We get up and have breakfast at Ruby’s Inn. Rick buys some gloves so his hands don’t get so cold and we are off. We head to Cedar Breaks National Monument. John and Nancy go with us. We both are still in our Model A’s. One of the few, most have transferred to their modern trucks. We first go through red rock area.
We continue on, going up and up. The snow gets deeper and it gets colder. The wind chill is mean. Taking my gloves off to take pictures and my fingers turn numb in no time at all. It is very pretty scenery. We run into Marcus in his Suburban at the top. We finish the loop and come back to Kanab. We start the motorhome up to make sure the battery hasn’t gone dead. It starts right up. We will be back in two days to head for home. We go to Houston’s and have an early dinner/late lunch. I top it off with a big piece of banana cream pie. We go back and check into the motel. I try one last time to add pictures to the blog but am a failure. Maybe when I get home I can figure out what all of a sudden changed so the pictures won’t add. If not this maybe my last blog.
We got up at 5:30 so we could have breakfast at 6 and be on the road by 7. We make it by 7:15. It is cold and there is a fresh covering of snow, but the storm is past and the wind is not blowing! We are very grateful that we spent the night and didn’t forge ahead when it was so miserable. Today turned into a nice drive even though we did yesterday’s drive along with today’s. Everything is pretty with a covering of snow on the contrasting red rocks and cliffs.
We stop in Kanab for lunch and gas and then head on to today’s planned trip to Bryce Canyon. We get into the park about 3. We drive to Sunrise Point and get out and walk to Sunset Point and then back to the cars. We don’t walk down into the hoodoos this time because it is either super muddy or icy. But the views from the top are still spectacular with the snow covering.
We go back to Ruby’s Inn and check into the Inn. We go to the Country Western Show and Dinner. We walked over and back. To say the least it was a BRISK WALK. Tonight it is suppose to get down to 22*.
Once again I can’t figure out how to add pictures even with calling and bothering Nick so pictures will have to come once I am home if I can figure it out then.
Wherever you go, no matter what the weather, always bring your own sunshine.
This saying was posted at the check in desk at the hotel, by Anthony J. D’Angelo. How appropriate for today.
OOPS – Well we didn’t make it to Kanab today as planned. We got up to it spitting snow and the wind blowing yet still! Snow dusting the cars and cold! Marcus comes out to a flat tire on his car, so a group change his tire after finding his spare flat also. Danny headed out first, followed by Nixons at 8. Clausens, Jorgensen’s and us head out at 8:30. It is snowing harder and building up on the windshield and the wind is unrelenting. We stop in Kayenta to get gas and go on. Then about 5 miles out of town Jim’s pickup stops. We were leading so stop at the first little road. John helps him and they get it going, but by then a group of about 6 Model A’s and the trouble truck go by back to Kayenta. The decision is we will stay in Kayenta tonight and head out tomorrow, hoping the storm has passed. We are able to get 10 rooms at a Hampton Inn. Marcus and others are staying at another hotel. Danny made it through to Kanab. Last we heard Nixons made it to Page.
It is a nice stop. The Navajo Code Readers have a museum next door and they open it up for an hour for us to go through. I find it very interesting and buy a book about one of the Code Readers.
Once again internet is so slow I can’t post pictures, so will do it later.
Addendum: The internet connection is too slow – so will add pictures later to this.
We get up early to get in Arches National Park. Breakfast was a joke at the hotel – couldn’t even sit in dining area. In fact today eating was not a highlight. Everywhere we tried for lunch was closed so ate at a gas station/Port of Subs and for dinner The View’s restaurant is closed so think we will eat our oatmeal cookie from lunch!
We leave at 7 and get into the park. It is cold at Arches, but we see the sights. We then head on but do not stop at Canyonlands. The wind is never ending and very strong. At one point a gust pushed Lizzie clear into the on coming lane. Not fun and takes all Rick’s concentration to keep it going straight ahead. No time to look at the sights. We end up at the “View” in Monument Valley to stay for the night, but clouds and no spectacular sunset.
