Posts Tagged ‘camping’

END OF MAY THRU JULY 2023

December 22, 2024

Though we enjoyed our trip very much, had lots of fun, saw some things we had only read about in books, magazines. or seen in movies, we were glad to be back home if only to get some rest and reflect on our adventures.

We had planted a garden back in March and it was time to harvest this thing upon our arrival home. Our next few days were focused on doing just that. Here are a few of our results. Lots of other things were planted but were either eaten by the local deer or just didn’t do well. We did get some corn and fresh green peas that we were able to freeze but the big crop was potato’s and zucchini.

Sunflowers we planted around the garden, Patty is 5’4″ πŸ™‚
Some of our potato harvest.
Me as a farmer, not a watermelon but rather a zucchini, and we had lots of them.

As we drifted into June we did a baby’s reveal for my Grandson here on the property. It’s a boy! Did some visiting with relatives, some back road riding on the Victory then planning our next camping trip. In July we decided to set up a couple of camping trips back to back, first one is Fort Mountain in Georgia. Though it was July was very nice and cool especially at night up on the mountain. Did a little hiking, went down the mountain a few times to eat, sight see, and do some shopping.

Campsite-Ft Mountain, GA
Some hiking at Ft. Mountain

We had some extra time while there so went to tour “Brasstown Bald” the highest point in Georgia. Fantastic views with lots of history in the making, recommend a visit if your in the area.

Notice temperature, was in month of July.

After about a week at Fort Mountain, we proceeded to our next campsite, David Crockett State Park in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee. Great clean campsite, was a little crowded because unknown to us there was a huge quartet festival in Lawrenceburg which drew a lot of campers to town. It seems that Lawrenceburg, TN is the birthplace of southern gospel music so each year in July they celebrate with this festival. The official name is the James D. Vaughan Quartet Festival should you like to look that up and attend?

That pretty much gets us through the end of July. When we were actually home there was always the occasional motorcycle ride usually in late afternoon on the local back roads of NW Florida. πŸ™‚

Hit that follow button to see what happens next. Not a “biker” by definition, just an old man that loves to ride motorcycles, travel, and experience new adventures.

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Motorcycle Camping Part 3 – The Trial

April 6, 2021

This should be the last post about the motorcycle camping trial run, in other words the testing in real time before the serious stuff starts. At this point everything I can think of is packed, food, toiletries, clothes, cooking utensils, heater (this was in March and still cold) extension cords, table, chairs, firewood, etc etc etc…. In other words had the trailer hooked up, bike and some supplies in trailer with the remainder in the cab or back of the truck.

Lets go——we had reserved camping sites at Karick Lake South for March 4 through the 8th of 2020. Five days to test out this setup, see what was missing and what could be left behind on the next outing. By the way Karick Lake camping is near by (25 miles) and is a really quiet and well taken care of campground. It has a fishing pier, bath rooms, showers, and hiking trails. Each campsite has electrical hook up and water. For those with RV and trailer campers there is a dump station on your way out.

Backed in on arrival

As you can see from the photos, when we arrived it was dreary looking, foggy, raining, and on top of that the wind was blowing pretty good also. Those photos were taken around three in the afternoon. That was not going to stop this camper however, we were going to stick it out no matter what. In fact turns out most of the five days we were there it was like this, cold, damp and for normal people some might have called it miserable.

Next it was time to setup, unload the bike first, then inflate the queen size air mattress, unpack the blankets, hook up the water hose, plug into electricity, turn on the heater, build a fire and get ready to prepare some food. The RV you see in the right side of the photo below is my brother and sister-in-law. They camp in style with all the comforts of home. πŸ™‚

It rained really hard that night, the camper directly in front of me was camping in a tent and riding a motorcycle. Met him the next morning as he was packing up to leave. He explained it was pretty rough since his tent flooded and he only had a few dry clothes to change into. He was from Mississippi and was headed home that morning hoping he could stay out of most of the bad weather. Not likely though, storms were brewing all across the southern states at that time.

