I took delivery of Peggy, my new truck, just after the first of the year. After a shakedown trip to Florida with the new camper, I departed Georgia on the third of June. On September 21 I arrived in Fortuna, California, the unofficial turnaround point of my 2018 odyssey . Up until now I had been travelling to get here, when I leave Humboldt County I will be travelling back to Georgia.
Northern California Coast – Klamath to Arcata
Gas Issues
I’ve never had the knack for timing purchases in the fields of investments or real estate, and this weakness apparently extends to gas stations as well. When in Idaho, I thought I could save ten cents a gallon if I waited a few miles. Then suddenly I was in Washington, and the price went up forty cents a gallon.
Oregon was a little cheaper, but they have a peculiar rule: you aren’t allowed to pump your own fuel. It’s not a Back to the Future deal; you won’t get your windshield washed or oil checked, you are simply forbidden from operating the pump. This means you have to wait for an attendant, who in a big station may be handling a dozen pumps. Nobody I asked could explain why the State mandates this, only that it had been that way for a long time.
The final surprise came in California, where the price of diesel fuel increase a full dollar a gallon. I suppose I should have expected it, since everything is more expensive here. My tip for travelers is you might want to check here on your phone as you approach state borders to help you time your gas purchases. I know I will from now on. Continue reading “Northern California Coast – Klamath to Arcata”
Northwest Oregon – Tillamook
Blimps, Cheese, and a Waterfall
Tillamook Creamery
If you recognize the name Tillamook at all, no doubt it is because of their cheese. In 1854 some dairy farmers in Tillamook formed a cooperative to build a sailing ship to transport their goods up the Columbia to sell them in Portland. Somewhere between now and then these farmers figured out the magic formula for what is now called agrotourism. Today there are about 90 family farms that make up the collective, and the Tillamook Creamery hosts over a million visitors each year.