Showing posts with label Allergies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allergies. Show all posts

Friday, April 1, 2016

March is going out like a lion. Wrapping it up, continued….

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Photo by Amada Gonzales

Most tasks have been taken care of now, except van maintenance.  Seems I need to get some work done and get rid of the annoying “Check Engine” light.  Here is how the month has been going.  Wind is blowing like crazy here in Quartzsite, roaring like a lion.  I apologize in advance for the long and rambling post.

March 18 at 7:57pm ·

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Today I have been going through things, trying to organize the rest of the way, gather things for the last Rock Club tailgate/swap meet tomorrow, and pack things away. Time to pack rocks away for the rest of the summer. Won't be seeing them again until November. In the process, I had my solar suitcase cover laying on top of things,and covered by a tarp.

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When I uncovered it, I found some little critter in the past ten days, stockpiled a bunch of green Mesquite tree seeds just right on top of the cover. Isn't that cute? These things are as hard as rocks. I am breaking camp on BLM land and going to town to housesit for a friend.

Ella Shore Do you find it sad when you pack up to leave?

Swankie Wheels It was sad to leave my camp on BLM land, but not sad to pack up and hit the road, just exciting.

March 19

The Latino Rock Fiesta, a music event, seems to be much-a-do-about-nothing. I drove to McDonalds today after the Rock Club Swap Meet, and then decided to drive across the I10 and down Kuehn Rd... to have a closer look. I observed a number of young people using the pedestrian overpass, walking to town for breakfast, mostly couples, and then over by Loves, more people walking to cross I10 on Exit 17, and some to Loves for breakfast. Traffic was nothing compared to the annual migration of snowbirds.

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If not for the tents and such, you would hardly be able to see any difference than normal. Traffic was actually much lighter then during our winter season. I think estimates of 20,000 are way off.

Some people say there is  nothing to do in Quartzsite and that always cracks me up.  Here are some things to do in the area…. and next year I will try to do those I have not yet seen.  Things to see.

I am working on condensing and packing up my trailer now. The Rock Club has a Swap Meet the 3rd Sat. of the month and today was the last one. I sold a bunch of my notecards and a few other small things. Still have a lot to do, but once the rocks are put away the rest gets easier. The rocks have to load over the axle of the trailer, and so that has to happen first. Tools have to be the last thing that goes in the back of trailer, in case I need them. Now to wash up some things, wash out the hummer feeders and put them were I can get to them, in case I want to hang them in my camp. Then to make the decision to load the kayak on the van or in the trailer (it ended up in the trailer). Think I will op for the trailer to keep it shaded from the sun. I'm getting closer.

Now, what to do with the passenger seat I did not sell??? The sun is getting too out to work outside very long. I got a headache from sitting in it this morning from 8-10am for the Swap Meet.

Thought I  might tow the trailer from MX to UT as I explore, so that if I can't get internet, I can work on projects off line when I am not hiking. There is also the advantage as I am meeting people in the trail towns, I can show them what I have... my rig, and see what storage options there are along the way.  I do have the option of leaving it here in Quartzsite at my friends’ house.  Which would be nice, when I finish the hike, it will be here waiting for me. I think I will leave it here in Quartzsite.

Lots to figure out.

Except for having Chevy look at the van and give me their opinion as to IF the engine cover can now be removed... I am done. Need to put tools away. Have a few more things to tweak. But it is all falling into place now. I am ready to hit the road and explore the AZ Trail.

I must begin studying my gear list and others I have been sent and get my gear ready... and order the other things I need. I am working on a combined list now of other AZT hiker's lists, and what I have on hand. Questions for other hikers are: 1) Is there anything on your list you NEVER used? 2) Is there anything you didn't take that you wish you had? 3) What, if anything would you MOST want to change? I'll share my spreadsheet when I am done.

March 20

Well, I have a lot to do today, so I am getting off the computer for now. Looks like my friends who worked the Fiesta have not been paid. I sure hope this is resolved to their benefit. (since this writing, they have been paid, but a week later than they were told).

Got the back of my trailer straightened out and found lots of things that were taking up space that I don't need. Actually got rid of five large Rubbermaid tubs.  Also cleared out the space where the kayak goes. It's too hot out there and sweat is dripping into my eyeballs.

