About my big camping trip.
I guess I could sharpen this pic up a bit maybe. But it's delightful when I remember the Kodak Instamatic tiny 110 mm camera I used to take it. Then would take the cartridge into a drug store whenever we got home from the trip. And of course, when I tried to edit the photo the computer said "what program should I use?" Silly computer.
This trip is worthy of a whole story line, and I'll just hint about it today. 10,000 miles in 3 months, and covered most of the Midwest and western states, having started in Florida. The Van behind my son was The Roving Toad.
That's because it was an Open Road conversion, and of course a Roving Toad rhymed nicely. Didn't look like a toad, but it kind of cornered like one. And heaven help having crosswinds on a highway. No less problems than many other campers of course.
The typewriter? That's how I memorialized our journey, supposedly. But I also journalled other things too. I'll have to look for those documents. I already Xeroxed them and gave them to my older sons a while back, since they shared this journey with me when they were 7 and 11, or so.
Not as many photos of that trip as I'd like. But I dare say there are already some of the National Parks available. We camped in them, or State Parks, usually. An occasional KOA was fun for the boys to go in swimming pools, or play pool while I washed our clothes, and enjoyed hot showers.
In 1974 we were a trusting civilization. I never felt fearful as a single woman traveling with two boys. It was a great adventure. We certainly made many mistakes...and were blessed somehow to get through them all. Our summertime trip took us from Tampa around the US returning to Tallahassee where we settled for a while. I must have been the real Roving Toad myself.
Here's a better picture of the Roving Toad earlier when we visited my parents in Framingham, MA.
My ceramic sculpture model looks a bit different. But it is nice to have as a reminder of a faithful servant.
I sculpted it a couple of years ago, maybe 2012. And as you can see, I drove it from 1972 to 1984. I am sad to say my own negligence was it's demise. I had lived in FL for so long, I didn't think of antifreeze at all. I would just top off the radiator with water. Ah, did it have a lovely engine too, a Chevy-Van 20, with a V-8, 356 engine (I think, not the 402) with a double barrel carburetor. The camping equipment could run off a separate battery that was also charged when the engine was going. So many mechanics had trouble figuring that out. The design was far from perfect, but having been built in 1971 it was pretty spiffy.
So the story of the death of the Roving Toad is that I'd parked it in the parking lot in student housing at U of FL in Gainesville, and since there was a Christmas break, didn't drive it for maybe a week. During that time there were 3 solid days below freezing...which was rare. And when I went to drive it, it kind of sputtered. So I checked oil and water, and the oil was gummy and full of water. I'd cracked his little engine block from the ice in the system apparently.
So I was able to eventually sell it. I could get to classes still, on my trusty bike, which was the only way to move around campus. It didn't take too long to sell it because I had no way to get to a grocery store...I advertised it somewhere and sold it for a song. The guy that bought it taught me something interesting about driving a vehicle with a cracked block. He poured a big can of black peppercorns, not ground pepper, into the radiator. And he said that might clog up the crack enough for them to drive it away.
He also got the 2 double beds, a flip over seat that was in front of the lower bed, a cabinet that included a small clothes closet, a full gas stove with oven and 2 burners, stainless sink, a working gas furnace, a portable toilet, a closet (where the toilet was located) and I don't remember what else. I'd made curtains for the windows, and the upholstry on the seats and foam bed pads was kind of shot...but most of the equipment still worked. I wonder how it all ended up. Hopefully someone else got to enjoy it along the road as much as we did. I think I had about 250,000 miles on it. At least one transmission, lots of other bits and bobs.
I bought a relatively little car next, also as advertised in one of those fliers, from a student. It certainly wasn't worth sculpting to remember though. Just a car. There will never be another Roving Toad.
...that was quite a trip.
ReplyDeleteI'm hoping to easily find my trip notes...there are various pages of paper in manilla envelopes next to old family photo albums, which I keep meaning to scan.
DeleteGreat memories, the Roving Toad is cute. I would like to take a cross-country road trip.
ReplyDeleteTake care, have a wonderful week!
I sure would love to travel by RV again, if cost were no issue.
DeleteTimes do change. It's a sad thing that we have to be so careful these dayse.
ReplyDeleteSometimes a particular auto just becomes something special for no apparent reason. My old Toyota 4RUNNER was that kind of vehicle. I called it RedRabbit because like the bunny in a certain ad it just kept going. Close to 300,000 miles when it quite literally disintegrated. I too made a clay version as a whistle no less. .....Thanks for the memory......Suzi....because FB insists I am anonymous!ðŸ¤
Yay for a Red Rabbit 4Runner. If you wish to share the clay version, you know I'd be interested!
DeleteGreat memory and story. What an adventurer you were.
ReplyDeleteThere are more stories to come. And I'd love to hear what my sons remember of that trip too!
DeleteYou are a marvel! I couldn't imagine...
ReplyDeleteThanks. It was part of what the 70s meant to me.
DeleteThat sounds brave but memorable. Wow!
ReplyDeleteThanks, I think I just would put one foot in front of the other, and that's how things happened.
DeleteI like your sculpture of it.
ReplyDelete