




Left our campground on the bank of the
On Thursday, Chris, Pam , Carol & I, walked into the town of
The sun’s finally out. If the wind would stop it would be a beautiful day. 56*.
This is all about our trip to pick up our new Lazy Daze motorhome. Left Fort Pierce, FL on March 12, 2008





Left our campground on the bank of the
On Thursday, Chris, Pam , Carol & I, walked into the town of
The sun’s finally out. If the wind would stop it would be a beautiful day. 56*.


We’re in
Crossed into
Having the most wonderful time.




We headed for
On Monday we continued north on Highway 101 to the
Drove to the Klamath River Overlook but it was so foggy all we saw was fog. We were stopped at the Crescent Beach Overlook, once again fogged in, when an old Class A RV pulled in. The engine was running poorly. The driver kept racing the engine faster & faster and eventually the RV caught on fire!! The driver & passenger got out safely. I called 911 then left fearing the gas tank would blow up. It was a very small overlook with no place to get out of the way if there was an explosion. Saw several police cars, an ambulance and fire truck responding to the 911 call.
In





Heading for the coast.
Left Sequoia/Kings Canyon NP about
Friday: Continued the drive. Had lunch at Granzella’s Deli in Williams. Read about it in one of the tourist books. It’s a local institution. We got there about

Heading for the coast.
Left Sequoia/Kings Canyon NP about
Friday: Continued the drive. Had lunch at Granzella’s Deli in Williams. Read about it in one of the tourist books. It’s a local institution. We got there about







Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks.
Sequoia NP was established in 1890. Only Yellowstone NP is older.
Entered the park at the
Lots of snow still on the ground. We enjoyed it. A nice change for us. Gopher just loves the snow. Runs through it, rolls in it, eats it. Tonight it’s supposed to drop down into the high 20’s.
Besides various overlooks, our first stop was the General Sherman Tree. This is the largest living tree on Earth. There is one species of tree that lives longer and three species that grow taller, but for sheer mass, none is larger. In all the world, sequoias grow naturally only on the west slope of the
Sequoia Facts: Height: to 311’. Age: To 3,200 years. Weight: To 2.7 million pounds. Bark: To 31” thick. Branches: Up to 8’ in diameter. Bases: To 40’ diameter.
There was a nice museum at the Sherman Tree site. We set out on another walk through a grove of Sequoia’s but had to stop because of the snow on the trail. After that we drove to the Montecito-Sequoia Lodge area for lunch then on to our campground. We camped at the Azalea Campground near the
We were going to stay another night but Carol was cold and said she had seen enough big trees. She was ready to move on. J
In the morning we drove to the General Grant Sequoia Grove. Gopher & I walked around. Carol stayed inside. It was 34*. Left about 9:30. Our destination was the Dos reis County Park near



After shopping at Camping World in
After visiting the dam, we went grocery shopping in