Trail Talk
Well-known member
With a few days to kill we decided to head to the northern Rockies and our old hiking patch; the Willmore Wilderness Area. Usually we would stage out of Rock Lake, either to canoe or hike, but this time the lake campground would be our base. Early spring up here is always debatable on what gear to bring and what activities Mother Nature will allow. Swimming and boating were out of the question; the lake was still frozen. Hiking OTOH was prime as the normally raging river and boggy meadows were semi-frozen and dry. Still, one trail led us into deep snow and without snowshoes we had to turn around.
The trip didn't start as planned; the TPMS warned us of a low LF tire before we even left the driveway. Turns out the valve stem had split and was slowly hissing away. As the tires were installed only a month ago, the local dealer took care of the repairs under warranty but we lost a day. Small silver lining, I suppose, in that we had an opportunity to practice installing the spare in more favourable conditions. I made some changes to the pulley system as a result. The only other glitch was our $#%@# hydronics started leaking so back to OEV again, but we were intending to go back with some small projects anyway. Sigh...
What I really love about shoulder seasons, like winter, is the lack of crowds and bugs. Besides a herd of elk and one bear, we were the only occupants in the entire campground. It was glorious! Obviously, temps dropping to zero at night and the logging road access does discourage many RVs but this is the sauce we like ;-) Took a few pictures, just not the best light with rain rolling through on-and-off.
The trip didn't start as planned; the TPMS warned us of a low LF tire before we even left the driveway. Turns out the valve stem had split and was slowly hissing away. As the tires were installed only a month ago, the local dealer took care of the repairs under warranty but we lost a day. Small silver lining, I suppose, in that we had an opportunity to practice installing the spare in more favourable conditions. I made some changes to the pulley system as a result. The only other glitch was our $#%@# hydronics started leaking so back to OEV again, but we were intending to go back with some small projects anyway. Sigh...
What I really love about shoulder seasons, like winter, is the lack of crowds and bugs. Besides a herd of elk and one bear, we were the only occupants in the entire campground. It was glorious! Obviously, temps dropping to zero at night and the logging road access does discourage many RVs but this is the sauce we like ;-) Took a few pictures, just not the best light with rain rolling through on-and-off.