Monday, July 25, 2022

Sunday, July 24, 2022- Mt. St. Helens National Monument

Sunday, July 24, 2022- Mt. St. Helens National Monument

We caravanned from the Oak Manor Harvest Host site to Judy’s Diner in Centralia for breakfast. The service was superb and the portions were excellent.  Our water glasses and coffee mugs were kept full without us having to ever ask.  The decor is charming with lots of country character. This is an excellent diner. 


We then caravanned the RV and John’s Elantra to downtown Toledo where we parked the Elantra on the street near the city library, and then took the RV to Johnston Ridge Observatory at Mt. St Helens National Monument.

We stopped the RV at several view points including a bridge overlook and also made a stop at the Weyerhauser visitor center and forest learning center.




 A personal highlight of that museum was seeing a logging exhibit featuring the “Talkie Tooter” device that Price’s company Rothenbuhler Engineering makes. 


We had smoked turkey on ciabatta roll sandwiches for lunch in the RV in the parking lot at the Loowit Viewpoint, which had a spectacular view of the Toutle river valley below the blast crater.  We had run the slide out and even though it was nearly 80˚F, it was comfortable with the windows open and fan on.  


People were using spotting scopes to look at elk miles away on the banks of the Toutle river, which even in a very powerful spotting scope were little more than oddly shaped specs.  John and Price hiked the 0.8mi trail from the Loowit Viewpoint to the Johnston Ridge Observatory while Janet and Ben drove the RV and parked it in the Observatory parking lot.  We toured the Observatory visitor center and watched the film in the theatre, which did not seem particularly well done.  The most interesting exhibits were those featuring the stories of individuals who had either survived or died in the blast.  Ben, John and Price did a short hike up the Eruption Trail and back along the boundary trail to the parking lot where Janet was waiting in the RV. We learned that the other visible snow covered peak nearby was Mt. Adams, not Rainier. 



On our way out of the park, we stopped at the Hummocks Trail and did the 2.6mi loop trail, which was somewhat overgrown by grasses in many areas, triggering lots of sneezes from Price, who happens to suffer hay fever.  Janet was on the verge of overheating on the uphill parts of the trail that emerged from the forest.  Many of the “viewpoints” along the trail were now obscured by young alder trees and other growth.  The trails must have looked a lot different when they were originally developed 40 years ago in the immediate aftermath of the Mt. St. Helens eruption which had stripped the area bare of vegetation.  There are lots of ponds of pooled water trapped within the hummocks.  The mosquitos must be something fierce as the sun sets.  



We also stopped at Coldwater Lake and walked out onto the boardwalks there.  Price recalled retrieving a Thomas the Tank Engine toy from the water as a child when he was lowered by his ankles by his Uncle Jack and Grandpa John from the boardwalk to fetch the toy from the water.  



We returned to Toledo and had dinner at Chimi’s Mexican Restaurant, which was just a short walk from where John’s car and the RV were parked.  While they were a bit stingy with the chips and the salsa was watery (supposedly they charge for the chips and salsa) the food was quite well prepared, tasted good and had good portions.  It was much better than we had expected from its location and outward appearance.  There was a bit of a wait, but our food did all arrive steaming hot and fresh. 



We said our good byes to John, who departed in his rental car to spend the week on business at the Essex Labs plant and visiting Uncle Jack and Aunt Sharon.  We headed up I-5 in the RV, and noted a rest area 8 miles north of Centralia (Scatter Creek Rest Area, MP 90) on I-5 Northbound that had a trailer dump facility and was open.  In retrospect, we should have taken advantage of that location because the next rest area with a trailer dump that we encountered was SeaTac I-5 Northbound, MP 140, 7.2 miles north of Tacoma, was in poor condition, crowded and one of the 3 dump stations was out of order, clogged with toilet paper. There was no water available for rinsing the sewer hoses or connections.  We did dump our tanks and flushed the black tank using our own water via the outside shower and check valves.  We also refilled the potable water using the potable water station that was several hundred feet ahead of the dump station.  It was after dark but there was lighting at the dump station.  We had previously noted on our way down that the Smokey Point rest area that we usually use in Marysville was closed (it had recently been overtaken by Seattle homeless campers and brought to ruin).  


Our usual refueling stop was closed (Lacey Costco) but we had just enough fuel to make it to the River Rock Tobacco and Fuel in north Arlington on our “reserve” fuel.  The pump stopped at $125 with 21.934 gal @$5.699/gal.  I reinserted the credit card and got the pump back on, but it clicked off after just 0.145gal or $0.83.  We were down to the last 2.5gal of reserve at that point since the rated capacity is 24.5gal.  The RV averaged 14mpg since the Lacey Costco fill up.  


We arrived at home close to midnight with 27984 miles on odometer.  This was a 557 mile trip total. It was a very brief but fun trip.  Since Price had to be back at work on Monday morning, we had no choice but to dash home from Mt. St. Helens, but we could see how we could do a future week-long trip driving around Mt. St. Helens to see the other park entrances and sites including Spirit Lake and the Ape Lava Caves, perhaps combined with some sales tax free Portland OR shopping.

