Categories
Mommy Diaries

Looking Forward to a Small Community Someday

Yesterday was a great day, and I’ve been thinking last night and this morning about why it was so great. We spent the morning at the local library, reading books and playing toys in their awesome children’s section. The librarian on duty was incredible useful, chatty, and friendly! She even let us check out books on her card so my kids could plow through a dozen books while we are in Moab for the week. I watched her greet many patrons by name, and she obviously recognized and new many of the locals.

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After a bit of conversation, she mentioned there was a community, Disney musical review being performed at the local high school that night and we should go! I heartily agreed, so after dinner we packed up the kids and headed to town to support the local theater community. The musical was adorable! Great costumes, fun songs, and some really impressive talent by both adults, teenagers and children.

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Between the community here in Moab (5,100 people), and the slightly larger town of Prescott, AZ (40,000 people) we’ve realized we really do want to live in a smaller community. A place where you recognize people at the library or community center and there is a sense of pride in where you live. In addition to living in a community, I’ve also realized I  want to be involved in the community. I want my kids to sing, do theater or choir at the high school and generally be involved. So while I’m enjoying our nomad status now, I’m definitely starting to see the first inklings of desire to settle in and build out a life with a little more roots.

Not yet though. There’s still so much left to see!

Categories
Daily Life

The Good and Bad of Spring Break

Jr. Ranger Class at the Grand Canyon

Spring break is a wonderful time for family adventure. I’ve watched the past few weeks as friends have taken trips to a variety of destinations. I love seeing their adventures, knowing how much our own adventures have blessed our life.

For full-time travelers, spring break represents the beginning of a complicated process. During the winter months we enjoy the luxury of empty campgrounds, no need for reservations, and an infinitely flexible schedule. Spring break brings forth a flood of ‘normal’ people, making the most of their week off work and school. Campgrounds fill up, venues are busy, and traffic abounds.

This year, we saw both ends of this phenomenon just a few days apart. We visited the Grand Canyon during Spring Break season, and though the visitor count was surely on the light end of the scale it felt busy and crowded. There were at least 15 kids all getting sworn in as Jr. Rangers at the same time! We also visited three other National Monuments in the Flagstaff area. While not as crowded as the Grand Canyon, there were definitely more families out and about.

In a funny twist of events, while walking one trail at Sunset Crater National Monument, we chatted with an elderly Swiss couple that has been in the United States for a few months. They looked at our group of 7 kids (between two families), smiled, and asked “Spring break?” with a slightly confused look on their faces. I nodded and said “Yes” while they responded with, “But spring break was last week in New Mexico!” We then had an entertaining conversation about how “Spring Break” occurs anywhere from March- April and chances are it’ll be Spring Break somewhere during that time and even follow us full time travelers around!

In contrast, just a few days later we visited Navajo National Monument on our way out of Arizona. The park is so far out of the way that there is no admission fee needed. Though we were not the only visitors, most of our time in the visitor’s center, on the trail, or at a viewpoint was spent with just our family.

I’m grateful that we can visit so many beautiful places without navigating the crowds common during peak season. Our visit is more relaxed. I’m able to let the kids roam further and worry less about losing them in a crowd of having them bother other visitors. These quiet times exploring new places is what really seems to bind us together as a family.

Categories
Arizona

The Queen Mine Tour & the Bisbee 1000 in Arizona

The town of Bisbee, Arizona has been on our list for quite some time as we’d seen other full time travelers pass through and really enjoy it. Though we would typically take the Airstream and spend a few days there, we weren’t able to get reservations at the only RV park in town. Instead, we visited in a day trip from our boondocking spot near Tombstone (about a 30 minute drive). The main attraction for us here was the Queen Mine Tour, but the city itself was an added bonus.

When We Visited: February 27, 2015

Ages of Kids: 9, 7, 4

Where We Stayed: Dry Camping spot outside of Tombstone, AZ

We had made reservations a few days earlier at the mine, and confirmed them upon arrival. We showed up early and attempted to get an earlier mine tour, but they were sold out. Apparently, reservations are definitely recommended! With more than an hour to spare, we wanted to explore town a bit. We learned from the Watsons that a yearly event in Bisbee is the Bisbee 1000 Stair Climb. Though the event is held but once a year, you can follow the route that weaves through town.

We procured a pamphlet from the rather reluctant lady at the visitor center desk (isn’t it her job to be helpful? We were confused), and set out to find parking closer to downtown. Really, we could have walked as it was that close, but since we were about to climb hundreds of stairs, we figured we’d give the kids a break.

The 1000 Stairs route was wonderful. Bisbee was founded as a mining town, not as a convenient place to build. The town sits mostly up and down the hillsides surrounding a very small downtown area. The roads weave chaotically up and around the houses and buildings. The many flights of stairs provide vertical connectors between the roads. Most of the staircases have nearby paintings marking the route, painted right onto nearby buildings or retaining walls.

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Following the route led us through parts of the town we otherwise would have never seen. It was a great little introduction to the town, passing through both residential neighborhoods and along downtown shopping streets.