We get up, breakfast, get gas and on the road by 8. We take the scenic route as always. Today was the most diversified, beautiful terrain of the trip so far. It rained last night and was cold enough to have ice crystals on things this morning. We travel up mountains, across flat plateaus, down off mountains, around hairpin curves, through pasture lands, through red rock areas, through canyon bottoms by the river, seeing Fall colors and snow on the mountain tops and continue to have blue skies with big fluffy clouds. This is America the Beautiful!
I will try to put some of what we saw today on this blog, here goes:
Fall colors and mountain tops covered in snow
Danny coming up the Norwood Hill
The three guys looking out over valley
We make it into Moab, however we can’t check into motel until 4, so we eat a snack and go out for a little drive by our selves
Some of the Model A’s at the motel
We come back and check in the motel and go with the group for dinner and the night light show on the boat trip on the Colorado River.
Colorado River boat tripET or maybe Yoda??Old ManMoon coming up over the cliffs on Colorado River
We get up earlier today at 5, because we have to be at the Royal Gorge by 8:15 to go across the bridge in the Model A’s. We get breakfast and find out we made the paper.
It must be going to be a good day – because when we go out to the car Jay had taken a picture of Lizzie with the rainbow ending at her!
Rainbow and Lizzie
We head out to the bridge. It was the largest suspension bridge in the world, now surpassed by one in China. It is now open only to pedestrians, but Marcus got a special permit to allow our group to cross in the Model A’s.
The Royal Gorge Bridge (2nd largest in the world)
Lined up to go over bridge
Model A’s on bridge
Model A Group crossing the bridge
Rick actually got out of the car on the bridge, just didn’t look down!View of the gorge from the bridge, it is a long way down!A view of the river way down there through the planks on the bridge!
We head back across
We go on ahead on our way to Montrose. The Fall colors are at their peak.
We hit some rain, but not bad as we go along the canyon next to the Arkansas River. The head waters of the Arkansas River are here but end in Arkansas and end up a tributary to the Mississippi River!
With Fall colors, snow on the top of the peaks and big clouds, made for a very pretty drive today!!!
We make it over Monarch Pass, where the elevation is 11,312 feet. It is also crossing the Continental Divide.
We continue on through more Fall colors
Past the Pinnacles
We stop in Gunnison for gas and lunch. It was a very enjoyable lunch ending with homemade cherry cobbler! Then it is on to Montrose for the night.
As per our usual we get up at 6, however we are not going to go up Pikes Peak with Lizzie. We have done it before in my van and went up the cog railway yesterday. We have breakfast and start out about 8:30. We get about three blocks from the hotel and Lizzie stops dead in the middle of traffic! Rick is able to get her into a left hand turn lane with traffic zooming by on either side. Rick tries restarting her to no avail. He lifts the hood and can’t see anything right off. But with patience and persistence he discovers the wire from the coil to the ignition has broken. He is able to fix it and we are on our way – yeah!
While Rick is working on Lizzie I had my own entertainment – 2 wild turkeys were chasing a little boy in the motel parking lot. I wasn’t fast enough with my camera to catch it though.
We say good-by to Pikes Peak as others are climbing it.
Pikes Peak
We travel a short distance back on Hwy 24 and turn off on CR1. Boy their road signs are small and you had to figure out that County Road 1 was CR1 and by the time you see the little sign you should have turned, no warning. Anyway we made the turn and stop at The Hornbek Homestead. We didn’t stop the other day when we went to see the petrified sequoias.
Hornbek Homestead
Root cellar
Dorothea and Jim
Lori and Rick
We head on down the road that is a country road up and down rolling hills and around curves. The “modern” homesteads don’t look that much different from the old one.
Next stop is the Colorado Prisons Museum:
We take the hour long tour. Glad we stopped and had lunch first, our guide hadn’t had lunch and was rather grouchy.
The Museum is right next to the actual state prison
Drying rack for license plates made by prisoners
Actual gas chamber used in Colorado in the past
Weapons confisgated in the prison
flogging table
Me in a prison cell
We tour a room of some really beautiful art pieces done by prisoners. We finish the tour and go to check in the motel. We go to dinner with John and Nancy at a Cajun place and then back to motel and to bed.
We get up and have breakfast but don’t have to leave so early today. First on the agenda is to go to the Olympic/Paralympic Museum.
