Thursday, April 29, 2010

Google Adsense revenue raising three small tips

1. A page put only one ad code.


When users browse the Web normally, a maximum of one page will only click on an ad, so put an ad on a page code, you can increase your click-through rates and page eCPM, higher eCPM pages, Google Adsense will be said to match the more expensive advertising to you. Another page put a lot of advertising, such as refuse collection point type, not beautiful, but also earned less.


(Note: foreign and domestic advertising way of thinking is an entirely different concept. Foreigners for advertising this thing is pay attention to the feelings of the people to see how the ads? So he feels strange adsense policy requirements. And domestic For advertising this thing, the simple sum of 8 characters: all-pervasive! exploit any tiny opening! We are all people who do not pay attention to see how they feel? When you learn how to use a different way of thinking to do GGAD. You make money when arrived.)


2. The most likely to see ads on the user’s location.


Ad position on the most easy to see the location of the user, not the users most likely to click on the mouse position. Do not put Google Adsense to your site users do not see the place at first sight, no one hits there will be no income. But do be careful not to put the user clicks the mouse to the position most likely would be cheating Google that.


(Note: this code into the mouse to click into place the most likely, will be considered ** Click GOOGLE! Caused invalid clicks on it waiting to be K,. Do not use your small of body, to challenge the will of god google !)


3. Only display ads to specific users.


Long-term users view your blog is not going to click on your ads, so ads for this part of the user is of no use, so the best is directly to the user from the search engine advertising, search engine users generally come from particularly vulnerable to click on ads. The purpose of this is the same and the first to raise the page eCPM, higher prices to match Google Adsense ads. I present, because the reason the cache does not know how to use JS to achieve.


(Note: this comparison, BT. Belong to the upper tips! Do not know. But that’s very right, your site will definitely not regulars casually click on your ad, only through the search engines come to your Web site, because Your website structure is not very familiar with the natural and possibilities click on the **!)

Source: http://hbonlinejobs.blogspot.com/2010/04/google-adsense-revenue-raising-three.html

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Wednesday, April 28, 2010

New ECPM system that is not SCAM


Easyad is a new advertising system that aimed to the publishers from around the world. Easyad system is based on ECPM system that have quality. Publishers only display ads on their sites. With us we can guarantee the highest quality advertising without adult content, so you can use our ads on any sites !


No need to get click to ads, just place the ads on your sites and the dollar will flow to our paypal account. This program is much better than skycpm, adsmedia, profiadvert, promoteburner, etc. The good news is that this ECPM has affiliate program.


The earning is unlimited. You will get as much as 5% earnings of user you bring to them and up to $0.25 as an one-off bonus for each user.


$0.25 bonus will be credited for every new user, but it will be paid only for active users.


You can get new users with placing their banners on pages or discussion boards about making money on the internet, pages for webmasters but also through any other legal way


As a publisher your minimum cashout is $1.00 and will be paid via PayPal.com payment system. They usually make payments in few days from request.


How to join this site ?
1. Click : HERE TO JOIN


2. Fill your username,pasword,email dan paypal then click " REGISTRATION"


3. Check your email and open the email from easyad. Click the confirmation link to activate your account on Easyad


4. Login to your easyad account


5. Take affiliation link to start promoting. Put your affiliation link through your site, social networking, or forum page.


6. Don't forget to put the banner (Ad tags) on your sites too. See the example below.

Source: http://our-topics-today.blogspot.com/2010/04/new-ecpm-system-that-is-not-scam.html

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Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Dine Out Vancouver 2010 - Maurya Indian Cuisine

Had a wonderful time at Maurya Indian Cuisine tonight with wonderful dining companions. Surprised that even closer to 7pm, this restaurant with excellent food and that had been honoured by Dine Out patrons two years running (they were Best Overall Menu and Best Appetizer in 2009) was less than half occupied.


The in-restaurant menu was different from the initial menu posted on the Dine Out website (and there were reports of website hiccups later on, which made the menu inaccessible):



  • Entree choices were trimmed, and the Goa Fish Curry is gone! But the helpful server asked the kitchen, and they made it available for me anyway.

