage trails.  We took a route that had us cross over 6 stone bridges, some as old as 1919. (This particular bridge was Mel’s favorite as it was a perfect representation of the bridge in the musical she is writing!) The hills climbed up and down, and we saw vistas of the coast line as well as sunset views of a lake.  Along the way, we had our first encounter with a porcupine.  The nocturnal creature must have been out for a midnight snack as it slowly sauntered along the carriage road trail.  We took a break from our bike ride, snapping pictures and enjoying the rare animal find.  Another successful day of adventuring.

Another of the many attractions of the “Crown Jewel of the North Atlantic Coast” was a historic trip back into time visiting the Carroll Homestead.  It had a small 6 room house on a 100 acre parcel of land that once belonged to the Carroll family who homesteaded the land from 1825-1917 for four generations.  At the tour program lead by a descendant of the Carroll family, we learned all about how the family worked and lived back in the “olden days.”  The kids played dress up and also earned their Junior Ranger badges there.

Naturally we visited the beach.  Sand Beach to be specific.  One of the few sandy beaches along the rocky coast of Maine.  The “sand” is actually more a collection of smashed shell fragments which cause it to feel more course and look more colorful than “normal” sand.  A trip to the beach was the perfect ending to a magical trip through Acadia National Park.

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Today, we did what I (Mel) was hoping to do almost since we left on this trip. We made a video tour of our motorhome. Not just any video tour, but one that’s also educational with what is near and dear to my heart. If you don’t know, I’m a volunteer Child Ambassador with World Vision. I get to talk and share about the amazing work WV is doing around the world to help children and communities living in extreme poverty overcome their challenges and become a thriving, self-sustaining community that is a safe place for all children to grow! I’ve been active in my volunteer role at home but have been wondering how this role will play out while traveling this year. Cue the video! The whole family is involved in it and we had so much fun making it! Enjoy!

Here is a close up of each of the kids waiting for sponsorship. Sponsoring a child is $39/month. For just a little more than a dollar a day you can completely change the life of one of these children along with their family and community. I have been to the field in Rwanda and Uganda and I can tell you with complete confidence that World Vision’s approach and model to solving the puzzle of poverty is holistic and it works! Connect with me if your heart is open to sponsoring one of these sweet kiddos! You can also go to this link to choose a child by birthdate, country, and/or gender. https://www.worldvision.org/sponsor-a-child?campaign=316014201

I’d love to get you started on a beautiful relationship with a child and their family. You will find that they will bless you as much (if not more!) as you bless them!

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Arriving at the East Coast

Yesterday, we completed an important milestone in the Great Miller Adventure.  We crossed over the state line from New Hampshire into Maine, arriving at the most North Eastern state in the USA.  The first chapter of our journey has now been completed.  We have traveled as a family of six, by way of motor home, coast to coast across the United States of America.  An accomplishment in and of itself worthy of appreciation.  Amazingly enough, this milestone is just the beginning of our adventure.  Now that we have arrived here, on the East Coast, we’re beginning the second phase of our trip.  The East Coast- the land of great American history.  The place where it all began.  Here our adventure slows down.  We will begin to do less driving and spend more time immersing ourselves into all this great coast line has to offer.  Spending time visiting cities and landmarks that date back as early as 1507 in colonial history.  Places that people like us, born and raised in Seattle, only read about in books.  Places like Jamestown, Plymouth, Cape Cod, Boston, Washington D.C., and New York City.  Places that, in my past, I (Josh) have only visited in my imagination.  The next leg of our trip is an extended stay along the East Coast of the USA.  A leg that will take all the years of our imagination and bring them to life right before our eyes.  We are grateful and thankful for this amazing journey- the trip of a lifetime.

It has now been 10 days since our last blog post, and we realize we have left you all in the dark regarding what we have been doing and seeing.  I will summarize for you the first half of September and help bring you up to speed so you will be prepared to follow us into the future as we head down the coast.

First, a huge shout out to my cousin, Shaunna, who lives just south of Grand Rapids, Michigan.  She opened up her home to us over the Labor Day holiday weekend where we spent four nights in one place.  Four nights in one place.  The longest stop we have had in one place since our trip began.  No driving to our next destination.  No sleeping in a box on wheels.  A great and needed break from the non-stop movement of our great adventure.  A time to hang out with family and relax.  We spent much time together with her, her husband Andy, and her daughters, Maria (13) and McKenzie (10).  My Aunt Terri and Uncle Ron also visited them while we where there and we greatly enjoyed everyone’s company.  Most everyday we went swimming in their outdoor pool.  We also visited the lake, went to the movies, and ate much more than was necessary.

 

Also, over the Labor Day weekend, an important event happened.  On Sept. 3rd, Mel and I celebrated our 14th anniversary.  Mel and I extend our greatest appreciation to Shaunna, who allowed us to borrow her car, leave the kids behind, and have an amazing anniversary date, just the two of us.  We traveled west to the shores of Lake Michigan where we enjoyed a romantic dinner and walked on the beach holding hands.

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After our blessed stay with family, we loaded up the kids and continued our travels.  We drove through a corner of Indiana and made it to Ohio, where we stayed a night at Lake Erie.

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The next day, we drove into upstate NY and on Sept. 6th we arrived at Niagara Falls.  Knowing that the views of the falls are more amazing in Canada, we crossed over the US/Canadian border, and our kids, for the first time in their lives, entered into a foreign country.  Of course the view of the falls was greater than any I could describe using words (just look at the pictures instead).

