Sunday, 24 July 2011

GOOD SAM RALLY

On July 9th, en-route to the Rally, we visited with cousins Debbie and Cliff in Portland.  Had a good visit and a great dinner.  Debbie also gave Susan a teddy bear that cousin Cathy had made, it was quite the emotional journey recounting how talented Cathy was especially in making such bears.

We left on the RV park on Sunday and arrived for The Good Sam Rally in Redmond, Oregon, where we set up in a field.  What a complete success this trip turned out to be!  We camped out with over 2700 RVs of all sizes, shapes and ages and enjoyed five full days of touring new and used RVs, over 500 vendors and display booths and great shows every evening.  We arrived on Sunday, got our orientation and were treated to a volunteers dinner that night where we were given our "assignments" for the Rally.  Kerry got to work in the sign shop where signs were designed and erected on the Rally site and Susan worked in the Radio room, the communications brain for all the workers on the site.

Of the many highlights we experienced the nightly shows took the cake.  The first night was a local band, Leroy and the Lugnuts who were very very good, the female singer received a standing ovation for her "Unchained melody by the Righteous Brothers.  The next night we were treated to Bobby Vinton who, at age 76 was terrific.  He got the whole crowd of over 2000 patrons singing his old songs, especially Mr. Lonely, Roses Are Red, etc..  His son is his bandleader and his daughter is his back up singer and soloist.  Bobby also captivated the audience with playing solos on his trumpet, saxaphone and then playing Rapsody in Blue on his clarinet.   Here's a picture of him and his daughter from our seats in row 10.


The next night we had a great time with Vince Gill.  Gill has sold more than 26 million albums. He has earned 18 CMA Awards, including Entertainer of the Year in 1993 and 1994. He is tied with George Strait for having won the most CMA Male Vocalist Awards (five), and is currently second only to Brooks and Dunn for accumulating the most CMA Awards in history. Gill is a member of the Grand Ole Opry, and has received 19 Grammy Awards to date, the most of any male Country artist.  It was a great show and we recognized almost every song he sang.  We had great seats for his show, centre isle, row 10 (again….) as the photo shows, 




Then on the fourth night we were treated to  Herman's Hermits.  Herman’s Hermits was an internationally successful 60s British band, from Manchester, England, formed in 1963. Part of the British Invasion, their trademark simple, non-threatening, clean-cut “boys next door” image made them easier to listen to and more accessible than other British Invasion bands.  Their first hit, “I’m Into Something Good" reached #1 in the UK (1963) and #13 in the US (1964). Other hits followed such as “Mrs. Brown, You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter” (1965) and “I’m Henry VIII, I Am”. The original Herman, Peter Noone sang all the bands old hits and a variety of other hits from the bands of the same era.  He also has a tremendous sense of that dry british humour and had the audience laughing over and over.  His energy (at 63) was contagious and had all 2000 in the audience singing "I'm Henry the VIII"with him.






We left the Rally site on Sunday afternoon and made our was north to Hermiston, Oregon where we stayed overnight and then on to Spokane, where we stayed at the Spokane RV resort which is in the midst of a 18 hole golf course.  We then headed on into Montana where on Tuesday we stayed in a local RV resort in quite a small town, Deer Lodge.  We didn't realize until the next day that we were only a few miles from the site of The Battle of the Little Bighorn, also known as Custer's Last Stand and, by the Indians involved, as the Battle of the Greasy Grass.  This was an armed engagement between combined forces of LakotaNorthern Cheyenne and Arapaho people against the 7th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army. It occurred on June 25 and June 26, 1876, near the Little Bighorn River in eastern Montana Territory, near what is now Crow Agency, Montana.   The highlight of this trip was to realize that not only in the land in Montana as flat as it claims but that the town casino is located in the back room of the Conoco gas station and comprises of 5 slot machines!