Even though is was miserable, had a great time with my brother. We hiked almost every day, cooked and ate a lot, sat around the camp fire which we kept going strong for the entire time and talked about anything that came to mind. Learned a lot on the trip, some changes I might do and other things I could do without. In other words, I packed way too much stuff. πŸ™‚ Even though the weather was not nice still had a chance to take a few short rides on the motorcycle which for me is always fun.

Will post a two minute video below of one ride as I was leaving the camp site and out of the campground to the main road. Camera was mounted on rear of the motorcycle. Turned off the sound because it was so windy.

Soon we will catch up from the past and start posting about what’s happening now, but first I will need to catch you up on what has happened since this camping trip, maybe more camping, more rides, more photos and videos. So be patient with me, we’ll get there I promise. Will close this post out with a few more photos of that campsite. It was a blast and a learning experience for sure!

Remember not an β€œOld Biker” by definition, just an old man (by birth certificate) that loves to ride motorcycles. Feel free to leave comments and suggestions. Stay tuned, hit that follow button to be notified when next post publishes. And if you feel the urge, you can share this on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Thanks for reading. πŸ™‚

Motorcycle Camping – Part 2

April 2, 2021

In the last post kind of explained what would be necessary for me to purchase in the area of a trailer to do all the things I needed to do with it. Like the motorcycle search which took a while, the trailer search began. After a couple of months searching, found the trailer I’d been looking for and it was probably about 1.5 miles away. Was a six by twelve foot single axle trailer, covered, with drop down rear door to use as a ramp and side door for entry when you didn’t want to drop the rear door down. Was large enough to carry the Yamaha and all the other stuff I thought was necessary.

Once the trailer was in my possession it was time to set it up and make it mine. First had to find a motorcycle chock that would accept the front tire of my bike and hold it up without support. Of course you have to use tie downs before you move it and that meant tie down hooks in the floor were needed. Turns out it already had some tie-downs.

Next thing I did was add electricity. Wired in an on/off switch, light, and a wall plug. Placed the plug-in down on the under side of the trailer easily accessible so it would be easy to run an extension cord and plug it in so you would have lights and electrical power inside the trailer. Most of the campgrounds I would use have electrical hook-ups, water, bathrooms and showers.

Also built a little area in the nose of the trailer to store things so they wouldn’t move around and even put a rod across the front of the trailer in order to hang clothes, jackets, helmets, and whatever else needed to be hung up. Also devised a way to mount the spare tire on the wall. When I say nose of the trailer, forgot to mention that it is V shaped in front which actually makes it pull easier due to the shape it will split the wind better. Will put some photos below.

When all of that was done, time to see how it would feel pulling it with my truck, bike loaded. Hooked up the trailer, loaded up the Yamaha, tied it down securely and took off down the road a few miles to test how it pulled, felt and then on returning making sure the bike was still secure and had not moved. Did some quick turns, faster than normal stops just to see if anything would go wrong with the way I had it setup.

Result, it pulled great, bike stayed in place and it appeared that the trailer, bike and me were very close to ready for a trial run at camping. Well not quite, still had to buy/gather up some supplies. Food, clothes, camp stove, utensils, paper towels, cleaning products, air mattress, sheets, blankets, pillow, heater (it was cold), charger for phone, extension cords, water hose, table, chairs, coffee, coffee pot, hot chocolate, firewood, matches, gas for stove and lantern. Believe me there was probably more but I really wanted to over pack and see what I really needed on this trial run. There was a lot more minor items packed I’m sure but you get the idea. πŸ™‚

Funny thing is my brother and sister-in-law were going to be camping in the very next campsite in their RV to assist me with anything necessary but the idea was for me to test this out as much as possible on my own. Plus we would only be camping about 25 miles from my home at Karick Lake South so if necessary I could run back home quickly should there be something missing. LOL

Will have to finish up this camping experience on a motorcycle in the next post as I don’t really like to make these post too long and boring. There will be a part three to this story posting soon. See some of the trailer photos below.