  • Dessert choices were dropped from three to two, with the Kesar Phirni off.

  • Read the Gulab Jamun entry carefully as it differs from the typical offering (something about sitting on bread -- an oversight on my part meant I didn't catch that our party of four all ordered the ice cream, so we didn't get to see it at all).


Anyway, for appetizers, we very nearly all ordered the "Jewels of the Sea" (Samundri Ratan). I noticed this and sacrified my first choice for the Chicken Mumtaaz (chicken kebob). A fellow diner followed suit and got the mixed vegetables.
Mixed grilled vegetables was interesting in its mix of veggies and fruit (including jackfruit!).
Chicken was the firmer white breast meat, yet moist. Very nicely done, and large slabs to boot--not the usual cubes for kebob but four pieces each approximately a whole three cubic inches.
However, overall, I must say (and with the consensus of my fellow diners) that the "Jewels of the Sea" had to be the best appy. And though I hadn't ordered it, was gratified to have a bite at least. If you go to Maurya, order this! Two round cake/dumplings per plate, and of a good size (about 1-/2 inch in diameter). You can taste the seafood that went into it, and you can clearly see at least one whole shrimp on the inside.


For our entrees, the chicken seemed dreadfully popular at our table for some reason. I had, as mentioned, been set on the Goa Fish Curry, and fortunately the kitchen was willing to make it, though they weren't prepared, geared up as they were for their final dine out menu. The server's warning was that it would take about a half-hour, but with appetizers ahead and a lively party of four, I didn't notice a thing.
Our mean came with two servings of rice and one basket of excellent fresh naan! We did end up asking for more naan (about 6 more wedges came, I believe), and with nothing added to the bill. I would recommend going easy on the naan as you'll probably want to use it to get every last drop of delicious curry from the metal serving dishes.
Curry was either mild, medium, or spicy. I opted for spicy for the Fish Curry, and it was spicy enough, but not so much that I was weeping for yogurt to clear my palate of unbearable burning and bitterness. The "mild" chicken curry had a surprising sweetness that wasn't discernable (or I wasn't paying enough attention) in the medium versions. My fish curry had enough fishiness so that you were sure it was fish and not tasteless meat, yet not so fishy to be off-putting. Nothing too adventurous required to try it (and nothing extra on the bill, either).
Chicken was chicken, I thought, Stiff breast meat chunks. Very generous amount of curry overall, very good for an initial round of dipping while the naan is still on the hot side of warm. Whatever was added to the fluffy rice was overshadowed by the strong and delicious flavours of the curry.


For dessert, pink (strawberry) kulfi (ice cream). I think it's prepared in the back in very long rods and chopped up for each plate. That seemed to be the common shape, and with four plates coming to the same table, it was still useful enough to try different presentations. The actual quantity of ice cream in each plate may then very well vary by as much as two cubic inches, however. One to two mint leaves per plate -- and yes, you can eat it. (It's like a stick of Wrigley's Spearmint in your mouth, but with a grassy/leafy aftertaste.)
I'd never had "authentic" kulfi before, but it's supposed to melt less easily due to how it's prepared. What we had was in between an ice cream and a sorbet, and it melted just as quick as regular ice cream, so I'll leave it up to more knowledgeable foodies to comment on its authenticity.
Not sorry to have ordered it, however, as the fresh fruity flavour and coolness was a very nice way to offset the curry, that can leave you with a slightly heavy feel, sort of like how too much spaghetti and pasta sauce can make you feel a bit sluggish.


Wouldn't have done to chase the kulfi with a hot coffee or tea after, however, but I certainly could have done with a mint tea or strong chai afterward. We started at 5pm when the restaurant was just open, and by the time we were done, there was still a luxuriuos amount of room in the restaurant that we didn't feel pressured at all to leave and make room for others. Where's the Dine Out crowd? With not much time left on Dine Out (ends May 6th), they're missing out by not going to Maurya Indian Cuisine.