March 22

I have joined the Arizona Trail Association and signed up for this VACATION!  I'm going. Anyone want to join in on the fun???? Sign up now if you do.  Volunteer Vacation 2016 – Mazatzal Wilderness.  https://www.facebook.com/events/1578216685831132/

Hope to meet with a guy this afternoon to see if he can read the van computer codes for me. Time for old Swankie to hit the road soon. Another season comes to an end and a new one begins.

Why is it, no matter how much stuff I get rid of, the trailer still fills up to the ceiling??? Kayak loaded. Rethinking STUFF!

Got to meet and visit with Jan Walker, a 57 year old women walking from Pacific Ocean to Atlantic Ocean for 911 Awareness.  https://www.facebook.com/RiseUpForTheFallen/

March 23

I tried to assist Jan by getting others to do some water drops (and maybe a Dr. Pepper) between Exit 45 and Phoenix... she is heading east on I-10 in the West bound lane.. I could not go to assist her, with the van problems I was having.   But police finally came along and kicked her off of I-10.  She ended up having to get a ride north to Route 60.

This was this past weekend in Quartzsite. Yep, nothing to do here. Latino Rock Music Festival.

Rock Fiesta 2016: 'You could barely move'

An attendee said:  “Let me just emphasize that by the end of the night, I could barely move through the crowds while trying to use Snapchat, Twitter and Instagram so our 12 News audience could be part of the fun as well.“  

In the meantime, my silly boy, Richard Bailey, is contact juggling and drinking beer at the same time... in Ireland. He has spent most of the month in Ireland working and vacationing.  His wife joined him for the last days he was there.

March 24

Note to self: Stay away from fiberglass insulation. I helped a friend yesterday and got some in my eyes, on my skin, in my lungs. Had an asthma attack during the night. Am now trying to STOP this COPD episode. Going to bed with hot tea and my AZ Trail book. Hope I don't get a secondary bacterial infection in my lungs while I am trying to cough one up. Darn. I don't get sick from being bad, I get sick from being good and doing good.

March 25

I am going to be "unfollowing" some of the people and also some of the groups I follow now. Since I will be away from Quartzsite about six-eight months, I don't need to keep up with all the local news. I will mainly be posting on my blog as I am able to get an internet signal and get to my computer or some other computer. I will resume using my SPOT O.K. notifications and can put 9 other people on that list, they will mainly be folks who can support me along the AZ Trail, so they will always know where I am. I will have ONE Facebook contact who can repost updates letting others know I am o.k. and approximately where I am. This is just a heads up. There just won't be time to keep up with Facebook that way I have been doing.

OK, I am off to tackle the engine cover and see if I can get it off without having to tear out my newly built battery box/cabinet. I think I will only need to trim off the top shelf of the cabinet to be able to move the cover enough. We will see.  (well that didn’t work)

I thought I may have to cut the top purple board back... from right under the orange extension cord to something about like this...... where the black camera cord is laying.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels Ha, she said!!!!

Swankie Wheels There it is, the glove box/drink holder and the engine cover/dog house/ engine cowl. If a mechanic needs to get in there, can the cover move with the purple battery box cover in the way? Or do I need to redesign the purple cabinet???

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels Pulled the lower dash covers off... before... driver's side.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels ...after - driver's side...

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels Before - passenger's side...

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels after. passenger's side...

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels Glove box/drinker holder, before

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels ...location for glove box/drink holder... after it is removed, front of engine cover. Yuk, the dust, it is really black, not tan.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels Unlatch engine cover, and move it... I can not move it... it won't budge.

Swankie Wheels And even if I cut the top of the purple box back, I don't think it will move enough to allow access to the engine.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels The most I can cut off the upper left corner of the purple would be two inches, and most likely to do that I am going to have to take the whole purple box apart. I think the thing to do is take it to someone who has removed these covers and see if they can jimmy it around so work could be done. That shouldn't cost too much for someone to look at it with me, since I have everything but the purple box out of the way.

Swankie Wheels View backing away a bit into the isle. The far corner is the one I mention above that a the most I could only cut 2" off of. The corner closest to the lens I can cut back about 10-12" which would be about where the passenger seat would have been anyway. I think I need someone else to look at this before I began cutting anything.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Swankie Wheels Looking at the purple box from the floor in the isle.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

There just seems to be no way around this, the purple box must come out and be rebuilt and pushed a foot farther back. Below is the new arrangement.