Wheel chock mounted inside
Front nose of trailer
Rear door
Electrical hookup
Ready to Load

Off subject a bit but just got notification that Viking Bags is running an Easter sale at 20% off. For how long it lasts I have no idea but this is the place I go to when I need saddle bags, sissy bar bags, or any type of motorcycle luggage you can think of. Viking Bags- World Largest Motorcycle Luggage Manufacturing Company, Offering over 700 Key lockable Saddlebags and pouches with hardware.

Remember not an β€œOld Biker” by definition, just an old man (by birth certificate) that loves to ride motorcycles. Feel free to leave comments and suggestions. Stay tuned, hit that follow button to be notified when next post publishes. πŸ™‚

Motorcycle Camping – Part 1

April 1, 2021

Camping is another of my passions these last few years. Probably influenced by my brother, sister-in-law, and one of my first cousins all of which are avid campers and love the outdoors. Even before the Yamaha was found and purchased had thoughts of traveling on the motorcycle, not staying in hotels but rather camping overnight, saving money and doing something enjoyable at the same time. (Doing this while recovering from bypass surgery done in January of 2019.) Side note: they told me I shouldn’t be riding a motorcycle for at least the remainder of 2019, too much vibration? It came up in conversation with one of my nurses who rides. πŸ™‚

I’ve seen where other people have camped during their travels on a motorcycle carrying all they required, tent, sleeping bag, food, clothes, etc…. but for the life of me I could not see how to carry all the things I would need on a long journey possibly multiple states and weeks at a time. Maybe it’s because my requirements are many in that I really like to stay as clean as possible, eat well, and sleep in more comfort that just a tent and pad to lay on? πŸ™‚

Since I had not done a lot of camping alone in a long time my first task was to basically figure out what supplies and and other requirements would be needed, yep, made a list. This list of course came from conversations with my camping experts, brother, sister-in-law, and first cousin who I actually visited in TN back in August of 2019. Had never been to Tennessee so it was quite an experience. Spent a week with my cousin and then a week with my best friend from high school days who also lives in Tennessee, another area of the state. Saw sites and things of interest that I had only seen in books and TV. It was an awesome trip. May go back someday on the motorcycle.

Okay, sorry I get side tracked sometime so back to the process of making the list, food, bedding, clothes, toiletries, fire wood, tent, etc etc etc….. no way in hell was that all going on a motorcycle.

First thought was maybe I should consider a small RV camper that was self contained and then tow my motorcycle on a trailer behind. That way I could camp at great places for motorcycle riding, have a place to sleep and ride the area during the day. Great idea right? Yes, good idea but way too much money involved in finding the right RV. Way out of my budget, so that was discarded after a few days maybe weeks of looking and thinking about the situation. Remember these thoughts were before finding the right motorcycle right price.

Then it hit me, I already had a truck, all that I needed was the right trailer to tow the motorcycle one I could use for carrying all I needed plus a place to sleep after unloading the motorcycle. So the search began, needed to be a covered trailer at least twelve feet long and inside height of six feet or more. Also had to have a style door that when lowered would be a ramp to load the bike. Timeline: This planning was happening during and after my trip to Tennessee, August, September, October and into November of 2019.

First things first, had to make a decision on one of the many motorcycles that I had been looking at and researching. FOUND it, 2005 Yamaha Roadstar XV1700 located at Rucker’s Auto and Cycle Sales in Enterprise, Alabama. This was somewhere in the first week of November 2019. Had to go see it, turned out was a beautiful bike, had lots been done to it recently, and was in excellent shape mechanically and otherwise. Even had a cup holder, phone mount with charger. Perfect for me and fit into my price range. It had all the bells and whistles I wanted and more. Owner Danny Toole was very nice and worked with me on every question or concern I might have. Even helped me at the local Credit Union to get financing. Long story short, Danny loaned me a trailer (didn’t own one at that time) to bring the bike home which I did on November 14, 2019. πŸ™‚

Day I brought it home.

This post is getting long so will cut if off now but stay tuned for Motorcycle Camping Part 2 coming out soon! πŸ™‚

Remember not an β€œOld Biker” by definition, just an old man (by birth certificate) that loves to ride motorcycles. Feel free to leave comments and suggestions. Stay tuned, hit that follow button to be notified when next post publishes. πŸ™‚