Puerto Penasco to Yuma
Yuma, Arizona: Hello from the USA. I can't promise a very
exciting report today, as today was a "driving day"... which all RVer's know,
usually does not involve much excitement.
If we are lucky.
We woke to clouds, high surf and wind. Though I had cleaned the bus
top-to-bottom on Monday, this morning the Magna Peregrinus required
another swabbing o'the decks. Sand, wind and surf combine to make a gritty
coating on everything. Blech.
Dad hitched up. We hitched up. At 9:30a, we pointed our rigs north and traveled
80 miles to the US-Mexico border.

Truth be told, this morning it was really just the
US border. We never saw a Mexican official. Seems
you can leave Mexico, but the US
immigration officials want to know who you are,
where you have been and where you are going. Our passports were requested.
The lanes to pass through US immigration and customs
are 10'-8" wide. Our bus is 8'-6" wide - and we have
huge mirrors on either side. Of course, My Driver
(and My Dad, following behind us) cleared this
obstacle course with ease.
Me? I was holding my breath. (As if holding my breath
would to make our coach a few inches smaller.)
The US immigration official asked if we were
Americans. Where had we been? Where were we going?
Did we buy anything in Mexico? We told him we had
souvenirs (20 bobble-head creatures are souvenirs,
right?). He asked us where we were from and told us to have a nice day. The same
questions were asked of Dad and we both continued on
our way.
Fifty miles down the road we were both stopped at a
US Border Patrol check point. We were asked if
we had any aliens in our bus. We said no. The agent
asked if we had any drugs in our bus? We said no.
Luckily for us, US Border Patrol are not interested
in bobble-head turtles.
Whew.
And so we arrived in Yuma, Arizona for the night. (Dad is spending a few days
with friends and will join us again next week.) We
needed to clean our bus - again - of another inch of
sandy grit due to terrible winds all day, and stock-up at a grocer before our next
adventure. We are camped over-night at
The Palms RV
Resort, where
we have camped before. This RV park
has sites for sale... and if the owners are away, or
the sites are unsold, you can rent by the night or
week.

Our situation in Yuma
Currently the RV park has "Jungle Fever"
and sites are going for $19.95 per night. With tax,
we paid just over $22 for our site - 50 amp, full
hook-ups, luxury pools, spas... everything. We
haven't paid this little for a campsite in years, and
this RV park is quite nice - such a deal!

Still,
I have no idea how one can contract Jungle Fever in
the desert.
DT and I headed out to the local grocer to replenish
our wine stash larder, and tonight we stayed in. Amazingly
enough, I sautéed flounder from The Three Boys in
Puerto Penasco and roasted asparagus spears I bought
(for $1) from a beach vendor yesterday.

Hey look - it's Garlic Fish! Third (or fourth?) time this week.
Except this time, the Garlic Fish
came out of my little RV kitchen. I cooked the fish
in a little olive oil and butter combo with three
cloves of minced garlic. Two minutes per side and
the thin fillets were perfect. The asparagus - drizzled with a little olive oil and
kosher salt - was
roasted for eight minutes at 450°. Wine was
enjoyed. After dinner we watched
Sunshine Cleaning and called it a night.
A very blustery night. Apparently the entire southwest of America is blowing
away tonight.
Until my next update, I remain, your dusty correspondent.
RV Park:
The Palms RV
Resort. Just a few blocks off the interstate, in a quiet neighborhood.
Luxury park. Sites are for sale or rent. Fabulous pools, hot tubs and spa
facilities, fitness center, shuffle board arena, tennis courts. Billiards hall.
30/50 amp service, gravel sites with paved patios. Cable, Wifi. Everything.