Before we knew it, we were out of time. We only completed 6 or 7 of the stair segments before we headed back to the truck and to the mine for our scheduled tour.

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Getting ready for the mine tour was a process of production line gear fitting. We were each dressed in a raincoat, a leather belt, hardhats, and lights. The men handling the gear were both efficient and friendly, easily handing our undersized minors size needs.
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The tour starts by riding a train into the mine itself. Straddling the train was easy for all of us, and left our hands free to point our lights wherever we wanted. The kids loved having their own lights, and none of them was scared riding the train or walking around inside the mine.

The tunnel we entered was an old main entrance. In preparation for public tours, the spaces we visited had been augmented with additional safety precautions, but it did not destroy the experience. In places, mining drills and gear had been set up for the tour in places not used during active mining. I felt the tour/authentic balance was perfect. It gave us a real sense of what mining was like, but I never felt that we were in any danger.

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The tour was given by a former miner of that very mine. He was both entertaining and informative during the stops we made inside the mine. We learned how dynamite was placed and the fuses were timed to produce the best possible explosion for mining operations. We even got to ‘demonstrate’ the toilet cart that they had inside the mine, though Cara was a bit nervous to sit up on the seat with me.

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We all loved the mine tour, kids and adults alike. If you happen near Bisbee, I would highly recommend the tour!

For some added entertainment, watch the video we recorded and posted to the CurrentlyWandering YouTube channel!

Categories
Solar & Power

Solar Power Upgrade Part 2: Self-Install Combiner Box

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At this point of the install, each panel was mounted on the roof, with a wire connected to each panel and routed along the roof to the fridge vent. The next phase of the project requires connecting the three panels together in what is called a combiner box. Each of the negative wires are connected to a negative bus bar, and the positives to the positive bus bar. This effectively wires the panels together in parallel, which is a better setup if one of your panels ends up partially in shadow.

Two combiner boxes are possible here. If you plan to drill a hole through the roof to run the wire, a roof-top combiner box is what you need. This is the method you want to use if you plan to use the pre-installed wire many Airstreams come with for solar. I’ll explain later why this is probably a bad idea.

The second type of combiner box is called a fridge combiner box, and is used when you will be running the wire down the fridge vent instead of drilling a hole directly in the roof. Because of the type of refrigerator used in most RVs uses a heating element often powered by propane, there is usually ventilation placed above the fridge. This offers a convenient way to get cables inside without drilling holes, and is indeed the method I used to get three antenna cables inside. The fridge combiner box mounts with VHB tape and screws to the side of the fridge vent, and a hole is drilled to run the wire down the space behind the fridge and to wherever you need to route it.

The instructions provided by AMSolar are really quite good, but they really fell over during this phase of the install. The instructions want you to first mount the combiner box to the fridge vent, and then attach all the wires. This became an obviously bad idea when out of curiosity I tried to stick the 6 gauge wire pair through the indented hole in the combiner box. The wire was not even close to fitting through the hole. (See the image on the left.)

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At this point, I used my ‘phone a friend’ option and gave Dave Zimmerman a ring. He confirmed that the hole was ludicrously small and that heavy modification was required. I enlarged the hole with a drill, a utility knife, and most effectively a round file purchased from the hardware store in yet another run. I even went so far as to strip the end of the 6 gauge wires and test mount them to the combiner bars. This helpfully revealed that the hole needed to be even bigger to successfully bend the wires into a space small enough to fit inside the combiner box cover.

Using the combiner box as a guide, I used a sharpie to mark the size of the now-much-larger hole onto the vertical side of the fridge vent. Please excuse the poorly aimed and fuzzy picture. I took that with my spare hand with no reference to aim for a better picture. I could have mounted this box on the street side of the fridge vent, but it would be highly visible and fairly ugly. I mounted it to the opposite side, where it would be nearly entirely hidden from view. This required doing the hole-drilling work while standing high on the 8 foot ladder, leaning heavily on the fortunately sturdy fridge vent cover.

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Starting with the drill and finishing with the round, flat, and triangular files I bought in a set, I produced a hole large enough for the wire and dull enough not to immediately slice through the wire’s insulation. Before I removed the refrigerator for the next step, I took the time to wire each panel to the bus bars inside the combiner box. Each panel kit came with a black thing that mounted to the combiner box cover with a hole for the cable. Upon tightening this black thing with a wrench, an internal rubber gasket produced a water-tight seal against the wire to protect it from the elements. Assembling the black things to the combiner box, I pulled the panel wires through the holes and estimated their final length.

Before I proceeded, I wanted to make DARN SURE I was wiring up the panels correctly. I pulled out my little multi-meter and tested the wire from each panel. The test is easy: place the positive probe (red in my case) to the wire that should be positive, and the negative probe (black in my case) on the wire that should be negative. If the voltage reading is positive, you are correct! If the voltage reading is negative, the wires are switched. (Go ahead and switch the probes to see the negative values… it won’t hurt anything). The AMSolar Instructions had me use the black wire for positive and the white for negative, and each panel was wired correctly.

