HopeOverLandandSea
Active member
“Let’s Go on an Adventure” is my current punch line to the old redneck joke, “Hey Ya’ll watch this!” This is my story and I hope you enjoy the experience and laugh, cry, curse along with me as you read about our adventures.
Prequel
When did you first start YOUR Overland adventure? I suspect like myself, you started gradually, reading about someone else's adventure, or watching their Youtube channel, or tv series! I have been camping, well GLAMPING for 20+ years now in the family travel trailer. We purchased it as a family in 2005 or so and pulled it back and forth to the beach for a few years before deciding that it was cheaper to simply store it at the campground and have them put it on the campsite when we were on our way.
The first camper was a 28’ Timberland Riverside and the current beach camper is a 38’ Salem Hemisphere with 3 slide outs.
Our definition of camping, or “roughing it” was a poor wifi connection, the cable tv being fuzzy and the campsite has too many ants / sand spurs! We stored our camper at a big campground on the beach and went several times each year. We tended to cook our breakfast in the mornings on the electric griddle, lunch was a sandwich and chips and then for supper we headed out to find a nice restaurant. This is a far cry from Overlanding but there are millions of folks out there doing this each year and is a gateway drug to more serious adventures.
We upgraded our camping game by purchasing a THIRD camper, this time a 1990 Country Coach, 40’ diesel pusher motorhome. My wife and I wanted to see the country and having our bathroom in the rig allowed us to travel further with less stops and spending less time in public bathrooms as the pandemic was subsiding. Her health over the years had been poor including a stroke when she was 33 years old. The ability to move around, sit on a couch, recliner, etc. made traveling long distances possible. We live in NC and took trips down to FL to visit with my mom and then the next fall out to TX and back to visit Waco, the home of Chip and Joanna!
Finally our last big trip was in the summer of 2022, we headed out on June 3rd up to the Amish country in eastern PA. Our nephew has traveled with us on our trips to the beach and other vacations and he came with us on that 2 week trip. He loves steam trains so we visited every train related destination from Casey Jones restaurant on our 22nd Weddng Anniversary (VERY romantic dinner with our nephew!) to the infamous Horseshoe Curve in Altoona. We spent a few days attending the Bantam Jeep Festival and finished our trip by spending a week in the Niagara Falls area.
Only a few weeks after getting home from that trip, on July 5th, we found out my wife’s Ovarian Cancer had returned and had already progressed to stage 4, beyond the point of treatment. As we found out the extent of her cancer and started to plan for the end, one of her requests was that I keep traveling with our nephew and showing him new and exciting things! She passed away about a week later in August of 2022 and in honor of her wishes I started planning the next big trip with my nephew!
Prequel
When did you first start YOUR Overland adventure? I suspect like myself, you started gradually, reading about someone else's adventure, or watching their Youtube channel, or tv series! I have been camping, well GLAMPING for 20+ years now in the family travel trailer. We purchased it as a family in 2005 or so and pulled it back and forth to the beach for a few years before deciding that it was cheaper to simply store it at the campground and have them put it on the campsite when we were on our way.
The first camper was a 28’ Timberland Riverside and the current beach camper is a 38’ Salem Hemisphere with 3 slide outs.
Our definition of camping, or “roughing it” was a poor wifi connection, the cable tv being fuzzy and the campsite has too many ants / sand spurs! We stored our camper at a big campground on the beach and went several times each year. We tended to cook our breakfast in the mornings on the electric griddle, lunch was a sandwich and chips and then for supper we headed out to find a nice restaurant. This is a far cry from Overlanding but there are millions of folks out there doing this each year and is a gateway drug to more serious adventures.
We upgraded our camping game by purchasing a THIRD camper, this time a 1990 Country Coach, 40’ diesel pusher motorhome. My wife and I wanted to see the country and having our bathroom in the rig allowed us to travel further with less stops and spending less time in public bathrooms as the pandemic was subsiding. Her health over the years had been poor including a stroke when she was 33 years old. The ability to move around, sit on a couch, recliner, etc. made traveling long distances possible. We live in NC and took trips down to FL to visit with my mom and then the next fall out to TX and back to visit Waco, the home of Chip and Joanna!
Finally our last big trip was in the summer of 2022, we headed out on June 3rd up to the Amish country in eastern PA. Our nephew has traveled with us on our trips to the beach and other vacations and he came with us on that 2 week trip. He loves steam trains so we visited every train related destination from Casey Jones restaurant on our 22nd Weddng Anniversary (VERY romantic dinner with our nephew!) to the infamous Horseshoe Curve in Altoona. We spent a few days attending the Bantam Jeep Festival and finished our trip by spending a week in the Niagara Falls area.
Only a few weeks after getting home from that trip, on July 5th, we found out my wife’s Ovarian Cancer had returned and had already progressed to stage 4, beyond the point of treatment. As we found out the extent of her cancer and started to plan for the end, one of her requests was that I keep traveling with our nephew and showing him new and exciting things! She passed away about a week later in August of 2022 and in honor of her wishes I started planning the next big trip with my nephew!
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