Our group at the Olympic Museum
USA Bobsled
The Olympics in the beginning
Torch from Salt Lake Olympics
Torch from Squaw Valley Olympics
Some of USA torches for the olympics – I didn’t know it is a different torch each year.
We try out some of the interactive events : skiing, archery, and goal ball.
Then onto the Pikes Peak Cog Railway:
Showing the cogs of the railway
The trip up:
We go up a 25% grade!
Bristlecone tree
Above the tree line to 14,115 feet
One of the 156 turns going up Pikes Peak!
Arriving at the top:
Rick, Nancy and John
Pat, Jay and Rick
Top of Pikes Peak
Eating our doughnuts – which is sort of a right of passage that you made it to the top!
Coming down
After we come back down to Manitou Springs, we try some of the “springs” of drinking water. Each from deep seated limestone aquifers and each with its own distinctive natural flavor.
We end the day by having dinner together at a place called The Keg – recommended by some locals. It was good and we had a relaxing time to end the day.
We again get up at 6 and have breakfast. Pack and leave by 8:15. Two of our group left at 8, so it is John and Nancy, Jim and Dorothea and us. Off we go. Mount Princeton and the area is very pretty.
Mount Princeton
We start seeing more fall colors – the aspen turning pretty yellow.
Fall is here in the high country.
We go on until we make a brief break at Lake George to stretch our legs.
Our next stop is after climbing over Wilkerson Pass – over 9500 feet – no problems. We stop at the Florissant Fossil Bed National Monument.
New trees growing out of the fossilized sequoia.
Fossils and native plantsNote the saw blade , where they tried to cut pieces out for the world’s fair!
Lori, Rick, Nancy and John at the Big Stump
Pretty native grasses
Next we are onto the Garden of the Gods:
The Balanced Rock
Next stop is the Cliff Dwellings:
From here we go check into the motel. We skipped lunch today, but are having a big pizza dinner in the park with the local Model A Club at 5. Well by 6:35 the pizza finally shows up. It is getting dark and cold, so we just eat and head back to the motel for the night.
We get up at 6 and go down by 7 and have breakfast. Rick goes out to help Jim with his car. They are going to try to blow out the gas line as a last try. Brad has a compressor and Rick goes and gets a nozzle. On the way back we stop to get gas and run into Brad. His car has stopped dead at the gas station, don’t know why, but it finally just starts. Back at the hotel they blow out the gas line. Others have left so Jim and Dorothea and us take off.
The car seems to run fine on the long flat stretch, but then the test is going up Poncha Pass at 9010 feet. It makes it with flying colors!
We start seeing the fall colors.
We also starting seeing the first snow in the “Rockies”, on Mt. Antero at 14,000+ feet. As well as Mount Princeton.
We make it into Buena Vista in good time, actually to soon to check into the hotel. So have lunch from a food truck , with Alaskan Cod. It was really good.
Next we go to Mount Princeton Hot Springs. It was a very relaxing afternoon.
The water was so warm and relaxing!
We climb down the rocks
But well worth it!
Then John and Nancy and Larry and Jerri meet us there and we join them in the large swimming pools.
We come back to the hotel on a back road and are able to get into our room now.
We end up skipping dinner and have happy hour in Dan’s room.
Today we get up and have breakfast and are ready to leave by 8. Nixons and Dan left before us. We start out with high hopes that things are fixed on Jim and Dorothea’s pickup. However it ended up a very long day driving 250 miles – most at 35 miles an hour. Through out the day Rick helped change out the coil – that wasn’t it. Changed to two different carburetors that wasn’t the answer. Disconnected the wolf whistle – that didn’t fix it. Tried changing the gas cap with a one with a vent -no such luck. Cleaned out the sediment bowl -no change still. Turned down the gas adjusting value – no go. About out of ideas to fix the truck. It still acts as if it isn’t getting fuel and goes at 35 miles an hour.
To add to the day we hit road construction and miss the turn off to Hwy. 285. We go about 15 miles and stop and ask a local where we are and how to get to 285. He was super nice and was able to tell us exactly how far back and where to turn in the construction to get on 285. We also never found any of the National Monuments along the way even though I was looking for them. Oh well, at this point we just want to get there.