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I was a little surprised to see the voltage I did on each panel. Remember that in the first step, I taped a piece of cardboard over the front of the panel to keep generated voltage low. Even with nearly full blockage, I registered over 6 volts per panel! As it was, I was glad to have enough current to verify positive and negative before I completed the wiring to the combiner box.

The combiner box cover wasn’t very large, so the outer insulation of the panel wires needed to be cut to rest just inside the cover. The two internal wires were also insulated, and needed to be cut at odd lengths so that one of the wires could attach to the near bar, and the other to the far. The included instructions actually did a decent job explaining this part. After marking the desired length, I cut the wires to allow for the right length of internal wiring, then set about connecting them to the combiner box. I did this sitting on top of the 8 foot ladder, with the combiner box resting upon the fridge vent cover.

At this point, it was time to pull the fridge. I’ve done this a few times before, and it isn’t as hard now as it was the first time. First, turn off the propane valves on BOTH tanks. Second, I disconnected the DC wires from the back. Wrap those separately in electrical tape to avoid disconnecting power to the entire trailer. Next, pull the AC plug, disconnect the propane pipe, and push the fridge drain hose back through it’s holding strap. Remove the two hex-head large screws holding the metal rails to the floor. Inside, remove the four screws holding the fridge in place. The two screws on the bottom are easy to see and remove. The top screws are a little more hidden. Though possible to remove as is, I find that removing the top plastic piece (that contains the fridge temp display) makes them easier to get to. Keep track of all these screws.

The fridge can be removed by two people and set on the floor in the hallway. We used some of the panel packing cardboard to set the fridge on to prevent any damage to the floor.SAMSUNG CSC

With the fridge removed, I pushed the end of the 6 gauge wire pair through the hole in the fridge vent and went back outside. Back on the ladder, I pulled the wire out far enough to comfortably wire it into the combiner bars. At this point, I was VERY glad I had tested this first while on the ground. With all the wires attached in the combiner box, I removed the tape, applied the included putty around the hole, and stuck it to the side of the fridge vent. I drilled pilot holes and secured it with the included screws.Solar project_18

At this point, nearly all my work on the roof was done. Later on in the process, I used the included zip-ties and sticky pads to secure the panel wires to the roof in a few places. I also sealed around the feet with lap sealant as previously mentioned, and I also removed the cardboard after the wind removed one of them for me.

The next step of the process is running the wire from the fridge vent all the way through the house to the forward wiring compartment. Join me next time for more solar fun!

Categories
Arizona WanderLog

Easter Weekend in Sedona Arizona

Sedona, Arizona is a popular destination for a reason. Gorgeous scenery, some nice open land, and plenty of outdoor activities. Unfortunately, this time around we only had a short 3 days before needing to meet our friends in Flagstaff for their spring break.

We drove up from Prescott and quickly settled into a spot near Route 89A. Our spot was tucked in next to @liberatemylife@the_scenicroute, and @2wanderaway.shannon. We couldn’t have asked for a better crew to spend the weekend with.

Travel Dates: April 3-5, 2015

Twice a year, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has a worldwide conference. Broadcast from the Conference Center in Salt Lake City, UT we have the opportunity to hear from our prophet, apostles, and leaders. Its honestly one of my favorite, spiritually uplifting weekends all year.

Every once in awhile, Conference also lines up with Easter Sunday and then we REALLY get to have a good time.

“We found a beautiful spot for conference weekend. Here will hunt for easter eggs, listen to #ldsconf, and enjoy the beautiful scenery.” -@telegramsam

“This’ll do quite nicely for Easter & General Conference Weekend. Our neighbors (@the_scenicroute & @liberatemylife) are not too shabby either.” – @jesscurren

We had a few campfire evenings and even a potluck on Sunday evening. The kids had a blast building a fort in the tree and we loved watching the hot air balloons rise up every morning.

“Our Easter Egg Hunt has a perfect setting. The last few years, we do everything bunny related on Saturday. We have fun, and then focus on Christ during Easter Sunday.” – @telegramsam

Our Easter egg hunt Saturday morning was so much fun! The kids are aware that Sam and I hide their eggs and basket, but its still lots of fun. We had many eggs camouflaged among the cactus, and even though we counted we lost one or two. Oops!

“Easter baskets” that double as sand pails were a total win this time around as well!

“The annual dying of the Easter Eggs. Cara did more than her fair share and then covered them all with stickers.” – @jesscurren

We have a tradition of eating chipped eggs on toast for Easter breakfast. Its a basic white sauce with hard boiled, chopped, egg whites, and then egg yolks mashed up and sprinkled over the top. Not exactly healthy, but man is it good!

“We are celebrating Christ by listening to his living Prophet today. Join us at lds.org for a live stream of his words and other leaders.” -@telegramsam

“We went on a short walk between #ldsconf sessions this afternoon. I can’t believe how gorgeous this area is. It reminds me a lot of southern Utah!” – @jesscurren

“The kids have turned this tree into their magical fort. Complete with welcome sign, fire pit, and Easter baskets, they’ve spent most of their day playing outside.” -@jesscurren

Our weekend was peaceful, yet full of great friends and family time. We didn’t get in any mountain biking, and left plenty of trails unexplored. We are going to need to make time to come back here for sure!