Source: http://lower-mainland-bc.blogspot.com/2010/04/dine-out-vancouver-2010-maurya-indian.html

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Sunday, April 25, 2010

Mon Apr 26 2010 : Tonight on The 'X' Zone with Rob McConnell



SEGMENT 1: 10 pm - 11 pm Eastern / 7 pm - 8 pm Pacific
HY KAPLAN - "Corporate Psychic" -
Hy graduated Temple University with a BA in Physics and worked as an applied Physicist for eleven years. He moved into high tech sales and sales management for the semiconductor industry and then formed his own business as Hy Kaplan Associates, a sales and training consultancy firm. Hy traveled the world to establish business partnerships for a US based test equipment company. He was the founder of the International Test Conference and the International Test Foundation. The Conference brought together management and engineering personnel of the semiconductor industry to work together to resolve common problems. The Foundation set up a scholarship program for engineering students at Drexel University for inner-city needy students. He started Tough Love chapter in Cherry Hill. Wrote a self-help book for parents with misbehaving or teens engaged in substance abuse, "Saving Your Teenager's Life." His first novel "Paradise Denied! published in January 2010. Paradise Denied! makes the case that the governments of the world are targeting the wrong people in the war against terrorism. A solution that exposes the right targets is offered in an entertaining and thought-provoking manner. Web site: www.paradisedeniedbook.com


SEGMENT 2: 11 pm - 12 am Eastern / 8 pm - 9 pm Pacific
BRIAN HAUGHTON - History's Mysteries -
History's Mysteries is an investigation into 35 archaeological mysteries from across the globe, organized by geographical region. As with Brian Haughton's previous book Hidden History, this work separates its collection of enthralling ancient riddles into three sections: Mysterious Places, Unexplained Artefacts, and Enigmatic People. The choice of subjects was made to include a wide range of cultures and a mixture of both the well known and the relatively obscure. Consequently you will read about India's celebrated Taj Mahal and the biblical Temple of Solomon, as well as the little known Royston Cave, in the UK, the infamous Rennes-le-Château, in France, and the forgotten site of Great Zimbabwe, in South Africa. But what constitutes an ancient mystery? The ancient world will more often than not be mysterious by its very nature. We can excavate buildings, artefacts, even sometimes texts, but we cannot know how the people of these ancient societies felt, what they believed or what motivated them to behave in the way they did. Nevertheless, modern science is allowing us the kind of access to secrets of the past which was only dreamt of a few decades ago. DNA studies, for example, of modern inhabitants of parts of Syria, Palestine, Tunisia, Morocco, Cyprus, and Malta have shown extraordinary connections with the ancient Phoenicians who once had colonies in those areas. Ongoing study, conservation, and sampling of The Uluburun Shipwreck, the remains of a 3,300 year old ship and its extraordinary cargo from the coast of southern Turkey, is discovering fascinating connections between ancient Canaan, Egypt, Mycenaean Greece, Italy and even the Baltic Sea area of Northern Europe. Science alone, however, will not give us a complete picture of the ancient world. But when combined with the study of mythology, folklore and sometimes simply a sharp change of viewpoint when looking back at the ancient world, science can be extremely enlightening. Indeed, it is surprising what can be accomplished by turning oneself off from a technology-obsessed 21st century mindset, for example in terms of understanding what the priorities may have been for the inhabitants of Nabta Play in the Egyptian desert 11,000 years ago, or the builders of Tenochtitlan in Mexico, around 700 years ago. Nevertheless, even if we could somehow project ourselves back into antiquity, one suspects that the magic and mystery which was undoubtedly a part of the everyday lives of many of these ancient civilizations would remain elusive. It is often said by 'alternative' historians that bringing a particularly controversial ancient site or artifact to the attention of the world will 'turn conventional wisdom on its head'. 'Conventional' archaeologists ('conventional' presumably meaning those who have studied and qualified as archaeologists) are criticized for not being open-minded enough to accept new theories and ideas. But, generally this is not the case, witness the (often heated) discussions surrounding genuinely challenging archaeological puzzles such as the extraordinary Turkish site of Göbekli Tepe, the enigmatic 'Venus' figurines of the last Ice Age, the abandonment of Mesa Verde, or the volcanic eruption which destroyed the Mediterranean island of Thera. Spurious 'ancient' artifacts or sites (such as the Oak Island Treasure or The Dendera Lamps) are anything but a challenge to 'conventional' archaeology. The furore surrounding these subjects on the web and in various print publications is the result of speculation based on the preconceived agenda of the writer, and as such has no place in history or archaeology. It is this distinction between genuine and bogus ancient mysteries that History's Mysteries attempts to clarify. Sometimes a few hours research and a generous helping of critical thinking can dispense with anything in the second category. In writing History's Mysteries Haughton has not attempted to justify personal prejudices regarding the enigmas of the ancient world. Rather he has been guided by the facts, even if, in the end, they can sometimes be unsatisfactory. - www.mysteriouspeople.com


