Friday, August 3, 2012

A POOPY JOB….BUT SOMEBODY HAS TO DO IT!

Saturday, August 4 - Paul has noticed the black tank flush system wasn't working as well as it had in the past, so after doing some online research on the Tiffin Network, he decided to work on a repair.  The suggested "fix" was to re-drill the rinser with a larger 3/32" hole.  OK….now to find the black tank rinser.  It is located on the top of the black tank, but depending on the model of Motor Home, it could be on the right or left side.

Here's Paul opening the right-side door to the holding tank area.DSC09248

Nope, not here….geesh!  Must be on the other side, which is more difficult to reach.DSC09247

Now to tear out much of the wet-bay area and remove the inside top cover to access the holding tank area.
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Ahh….there it is. Of course, this picture is taken looking behind the wet bay wall. Paul will have to reach over the wall to remove those three screws holding the flush in the top of the black tank. This will be fun!

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Got it out!  Completely plugged!  Wiping isn't going to help.DSC09252

Using a 3/32 drill bit, he re-drills the holes. Can you see the holes?DSC09253

Paul then replaced the rinser and gives it a test. Holy Cow!  That sucker really squirts now. He could hear it flush all that…..ah, "stuff" out of the tank. It NEVER worked this well. Guess he should have drilled it out a couple years ago. Got the "stuff" really flowing now!

While Paul was working on his…..ahhh  "stuff," look what pulled in across the park from us. It's the KOA Inspection Team. No sneaking in for them. This explains all the painting, black topping, weeding, and other updating that has been going  on in the park since our arrival.

Pretty nice rig the inspectors have….all brand new too!DSC09313

Thanks for stopping by. Hope to see y'all back real soon. Have a great day!

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

ARE YOU READY FOR SOME FOOTBALL?

Tuesday, July 31 – Since our arrival in Canton 12 days again, we have been having a wonderful time visiting with family and friends. One stop we made is to our daughter, Kelly's, new place. She has accepted a new teaching position in Parma City Schools. She will be teaching math at one of the high schools. She has also moved. We think these apartments used to be condos.

Kelly's new place.
kelly's place in streetsborough

After visiting, we took Kelly and Dave out to dinner. How nice it is to be with her.

Kelly and Dave

This week is the biggest week in our hometown. It is Pro Football Hall of Fame week. The HOF opened in Canton, Ohio, on September 7, 1963, with 17 charter enshrinees.

HOF sign

There are now a total 267 members of the Hall of Fame, including the most recent six honorees announced in February 2012.

Canton, Ohio, was selected as the location for the Hall of Fame for three reasons:
First, the NFL was founded in Canton in 1920 (at that time it was known as the American Professional Football Association);
Second, the now-defunct Canton Bulldogs were the first two-time champion of the NFL and were based in Canton during the first few years of the league;
Finally, the community of Canton successfully lobbied the NFL to have the Hall built in their city.

Groundbreaking for the building was held on August 11, 1962. The original building contained just two rooms, and 19,000 square feet of interior space. In April 1970, ground was broken for the first of many expansions.

This WAS the front of the Hall of Fame until a few months ago.old front of HOF

This is now the new front. It is really beautiful. They retained the football shaped dome as a side entrance.
 new front of HOF

Visitors entering the museum are greeted by a seven-foot bronze statue of Jim Thorpe, considered a legend of pro football dating back to his days with the Canton Bulldogs in the early 1900s. There are the Teams of the NFL Exhibition Area, the Hall of Fame Gallery, Pro Football Adventure Room, Moments, Memories & Mementos Gallery, and The Lamar Hunt Super Bowl Gallery just to name a few of the areas inside the Hall.