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In the end, I had to take the whole box apart and rebuild it, moving it backward one foot, and mechanics at Chevy have now looked at it, pulled the cover off, and moved it around to be sure that it will clear enough so work can be done on the engine, if needed.  That’s a big relief.

I have signed up for the first week of May to work on this maintenance project and will be hiking the entire trail in early fall.

Carl Brown Sr's photo.

Well, my goal for the day has been accomplished, I got everything removed from around the engine cover to determine if it could be opened without me having to pull or redesign the battery cabinet. I am pooped. I didn't break anything and am sure I can put it all back together again, but I could not budge the engine cover and think I will get some professional advice on if it can be removed with the purple cabinet in place or how much I have to change things to be able to give mechanics access to the engine. Ugh. I'm tired and depressed and hungry. I'm gonna go eat now.

Swankie Wheels Food can make a person feel much better. I'm conjuring up a re-design.

Swankie Wheels Well there is just no way that engine cover is gonna come off with this box in the way. I have decided to move it to the rear by 12", and then sit my refridge on top of it, even with the freezer you see in this photo. The farthest left battery will then be in the door way of the side door, but not blocking any more space than what I am already used to. I mocked it up in Photoshop.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

Douglas Rykerd: Bummer that you have to redo it. I hate when we think a project is done, and then we have to redo it because we didn't foresee an issue with something seemingly unrelated. Happens to me more than it should ; )

Swankie Wheels Now, I only hope they can jiggle that engine cover to get at whatever needs gotten after, cause I am gonna be pissed if I have to take all this out again.

March 26

Sometimes I surprise myself. I got the batteries out today, and hooked up outside to keep my refridge and freezer running. Got the battery box rebuilt so there is more room up front to removed the engine cover. Got it all done, and the refridge and freezer moved back inside the van. Running power using jumper cables tonight. Will move batteries back in place tomorrow, and tidy up some wiring. Most likely will get another pair of jumper cables to run from batteries to invertor and fuse panel. Didn't think I could do all that in one day. 1) photo before the re-build and 2) space now, after moving the battery box back a foot.

Swankie Wheels Here is my new arrangement for invertor and fuse panel. I will tidy up the wires tomorrow.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

A nesting dove has been watching me work all day. Right over my camp is a nest. It looks more like a net than a nest. I looked up a couple days ago and could look right through the nest and see the egg and the yoke inside, with sun shining through. I'll try for a photo tomorrow.

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March 27

Once I begin my "hiking" adventure, it is unlikely I will get much computer time. So, please know that when I do turn on the computer, it is unlikely I am going to look through hundreds of "LIKE" notifications.... which means I will most likely stop looking at any notifications. As it is, I have only 30 likes each time I turn the computer on, and that is several times a day.

Solution: If there is a way to stop ALL notifications I may do that. If not, I may deactivate my Facebook account for the duration. I have to compulsion to want to look at all the comments and notifications... and it won't be possible.

I have made some changes to what "notifications" I will receive and from who. I have also revised my blog page to bring information on the Arizona Trail to the forefront so it's more noticeable. I am working on a Wish List of gear I will need to get for the hike, but it is still under development.  There is a tab at the top next to the HOME tab.   I have also moved the "donate" button to the top right corner, in case anyone wants to help me get gear.

Swankie Wheels Except for having Chevy look at the van and give me their opinion as to IF the engine cover can now be removed... I am done. Need to put tools away. Have a few more things to tweak. But it is all falling into place now. I am ready to hit the road and explore the AZ Trail.

Time to get back up there today and slap the last of my paint on the platform. I don't have enough to cover it all, but am going to use up what I do have. Now I have the panel so it tilts up and it has not been painted under the panel since it was installed six years ago. Going to use up the paint in that area.

Then I worked on a better way to tie down the t.v. antenna... since the blue strap is needed for the kayak and it sings in the wind. Got that done, plus drilling a hole in my roof to feed the coax through. Got it plugged. It was a good day.

Swankie Wheels's photo.

It was a very windy day today in Quartzsite, but I managed to get a lot done. Looks like I need the following done to my van: change fuel filter, replace an O2 sensor or fuse (hope it is just a fuse), and get spark plugs checked/replaced. Ouch.  Was NOT the fuses.

