192 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
192 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3920
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Title: HPR3920: RV Trip 2022-2023: Southeast US
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3920/hpr3920.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:20:44
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,920 for Friday 11th of August 2023.
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Today's show is entitled RV Trip 2022-223 Southeast United States.
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It is part of the series travel.
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It is hosted by Avocad and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, step one for a month's long RV trip is the planning.
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Hello, this is Ahuka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in my ongoing series on RV travels.
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And what I'm going to do this time is talk about our trip to the southeast, which we did
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over the winter of 2022 to 2023.
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And in this episode, what I want to do is talk about how we get started with this.
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And the start is planning.
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We plan our trips.
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I know there are people who just hit the road and wing it.
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I don't like being out on the road, not knowing where I'm going to sleep tonight.
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So we do plan these things.
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Now, we had a great time, last time, in the southwest, and it was certainly good enough
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that we wanted to do another trip.
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But Sheryl and I do not like to repeat ourselves a whole lot.
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The one exception of this is that we actually made two trips to Ireland, but generally we
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like to go to someplace different.
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So we thought about that and we thought about, you know, our plan originally was we wanted
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to visit some NASA facilities.
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And we thought this might be a chance for us to make good on a little of that at a few
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of those to this trip.
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And we also made a few decisions based on our previous experience.
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The first, we took the length of the plan trip down to about three months and ended up
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being slightly less than that, actually, for several reasons.
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Now we had planned four months last time and then had to reduce it to three and a half
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months when I had some medical issues.
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And then by the time we got to the end of the trip, we decided that three months would
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be even better.
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And because of other plans we have in the spring of 2023, we needed to be home by the
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middle of March at the very least.
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So I started our planning with a departure date of December 15th, aiming to be home no
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later than March 15th.
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So I opened up RV life's trip wizard in my browser and started a new trip with the
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beginning date of December 15th, leaving from our home.
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Then I made a trip, a change to our trip settings.
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We found that our plan drives of 300 miles ended up being too much, particularly when
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the mileage crept up to 330 or more.
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So I changed our planned driving radius to 250 miles and started.
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One other thing we discussed was that instead of the five days of daily driving that we
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did getting to and from the Southwest, we should stop for a few days at a time to keep
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refreshed and maybe see some local sites.
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I found that with a two-day drive we could get to Nashville, which is a city we wanted
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to see anyway, so I plugged in an overnight stop in Kentucky followed by a week and
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Nashville.
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From there Memphis was a one-day trip, so I added seven nights there, then another one-day
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trip would take us to Huntsville, Alabama, the first of our NASA stops.
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From there I was looking to get to the Gulf Coast around Mobile, but that was too long
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a drive, so I found a stop in the middle of Alabama near some parks where we could find
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some hiking opportunities and do some sightseeing and put in a three-night stay followed by
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a short drive to the Gulf Coast where we could stay for seven nights.
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From there another one-day drive would take us to the floor of the Gulf Coast, just south
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of Tallahassee, then we would go to St. Augustine, which is one of my wish list stops before
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we planned this, and for this stop I made it nine nights, then it was on to Cape Canaveral
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in the Kennedy Space Center for another nine nights, then we start the gradual movement
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north since we will be in February by this point.
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A three-night stay near Gainesville, Florida sets us up for a week long stay in Savannah,
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Georgia.
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Now, I visited Savannah once a really long time ago, I was a child, but I remember that
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it was a beautiful city well worth the visit, and then we could move a little bit north to
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Charleston, South Carolina for a four-night stay.
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This is another lovely southern city with a lot of sightseeing opportunities.
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Then on to Asheville, North Carolina for five nights, then to Berea, Kentucky for four nights,
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finally a week in Cincinnati, Ohio before returning home on March 12th.
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Now at this point it was just a draft, and you know, subject to a lot of change, I had
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not made any RV park reservations, and that things can always change when you get to that
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step, and I had to get approval from my wife, that this was a plan that she was on board
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with.
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Now the next steps would be to check the route for any steep grades or elevations, which
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would mean adjusting the route, and we also wanted to research a little more on things
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to do in each stop.
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What we don't need to do is pack each day with activities.
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We learned last time that days offer a good thing, you know, we're a couple of senior
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citizens hitting the road, we don't need to overdo it, and sometimes the weather may be
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bad, sometimes you just need to rest, and about once a week you need to do laundry.
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And we got to a good rhythm by the end of our trip last time, and I hope we can pick
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up where we left off, but I think we have a good starting point with this plan.
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We just need to do a little more planning over the next couple of weeks.
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So I had wrote all of that on August 8th of 2022.
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Well, on August 20th, so not quite two weeks later, I came back to it, so we took our
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graph plan and did another check, this time looking at how steep the grades would be.
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We've got a good truck to be sure, but we don't like a lot of steep mountainous roads,
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and our draft had us in the vicinity of the Appalachian Mountains.