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The next day, we traveled to a camp ground at Lake Ontario where we stayed two nights.  Of the five Great Lakes, Mel and I physically put our feet in four of them, the fifth one (Lake Huron) we only saw from afar.   We traveled east from there across NY state where we stayed at the Adirondack state park.  Then, on Sept. 12th, we arrived at a destination I had been excited to see…Ben and Jerry’s Ice Cream in Vermont.  Caleb and Lydia’s first grade teacher, Martha Nichols, is from Vermont. She knows Jerry so we had a welcome sign for our family and B&J’s buttons for the kids with their names on them. We took a tour of their factory, saw how they made their ice cream, and, of course, ate way more ice cream than we needed.  Thanks to Martha, we spent one night at her mom’s place as well. (Thank you, Karen and Nan, for taking us in!) In Vermont, we also visited Wilson Castle, tasted fresh apple cider and apple cider donuts at a cider mill, and toured a sugar house where we learned how maple syrup was made.

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Something to note, as we traveled from New York to Vermont we had a small accident.  As I was pulling into a gas station, the wide turn the motor home made was not going to make it to the gas pump.  I carefully backed up, straighten out and began to pull forward again.  I felt some resistance as I moved forward and an ear piercing, bending of metal, noise came from behind the motor home.  Unknown to me, as I had backed up, the bike rack on the back of our motor home had slipped over the top of on old metal bolt that was sticking out of the ground at the edge of the parking lot.  When I pulled forward, the bolt hooked onto the bike rack and held it in place and the motor home moved forward.  When I got out to survey the damage, I came out to see my bike rack ripped in two.  The metal was irreversibly bent and the bikes, still standing, balance on the other half of the rack.  I was grateful that the bikes had not been damaged, yet I did not know how I would recover from the damage.  Some kind locals came over and helped.  We scrapped the broken parts of the rack, re-positioned the bikes on the part of the still intact rack, and finally pulled forward to get gas.  I ordered a new rack from Amazon and had it sent to an address we would visit in a week.  The greatest damage done was to my pride, as I drove around the country for one week with a “ghetto” bike set up hanging off the back side of my motor home.  Mel’s bike got damaged that week as it became the sacrificial bike at the bottom of the pile.  I now owe her a new bike.  Lesson learned, on with the trip.

Our next stop was the White Mountains in New Hampshire.  We stayed at the state camp ground for two nights.  It was sunny and warm.  The kids played in the river and we dried out our wet clothes we had been traveling with.  We visited “The Flume” visitor center and learned about “The Old Man in the Mountain.”  The country side and rolling hills where beautiful.

From there we traveled south, just outside of Manchester, NH, where we visited a World Vision Child Ambassador friend of Mel’s.  Courtney opened up her home to us and we enjoyed a three night escape from our home on wheels.  We enjoyed ourselves immensely as we got to better know her husband, Hall, and their two daughters Molly (14) and Grace (13).  We visited the NH coast with them, enjoyed Hall’s gourmet cooking, and stayed up late drinking wine and watching videos of Jim Gaffigan.  The new bike rack came in the mail (thank you Amazon) and I had time there to replace the old bike rack with the new one.  I also changed the oil in the motor home (5000 miles already).  The morning that we left we woke up to a second minor accident.  In the middle to the night, it poured down rain.  We had left the skylight vents open in the motor home and in the morning, discovered a small sea on the floor and all over our bed.  More of an inconvenience, we spend three hours using Courtney’s towels and clothes dryer to clean up the mess.  The delay did not stop us from crossing over to Maine, where we are now camped today.

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Itinerary (Sept-Oct.)

Here is our itinerary for the new 30 days.  We will be spending some time in Maine and Canada that has not been planned in detail, but the following chart will give a general schedule for our time in these places.

Sept. Miles Hours Nights City/State
1-4 Shaunna (Family) 178 3 4 Plainwell, MI
4-6 Kenisee Lake (TT) 166 3 2 Jefferson OH
6-7 Niagara Falls 198 3 1 Niagra Falls, NY
7-9 Brennan Beach* (TT) 255 5.5 2 Pulaski, NY
9-12 Vermont/ Ben and Jerry’s 85 1.75 3 Waterbury, VT
13-15 White Mountain 124 2 2 Twin Mountain, NH
15-16 Courtney Crowder (Friend) NA NA 1 Bedford, NH
16-18 New Hampshire 236 4 2 NH
18-20 Pattern Pond (TT) 20 0.33 2 Ellsworth, ME
20-22 Acadia NP 43 1 2 Acadia, ME
22-23 Paul Bunyan 97 1.75 1 Bangor, ME
23-24 Maine 167 2.5 1 Calais, ME
24-25 New Brunswick (Canada) 95 2 1 Moncton, NB Canada
24-26 Prince Edwards Island (Canada) 196 3.33 2 Prince Edwards Island (Canada)
26-28 Nova Scotia (Canada) 328 5 2 Nova Scotia (Canada)
28-30 Maine 259 4.25 2 Calais, ME
Oct.
1-3 Maine NA NA 2 Calais, ME
3-7 Moody Beach (TT) 35 0.75 4 Wells, ME
7-8 Walmart (Portland, ME) 107 2 1 Scarborough, ME
8-10 Boston, MA 54 1 2 Boston, MA
10-14 Cape Cod RV Park (TT) Rochester, MA
(TT)= Thousand Trails Resort