We’ve been gone from home for three weeks today and will be back home day after tomorrow. For not being nearly as connected all of the time as some folks, it’s been a little rough sometimes not being able to be connected at all.
We’re used to being able to go on-line at any time and connect with family and friends via e-mail or chat. We’re used to being able to pick up the phone and – with our nation-wide calling plan – be able to call anyone we want to whenever we want to.
However, going camping – even camping with in a fairly nice fifth wheel camper – means sometimes doing without connecting, at least for now.
Granted, sometimes you have internet access in some of the campgrounds, and, more often, phone service is available fairly often as we travel.
We were in one location that was fairly remote in a hollow in Southeastern Minnesota that had wireless internet access – no phone, but we did have internet. That was a little unusual.
We’ve stayed at two KOA campgrounds on this trip. We had internet and cell phone service at both.
We’ve stayed at two members-only campgrounds near large cities, Kansas City and Omaha. Neither campground had internet access and phone service was marginal, with calls liable to be dropped at any moment.
While we were in Nebraska, Karen sat in a parking lot at a recreational area talking to her sister while I walked around taking pictures. Later that day, I just happened to check my phone while we were wading in the Platte – something I hadn’t done in 40 years – and I had service, so I decided to call our daughter to tell her what we were doing. Since I was also carrying my camera and a camara bag, that wasn’t a smart move… kerplunk!
Fortunately, it was the cell phone and I grabbed it before it had gone more than 6 inches deep. (If you know the Platte, in most places, 6 inches is deep!) Believe it or not, the phone is still working.
So back to withdrawal from being connected… We’re sitting in a branch of the Mid-Continent Public Library east of Kansas City that has wireless internet access. Karen has finished with all of her e-mail and on-line forums and is waiting for me to get done – she’s a typist and I hunt and peck. Hunting around to find someplace that has wireless internet is not something that I would want to do on a regular basis.
This trip is almost over and we’ll be back home soon, with no connection problems, unless it storms. On our next trip, we’re currently considering making a stop in Montana to get a internet satellite system, along with training on how to set it up, and then it’ll be easier to stay connected – when we want to be connected.
(Note: I posted this first on the RV Forum.)
Note: This “lost” Haw Creek Out ‘n About post was recovered from the Internet Archive WayBack Machine.
A little bit of this and a little bit of that, with a little rant added in.
June 26, 2009
I discovered just a little while ago that access to individual posts on this blog was unavailable and commenting was not available. This was because of something I did with some files on the server earlier today — not a web host issue. I knew that I should have checked after I was done, but didn’t.
It’s all back to normal now. It was only a 30 second fix, because it’s something that happened before and I knew where to look.
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A couple of days ago, a park visitor from Spain was injured by a Yellowstone National Park bison (aka American buffalo).
“At approximately 11:25 a.m., the woman and her husband were using a pay phone in the Canyon lodging area with their backs to the road. According to witnesses, two bull bison walked down the road, passing within 20 feet of the couple. One of the bison left the road, walked up behind the woman and butted her into the air. The couple, who were facing away from the road, did not see the bison.”
The woman was taken to the Lake Clinic where she was treated for minor injuries and released.
This quite an unusual event. Bison are not usually aggressive unless someone has encroached upon their space. We have seen numerous instances where people have gotten way too close to these critters and nothing happened. Park regulations require that a minimum distance of 25 yard must be maintained from bison.
Bison are very, very common in the Canyon area.
We still hope to make it to Yellowstone this year. However, we may not have as much time available as we had originally thought.
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Climate change legislation — The Waxman/Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act pass by a very slim margin today in the US House of Representatives. I actually watched some of the debate on CSPAN. I’ve got just a few comments.
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Climate change — I read material on climate change almost every day.
I am absolutely appalled at the gloom and doom, the-sky-is-falling alarmism that is in the media on a daily basis.
I’m not sure at what point I stopped simply accepting anthropogenic (human caused) global warming. I can say that for well over a year I’ve been reading a lot of climate change related material and have a much better understanding of the topic than I once had. My first blog post on climate was It’s not a hypothesis… It’s not a theory… it’s a CONSENSUS! last year.
Below is some of what I’ve come to believe and understand related to the Earth’s climate.
Carbon Dioxide Absorption Peaks
day 22
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