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We use Google Maps, which can be set to give a topographical view.
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But an even more helpful tool we found is something called Flattest Root, and I have a link
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to this in the show notes if anyone wants to know about this particular application.
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This can show you the Flattest Root between any two locations, with a histogram of both
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the elevation and the grade along your route, the maximums and minimums of both, and even
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suggestions for modifying your route by adding an intermediate stop.
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Now the homepage, when I looked at it, used all US examples, but I also did try your
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European examples.
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Did you know that going from Berlin to Torrin goes over the Alps, has 2,000 meters of elevation
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in 12% grades?
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Well, now you do.
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We also made use of the topographic maps, and there's a link in the show notes to this,
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this is a federal US federal government site.
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But I would bet there's probably similar things available in other countries and other regions.
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And even this site does have some information from other places.
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If you enter using US English as your language, that will display all US, but you can change
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your language or just search for the area you're interested in.
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I could bring up the area, for instance, while using US English as my language.
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So it can be useful to do a little research if you're planning some travel.
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Now when we reviewed our first draft, we had some grades that were a lot higher than we
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were comfortable with.
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Now we'd encountered a 10% grade while towing our RV last winter going into Clifton, Arizona.
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And that was pretty much a white knuckle experience for us.
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So we wanted to be more comfortable this time.
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And it turned out that with a little work and a few modifications to the plan we could
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make it happen.
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Our new plan had us drop Nashville, but we swung a bit west through Indiana and came
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down to Memphis.
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We went to Huntsville, Alabama for a few days, then returned to Memphis for an overnight.
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From there, we went to Vicksburg, a major civil war site, and then onto New Orleans.
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From there, we moved along the Gulf Coast to Mobile, Alabama, then into the Florida panhandle
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near Tallahassee, then signed to Cape Canaveral and the Kennedy Space Center, and then up
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to St. Augustine, Florida.
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This is followed by Savannah, Georgia, and Charleston, South Carolina.
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Then we go across Georgia into Alabama and Mississippi.
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Then north through Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana before returning home.
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Now this trip, our plan, we managed to hit three of the NASA sites that were on our
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list.
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The US Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, the Stennis Space Center outside
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of New Orleans, it's actually in Mississippi, just across the border, and the Kennedy Space
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Center in Cape Canaveral.
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This is shaping up to be a really nice trip, and we're looking forward to it.
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A few days later, I wrote that once we had checked all the grades and elevations, it was
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time to start making reservations.
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RV Trip Wizard gives you telephone numbers for all the camps, so it's pretty easy to
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just run through the list and make phone calls.
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This can lead to more changes.
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For instance, a couple of places we called were not open in the winter months.
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A couple more did not make reservations as far out as our planned trip.
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Now, since we don't like leaving things to chance, we looked for alternatives.
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It is more comforting to set out knowing that you have a place to stay each night.
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So over the next week, I made phone calls to lock in our stays.
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By August 30th, I had all of that done.
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So it was then time to prepare the book.
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Now we started the book on our last trip and learned we can improve it.
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The idea is to have a book that has all of your stops in order and all of the planned
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routes.
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Now remember, we have a big rig to tow, so we can't just take any road.
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We have to make sure it will accommodate our rig.
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You can go online and find tons of videos of people in RVs running into a low bridge
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and either just losing things off the top like their air conditioner or worst case smashing
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to pieces the entire RV.
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We don't want to do that.
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So RV Trip Wizard gives us safe routes.
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We're also investigating a few other things.
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The thing you have to bear in mind is that, well, Google is great for driving directions
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for a car.
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It's not great for what we're doing.
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At one point, we ran into a traffic jam and Google talked us into taking a detour that
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took us through a residential neighborhood and it was very uncomfortable.
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We not only have to worry about low bridges, we have to worry about tight turns, there's
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a lot of stuff to worry about.
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Now we learned last time that it would be handy to have the information on the reservation
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itself, whether or not it was prepaid or if a deposit was paid, whether it would accept
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credit cards or if a check was required.
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Now it may seem odd in this part of the 21st century, but there were several parks that
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only took cash or checks.
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No credit cards accepted.
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Getting the time to compile all of this into a book ahead of time really makes things
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less stressful on travel days because everything you need to know is right at your fingertips.
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Now I started by exporting the whole trip from RV Trip Wizard as an Excel file, then print
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out the maps, then print out the email confirmations where there were any.
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Some of those came with advice on the best route to the park once you were close, which
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is handy.
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There were a couple of places that said, don't pay attention to what Google says, this
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is the way you really want to come, good information.
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So with all of these, the book came together and planning for the trip was pretty much done.
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So this is a hookup for Hacker Public Radio signing off and encouraging you to support
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free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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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 out
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how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and
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our syncs.net.
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On this advice status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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