SEGMENT 3: 12 am - 01 am Eastern / 9 pm - 10 pm Pacific
MONICA HOLY - Fringe Dweller on the Night Shift -
By day, Monica Holy's life looks like millions of others. She paints, jogs, talks to friends, and worries about her children. Monica's nightlife is a different story. Since birth, Holy has entered extraordinary worlds of consciousness through the portal of lucid dreams. While there, she conducts souls to the other side and to the light, teaches, guides, and heals. She enters those non-ordinary realities not just to explore them, but to work on behalf of the human community. In Fringe Dweller on the Night Shift (Weiser Books, October 2009), she eloquently recounts her psychic and spiritual work with the troubled dead, the newly dead or those about to die - especially children - to provide emergency relief. She also brings back messages from the world beyond this one, by offering each and every one of us inspiration and ideas for honoring our feelings and connecting to the divine expression of all that is. Ultimately, we will all see The Grid (chapter 10): the invisible reality beyond our five senses that underlies all physical form as we know it. Monica Holy's work is in the spirit and tradition of native, shamanistic travelers (a la Don Juan in Castaneda), spiritual mediums (John Edward and James Van Praagh), spiritual guidance from other realms (Shirley MacLaine), and what the Akashic realm looks and feels like (Deepak Chopra). Fringe Dweller on the Night Shift combines cosmic adventure with down-to-earth practical information - part art, part memoir, part philosophy, part guidance, this book is a work of the heart. Monica Holy is an artist, psychic medium, spirit guide, and mother of two. She has worked in animation, photography, and typography for film and television. For most of her life, she has kept her psychic and spiritual life a secret. She feels the time is right to share her story in hopes that it will help others understand their own journey through life. This is her first book. - www.thefringedweller.com


SEGMENT 4: 01 am - 02 am Eastern / 10 pm - 11 pm Pacific
DAVID CHAMPION - Psychic Readings - Clairvoyant - Relationships and Spiritual Counseling -
Are you carrying the burden of an unanswered question? Are you in search of spiritual renewal? Which path should you choose for romance, travel, health, or your career? A different perspective may be all you need to change your life forever. I can guide you to self -awareness so you can make that decision you may be struggling with. I can provide you with clarity. Clarity is seeing a situation and being able to fully understand it - sort of like seeing the big picture. You may be thinking or feeling something related to your struggle. My psychic readings can confirm or validate your highest understanding - guiding you to the right path you may be searching for. - www.davidchampion.com


ROB McCONNELL
REL-MAR McConnell Media Company
The 'X' Zone Radio Show
The 'X' Zone TV Show
The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network
The 'X' Chronicles Newspaper
Paragators TV Show
Tel: (905) 575-1222
Fax: (905) 575-1222
Toll Free: (800) 610-7035

Source: http://xzonenation.blogspot.com/2010/04/mon-apr-26-2010-tonight-on-x-zone-with.html

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Video games aren't art ... yet

Roger Ebert, you gotta love him.


Here he is in the worst physical shape of his life following a tremendous (and victorious) battle with cancer and the many surgeries that have left him unable to speak, and yet he’s at his writing peak, churning out movie review after movie review and writing some of the most thoughtful prose of his career on his blog, one of the smartest and most insightful on the entire Internet.


First he angered creationists by rebuking their need to have the “science” of creationism taught in school. Then he turned his guns on Glenn Beck, who he said any rational human being, Republican or Democrat, should despise. Then he outed himself as a longtime Alcoholics Anonymous member, an AA no-no.


