Saturday, March 31, 2007

Last class, Last visitors

The season is coming to an end. We had our last seminar here at Peace River on Friday. It was fun to have a small group we could 'chat' with after our seminars with 600+ folks at the FMCA!




And, Jim had his last 'help-desk' session in the clubhouse. Here is Benita, who was just thrilled to have the one-on-one help. She also took our 'Blog' seminar and learned how to make a blog.



This will probably be our last weekend here and we're hosting our last group of friends. Glenn, who has been threatening to visit all winter long finally made it.



Perfect timing! Because Diane and Andy are also visiting this weekend to get their Datastorm installed. And Glenn, Diane, and Andy are all our friends from the Kayuba dive club.



Diane and Glenn and I have the same kind of camera, just slightly different models and attachments. So we spent some time on our beautiful nature trail here, taking photos and comparing notes.












When they get around to posting their photos, you'll see Diane's on their blog, and you'll see Glenn's on his Picasa Web Album.




When we leave here, we'll visit family in Fort Lauderdale for a couple weeks, then start heading west. There is nothing on our schedule right now until the next FMCA convention in Redmond, Oregon in August. We're searching out rallies and RV parks along our route to give more seminars. If you're planning a rally or staying at a park who might like to host us - send an email to jimandchris@geeksontour.com.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Back in Peace River

We are back 'home' again now. In the Peace River Thousand Trails park for a couple weeks. It is much more peaceful now. Instead of being full with about 400 rigs like it was 2 weeks ago, my guess is that there are about 200 rigs here now. Yet, the weather is perfect. I think this is the best time to be here. It's in the high 50s at night and 80 during the day.

We parked in a different site, closer to the clubhouse, pool and pickleball courts. We even tried our hand at pickelball yesterday. It's fun.



Diane and Andy are going to be visiting this weekend and Jim will install a Datastorm Internet Satellite dish on their motorhome. I think we're going to make them into our poster children for Internet access on the road. They've used just about every method over the last 3 years and finally realized they needed a dish. We've been telling them that since the beginning!

Sunday, March 11, 2007

WEC - Peace River Outing

I have been a member of Women's Executive Club, aka 'WEC' since 1983. Even now, when I don't live in Fort Lauderdale anymore, I stay active as their Webmaster, and I keep in touch with several of the members. Most of these women are much more comfortable in a board room than in a campground, but a few adventurous souls decided to take a mini-vacation and come visit me in Peace River for the weekend. I didn't make them rough it too hard tho - they stayed in cabins - but I did get them all out in the river for a paddle. We had a gorgeous day.


In the picture above, from left to right: Emily, Jan M.R., Jan B., Nancy, me. The photo was taken by Richard from the park who was obliging enough not only to load up kayaks and canoe and drive us to the launch, but also to make sure everyone was situated properly and pushed into the water, AND to take our photo. Thanx Richard!

Did I mention that it was beautiful day? Warm sunshine, 75-80 degrees, but still with a cool breeze.















I *told* 'em they might need to get their feet wet! Notice the guy in the background ... not only did he not try to help the ladies in distress - he just walked by shaking his head.




The cold water must have tickled because there was lots of laughter after that!




The kayaks were easier to maneuver - and they went right over the shallow parts. Emily and I reminisced about our first time paddling the Peace River ... in 1983! Our dive club organized a group outing thru Canoe Outpost, or Canoe Safari and we paddled for 2 or 3 days - camping out on the banks of the river.



After a couple hours on the river, we were back at the campground and took a dip in the pool and a soak in the hot tub. Then it was off to a winery about a half-hour away called 'Henscratch Farms.'



There is also a hydroponic 'u-pick-em' strawberry farm there.



We asked for a recommendation for dinner, and discovered The Watering Hole in Sebring. Wow. The food was superb - I had steamed mussels on fettuccine. The huge, live alligator in a cage gave it a uniquely Florida ambiance!

This morning, I found Emily sitting at my favorite sitting spot and she had her watercolors out.





