Camp set up at Olema |
Thanks a lot, coronavirus!
Instead of thousands of highway miles, The Red Writer for the balance of this summer will likely do mostly local travel, going to places like Olema, Calif., adjacent to the Point Reyes National Seashore.
We did one foray there to shake down the rig last week. Another four-day expedition begins Sunday.
How local is Olema to Point Richmond and SF Bay?
Thirty miles.
But last week's trip proved that 30 or 3,000 miles doesn't make any difference in enjoyment.
Biscuit searching for gophers, moles and voles |
I think Biscuit would have preferred to go to the beach with the ladies, but he was a good sport.
The only real excitement came a 2 a.m. the first night when we were visited by a hungry raccoon. He got in the tent and absconded with a ripe avocado, passing up a tray of apples and bananas.
Because the campground is in Marin County, his choice of foods is not that surprising.
The state parks in California are slowly re-opening, filling up campsite reservations as soon as gates open.
Once Labor Day is past however, campgrounds will be mostly empty and The Red Writer can expand our travel radius with plenty of places to stay.
One arguably big trip is being mulled.
A few days ago a newspaper story about Modoc County in California caught my eye.
It's a last-frontier kind of place. Kind of wild west. Undeveloped wooded property there is pentiful and relatively cheap. Maybe buying a few acres might be worth considering.
Might have to break out my cowboy hat to wear on that trip.
Oh! And Modoc County has not had a single case of COVID-19.
Downtown Alturas in Modoc County, Calif. |
The tent has a footprint as big as the inside of the trailer |
Test campsite - at our condo in Point Richmond |