Stanley Ptak: Charlene, if you don't have this website, bookmark it. I find it invaluable when travelling. If I'm on the road on a Tuesday night I have to watch NCIS. I'll go here, put in the zip code or the city, state location and it will shoot an azimuth to the transmitting tower and get you distances and an idea of the signal strength. I can then point my antenna right on, and then search for the signal. If I'm in range, all is well. If not, I'll just drive to a closer location.   You may want to add this to your blog. Stanley Ptak sent me this:   http://transition.fcc.gov/mb/engineering/dtvmaps/

The Digital TV Transition: Reception Maps

Digital Television (DTV) is a new type of broadcasting technology that will transform your television viewing experience. DTV enables broadcasters to offer television with movie-quality picture and sound. It can also offer multicasting and interactive capabilities.

After working on my t.v. antenna and connection yesterday, I did a scan for channels in town and got none. So, last night I drove back out to my campsite in La Posa North LTVA and tried again. I tried with van facing west and got nothing, then north and got nothing, and decided to watch a DVD instead. This morning I turned the van facing south and I got channels. A month or so I got the t.v. working here and got six channels (5 digital, 1 analog). 2 of the five digital were Spanish. This morning I got 10 channels only 1 of those analog, and 1 Spanish. Pretty cool. Nice to sit at my desk and work and have news or programs playing at the same time. I feel so civilized. lol

April 1, 2016

I am in Parker AZ waiting for Chevy to get a new O2 sensor in from CA.  Turns out the fuel filter is inside the gas tank and the cost of replacing it would be over $500.  Turns out I don’t need a tune up and spark plugs, a job that would cost $650 (that’s what all the work on the rebuild of the battery box was for, ha ha).  It’s just a bad sensor.  Cost of the computer diagnostics and new O2 sensor is about $300.  What a relief.

And in conclusion:

Just a reminder, I do not read LIKE notifications, I just click them off. If you want me to know you like something I post, PLEASE use your words. I will read all comments. I may "unfriend" people who continue to LIKE too much stuff. If you believe I am being unreasonable, please "unfriend" me on Facebook and just follow my blog instead. Most of my posts will be there, not on Facebook, for the rest of 2016. Thank you.

Sorry for the rambling.


Thank you for doing your usual Amazon shopping using my affiliate link.

Help me a little if you can by donating to my equipment fund for the Arizona Trail hike, in the Fall 2016.  I promise to pay it forward.  There is a PayPal donation button in the top right corner, but I realize people using phone may not see that so I am repeating the button below. You can see a list of gear I need at http://swankiewheels.blogspot.com/p/wish-list.html .

Contribute to Equipment for the Arizona Trail Hike.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Manners for being a Vandweller (Training weeks 10 and 11)

manners

The above photo was shared by a Facebook friend of mine and is from Healing Light Facebook page.  https://www.facebook.com/healinglightonline?fref=nf

I am deviating from the standard layout of my Training program for two reasons: 

1) the phase of using swimming is over and I am moving on to the next phase – hiking/using legs, carrying weight.  Sept. 22 I swam 1 mile in 1hr and 11 minutes, whereas I began on Aug. 23 I began swimming and swam 1/4 mile in 30 min.  Good improvement.  And I have lost 2 pounds a week since beginning to work out again, August 18, 2015.

2) a recent effort to help another backfired on me and I began thinking a lot about taking care of myself first.  Then I saw this list… and realized it ties in well with a thought I had last year about doing a blog on Camp/Vandweller Manners.

The past two weeks have been hard on me.  I usually update my blog on Saturday, but Saturday, September 19, I forgot because I was upset by behavior of someone I had been hosting all week, and depressed and physically ill from it.  I left that person to their own devices about midday on Friday 18th and went on my way.  I put some distance between us… then slept til noon the next day.  I never do that.  When I woke, I learned this person was slamming me all over the internet and telling all kinds of lies about me.  The way my body responds to stress is my gut shuts down.  I stop eating right, my gut stops working right, and I get fecal impaction.  Excuse me for being crude here, but then once I relax again, I begin to poop and poop and poop.  I had felt I was gaining weight, but I was not, I was just not eliminating waste.  That, in itself, can make a person very sick.  Some folks get headaches from stress (and I do that sometimes), but if the stress is subconscious, my gut reacts first, before my mind even knows something is amiss.