Nice weekend! Thanx for the visit guys ... er I mean gals..

Friday, March 9, 2007

RVs and Computers, a busy week

In addition to our normal seminars and Jim's 'Help-Desk' hours, I did a few private lessons this week as well. You'd be surprised how many RVers use computers and need help! When we first started RVing in 2003, our estimate was that about 50% of all the RVs we saw had a computer inside. Now we think that it's 90%! And - 50% of those have 2 computers! This is simply a reflection of how important computers have become to everyday life. And, the Internet has become a necessary 'utility' akin to electricity, water, or telephone.

I just have to brag about one particular teaching session this week. He's a retired doctor. This is his first computer. He and his wife were in this park just for a short time. He took one of our seminars, then scheduled a private lesson for himself and his wife. He told me that his wife liked to write, but she was reluctant to even touch the computer. After the lesson, she seemed excited to start. Just a little bit of training helped break the ice. And, he scheduled another session for himself. When we were finished he gave me a check, but the real payment was the spontaneous hug he gave me. He said that he's accomplished some very difficult feats in his life - becoming a medical doctor and becoming a boat captain among them - but this computer was a challenge that had been defeating him until now. My training put him on the right path and gave him confidence.

It may not be solving world hunger, or curing cancer, but Jim and I feel really good about what we do!

Check out this computer-in-the-dashboard.



This is an option in a Tiffin Allegro Bus. It isn't just a navigational computer - it's a full-fledged Windows XP computer. Someone in the park had one of these and they showed it to us. They had never used it except to play DVDs. Jim set them up with a WiFi adapter so they could get it online and downloaded all the XP updates they needed. Now both of them can be browsing the web. She on her laptop, and he from one of the front seats. It's about time we started seeing some real computer options in motorhomes.

What we're still waiting for is to see outdoor mounted WiFi antennas as an option. Right now, people still have to rig their own. Here's one that we helped set up for a neighbor in the park.



It's a WaveRV marine-type antenna/USB adapter, strapped to a Walmart-special telescoping pole, strapped to the awning support. Works great. He is parked about 6 sites away from us and, with this antenna he gets a good connection to our network. He even uses it to make Skype phone calls to Europe and said it worked fine - once you get used to the delay caused by satellite connection. He promised to only use it for phone calls between 5 and 6 am because that is a bit of a bandwidth-hog and could noticeably slow us down.

And, one last picture ... would you believe that Santa comes to our computer classes?! Always wondered what he did the rest of the year. He leaves the sleigh behind and goes RVing!



Read more about him, and see a photo in full dress at Ron's Blog.

Monday, March 5, 2007

Beautiful Day, Wonderful Friends

Nothing is better than sharing your favorite things with your favorite people! Lynne and John are visiting us for a couple days, staying in the park. Yesterday, we went paddling on the river.

We figured, if we could get all 4 boats on one car, then we could drive up to the launch site, paddle down river, then take the other car back up the road to pick up the one we left. It worked out great.






Thursday, March 1, 2007

Stumpy, the mascot alligator

It always surprises me to learn how wild animals take up residence in one place. To me 'wild' means nomadic. I like being 'wild'! But, it's simply not true. In scuba diving, you can find the same critter in the same branch of coral day after day, month after month. Here, at Thousand Trails, Peace River Reserve, there is a large alligator named 'Stumpy' that you'll find on the same little beach on the same bend of the river - right across from a strategically placed bench.

We haven't seen her in a while because it's been cold. I'm not sure where she goes, but she's not on the bank when it's cold. It's warmed up lately, and today she was on her bank, right where she belongs. Jim got some photos today that make it clear why she's called 'stumpy'! We call her 'she' because she was seen with a lot of babies following her around last season.





No one knows how she lost her leg.

I sure needed some nature time today. I've been struggling with the computer all day, getting absolutely nothing accomplished. grrrrrrr
What a nice bench. All's right with the world as the water flows by like it does every day.