Sunday, December 29
Travel day today. We reluctantly packed up and left Pilot Knob RV Park. We certainly enjoyed our two week visit there and we'll certainly be back. Very good staff, well maintained park, decent facilities, friendly people (and of course our wonderful friends were there!!). It checks all the boxes.....except for the Interstate and train noise, but at least one learned to ignore it. :-)
So with hugs and handshakes we headed down Interstate 8 west deeper into California. Every mile west is new territory for Opti-Creeker. We went on a mini-vacation two years ago when we drove the truck to San Diego from Yuma. This is the furthest west the trailer has been.
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| Boondockers near Ogilby Road. There were hundreds of rigs out in the desert. |
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| BLM camping at Imperial Sand Dunes. |
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| Huge dunes for the quaders. |
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| Another boondocking area. So many rigs. I hope they weren't dumping their tanks in the desert. |
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| Lots of veggies grown in this area. |
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| I love these decorated overpasses. This on is in El Centro. |
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| Notice the Sea Level sign on the left side of the storage tank? We are below sea level here.....but not for long. |
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| West of El Centro we begin to get into rolling hills. We have to cross those mountains ahead. |
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| Monster generators near the road. A very windy area, but fairly calm today. |
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| The rocks through this area are amazing. None are smaller than a car and most are bigger than buses. |
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| Precariously balanced. |
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| Top of the hill. We started below sea level in El Centro. |
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| The remnants of the snow storm that closed this section of Interstate on December 26. |
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| The long descent all the way to the Pacific Ocean. |
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| Water reservoir just north of I-8. It's pretty low. They could use more rain, just not the deluges they seem to get around here that cause flooding. |
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| Very green around here. You can tell you are getting Pacific Ocean influenced weather here. |
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| The hill across from us at Dos Picos County Park. You would think there would be good TV and radio reception. Nope! |
When I reserved our site at Dos Picos I hed gone online and checked the pictures of the park. I even phoned and asked if our 37 foot fifth wheel would fit. No problem they said. Obviously someone that had not tried to maneuver a rig this size into one of their spots. The first site was not going to work. No way to back it between the big trees on either side and not get the truck hung up on the ashphalt curbing they have everywhere. So buddy in the office gave me a couple of other suggestions. We managed to squeeze into site 39....barely. (Hint: I would not recommend anything larger than 30 feet long and less than 10 feet high. Nice park if you can fit.)
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| We are squeezed in here. Not a great park for bigger rigs. |
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| This is one of those times I'm glad we don't have a 40 footer. 37 barely fits. |
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| That site straight ahead was where we were originally assigned. We would have to back under the tree arches. Out of the picture is the asphalt curb that ran along the edge of the road. |
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| Those branches are well under 13 feet. |
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| Those asphalt curbs are everywhere. Sure narrows up an already narrow road. |
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| Nice views from the upper campground. |
Monday, December 30
We drove into the town of Ramona just before lunch and then kept on going down (or was it up) Hwy 67 toward the tourist town of Julian about 22 miles up the road. We thought we would have lunch there....until we saw the crowds! It was only a dozen degrees above freezing, snow on the ground, and people lined up half a block just to get into a restaurant. On a Monday! Are these people crazy? I can't imagine what it must be like on a beautiful summer weekend. Nope! Not for us. So we drove back down about seven miles to Santa Ysabel. We had to stop at the Julian Pie Company (located in Santa Ysabel not Julian.....just to confuse you), then popped over to Delaney's Bakery for a sandwich.
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| Tree lined Main street |
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| Nice downtown area. A busy little town. About 22,000 people live in the city limits. |
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Lots of wineries along the road (tasting on Friday, Saturday and Sunday only. Sorry Cheryl.) This winery had some nice metal horse sculptures. |
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| Lots of traffic on a winding road. |
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| Very twisty. Fun to drive. |
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| Crazy busy in Julian |
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| Nowhere to park. Windy and cold. See the snow on the roofs? |
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| Hard to see with the parked cars but there is a half block lineup just to get into Mom's Restaurant. |
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| I guess this guy was ready for anything. He had chains on the rear wheels of his all wheel drive Equinox. |
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| The snow line was about 4000 feet. |
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| Julian Pie Company in Santa Ysabel |
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| Pie baking equipment. Keeping it clean. |
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| Done baking for the day. |
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| Lots of pie for sale. |
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| More pie awaiting packaging |
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| A bit pricey. We didn't buy a pie but we did buy a small apple loaf. |
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| Good spot for lunch. |
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| Part bakery, part deli and part gift shop. |
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| My TBA (tomato, bacon and avocado) Mmmm. |
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| Cheryl's Baja sandwich (turkey, onion, jalapeno's, tomato, etc.) |
We drove back into Ramona. The roads are in excellent shape and so fun to drive. Even in a one ton diesel. Folks are sure in a hurry here in California. I wanted to drive slower but the long line of cars behind us told us to speed up or get the hell out of the way. We did both.
We stopped at Albertson's for a few groceries (welcome to California prices!), and stopped for fuel. Actually I was surprised at the pricing. $3.89/gallon for diesel. About a buck more than Yuma.
.....and that was Our View From Here!
Some interesting sights along your journey. We enjoyed Julian and came away with an apple loaf as well. I like seeing the snow on the road sides but I'm glad it's only in the photos.
ReplyDeleteI've always said that only folks that park a rig should work at assigning spots in a campground. Some folks have no idea.
Enjoy your stay.
I have to agree with Deb about parking..That's ridiculous the site they wanted to give you! With it being Christmas break I'm guessing that may have something to do with the crowds, but CA has way too many people anyway in our opinion. Especially Southern CA. Great pics! I know you two will enjoy whatever you do! Happy New Years Eve!
ReplyDeleteI sometimes think that the people that design campgrounds have only camped in a tent. Sites aren’t angled, trees in the way, low branches etc.
ReplyDeleteSafe travels!
Enjoy your stay on the coast. Julian is a cute town but yes, very busy. What kind of pie did you get?
ReplyDeleteIt was certainly sad to see you go but we know we'll meet up again.
ReplyDeleteSomehow, probably because of traffic, you missed the actual Julian Pie Company store in Julian. Not surprising, so many cars! It is through the town across from the library.
That's crazy about the site you were given. Even old parks can cut trees down to accommodate guests!
Sorry to see you two go and hope it works to cross paths again at Quartzsite. That is one tight park like Patsy said it would not hurt to cut a few trees down to accommodate what is mostly bigger rigs these days. Tom's jealous you visited his favorite pie town...lol
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year!
Glad you enjoyed the trip to the Julian Pie Factory. Kathy said their Cookies were better then their Pies.
ReplyDeleteWishing you both a Safe, Happy and Healthy New Year.
It's about time.
Welcome to CA! $3.89 is a decent price for diesel, I often pay $4+. If you are into wine tasting, I can recommend Edwards Vineyard east of Ramona. And enjoy a slice of Apple Mountain Berry Pie if you pass thru Santa Ysabel. Snow creates a huge draw to the local mountains, it'll be back to normal once it melts.
ReplyDelete