It was several more days more before I remembered I forgot to post on my blog. So, I am going to turn the above list of twelve into rules for Good Vandwelling Manners.  I will do this by relating my recent experience in trying to help someone else, as well as some past experiences since becoming a vandweller over six years ago.

1. If it feels wrong, don’t do it.

It’s all about listening to the wee small voice inside.  I ignored it.  It kept saying, there is some reason this person  you want to help and host is always in a jam, always loosing jobs, etc.  But, some folks are very good at getting you to take pity on them.  And I did… the whole while saying “give them the benefit of the doubt.”  NO, don’t do that!  Give them some free suggestions, direct them to other resources and let it go at that.  Listen to your wee small voice inside.  Give them the benefit of your experience, not your limited income.  That would also apply to letting people advance you money… I’ve been doing that, and I must stop… the wee small voice is saying so.  Trying to catch up from borrowing money is difficult on a fixed income of less than $1,000 a month. 

2. Say exactly what you mean.

When I invited this person to join up with me, I said “We can pool our resources, I can heat water for you, and warm food up for you on my stove, since you don’t have a way to cook.  I will share what food I have with you, you won’t go hungry.  You will have the safety of parking near me and then follow me to Quartzsite when the time comes.  You will learn so much in Quartzsite”

Such an offer should not mean your host is going to cook all the meals, use their own water to heat for your morning coffee, provide you with dishes and silverware.  As a vandweller, you should have all those things.  If someone offers to heat you water, don’t bring them an empty coffee cup.  Bring them a cup of water to heat for you.  If you have food, prepare it for cooking and ask them to heat it up.  If they do so, offer to do the dishes and take the pot and clean it after. Be grateful they are willing to use their fuel to help you.  Don’t give them back dirty dishes to clean.

Providing a guest with water and preparing and cooking all their meals for a week, might not be a big deal in sticks and bricks, but in a van, it is a big deal.  In my particular instance, they provided a can of chicken, a can of green beans and a little cooking oil, and a little garlic salt – for a week???  I provided everything else, and the day they got money so they could pay me back, they got so rude and aggressive, I had to leave.  That was just an hour or so after I bought $40 worth of groceries for them because they said their payday was not for five more days.  Turned out it was that very day and they gave no thought at all to paying me back, but went straight for the wine store.

Yes, I was tense all week because I was only offering to heat water (theirs) and heat food (theirs) or share what I had, not go out and buy more stuff, granola bars, pet food, etc., when I was flat broke myself.  (BTW… they have $400 a month more to live off of then I do.)  And I drive a gas hog, while they have a high mileage vehicle.  And I drove a lot of extra miles that week to help them.

So, I should have straight out handed the empty coffee cup back and said, but you need to give me the water to heat, your cup is empty???

3. Don’t be a people pleaser.

It’s my natural inclination to do that, WANT to please people.  I guess it is old garbage, always trying to please my mother and get her approval and never succeeding at either.  Don’t take advantage of that trait in others. Resist your urge to give into that trait in yourself.  Generally, it never pays off.

4. Trust your instincts.

This really goes back to what I’ve already said.  If you get a bad vibe about a person or place where you find yourself… move.  I know I should never camp near someone who has pets… I generally get sick if I do.  I can’t risk that and I can assure you, that person with the pets is NOT going to come take care of you if you do get sick.  There are people like me with extreme allergies, there are others who have severe chemical sensitivities.  My allergies are not news and not the first time I have blogged about it.  We can not help others understand our needs, so we must put our own needs first.  Stay out of situations you should not be in.  For instance, I know that I should not attend a large gathering of vandwellers in the desert… too many things that can make me sick, all kinds of smoke in the air, dust being kicked up by dozens of feet (human and animal), no control of where loose pets are going or whose stuff they are peeing on, or whose food there are stealing, etc.  It has taking me years to wrap my mind around the fact that being with that large a group of “like-minded people” is unhealthy for me.  I am learning to trust my instincts about that… and it makes me sad.  But, it is what it is.