First stop of the day, others with us.Another stop, others stop but go on, no answers!Another stop – not counting any more.
This was the little settlement where we turned around and back tracked. A nice high light of the day we get a call from Bob and Marilynn to see how the trip is going. We miss them not being on the tour.
We get into Alamosa at 6:10 and drive to the restaurant without even checking in at the hotel. Jim’s truck actually stops completely a couple of times. Tomorrow’s plan is to try and drain the gas tank as a last ditch effort. Here’s hoping all of Rick’s work will pay off with a solution for them. We were the last into dinner but ended up being the first served dinner – yeah, we were hungry since lunch was some snacking on the road.
Adventure Day Four – Hot Air Balloons in Albuquerque
We get up at 4 AM to get ready to go to the Dawn Patrol and then the Mass Ascension at the Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta. We leave at 5:30 after having some breakfast. The traffic on the freeway in the dark isn’t much fun in the Model A’s, but we make it to the field in perfect timing.
Balloons inflating at dawn.A pretty morning with balloons going up
A few shots of some of our group:
Jerri sitting, Dan, Larry, Rick and Nancy
John and Nancy foreground Dan and Rick in the back
“The Twosome”Lori, Jay and Rose in front – Rick, Tim, Pat and Terri in the backSome of the balloons are very big! Some can hold as many as 15 people in their baskets.
Some shots of the balloons:
Some are very colorful!
Tinker belle
Yoda and Darthvader
The Penguin Group
Some Parting Shots:
We head back to the hotel. Rick, John and Dan go down to help Jim try to figure out his car’s problem. I finally go down to see how things are going and find the whole gang down there Larry, Jay and John Hulstrom are there also.
After working on the cars, we decide to do some exploring. Our first stop is to the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center. It is very extensive and informative. Besides the museum they had cultural music and dancing by native people.
After the cultural center we had planned on going out to the petroglyphs, but simply ran out of time. We gather together and go to the Sawmill Market for dinner. It was a high end food market with a lot of the top restaurants from town, plus brewery, wine bar, ice cream and a dessert shop. Then we ate outside together after each picking their own choices for dinner. It was more like places in Spain with topa bars. Larry and Jerri were to join us and blocks away their car quit again, however when we got back to the hotel their car was there, so hopefully everything is ok. Tomorrow is another long 200+ day so it is to bed for me.
We got up and Rick went out to help Jim with his car. They finished and when Rick came in the rest of our group had already left. So we told Jim and Dorothea we could travel together. We ended up hooking up with Jay as the leader. We got a late start today and didn’t leave until 9:30. We head straight to the first stop – The Aztec Ruins National Monument.
Very interesting site, even though we have been here before.
Dorothea and Jim
Some of the ruins
Jim and Dorothea and Rick and I eat snacks as we wait for the others. They decided to go to a restaurant for some lunch so we decide to start out heading towards Albuquerque. Jim’s car started out running fine so we think the problem was solved by changing the ignition module, but then it started going only 30-35 mph with no acceleration. So we chug along again until about half way to Cuba, NM and they call the trouble truck to come get them. We wait until the trouble truck arrives and head onto Albuquerque. There are some pretty formations again, but a long drive.
The contrast of the deep blue sky and the big fluffy clouds adds to the scenery today.
We pull into the hotel at 5:50, check in and leave with our group at 6 for dinner! That is cutting it too short. We had a barbecue dinner joining some of the local club. We leave by 8 because tomorrow is an EARLY day to go to the balloon festival, getting up at 5. So more tomorrow.
We get up early to see the sunrise at Monument Valley, but it rained last night and it is cloudy and no spectacular sunrise like last time.
Too many clouds for a beautiful sunrise
So we choose not to do the 17 mile tour at Monument Valley and instead go see the sights heading North: “Forest Gump Hill”, Mexican Hat, and “The Valley of the Gods”. Everywhere you look is another beautiful sight so now my biggest job is to try and pick some of the sights to share and not post them all!
Starting at sunrise at Monument ValleyThings lighten up and the clouds add contrast
Mexican Hat
On our way to Valley of the Gods – a 17 mile dirt road through beautiful country!