On Wednesday we arrived back into Canada and headed up to Lethbridge where we have been staying for five days at Bridgeview RV resort, a Holiday Trails Resort campsite.  The resort gets its name from the impressive bridge that is just across the valley.  This bridge is the largest railway structure in Canada.  It was built as part of a major diversion of the Crowsnest Pass route between Lethbridge and Fort Macleod. The river crossing was previously over a wooden trestle measuring 894 m (2,933 ft) long and 20 m (66 ft) high; an impressive structure in its own right.




We are heading out tomorrow for Drumheller and another Holiday Trails resort, Dinosaur Trail.   This is also the home of the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, the world's largest dinosaur and a host of other attractions we are certainly not going to miss out on.  

Monday, 11 July 2011

QUEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS

Welcome to our blog.

This blog is being written as a diary of our “round North America” tour.  This tour will take us across Canada and the United States over the next nine months following the compass west to east, north to south, east to west and then homeward.  We will be travelling with our boys, Charlie and Bailey in our 2006 Beaver 40 foot motorhome with a towed 2010 Ford Ranger pickup. 

On June 15th we left our RV park at Sunshine Valley near Hope on the first leg of our tour to visit Crystal, Curby and family on Haida Gwaii (the Queen Charlotte Islands).  This day coincided with Susan’s last day of work with Fraser Health.  Susan will officially retire on July 14th.  We headed up the Fraser Canyon in the bright sunshine and into the small Caribou community of Clinton.  We left the next day for Prince George, spent two days there and then drove on to Prince Rupert.  On June 19 we boarded the BC ferry en-route to Haida Gwaii and enjoyed a virtually flat ocean.  Six hours later we arrived in Skidegate and headed up to Queen Charlotte.


Here Skyla and Daysen pose with the menagerie of pets in the house at the time of our visit including our two boys, Bailey with Skyla and Charlie in front of Daysen.  Over the next week we enjoyed travelling around our old stomping grounds, visiting some friends in the coffee shops and walking around the town.  We attended Daysen and Skyla’s school wind-up party on the beach and had a great time with the kids.   We also had the chance to head down into Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve to the ancient village of Skedans.  Crystal’s friend, Mandy, took Crystal and us down on her boat where we had a personal tour of the old village together with a close up view of all the relics and artifacts of the village.  After the tour, we travelled around Louise Island, found some very large ancient spruce trees and raced through the narrows between Louise Island and Morseby Island.   The whole trip took the better part of a day and was so unbelievably beautiful.


Here Crystal, Susan and I are standing in front of a Potlatch pole.  Each of the rings, which are about a meter (3 feet) from each other, denotes the number of potlatches sponsored by the Chief or his family.  This pole stretches out almost 40 feet.

We had a lot of fun with the local Sitka deer.


When fully mature they are no bigger than a large dog, are quite tame and can be quite mischievous.




Here Crystal and Mandy are standing in front of one of the massive spruce trees Mandy's uncle, George Wesley had found.  We also had a chance to visit Mosquito Lake.  The World War II Mosquito bomber as so named because all of the spruce used to build the bombers came from the forest around Mosquito Lake.


A final look at the Islands as we headed back to Prince Rupert on the 27th.   We arrived back in Bridal Falls on the 29th for a week of taking care of the little things before we headed including a great dinner with Heather and Trevor and families to celebrate the June/July birthdays.  We left Bridal Falls on Wednesday, the 6th of July and headed up to Kelowna to visit our good friends, Bob and Kim Gostlin and to have our new satellite dish mounted on our motorhome.  We left there on the 8th and crossed into the United States.  Coming through Washington State was indeed a treat as we had the chance to see country we had not been through before including an amazing display of wind energy.  We passed through an area where hundreds of windmills were erected across all of the peaks. 



Our final destination for this leg was heading off to the Good Sam Rally to be held at Redmond, Oregon. This promises to be an exciting week for us as we are volunteering at the Rally as well as looking forward to seeing the exhibits and enjoying the concerts.  There will be 700+ new RVs on display, over 250+ vendors and exhibitors, 150+ seminars and we have a different concert every night, with Country music recording star Vince Gill on Saturday, 1960’s Herman’s Hermits from England on Thursday staring Peter Noone and Bobby Vinton on Friday night.