5. Never speak bad about yourself.

In this situation, where I hosted this person, I commented one day, that cooking for two people was not good for me, and that it was causing me to gain weight as I was eating too much.  Believe it or not, that got turned around to being put on that person’s facebook page, that I said this person was eating too much????  Maybe there is a hearing problem involved here???  But I would never tell a guest of mine that they were eating too much.  If you believe such a thing was said by your host and they offended you, ask for clarification, or at the very least have the grace not to comment about it on social media in a effort to make them look bad. 

6. Never give up on your dreams.

Hosting another person during a time when I am trying to get control of my fitness and train for a major life event, an 820-mile solo hike through deserts and mountains, does not work.  All my time and energy has to go to training and reaching my goals.  By trying to help someone else at this time, I was derailing my own dreams.  Don’t do that! They don’t care about your dreams.  If you have to compromise your own needs and principles in order to host someone else, think twice.

7. Don’t be afraid to say “No.”

I should never have offered to help someone else when I myself was broke.  I should have said NO.

8 . Don’t be afraid to say “Yes.”

I should have said, “Yes, Swankie, you are right, it’s o.k. to say NO!”

9. Be KIND to yourself.

The kindest thing I did for myself the past two weeks, was to walk away from my guest.  Take care of yourself first, as no one else is going to do it.

10. Let go of what you can’t control.

I observed my guest driving in ways that were dangerous not only to themselves, but to me and to others on the road.  I was also aware that this person might be driving without auto insurance. When I finally shouted out in fear and exasperation that leaving their car parked in the middle of a driveway blocking others, and in a turn where others may not see them, I was accused of screaming like a banshee… (and I have four sisters who can tell you none of us are the quiet types, we have big booming voices and know how to use them).  In all the years I’ve been on the road, and all the people I have met, NO ONE has ever heard me scream.  If you have, please remind me of the event in the comments.  Thank you.

My only concern was the safety of my guest and to prevent their car from being rear-ended.  Then the real screaming began…. and it wasn’t me doing it.  There were a lot of people on the other side of the street seeing and hearing all this and I am way to shy to draw that kind attention to myself.  And it would spoil my “stealthiness” to behave so.  If you are the guest of someone else, in their home/camp, etc., you need to listen to and respect their wishes about the proper way to act there, even if you don’t agree with them.  Never scream at your hosts for being concerned about your safety.  I realized that very moment I could not change or help this person, and I gave them their food, forgetting a half bottle of cooking oil, and drove away.  They were still screaming.  I am writing off the $ they owned me as the cost of a lesson well learned.  I have made the choice to live on the road this way… others may not have had a choice for various reasons, some of which could be mental health issues.  So be it.  I didn’t cause it and I can’t fix it. (I.E. not my monkey.)

11. Stay away from drama and negativity.

Unfortunately, being a host to someone else is not something I am good at, and I won’t be doing it again.  And attending large gatherings is also something that is not good for me either.  I guess I am meant to be a hermit and maybe that is the only way to avoid drama and negativity.  All I really know is being alone in the desert is the first time in my life I have known true peace.  So don’t take your drama and negativity to someone else’s camp and spoil their peace, especially my camp.

12. LOVE

Some times the best way to love others is to walk away from them.  I am doing that for my family.  I am not allowed to love them like I want to, so it is best for them and me to walk away, regardless of the pain I feel my doing so.  I am not allowed to participate in large desert gatherings the way I would like to, sharing my knowledge and experiences in a safe, appreciative and healthy environment for me… I have to wear a mask and keep moving away from loose animals that risk  my health and damage my possessions by peeing on my things.  That’s no fun for me.  I believe in the basic ideas of such gatherings and so I am letting go with Love.  I am walking away.

Well, there, I’ve vented.  I probably sound  like an in-coherent nut, but it’s my blog and I can sounds nuts if I want to. 

==============

In order to protect my health I am adopting and modifying RV Sue Privacy Policy at her camps.

Sue's:  No Visitors, No Photos, No Exceptions. Thank you.

New rules for SwankieLand:

“Please, No dogs or cats, No unexpected visitors, No smoke of any kind, No Exceptions. Thank you.”

If you want to visit with me, I will come to your camp or meet you in town.  Please keep  your pets or service animals a good distance from me. Do not smoke anywhere near me.  If you wear colognes or perfumes, I can not visit you.  This is essential to my health due to severe allergies.  Please understand.