And that’s how it goes; nothing’s really off limits: health care death panels, new-age medicine, the “festering fringe” of the anti-Obama movement and textbooks in Texas. He also talks about nice, happy things, like memories of his father, the Champaign-Urbana neighborhood he grew up in, stories of his late reviewing buddy Gene Siskel. But the meat and potatoes of his blog are really his careful articulation of controversial subjects.


Last week, Ebert posted a blog titled bluntly, “Video games can never be art.” And then, seemingly, the world lit on fire and started plunging toward the sun … at least according to every video game fanboy with an Internet connection. This group of people, bless their heart, don’t hear “no” very often judging by the anger exhibited in their responses. The largely anonymous group of game junkies will convict you of blasphemy if you don’t show pious respect to Mario, Zelda, Sonic the Hedgehog or Master Chief. And boy did they convict Roger.


Nearly overnight, the article tallied up more than 1,600 comments, 98 percent of them in strong disagreement of Ebert’s assertion that video games will never be art. (Comments now number more than 3,500.) Ebert argued: “Let me just say that no video gamer now living will survive long enough to experience the medium as an art form.”


One assumption that gamers make, one they get all wrong, is that Ebert says all films are art. Nope. He said film as a medium is an art form, although most films are not art. For example, Armageddon is not art, although cinema as a medium surely is. He does suggest (through consistent reading of his work) some films that can be classified as art — many of Ingmar Bergman’s films such as Cries and Whispers, works by Akira Kurosawa, last year’s Synecdoche, New York, or Michael Haneke’s Caché — for the way they examine the intricacies of the human condition. I agree with his assessment of film as an artistic medium, the same way I agree that hip-hop is an art form, although I can’t name you one Ghostface song that should be comparable to the works of Monet or Mozart. On the same plank, video games as a medium surely can be art, though no game yet has exemplified itself as art.


Although Ebert’s entire argument is critically flawed since he apparently has never actually played a video game, he still brings up some valid points, like why do video game fans feel that they must have their time-sucking hobby validated — “Bobby Fischer, Michael Jordan and Dick Butkus never said they thought their games were an art form.” He suggests they keep playing with his blessing, as they surely will.

What he really brings up, though, especially later in his replies to comments, is the nature of art: What is art, and what isn’t art? By and large, video game enthusiasts feel that (a) if it’s beautiful it’s art, like Flower, a game where you play as a flower petal and blow through grassy fields. (b) If it includes a moving story it’s art, like Bioshock a retro sci-fi shooter set in an underwater world. (c) If a game gives the player choices it’s art, like Heavy Rain a cinematic murder mystery. (d) Or if the puzzles require comprehension at an advanced level then it’s art, like Braid, a Mario-like platformer where the player can manipulate time. Gamers also argue that any combination of these attributes makes a game art.


Surely some games are beautiful, some games are challenging, some have involving stories and well-written characters, and some are created by visual artists of the highest caliber. But these alone don’t make a game a piece of art, or more specifically, a piece of fine art. This is where Ebert got it right even if there is a growing movement of people who will call anything art, from their ergonomic desk to their kitchen toaster. No, art shouldn't be so exclusionary that nothing is art, but it also shouldn't include everything because then it yields the same result — nothing is art. Ebert simply suggested we demand more than health bars and ammo packs from artwork.


I think art has to stir something deeper in the soul than just beauty, or invigorate the brain with something more than just puzzles. I think art must speak to elements of the human spirit, examining who we are at our core. A movie like Synecdoche, New York surely does that. The works of Picasso do too. As does Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd Wright’s fusion of architecture and nature. But Halo 3? It’s closer than most video games, but still has some distance to climb to reach the lofty pedestal of fine art.


Gamers need to be realistic: Yes, games like Halo 3, Bioshock, Heavy Rain, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, God of War III, Flower and Braid are fun, and they also look amazing, but what do they say about us as a people or civilization? At their core, games are about jumping and shooting — essentially mashing buttons on a controller — to beat the boss and win. Some games stray from that formula, but usually not far.