The Pro Football Hall of Fame Game is an annual National Football League exhibition game that is held the weekend of the Pro Football Hall of Fame's induction ceremonies. The game is played at Fawcett Stadium, which is located next door to the Hall of Fame building. It is traditionally the first game in the NFL's preseason.

stadium

This year's enshrines are Jack Butler, Dermontti Dawson, Chris Doleman, Cortez Kennedy, Curtis Martin, and Willie Roaf. They will be formally inducted during the Enshrinement Ceremony held in Fawcett Stadium on Saturday, Aug. 4.

inductees

This year's game is between the Arizona Cardinals and the New Orleans Saints.

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The kickoff for this big week's events started two weeks ago with the Balloon Festival. This week there are several autograph sessions with past enshrinees, the Ribs Burn-off starting on Wednesday-Friday, HOF Fashion Show on Friday afternoon, Enshrinees' Gold Jacket Dinner Friday evening, Timken Grand Parade on Saturday, 2012 Enshrinement and concluding with the HOF game played on Sunday night. Marsha will be attending the big parade so be prepared for a post on that event.

We found this map that represents the NFL team locations and fan base. Someone did a pretty good job in designing it. We are located where you see the Cleveland Brown's helmet in Ohio.

football map

Marsha is THRILLED about the hummingbirds this year. She says she has an excuse for why the house isn't clean…HUMMINGBIRDS. She sits by the window starring at them, or she is running outside with the camera to take another 4,000 photos of them. GEESH…enough all ready.

hummingbirds

Thanks for stopping by. Hope to see y'all back real soon. Have a great day!

Thursday, July 26, 2012

THE GORDON STOCKADE…CUSTER, SD

Thursday, July 26 – All is going great here in Canton, Ohio. We have been very busy visiting family and friends. We will summarize some of those visits in the future posts.

We will be doing some flashbacks to places we have visited but did not have the time to post. Our first flashback came early this month in Custer, SD…The Gordon Stockade.

In the summer of 1874, an expedition led by Lt. Colonel George A. Custer discovered gold in the Black Hills. Under the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, however, this region belonged to the Plains Indians, and white settlement was not allowed.

Twenty-eight people left Sioux City, Iowa in October of 1874 headed to the Black Hills in search of gold.  They reached the Black Hills in December.  Being in the Black Hills at that time was illegal, as it violated the Fort Laramie Treaty

Fort Laramie Treaty info

Fort Laramie Treaty

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Smart Indian…read what he did.
Chief Red Cloud

Upon their arrival, the Gordon Party built a log fortress on the bank of French Creek to protect themselves from possible Lakota attacks.

The Gordon Stockade
The Stockade

Annie Tallent is noted as being the first white woman to enter the Black Hills. She was an adventurous 47-year-old woman looking to strike it rich with her lawyer husband, David, and 9-year-old son.

Annie Tallent

A replica of one of the cabins.Cabin

Inside cabin

Within five months, the stockade was discovered by the US Cavalry in 1875, and the party members were taken to Fort Laramie. They were not charged with any crimes and many of them ended up back in the Black Hills searching for gold. The Gordon Party's stay was short lived and not very profitable.

The Black Hills would never be the same. The expedition found gold in French Creek near the location of the Stockade Even though the findings were meager, news inflated the finds. Thus began the most famed gold rushes in American history.

Today's Gordon Stockade is the third replica built on the original site. The first was constructed by the citizens of Custer in 1925, and in 1941, the Civilian Conservation Corpsmen from Camp Narrows rebuilt the entire structure. Through the years, the outer walls and cabins weathered away until the park had to close the Stockade in the late 1990s due to visitor safety concerns.

The ones falling down.old cabin

falling down

Because the Stockade played a role in the history of the Black Hills, the park formed the an advisory committee to keep this historical landmark. Working together, the park and local advisory committee secured funding to once again reconstruct the Gordon Stockade.

Today, as you approach the Gordon Stockade, interpretive signs tell the story of this short lived illegal occupation in 1874 and 1875. The visit is free and open year round.

Thanks for stopping by. Hope to see y'all back real soon. Have a great day!