Getting Back On The Road Again
You
could say it started with a PBS show, American Epic, running during
pledge week on WVIA. Just a few minutes of music featuring a circa
1927 recording device and I thought “Francis would be fascinated”.
It was days later, we sat down to watch the full show and were
enraptured with the story of the first recordings of truly indigenous
American music.
To
wit: In 1927 music agents went to rural Bristol, Tennessee and put
an advertisment in the local papers: $50 for anyone who came to town
and recorded themselves. Among the first folks to show up was A.P.
Carter,
with his
wife, Sara, and his sister-in-law, Maybelle; another group was a
gospel choir led by Elder
J.E. Burch, from Cheraw, S.C.
The legacy of the Carter Family is well known but the names of many
of those recorded have faded into obscurity. Elder Burch and his
church choir were an influence on Dizzy Gillespie!

Driving
for days along route 95 is about as boring as travel can be. It is
disconcerting too, as enormous tractor-trailers and doubles speed by
you in the slow lane creating wind turbulence. Our travel mantra is
avoid the major highway full of big-rigs and semis if so ever
possible. On our previous trip in our first RV trailer, we went as
far East as we could, using bridges and ferries to hop from one
barrier island to another along the coast. Through the deep South we
followed the secondary highways, pausing along the way to explore the
historic cities of Charleston, Savannah and St. Augustine. This time
we would head West with a route from the Blue Ridge into the music
scene, then down through the Smokeys into the Cherokee homeland,
before heading to the flatlands.
About
the RV: We had purchased a boxy 20” trailer and made the
ubiquitous cross country trip, spending a Winter in residence in FL.
Sadly Francis had unpleasant associations between the trailer and my
illness and the half the trailer floor rotted away due to water
infiltration in just two years. While I would have thought it
worthless, this tuned out to not be the case. A Craiglist posting and
the next day a couple came by with cash in hand. They were living on
a 20” boat with their Granddaughter. A 20 “ trailer provides
much more space and privacy than a similar size sailboat! In a week
they had replaced the rot and were ready to roll on the road.
Enhanced karma for all concerned.
We
stayed off the road for a year, until Francis expressed a renewed
interest in RV camping. Me, I love travel on ANY kind. 'Just wanna'
see new places, on foot, on the road, foreign or domestic. The first
RV purchase was determined by Francis' criteria that it be under 20”
and have walk around queen size bed. There was only one trailer on
the market which met those conditions! This time he agreed to accept
the more common cozy bed, a queen bed ran across the trailer width.
After much more research than we had made with the first RV, we
decided on an R-pod. You can't walk around the bed but it is just 18”
long and the roof is a rounded, a seamless teardrop. The contour
one-piece roof design results in less potential for leaks and much
better aerodynamics, better resistance to that buffeting from big
trucks! It has a tiny bathroom, a kitchenette, a queen bed, a dining
area that converts into a full bed. It hauls like a dream and is too
cute to boot.

Back
home, we prepped the little trailer for the big trip South. This
tends to be a separate but equal process; while I make the inside
cozy and research tech upgrades, Francis fusses over the power
systems and installs upgrades. The sole defects from my perspectives
of the tiny RV were a dark interior color scheme, lack of storage and
no rear view. Changing out all the interior fabrics and installing a
myriad of wall pockets took care of the interior. A wifi camera
hooked to our GPS will provide a rear view.
This
Rpod, like many RVs, comes ready for solar power. Just in case you
ever wondered - - solar only powers the 12 volt battery, DC, which
in our case would be the interior lighting and bathroom fan. The
fridge and furnace can run on the compressed gas tank but the TV,
radio and outlets are AC, regular house power. No music, no laptop &
no phone charger! We are still working on a converter to pull the DC
charge into more useful AC power.
For luck we added every international symbol we could think of, from the Sicilian Trinacria to the Lenne Lenape turtle medicine wheel to a Feng shui Toad to Saravasta and a travel mezzuzah, we are taking no chances.
An
aesthetic issue for me is labels. Commercial logos and labels I
immediately remove. In the case of the RV, the brand name with it's
charming frog in a canoe were replaced with custom Asian dragon,
phoenix and good luck bats. The dragon and phoenix are related to the
ying yang, a balance of male and female principles for a balanced
household. Five blue bats symbolically circle around the household
eliminating bad luck, just as bats swoop down from the sky removing
biting insects. Inside and out, mechanically and aesthetically, we
were ready to roll.