185 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
185 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3690
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Title: HPR3690: Planning the Trip
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3690/hpr3690.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 04:08:52
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,690 for Friday the 23rd of September 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Planning the Trip.
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It is part of the series Travel.
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It is hosted by Aoka and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Taking Our Revised Plant to Completion.
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Hello, this is Aoka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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of Hacker Public Radio.
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Yes, indeed.
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I'm continuing with the series on my RV trip and we've been focusing on the planning
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and I'm going to do some more of that today.
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Where we left off, we were looking at RV trip wizard and you could just do it one day
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at a time.
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And that's certainly feasible.
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What RV trip wizard doesn't seem to do or at least I haven't found out how to do it yet
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is see the whole trip and then fill in details.
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It appears to be built on the idea of adding stops one at a time.
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For us, we want to nail down the destination stop first, then commit to the daily trips
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and stops to get there.
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Every trip wizard does let you put in a starting date so I can see a good way to do that part.
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But first I want to see in general what this trip looks like.
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And for that, I'm going back to Google Maps.
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I put in our park in Parampas the destination with our home as the beginning and got directions.
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Google will always give you the fastest route as the preferred option.
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But we are more concerned with not getting caught up in the mountains while towing a 36-foot
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RV.
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The preferred route went right through Denver, Colorado, which is the heart of the Rocky
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Mountains.
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But it offered two alternatives.
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And I picked the more southern route, which goes through Oklahoma and New Mexico.
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There are mountains in the Albuquerque area, but they're less scary than the Colorado
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Rocky Mountains.
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Now I can see the whole trip in the big picture.
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The first part matches up with what we did in RV Trip Wizard and has us on Interstate 70
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as far as St. Louis.
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Then we get on Interstate 44 for the next leg.
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Interstates are generally very safe for a large RV, so this is good.
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So far, I have never run into an excessively low bridge on an Interstate, excessively low
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being anything we can't go through.
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So we measure ours as being 13-feet-two inches or approximately four meters.
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Going back to RV Trip Wizard then, with my planning circle sent it on the park near
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Tara Hoat, I can see that the circle goes past St. Louis, so I can follow Interstate 44
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into Missouri.
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As I zoom in, I see a park in St. Robert, Missouri that is affiliated with both Good Sam and
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Passport America.
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It also has pull-through sites, which is a plus for making time on the road.
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What I mean by this is that it takes time to disconnect and set up the RV and takes more
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time to reconnect it to the truck the next day.
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So when we're just trying to make time between two destinations, it's sometimes simpler to
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just leave the RV connected to the truck and just pull the whole thing in.
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And then the next day all we have to do is disconnect the water and electric and hit the road.
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So this park in St. Robert, Missouri looked like a good idea, so I added it to the trip
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and it tells me it is 330 miles from the one in Tara Hoat and should take five hours
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and 30 minutes.
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I then centered the map on this park, zoomed out and got my next planning circle.
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Proceeding similarly, I added a stop near Oklahoma City that looked good.
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When the RV trip wizard warned me that there was no way to get there without going on
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an unpaved road.
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So now research is warranted and Google Maps is the way to go.
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I went to the RV park in question and looked it up using Street View and the only unpaved
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portion is in the park itself and I could see it was nothing to be worried about.
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So I kept this site on my trip, re-centred the map and onto the next stop.
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That took me into Amarillo, Texas.
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Now so far all the stops were just for one night.
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The idea was to get out to the southwest and away from the worst of winter.
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But the next two stops we extended, first a three night stop in Albuquerque, New Mexico
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followed by a three night stop in Flagstaff, Arizona.
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Now we may do longer stops in these places on another trip, but this lets us see what
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the area has to offer.
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And then from Flagstaff, Arizona, we went to our final destination, Perump, Nevada,
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where we would stay for two weeks.
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So our travel plans has to have us leaving Michigan on December 2nd, doing five days
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of travel with one night stops before arriving in Albuquerque and traveling somewhere between
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300 and 330 miles per day.
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Now with my plan speed of 60 miles an hour, that's just under 100 kilometers per hour and
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allowing for rest stops, that should end up being about seven hours of travel per day.
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Three nights each in Albuquerque and Flagstaff, then a one day trip to Perump on our trip
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was now planned.
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But to nail it down, we had to call and make reservations at the parks.
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This was a pretty straightforward process for all of the parks except the one in Perump.
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And what we ran into there was the fact that our RV was 13 years old, they wanted to
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see pictures.
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Now we're starting to see more of that in the United States.
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Some people have really junky RVs and the park is afraid you're going to pull in there
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and it's just going to collapse on the site and look terrible and all of that kind of stuff.