If I must label anything in the gaming community art I lean toward the sandbox gaming of products — I use the word “products” intentionally — like Grand Theft Auto IV. No, I don’t think the game itself is art, but I think the way it provides an open world and then allows the players to interact with it is more artistic than anything mentioned in the Ebert blog comments. Players are given a sandbox to explore. Some do just that, explore; others get in a car and mow down pedestrians with reckless cruelty.The player’s identity is reflected in the way they play the game the same way viewers are reflected in perplexing ways in Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate sculpture in Millennium Park, in Ebert’s own city of Chicago. Of course, a game like GTAIV would be more artful with just a city and the tools in which to realistically interact with it, but the designers give players missions, objectives and storylines, which then dilutes the artistry of the open-world choices. Other games, like Heavy Rain, give the illusion of choice, but really the formula has already been written. These sandbox games, though, really do give freedom in a digital world teeming with life.


The bigger question is this: Who said video games wanted to be art? The Rolling Stones never sat around whining that they weren’t art. They wanted to be rock’n’rollers, and they wore that title like a badge of honor. Video games should be happy to be bad-ass shooters, or sleek ultra-modern adventure thrillers, or perplexing visual riddles. I can admit, at least, that video games can be art, which is more than Ebert is willing to admit. The medium is full of artistic opportunities. We just haven’t seen any yet. And if Ebert’s debate does anything, then it should challenge video game designers to think on a higher plane, to design a game worthy of the Louvre or the Met, not just the TV rooms of every 14-year-old with idle thumbs.

Source: http://pickupflix.blogspot.com/2010/04/in-support-of-eberts-games-arent-art.html

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Tuesday, April 20, 2010

From the Rio Grande to the Rio Colorado

Hello again. The last episode of our travel log ended with us in Deming, New Mexico, en route to Albuquerque for the Family Motor Coach Association (FMCA) Convention. At this point we are traveling with our friends, Peggy and Vernon Bullock. We stopped in Deming at the Little Vineyard RV park.


Saturday, March 20th we headed out of Deming, New Mexico North towards Albuquerque. Our route North took us through the little town of Hatch, New Mexico, which claims to be the chili capitol of the world. I know that I have seen the name “Hatch Chili’s” displayed and we have bought cans of Hatch Chili’s. We arrived at the Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta grounds about 2:00 p.m. or so and got parked. We had earlier offered to help the Fulltimers Chapter of FMCA serve ice cream at the ice cream social during the rally, so this made us “volunteers” for the rally. As a result, we got to park with the other volunteers, which turned out to be a really good thing. We had parking on asphalt with 50 amp electric service and a water supply! We have never had this good a parking spot at any other FMCA convention.


Just a quick recap for those who have not read previous posts about FMCA rallies. FMCA has two large conventions each year. The locations vary - we have been to conventions in Minot, North Dakota, Charlotte, North Carolina, Pomona, California, and St. Paul, Minnesota. When we started going to rallies in 2005 the conventions were big - there were nearly 7,000 coaches in Minot in 2005. With the economy and fuel prices being what they have been, the rallies have gotten progressively smaller, with the average now about 3,000 - which is still a lot of motorhomes and people. The Albuquerque rally was going to be a little different because most of the parking for the coaches was at the Balloon Fiesta grounds, on the North end of town. However, most of the meetings, seminars, vendors and displays were at the Albuquerque Fairgrounds, about 12 miles away. They did provide bus service between the two locations, as well as the location for two of the night time entertainment events, which were scheduled for a third location, the Sandia Indian Casino near the Balloon Fiesta grounds. We have not attended an FMCA rally that was this disjointed and spread out. The rally is providing shuttle service between the various venues, but they also have sufficient parking to allow attendees to take their own vehicles. We decided that we would rather “commute” on our own than depend on the bus service.


We spent the rest of Saturday just hanging around the coach resting for the remainder of the week. We did do a hamburger cookout with Peggy and Vernon. Unlike the Monaco rallies, the FMCA rallies don’t include any meals. Sunday we didn’t do too much either. The actual rally activities don’t start until Monday, with Saturday and Sunday being parking days. After lunch we did take a drive over to the fairgrounds so that we would know the route on Monday and wouldn’t get lost.