======================

Also, I am creating a set of notecards of southwestern images to sell in order to raise money for equipment or to help pay back my friends.  Please have a look at what they may look like.  I hope to have them finished and ready to mail out by Thanksgiving.  You can reserve your set of note cards now by sending a PayPal donation of $25 to charlene.swankie@gmail.com.  Note Cards will be sent out before Dec. 1, 2015, or delivered to you are the Winter RTR Rendezvous, your choice.  Only these advance sale cards will have my original signature.  Card sets will be available online afterward this advance sale but will have printed signature.

Sample Southwest Notecards


Thank you for doing your usual Amazon shopping using my affiliate link.

Help me a little if you can by donating to my equipment fund for the hike.  I promise to pay it forward.  There is a PayPal donation button in the top right corner, but I realize people using phone may not see that so I am repeating the button below.


Contribute to Equipment for the Trail Hike or for the Note Cards:

 


Saturday, May 28, 2011

Getting Healthy On-The-Road: Day 6

Well, I wish I could say I'm better but at least I can say I'm no worse. 

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The view from the head of my bed.  Dem trees is tall! 

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And my left-over steak and fresh veggies stew.  Yum it was good.

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I've spent a number of days in the GA mountains and it was basically all good, until I got rousted out by deputies at 1am-I was sound asleep.  I think if I had not left some of this stuff out overnight, they might not have questioned me. 

They checked my ID.  I explained I was sick and just out of the hospital and trying to rest and heal.  They said I could not park there and directed me back down the mountain about 1 mile.

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The new spot was a nice picnic spot with a great waterfall.   Nice sound to sleep to.

I then blew them away with my "I'm kayaking America and have so far done 29 states”... at which point they decided not to ticket me?   The one deputy kept saying, “She is kayaking America… she has kayaked 29 states.”  Then he asked… “are you doing all this alone?”  I said, well, everyone else is dead, so I guess I could either give up and watch t.v. or get off my butt and live my life as I have always dreamed.

So there I am, full of sleeping pills at 1am, climbing onto the roof of my van to lift my big ladder up, tie it down, then lower myself back down through the driver's window (a view you would have to see to believe – David Hair has a photo of this, I’ll try to get it).  It is a task I have mastered, but on sleeping pills???  But the view of the stars was spectacular up there.  I'll have to do that more often.  I designed the roof platform so I could sleep up there... and I will have to "make it so" soon.

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But at the new location, the great night's sleep was again disturbed by holiday weekenders and church goers at about 11:30am.   Screaming and hollering like someone just let them out of cages.  Well, I guess maybe that was the case.  But I just couldn't do it... so I drove back into town.  I'm looking for some shade... and will try to go back to sleep.  Tuesday, I might head back up the mountain .... problem is few places up there where I can get internet and I'm working live on ancestry.com doing a genealogy report for someone.

I am here:  http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=34.78483,-84.77191&ll=34.78483,-84.77191&ie=UTF8&z=12&om=1

OK...  I'm still way behind on blogging (sorry).

Charlene Swankie - http://swankiewheels.blogspot.com/
 
Malo Periculosam Libertatem Quam Quietum Servitium
("I prefer liberty with danger to peace with slavery")

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Getting Healthy On-The-Road Again: Day 1

So after four months in Florida, and exposure to too many allergens, I left to visit some vandwellers in Georgia… and there I added insult to injury…. and there I got too much second hand smoke from 3 smokers, too much cat hair, too much house dust… and my body just couldn’t fight any more.  But how can I visit with them… without being exposed to things that are not healthy for me?  No way to do it.  And the visits were really good, but now I pay the price.  I can not and will not do it again in the future.  My health has to come first.  I just had no idea things could get this bad, breathing wise.

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But, …. a surprise birthday party…. a 7-layer cake and coffee ice cream –sure lifted my spirits.  Nothing better than coffee ice cream as a birthday gift.  Thanks to Hairs and cuzzin Dick and David Jr.  Marvelous, even if I did think I should have gone to the hospital that day.

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The vandweller project for cuzzin’ Dick is coming along nicely.  His rig is going to be sweet.  David (and David Jr)… you are marvels.

