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Moving to North Texas

Our time in Waco done, we are moving north to the Dallas/Ft Worth suburb of Highland Village.  John's brother lives about a half hour south of Highland Village and we'll be visiting him and his family for a few days. Again, our initial plans for a campground, one we had used in the past, were thwarted by flooding.  Lewisville Lake was swollen by months of rain and the campground on the southern end near the dam was mostly underwater.  After an extensive search we came upon a little gem of a park operated by the city of Highland Village on the banks of the northern end of Lewisville Lake.  The park, Pilot Knoll , was on a little bit higher ground and not flooded by the bereft of rain.  However it was flooded by campers.  This park being one of few that was not battling flooding had all the campers funneled to it.  We were pretty lucky to get a space but it was for fewer days than what we preferred. We had no more got set up and ready to go see famil...

Waco Here We Come.

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We have mixed emotions about getting back on the road.  On one hand we are looking forward to what Waco, TX has to offer tourists but on the other hand we are unsettled by our tire problems.  We have confirmed that our total load is within limits and that our load balance across each axle and even each individual tire is also within limits.  But after more hours than I care to think about researching and getting on forums it is clear that the Goodyear Marathons I am running are a tire with a reputation.  And it is not a good reputation. The number of reported failures of these tires was astounding.  It was not possible to read all the search hits about problems with this tire.  Of the couple hundred I did read the theme was common, tread separation and blowouts under conditions that these problems should not have happened.  One condition that did seem to be an issue in a large number of the failures was hot pavement.  Like me, many of the people...

Just a quick blurb.

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Being in Livingston, TX puts us close to several of John's cousins.  Of course close is a relative term when your talking about Texas.  One was two hours away in Sugarland, another one an hour away in Conroe and the third an hour away in Montgomery.   By the way, did you know that you could always tell if you were talking to a Texan if they spoke in terms of travel time instead of distance?   When we were in high school we made a few trips from our hometown of Borger, TX (up in the panhandle, north of Amarillo) to Galveston Island, TX.  To this day I have no idea how many miles that drive was but I know it was a 14 hour trip with 70 mph speed limits.  During the oil crisis when speed limits were dropped to 55 mph we quit making long-distance weekend drives.  There just was not enough hours in the weekend to do more than make the drive, with no time to spend at the destination. Before our stay in Livingston was finished we had managed to meet with all...

Done, done and done.

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The second day of jury duty was a lot like the first, hot and boring.  The A/C had not been fixed yet so it was plenty hot.  The heat coupled with the not-so-interesting law suit made for drowsiness.  One of our jurors, a twenty-something, actually dosed off, but within seconds of the first head-bob the bailiff was all over her letting her know that behavior was unacceptable. That perked everybody in the courtroom up. By the end of the day we, the jury, had found in favor of the plaintiff and awarded them the $150,000 they had been swindled out of.  We had now fulfilled our civil obligations.  Mark this one DONE! It was time to move on to the other objectives we (Cyndee and I) had come to Livingston for.  I made an appointment to get our truck and trailer weighed with SmartWeigh and headed to the tax commissioner's office to secure the title to my truck. It has been three years since we moved from Georgia to Texas.  All legal documents have been ...

Air You Can Wear

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Can it possibly get any hotter!  It was really hot coming across Alabama and Mississippi.  I about stroked out changing those blowouts in the middle of the day.  But since getting to Livingston it has only gotten hotter.  In these few days that we have been waiting for jury duty to start, the temperature has reached epic highs.  The actual temperature has peaked at 110 several times.  And with near biblical rains in this area for the past few months everything is soaking wet, raising the humidity levels to the point that the heat index has been topping out between 115 and 118 degrees.  The air is so thick you don't breath it, you wear it. Our 5th wheel RV has two of the largest air conditioners you can have on an RV at 15,000 BTU's a piece.  But they can't begin to keep up with this kind of heat.  The temperature in the rig rises steadily with the sun, staying roughly 20 degrees below outside ambient.  So when it hits 110 outside we're...

Deep Recliner Sitting

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You know, sometimes you just don't want to do anything.  We had been on duty seven days a week as volunteers for Chattahoochee Bend State Park for 14 months and then nearly a week long, nerve wracking, excruciatingly hot trip from Georgia to Texas.  We wanted some down time and decided to take it.  Both of us got in our recliners, kicked back and catnapped almost all day. There were a couple of moments of lucidness where phone calls were made.  We inquired about how to volunteer for jury duty and learned to our surprise that they seat juries only on the second Monday of every month, and that was four days ago.  But for some strange reason they had a heavy court schedule this June and would be seating a jury on the third Monday also.  All we needed to do was to show up. The Rainbow's End Escapee Park has a lot of amenities and features.  There's a clubhouse, pool, onsite insurance agency, and mail service to name a few.  They also have a fa...

Skipping NOLA

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Okay, here we go.  It's a new day, we have two new tires, new brake lines and all new brake fluid.  We are hitched up and about to depart Campgrounds of the South  at just a little after 7:00 am.  Our destination is not even an hour away but there is a lot of anxiety about getting back on the highway given our break-down history of the last two days.  We'll get there way before check-in time but we'll be off the road before the asphalt exceeds 120 degrees.  We have learned that our make of tire may be sensitive to hot pavement, hence the comment about asphalt temperature. Happily the drive is going flawlessly as we approach our exit but as we talk about it neither of us feels much like doing the tourist thing in New Orleans.  We've already lost the two days we had planned on spending in NOLA and even though there is no schedule carved in stone for being in Livingston, TX, we would just as soon get there and get on with the things we need to do there....