Category Archives: Tramper pictures

DAY 25 – 10/9/2012 Fredericton, N.B. to Baxter State Park, ME

We were reluctant to leave David’s cousin Gordon and his girlfriend, Jackie, in Fredericton, New Brunswick, but also, we were eager to continue the Tramper Voyage.

Gordon is as gracious as he can be. We felt very welcome in his home.

Gordon and Jackie's lovely garden

Gordon and Jackie’s lovely garden

He’s very fit and active into his seventies so we really enjoyed hiking with him. David hadn’t seen Gordon for many years and we’d never met Jackie but we were warm friends right away. I love it when that happens!!

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAJust before crossing the border, we saw a sign for the World’s Largest Axe in Nackawic, N.B. Naturally, we had to go see it! My daughter always finds fun, funky things while on the road. The World’s Largest Chest of Drawers, Foam-henge, etc. Visiting the Axe was a must.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Funny story about the border crossing. Not as funny as the Bay of Fundy Aunt Margaret story but sort of odd. We forgot to pack our passports when we left Baltimore. You might think this was an epic fail, but I was only one day post-biopsy when we left. The anesthesia had barely worn off. Also, David had a whirlwind 2 weeks getting the 4Runner ready after the neighbor’s Land Cruiser proved to have too many problems to be a good Tramper puller. Every day in port was a wasted day of the Tramper Voyage!

So, our leave-taking from Baltimore was, you might say, a bit rushed. Months of planning, one day of shoving everything in.

We had no passports. We had forgotten to pack the passports! No problem. Yet. Olivia mailed them to Augusta, Maine to my brother. Only, they had expired in March. Also, we were unaware that, in 2009, the border-crossing rules had changed. You needed a passport to get back into the U.S.

Even though a USPS official in Augusta told us that, with his official stamped and signed photocopies of our passports we would be able to get back in, we held our breath a bit when we passed through US Customs. You can’t hold your breath too much, however, because you don’t want to raise any red flags with the Border Patrol.

imagesWe tried to look and sound normal and I guess we succeeded because the very nice officer waved us back in to the U.S.! Phew!

Please click to really appreciate this photo!

Please click to really appreciate this photo!

As the sun was setting, we drove into the magnificent Baxter State Park. It is 200,000 acres of unspoiled land in North Central Maine.

100_7102Most of the land surrounding Baxter is pretty empty as well. Baxter, unlike other  state parks, does not have camper hookups, electricity or running water.

100_7053The campsites are few and primitive . Only a couple of gravel of roads run through the park. It is entered by only 2 gates, at the Northeast border and at the Southern border.

That little silver box in the distance is the Tramper.

That little silver box in the distance is the Tramper.

We parked the Tramper in a large meadow as darkness fell. We turned out the lights and the stars were extravagant and amazing! The woods were completely quiet and dark. I stepped outside again in the middle of the night and there were the big, sparkling stars again, even brighter than before.

By this time it was quite cold but I could not go back inside until I drank in more of the quiet beauty of the deep Baxter night.

-Jane

PEOPLE

When last I wrote of people, I mentioned being fortunate enough that Jane didn’t “leave me” upon seeing the large aluminum box in our driveway (our wonderful neighbors never complained either).   My next tasks were planning and starting the notebook that accompanies all my bigger projects.  I had to start somewhere, preservation began with recoating the silver tar roof, getting good tires/wheels.  I found Hubcap City (which a guy was operating from his cell phone), he asked what I needed (6 lug, 15″ wheels), then agreed to meet me at a diner on Route 40 to exchange cash for them. (Nice guy, guaranteed the quality and fit, wish I could remember his name).

Next, on to Frank at Interstate tire.  He suggests cheap, but quality tires for a trailer because they invariably dry rot before you wear them out.  Maybe I’ll wear these out though?  Very, very nice guy, dry humor, reliable and NOT mercenary.  Funny how many people know of him whenever I mention his shop. Then I used “Service Tire” shop out Route 40 for my Maryland State Inspection.  I knew I wouldn’t be finished within 30 days for a re-inspection, but the guy was very helpful and suggested I could patch and repair the frame using welds and “fish plates” on both sides of defects. In my earlier post I described that I cut the bolts holding the camper onto the trailer frame and then moved into the unknown.  Somehow the wooden body stayed together as I raised it above the rotted steel. When I towed the newly welded bare steel frame home, my neighbor Ray was ready and willing to help push it into my garage and watch as I washed off the road salt and dirt in preparation for Rustoleum.  I skipped the high-tech suggestions of powder coating to shave a few $ from the project, and rolled on primer and satin black figuring the first one lasted >50 years. Freshly rolled frame waiting for the next step: can I really get this back under the body

...yeah, just take off the wheels, plop the springs on some casters and shove it back under...(all on someone else's property because he has a level concrete pad and a little faith that I finish something I started)

Perhaps the biggest contribution came from a long time friend and mentor: Lynn.  He had previously scrapped out a camper and offered the systems to me for a price I would have to name.  Dometic fridge (propane/electric), water heater (propane), a big Inverter/electric distribution system (that I later abandoned for solar and two parallel but separate systems) and a pump.  I gave some sorry low amount  of cash and a full bottle of Freon R 12 that I saved from going into the Cockeysville landfill.  (later estimated to be worth about 8-12 hundred dollars).  He saved me thousands and provided phone consults freely.