The rain last night has made it so as not to be too dusty and yet not too muddy. Just right!!This is my kind of Model A road!
Then I decide we should do a “GROUP” shot of those who took this Adventurous route today, through this fantastic place. People obliged me and we took a moment together.
All ten of us together in the Valley of the Gods
Beautiful people, beautiful cars, in beautiful places – what more could you ask for?
We finish the loop and head on to more places for the day. each choosing their own places of choice to finish out the day. Some to Four Corners, some to Mesa Verde, and some onto Durango, Colorado where we are spending the night. We have been to all of these places before, so we stay behind Jim and Dorothea because their car is having issues and goes only 30-35 miles an hour while back firing. We follow them to Cortez where the trouble truck meets them and we go onto Durango.
We end up with a few rain showers, but the end of a great day.
We get up and have breakfast in the hotel and pick up our sack lunch for the day. Our group from Nevada heads out. We head East on Route 89 towards Page. We are in the Vermilion Cliffs with great scenery when Nixon’s car decides it needs to rest again! So time for me to take some photos while they disconnect the thermostat this time, to see if that will solve the problem.
Vermilion Cliffs stop
We get it started once again and head on down the road. We stop at the Glen Canyon Dam on Lake Powell but it is closed.
Glen Canyon Dam on Lake Powell
Next we make a stop in Page to get gas, snacks, and a camera chip. Jorgensen’s car is now making a funny noise and they think it is the alternator, but we head on. We enjoy the sights around Antelope Canyon, even though we don’t go see the slot canyons this time around.
Area around Antelope CanyonOutside of Page
We stop in a shady spot and eat our sack lunch while looking out at the beautiful view. We finish and go on, but not a long enough break for Nixon’s car I guess because it decides to quit once again.
This time they grease and protect some wiringTime for another photo shoot for me!Yesterday Fall officially started and since there aren’t many trees around this is my Fall Photo!
Entering Monument Valley
We check in and then watch the sun set over Monument Valley.
Today started out with a bang, or should I say a DOWNPOUR! It rained hard all night with lightening and thunder. You could really hear it in the motorhome! We heard later in the day that it rained three inches just last night.
Evidence of the hard rain from last night, mud covering the road
We get up and move things from the motorhome to Tin Lizzie. Go to the Kanab Archeological Museum and then ask about where to go for a little local ride. They suggest Johnson Canyon, so off we head. It was a little test drive for Nixon’s car. Boy are we glad we did it. It was about 10 miles out of town and then a 15 mile drive up a little country road (as in the above picture). About 5 miles up the road all of a sudden no Larry and Jerri behind us. Well maybe they are doing a picture moment, but soon think it must be some picture shoot! So we turn around and find their car stopped dead in the road!
Well after an hour, the guys figure out it was the coil. With a new coil, it started right up!!!
We are on the road again and do see some pretty sights.
Welcome to Kanab country!
We go back and have some lunch, then check into the hotel. We freshen up and then go to the welcoming dinner. It is always nice meeting up with old friends and meeting new ones. Tomorrow we will head out into some beautiful country!
We get up and hitch the trailer back up and end up talking to a couple who were Model A people just coming back from a get together at Gilmore. We hit the road at 9. We went from Ely to Milford via Hwy. 21 . Talk about a “lonely road”. From Baker to Milford it was 75 miles of No Service, No Shoulder, and No Turn Outs on a VERY narrow road! Needless to say when we got to a spot that had a little pull out we were all ready to take a little break.
San Francisco Peak
From Milford we go to Beaver and onto I15 and then took Hwy 20 over to Hwy. 89. We stopped in Milford at a local cafe called Flatiron for lunch. Things went fine until outside of Carmel Junction I realize Larry and Jerri all of a sudden are not right behind us. Thought Larry was being nice and letting traffic by but we get a call and they have had a flat on the trailer. We pull over when we can but can’t really turn around and go back very easily. They say that is fine – a couple of nice guys stopped and helped them change the tire and wheel. We make it into Kanab about 6 (we lost an hour with changing to Mountain time). We park in the convention parking lot where we are leaving the motorhome and trailer for the tour. We go to Houston’s for dinner. We call it a night and go to bed by 9.