The day after my birthday, I did take myself to the Emergency Room as I couldn’t breath.   Something about open airways has great appeal to me.  I was coughing so hard, I was loosing control of all other bodily functions, my ribs hurt, my head was splitting, I couldn’t eat.  My blood pressure was going out of sight, and I’ve never had an issue with that before.  So after 8 hours in the E.R. with no food, no water, no relief, they admitted me.  All they did was bruise me…. 3 IV sites… I looked like I had been mugged…

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but I found this little guy to keep me company and to keep my mind on the prize… the open road!

Four nights later, at 8pm on a Friday night, the doctor comes to my room and says, lungs clear, blood work good, nothing wrong, just COPD… you can go home now.  I said, but, I can’t breath.  I’m camping out and the air out there is really really bad and I can’t breath in here.   So he waves bye bye and sends me down the hall hacking my head off.  I requested copies of all lab work, and my x-rays on a CD… and he said… what for????  There is nothing there.  You are o.k.  WTF?

 

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Next morning, I headed to Cleveland, TN  in the hopes air quality there would be better.  I have two classmates David and Phyllis Altopp (‘62 high school class with me) who live there.   I was hoping air quality up there would be better but it was only slightly better.  I had a wonderful visit with them, beautiful meal, good company.  Just wish I had had a voice.  That Phyllis, can she cook… those were the best rolls I ever ate.

We visited(as best I could with no voice),  I helped them with the reunion list, our 50th is coming up next year.  The air quality was only a little better there than 30 miles south.  I could hardly make myself understood, but we had a nice visit.  Spent two nights… and most of the time I was in my van… running my Air Conditioner.  I have a new nick-name for ol’ SwankieWheels…. “deIronLung.”   I then returned to Dalton where the air quality had gotten even worse so I decided I had to leave Dalton the next day and seek out mountains. 

Now I’m giving great thought to doing the Midwestern states as I head westward toward AZ and maybe, only maybe, returning to do the Southeastern states during a very early spring or very late fall… or even winter…. just not when it is humid like this.  I can’t see how people live here.

And if desperation overtakes me, I have even considered tabling all my kayaking plans and heading right back out to the CA coast and good old salt air.  Or even the Pacific Northwest.  There is just something about being able to take a deep breath… that I’m rather partial to.  I had no idea what people with COPD and Asthma have to endure before this month.  This is just the worse.  But, I’ll find some beauty in the world this week… and maybe, just maybe become a little less “canary-like.”   Oh, I saw a big Eastern Indigo snake as I pulled in to camp here.  Sorry, missed the photo op.  Will watch for him  and try to get it. 

What to do now?  Last night at Hair’s I had to run the A/C in the van most of the night, and so I got up early in the morning, and headed out for the mountains.  Meds not working, doctors not working, hospital not working, can’t run the A/C forever. Well, let’s see… if I can’t take the pollutants out of the air…. I’ll have to take myself out of the polluted air

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Here I sit, about 20 miles outside Dalton GA… in the forest, along a babbling brook… wondering how the hell do I get healthy again.  The past two weeks have been nothing short of hell.  My birthday was 5/16 and it was without a doubt the worst birthday out of the previous 66 birthdays.  I’ve jokingly called myself the “canary” in the coal mine… as I seem to have very low tolerance to environmental allergens. 

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Now, I’ve got a lovely camping spot on a beautiful creek…. and the air temps are cooling off.  Still very very humid and I can’t stay outside long. It is suppose to rain… and I pray it does.  Rain, please rain.

And I have projects to keep me busy:  1) compiling David Hair’s wife’s genealogy.   Hope to have a nice report printed out for her in the next couple days.   2) a couple art projects to do… as thank you gifts to those people who have been trying to help me through this.   Basically though, my chosen task is to find my voice, get my lungs clear, and resume my kayaking adventure. 

Who is Swankie?

My photo
Anywhere, USA, Full-Time USA traveler, United States
In 2006, I was shopping for a wheelchair. By 2007, I had new knees, better health and by 2008 a kayak. In Aug 2013, I kayaked my 49th state, Alaska, at the Holgate Glacier and in May 2014, I kayaked Hawaii, my 50th state, to celebrate my 70th Birthday and the finale to the wonderful adventure of Kayaking America. Next up... Re-kayaking southwestern states.

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