Monday, March 22nd, the first day of rally activities. We had to get up and out of the coach by 8:30 a.m. (yikes!) so that we could get over to the fairgrounds to prepare for the Chapter Fair at 9:30 a.m. All of the FMCA rallies include a Chapter Fair early on the first day of the rally. Any chapter of FMCA can reserve a table and set up a display to try to attract new members to their chapter. FMCA has over 500 chapters, all of which are focused on some common interest. You have heard me talk about several of the chapters we belong to, including Monaco International Chapter, which is for Monaco Coach owners, Elks International Chapter, which is for members of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and the 100%ers Chapter, which is for folks who live 100% of the time in their motorhomes. Right now we belong to eleven different chapters. I am currently the President of the 100%ers Chapter, and Jackie is also an officer of the Chapter. We have set up a couple of other Chapter Fairs at past rallies and, since our Chapter is getting very low in membership, we decided to set up a table at the Albuquerque rally. We set up a very nice table and talked to a lot of people during the hour and a half of the fair. Several people took applications, but we didn’t get any sign-ups out of it.


After the Chapter Fair we took down our table display and headed over to a seminar on full-timing put on by the Full Timers Chapter, of which we are also members. Unlike the 100%ers Chapter, the Full Timers Chapter allows members who actually still live in houses part of the time. It is a minor distinction in the focus of the chapters, but the Full Timers have several hundred members, while our 100%ers Chapter has about 16. Peggy and Vernon went to the Full Timers seminar with us and signed up to join the chapter. They still have a house in Northern California that they live in a couple of months a year., but they travel in their coach most of the time. Peggy and Vernon have never been to an FMCA rally before and we are sort of mentoring them at the rally.


After the Full Timers seminar the four of us headed out to do lunch in downtown Albuquerque. Both us and Peggy and Vernon are big fans of a TV show called “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” which is on the Food Network. The series features a well known chef, Guy Fieri, who travels around the country seeking out funky, cool places to eat. The show is a half hour and features three different restaurants on each show. There were two places in Albuquerque that he had featured on his show and we wanted to try at least one of them while we were here. Since all four of us like Mexican Food we decided on a little Mexican restaurant in the middle of downtown called Cecelia’s. We had a little trouble finding it and by the time we got there it was about 2:10 p.m. We walked up to the place (a real dive looking building), started to open the door and were met by a woman who told us they were closed! Apparently they were only open for breakfast and lunch. Well, bummer - the food featured on the show had really looked good.


Not to be deterred, we headed over to the second Albuquerque restaurant which had been featured on the show, the Standard Diner. This was a place that had once been a service station and had been converted into a restaurant. It was also downtown and only a mile or so from Cecelia’s. The four of us met at the Standard Diner and went in for lunch, or actually an early dinner. The restaurant was very nicely decorated and the service was excellent. We all had one of the menu items which had been featured on the show, a bacon wrapped meat loaf with all the fixings. It was delicious! Although the place was not inexpensive, it was not outrageous either considering the size of the portions. I would encourage anyone visiting Albuquerque to at least try the Standard Diner once. It is on Central Avenue, near downtown. I would also encourage anyone who travels a lot to watch “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” (also known as Triple D) on the food channel for great ideas on where to eat all over the country. After lunch we headed back to the balloon fiesta grounds for a happy hour with the members of the Full Timers Chapter that were parked in the area. We had a nice visit and then settled in for the rest of the night.


Tuesday, March 23rd we headed over to the fairgrounds around 10:30 or so to visit the vendor area. The FMCA conventions always have a big turnout of vendors selling all sorts of motorhome and RVing stuff. We spent a couple of hours wandering around the vendors, but not buying much. After five years on the road, we have pretty much everything that we need for the coach and out lifestyle. We go to the vendors to see if there is anything new, and to enter the contests and drawings for give aways. After a quick lunch at one of the overpriced food booths at the fairgrounds Jackie and I went to a seminar on a product that allows you to tap into your coach’s engine computer and monitor all of the engine information on a laptop computer much more accurately than you can with your dash gauges. I have been wanting one of these for a couple of years, but the $400 cost has always been a deterrent. After the seminar Jackie agreed that the program could be useful in helping to achieve good fuel economy and performance and said if I wanted it I should buy it. I still was a little hesitant, and decided to think about it overnight.