I am getting a late start on this blog , but better late than never! We left home at 8:00 yesterday and met John and Nancy and left Reno at 8:30. It is still smokey but not as bad as it has been.
Loaded and ready to go
Leaving Reno
We call Nixons to see if we will meet them in Fallon, where we stop for gas. But they are just leaving, may catch up with us later in the day. We stop at Middlegate for a short break. We are in better shape than a few cars there!
Cars at Middlegate
We head on to Austin where we stop at the ONLY place open in town – the International Cafe. It is like a living ghost town. The sign on the door says: TAKE YOUR MASK OFF BEFORE ENTERING! So we enter maskless and enjoy a lunch made by the owner, hostess, waitress, cook and cashier. She says “Here is what I have , take it or leave it.” The BLT was actually pretty good. While we are eating Larry and Jeri catch us and share a BLT. On our way to Ely, which we make by 6 PM. We stay at the KOA and meet up and have Mexican food for dinner.
Well since we haven’t been able to travel much due to our buddy: “COVID-19” in the last two years ,things have changed in many ways! One being that this blog site has made new changes and now it is time to see if this “old dog” can learn the “new tricks” to use it.
Tin Lizzie isn’t loaded yet.
Our garden isn’t put to bed yet.
Grandma isn’t moved to her new setting for three weeks. And yours truly hasn’t packed yet. Time is running short, but things are coming together slowly but surely. With any luck the “old dog” is learning and this blog may come to be for this trip yet. Time will tell, hopefully with the next blog we will be on the road!
WHERE: Sheboygan, Wisconsin -> Kohler -> West Allis, Wisconsin
WEATHER: Blue skies with fluffy white clouds & cold, warms to 56*
We get up and are ready to go to the Kohler Factory for our last tour. We ask to have a late check out at 1200 noon, but are told ‘no’, because they are booked up. I am guessing because of the Packers home game tonight. We say our Good-byes to Jim & Dorothea, because they are heading back to their home in Wisconsin today before they go to their winter home in Florida. We had a wonderful time touring with them in our little group and hope to visit them sometime in Florida! We then go to the Kohler tour.
We go on a 2 hour tour, very informative, but again like all the big factory tours we have taken, no pictures are allowed. They show us the ingredients needed to make the pottery, the forms & molds, the firing/baking, the cleaning, the putting on of the enamel,and the foundry where they make the cast iron things. They also make auto pieces in the foundry. They also show the different types of faucets, and the art design area.
Some of the sink designs
Sinks, faucets, tubs
They also do toilets, urinals, and showers as well. We go back and check out of the hotel by 1100.
Rick at the top of the stairs to our hotel the Blue Harbor Resort.
Me at the bottom of the stairs with Lake Michigan in the background.
Last view of Lake Michigan before we end the tour and head for home tomorrow morning.
We are going to the farewell dinner tonight at the same German restaurant that we started the tour at. Then tomorrow everybody heads in different directions to get to their respective homes. Here is a picture of the plaque that we got and had everybody sign as a ‘Thank You’ to Marcus & Mary.
That’s All Folks, until next time!
Some of our cars at the German restaurant for our farewell dinner.
Marilynn & Shirley in era fashion
Entertainment: Cyndi on accordion
and John on trumpet.
OK I lied. I decided to add a little addendum. Here are pictures of the people on the 2019 GREAT LAKES TOUR.
Ken & Shirley
Dorothea & Jim
Bob & Marilynn
Jay & Pat
Cammie, Sally, & Terri (The girls!)
Marcus (our fearless leader missing Mary)
Joyce & Gary McCall
Dennise & Ron Matty
Steve & Sondra Kurtz
Cheryl & Steve Kerr
Linda & Ken Robinson
Josh & Carol Swanson
John & Judy Hulstrom
Cyndi & Dave Krill
Lin & John Bieback
Andy & Donna Oliver
Pat & Charlie Dickinson
And last but not least the ‘Twosome’ from which this blog comes, standing on the shore of a GREAT LAKE at the end of a GREAT LAKES TOUR!A beautiful end to a final day as we fly home from Chicago to Reno on Tuesday, October 15, 2019.