His friend Matt came by and unwound one of my many electrical conundrums.  Trailer lights should be a very finite problem; 4 wires, just a few functions, but they keep giving me fits at various times (once again today in Maine, I have no R turn or brake….crap, I’ll fix it soon, but it gets pissy).  Matt was also involved in helping Lynn get a Jeep for mail delivery, then sending a blue and red tank my way.  You’ll likely see them on the back of the 4Runner in some pic or another.  One day I’ll be pouring 5 gallons of gas into my truck thinking of how Matt saved me on a road with no open gas stations.  (tanks are empty now in the busy east).

John (of Melanie and John, pickup truck loan fame), emailed me a link to the cutest avocado Holiday stove on Craigslist.  I drove over to Gilman School to buy it for some $40-ish dollars.  Another very nice guy who was making a camper of his own and parted out a broken down 1960’s Shasta.  Into my garage it went to wait about a year before I tested and installed it.

Alan (of flat driveway fame, glad to have finally on Mother’s day be unburdened of my big aluminum box) came to my rescue again.  He gave me all of the Formica counter coverings seen gracing the dinette table and sink counters.  He had rescued this from disposal at work as they rebuilt the laminate rack and restocked the shop.

I called and emailed several different suppliers of solar equipment.  The single most helpful contact turned out to be right in Baltimore.  Brent at Mr Solar answered all of my usual and unusual questions promptly by phone and email as I learned as much as I could about a new topic.  (I wrote a blog about this equipment experience on my Good Old RV’s home page under Solar Newbies). Jane received a nice tutorial introduction to upholstery from Julia, my boss at Sinai.  She came by one evening and helped out with the confidence Jane would need as she created the dinette cushions using 20-some pages of internet step-by-steps, where we also learned about cutting on the bias to create your own binding, edging and finished work.

Jane’s cushions…I sit on this one right now as I write

Our great friend Jeff from the Aquarium rescued not a dolphin, but some sheets of 1/4 inch plexiglas that save me 40 bucks as I made double layered windows for the door that “may fend off a bear”.  I knew clearly that my temporary single layer of 1/8 stuff had NO CHANCE as just pushing it in hard enough flexed it to allow pulling it out of the tracks.

Another ongoing and invaluable source of info has been Custom Coach.  When I find great info and answers anywhere I am happy.  When these answers come from a woman in what could be a male-dominated setting, I have admit it adds something.  That Jane too ended up saying “she’s the one we really like” was very nice as Jenn answered most questions from her own font of knowledge, happily looked stuff up online and in catalogs and knew the difference between metric or US fasteners readily.  Her “Happy Camper” t-shirt and smile made it a pleasure to stop in and add to my knowledge and stockpile of parts that gradually became our Tramper.  (not unlike Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang)

– David

I glanced back at this post and remember a Very Fond Morning.  I wanted to replace the floor with something nicer than grey-brown chip like peels that once were tiles.  I made a paper pattern and was greeted in the sunny driveway by our neighbor CHARLIE.  He was about 3 1/2 at the time, but was happy to hold down the paper and linoleum  as the wind and bright sun made my tracing a bit harder.  He put down a toy and moved freely to help out.  After about an hour(!), I could see his attention waning, but I couldn’t have laid that nice checkerboard floor without Charlie’s help.  We miss him and wish he could drop in to play with Miss Jane and I.

People, people…

In the driveway I began to see what I had done.  The next few people were consulted.  After MD State Inspection, I knew I had repairs to make.  Towing it to Al’s house we surveyed the rust, planned repairs, rolled out with patches in mind.  Rolled back under and out came the need to “just make a new frame”.  Then back to patches and thinking some more.  Then tow it to another old friend and previous boss.  John is a self-taught machinist, welder, business man and heck of a hard worker.  He too began to agree; “just make a new frame”,  steel is cheap.  Perhaps the biggest concern was having 20 feet of welding happening underneath the camper, inches from 50-year-old particle board.

Home it was towed again.  Planning, estimating, and a few second thoughts.  Al to the rescue!  I “Borrowed” a paved section of his driveway to cut bolts,  separate and raise the body off of the frame.  Knowing that if the body collapsed from its own weight, I would be cutting it all up as scrap.  It would either work or fail.  Al’s place was a long static pad for rest while I sorted out the old frame and its new plan.  His visiting dad feared mine was another friend’s project that would die in its tracks.

-David

A few pics of The Tramper

The seating area turns into our bed – a bit smaller than a double. A neighbor said “I hope you two really like each other!”, since, I suppose, she could see that we’ll be in an itty-bitty living space for a while. Fortunately, we like each other very much! That light fixture is vintage, restored by David.

Here are a few pics of the (mostly) finished Tramper, before we load it with all our stuff. Many more details about the renovation and more photos of The Tramper can be found at www.goodoldrvs.com. Type in “David Grant” in the search box in the upper right corner. It really tells the story of just how much work David has put into this renovation!

Since I’m still in the steep upward slope of the learning curve on using this blog site and we have a million things to do to get on the road, there probably won’t be too many more posts before we go! But, you never know, I could get inspired…

Jane

Fridge Interior. We love food so we needed lots of room!
Vintage refrigerator. Restored by David. Powered by propane

Kitchen Detail with cute sink & faucet in background

Kitchen Counter Extension w/ LED light fixture. All created by David
Seating area detail

Sound System. Plays our iPod

Seating area

Shower!

Vintage oven – refurbished by David

for more pics and more details of the renovation, go to www.goodoldrvs.com and type “David Grant” in the search box in the upper right.