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So I took some pictures, I sent it in and they said, oh, now that looks fine and we got
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our reservation.
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Now if you don't have reservations, you're taking a chance and you don't want to cap
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off a seven hour driving day by having to look around for a place to stay.
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So I think it's a good idea to have those reservations.
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So with our reservation at Perump, we're now looking at what is going to be a two week
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stay and we're going to have a chance to visit some of the parks in the area, particularly
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Death Valley.
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So we did enough research to know that there's things to do in that area.
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Then what?
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Well, looking at the map from Perump, you either go into Southern California or back
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down to Arizona.
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The further west you go, the further east you're going to have to travel when you turn around.
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So we decided we didn't want to go into Southern California.
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Also it was more likely to be crowded there than some of the other places.
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So we went down to Arizona.
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Now at this point, we're no longer looking at long driving days for the most part until
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it's time to return home and that's a good thing.
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Those days are tiring and in retrospect, now that we've done the trip, you know, we
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were talking about 300 or a little over 300 miles per day.
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We're going to take that down, I think, in the future to maybe 250 and see if that's
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a little better because some of those days we're just kind of brutal and particularly when
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you have to do three or four of them back to back.
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We're looking at ways with our experience now of saying we can do better.
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So what can we do that south of Perump and Arizona?
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Well, you know, there's a number of things.
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We could do the Grand Canyon.
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We went to the Grand Canyon a few years ago when we took that trip with our niece and we
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wanted to see some other things.
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So we looked at Lake Havasu City which is the home to the London Bridge and yes, that's
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really the London Bridge.
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The city of London was going to tear it down so a businessman in Arizona bought it, shipped
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it to Arizona and reassembled it here.
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Well, we decided one week was plenty for this location.
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Then we decided to go to Ajo, Arizona which is conveniently situated near the Oregon
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Pipe National Monument and the Cabezza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge.
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We'd stay here for one more week.
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Then for a longer stay, we booked a month at a park in Denson, Arizona just southeast
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of Tucson.
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This puts us in the right place for the Solaro National Park and the Coronado National Forest
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plus everything in Tucson and the surrounding area.
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Now one thing worth noting is that many RV parks offer lower rates for month long stays.
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When I first called this park in Denson, I was looking for two weeks but the helpful person
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who took my call explained that by staying for a month, we'd actually end up paying less
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than we would pay for two weeks.
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Being near Tucson means there will be plenty to do there.
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So of course I booked a month and saved several hundred dollars.
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Then our next stop was would be Clifton, Arizona for nine months where we're in the vicinity
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of the San Francisco River and the Apache National Forest.
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And there we headed to, we would head to Silver City, New Mexico, near the Pinos Altos,
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a ghost town.
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There was once a mining site and was reputed to be haunted and it's also near the
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Hila National Forest.
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We stayed there for eight nights before moving on to Anthony, New Mexico and that's at
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the point where New Mexico, Texas and the country of Mexico all meet.
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Which is the site of the Igear Springs National Recreation Area, about one hour from the
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White Sands National Park and the San André National Wildlife Refuge.
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So we planned fifteen nights there before going into Texas to visit the Big Bend National
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Park and we planned to stay there for eleven nights.
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Now this park is along the Rio Grande which forms the border between Texas and Mexico and
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the park gets its name from the fact that the river does make a big bend there.
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Finally on March 25th, 2022 we would start our return trip home.
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The process here is very similar to the trip out and in fact most of the parks that we
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would stay in would be the same coming and going.
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If we don't like a park on the way out we can cancel this day on the return trip and
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book something else but without any more information than we have it is simpler to just run that
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in reverse.
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The return trip will involve four one night stops before we arrive back in Michigan and
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by then fingers crossed the winter should be over and once we have all the stops on paper
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of course we call to make reservations at each stop.
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One thing to keep in mind is that none of this is set in stone.
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If we get to a park and hate it we can always go somewhere else.
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When you are in an RV your home is on wheels and can go wherever you want to take it.
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The worst case scenario is that you lose a few bucks but I think the places we picked
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out are going to be fine or I wouldn't have picked them to begin with.
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We completed all the planning on November 4th of 21 and our plans call for us to leave
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on December 2nd of 21.
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The rest of the preparation consists of purchasing supplies of things we need for the trip.
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We put in new smoke detectors and new carbon monoxide detectors, head the RV inspected
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and maintained by General RV, got new tires for the truck and so on.
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Now it's just a matter of waiting a few weeks.
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So this is Ahuka for Hacker Public Radio signing off and is always encouraging you to
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support free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find
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out how easy it may be.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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