Saturday, July 23, 2022- A Quick visit to Onalaska and Wine Tasting in Centralia

Saturday, July 23, 2022-  Centralia Oak Manor Harvest Host site and Onalaska

Ben fixed Joey’s mail box which had the lock broken in a prying attack. She had a replacement lock, but the threads on the shaft were stripped or damaged. Prior attempts to repair had also mounted the latching arm backwards, leaving excessive clearance and causing failure of the latch to engage the flange.  Ben repaired it using epoxy on the nut and correctly mounting the arm.  We dropped John and Price off at Sea-Tac Rental Car facility to pick up John’s rental car.  The pick up lane has plenty of clearance for shuttle vans and buses.  John ended up with a Hyundai Elantra sedan.


We caravanned to the Black Bear diner in Federal Way, but had an over 35min wait. Instead of waiting, we caravanned to the Tacoma Lakewood Black Bear diner and got seated in 15-20min.  We ended up parking the RV near the casino in back parking lot because the front lot was full.  




Our next stop was the Lacey Costco for refueling.  27622 miles on odometer. 9.951gal @ $5.899/gal.  14.6mpg since last fill up. 


Our caravan continued to Oak Manor Harvest Host site in Centralia (2961 Harrison Ave, Centralia, WA 98531), arriving around 3pm.  John and Price ended up taking a Google Maps detour to a Target store parking lot in the Olympia area after entering in "Oak Manor Winery" in Google Maps, but eventually ended up in the right place after texting them the correct address.  It was sunny and warm (79 degrees) so we ran the awning out and set up chairs and the carpet.


We took John’s rental car to visit Sharon in Onalaska and check out mint processing plant. Jack and Sharon’s new Trex deck looks nice and we toured the gardens.


Jack was doing a coin show in Portland. John then took a preview of the Essex Laboratories mint oil processing plant location that is a subsidiary of Firmenich.  He is helping them trouble shoot a broken boiler that has shut down their operations since January and provide corporate process engineering services to optimize the return of the facility to productivity.  



We then returned to Oak Manor and did their wine tasting program which featured a flight of 3 wines along with an interpretive narrative by the wine maker himself ($15pp). It was very educational, learning how small batch wineries and American wineries in general function behind the scenes.  We had a lot of fun and ended up buying 2 bottles each of Cabernet Sauvignon and Malbec, and one bottle of Merlot ($20ea). 



The Harvest Host camping area is a flat lawn adjacent to the vineyard. It was very quiet and comfortable. We ate leftovers from Chiang’s Gourmet and Black Bear Diner for dinner. The awning, chairs and carpet were put away as the sun set. We watched Charlie’s Angels with Kristen Stewart and Naomi Watts on DVD via MacMini. The temperature did drop into the upper 50’s overnight so we were able to sleep comfortably without air conditioning or heating.


Friday, July 22, 2022- A Quick Trip to Mt. St. Helens National Monument

Friday, July 22, 2022- SeaTac and Kent to see family and friends.


27427 miles on odometer. Departed home with Ben, Janet and Price on board.  Refueled at River Rock Fuel and Tobacco in Arlington.  27477 miles on odometer, 10.689 gal @ $5.699/gal.  DEF light came on heading south through Arlington.  Fortunately, we have a spare DEF container stashed in the outside storage closet that we bought in Oregon. We picked up Chiang’s Gourmet take out food and dropped off 12 frozen whole crab for Chiang’s Gourmet staff in North Seattle.  


Drove to Cedarbrook Lodge near Angle Lake in Sea-Tac to pick up Janet's sister Terri and her husband John who have arrived for a combination of hiking in the North Cascades with friends and a Wonderland Trail mega hike event. Drove to Tyee High School to have late lunch in parking lot with Chiang’s take out. We ran the slide out after parking in the shade of some trees.  


Janet, Terri and John toured the high school grounds.  Drove to Angle Lake Park and dropped off Janet, Terri and John.  Ben and Price parked RV at empty Covid Test facility 1/4mi south of Angle Lake park and watched evening news on TV.  Picked up Janet, Terri and John and dropped T&J back at Cedarbrook Lodge at 7pm.  


Drove to Sea-Tac Cellular lot to wait for John’s flight to arrive but his flight ended up delayed by over 3 hrs from 7:15PM to 10:15pm.  The cellular lot became very busy, so we moved RV back to the empty Covid Test facility where we could have boondocked if we wanted to- ran out the slide and watched TV.  Ben refilled the DEF reservoir with DEF stored on board.  We picked up our son John at 11pm, encountering terrible traffic at the Sea-Tac Terminal approach- it took 45 minutes to drive the 2 miles from the airport entrance to the departures lanes to pick up John.  


Drove to Janet's high school friend Joey’s house in Kent to visit and celebrate her birthday.  Joey served tomato salad and roll ups, while we had brought down a Costco birthday cake for her. 


She's a night owl who likes to stay up until 3am and sleeps in until early afternoon every day.  She had lamented that her mail box was broken and how multiple attempts by multiple neighbors and friends had failed to fix the broken latch despite purchasing replacement parts.  We boondocked in front of her house on the curb.  It was fairly level and proved to be quiet and comfortable.  The temperatures were in the lower 60's overnight. John slept in the cab-over while Price slept on the dinette.