After the Silverleaf seminar, the name of the product I was looking at, I went to a seminar and business meeting of a brand new FMCA chapter, the Military Veteran’s Chapter. Surprisingly, with 500 chapters in FMCA and a membership that tends to be over 50, FMCA had never had a chapter just for vets. One of our acquaintances decided to try and start one up and started signing up charter members, of which I was one. This meeting in Albuquerque was the formation meeting and we had over 150 charter members! I suspect this may end up being one of the larger chapters in FMCA when they start to recruit in earnest. While I was at the vet chapter meeting Jackie went back to the vendors.


We had intended to go over to the new coach displays after the vet meeting to look at the display coaches, but the weather had turned cold and windy, and we were tired, so we went back to the coach to rest instead. That night the entertainment was set to start at 7:30 at the Sandia Casino, an Indian casino located about a mile from the balloon fiesta grounds where we were parked. We rested until it was time to head over to the casino. The Sandia Casino was very big and very nice, actually worthy of a Las Vegas Strip venue. The entertainment was supposed to have been in a outdoor concert amphitheater but had been moved inside to a huge ballroom because of the cold weather and the threat of rain. The ballroom was ok, but the seating was flat so the view of the stage was not the greatest. The entertainment for the evening was a local song and dance troupe called the Pink Flamingo Express. They did a lot of older rock and roll music and were pretty good after a somewhat slow start. What made the difference was they started getting the audience involved and bringing people up on the stage to “perform” in different numbers. All in all it turned out to be pretty good entertainment. All FMCA rallies include two or three nights of entertainment, usually one night with a fairly well known performer and less well known groups or individuals on the other nights.


After the concert we decided to stay at the casino and “game” for an hour or so before heading back to the coach. I was just fooling around on a dollar slot machine with $20 and hit a $300 jackpot! I immediately cashed it out and quit for the night. I walked over to Jackie and showed her my $300 ticket and told her that my $400 Silverleaf system was now only going to cost us $100 - yea! Jackie only lost about $40 bucks, so we had a pretty good night. When we went out to get the car it was raining cats and dogs, and kept raining all night long. Good thing we are parked on asphalt.


Wednesday, March 24th we headed over to the fairgrounds about 9:30 a.m. to attend a seminar on advance geocaching. It was being put on by some acquaintances of ours who started a Geocaching Chapter. While we were at the seminar we joined the chapter and added it to our list of member chapters. The seminar didn’t go too well because of problems with the audio visual equipment. Peggy and Vernon had gone to the seminar with us because over the last month or so we have been together they have become very interested in geocaching. We were a little disappointed in the seminar but while we were in the room we noticed that it had started snowing outside - and fairly heavy snow at that. Unfortunately, we didn’t have a camera with us, so we couldn’t get any real good pictures. It snowed for a couple of hours, but it was too warm for it to stick to the ground very long. The grassy areas and shrubs got kind of white, but it didn’t stay long.


After the geocaching seminar we had lunch and then did some more shopping. I did go over a buy my Silverleaf system that was made a lot less expensive by virtue of my casino winnings. At 12:30 we headed over to where the ice cream social was to be held. The Full Timers Chapter has always been the volunteer servers for the FMCA ice cream socials and we had volunteered to help. It was this service that got us our great parking spot! We really only have to stand and hand out ice cream bars for an hour, but it is always a lot of fun. Peggy and Vernon had also volunteered as brand new members of the Full Timers and were there with us. After the ice cream social we went to a meeting of the International Area, one of the FMCA organizational units, and then headed back to the parking area for a social hour with our new geocaching group.


The entertainment this night was again at the casino so Jackie and I headed over there about an hour early to do some more gaming. Neither of us had much luck and ended up losing about $40 or so. We then headed into the ballroom for the evening’s show, country and western star B.J Thomas. Thomas was big back in the 60's and 70's, but has only had a couple of modest hits since then. He is now on the fair and casino circuit. His biggest hit was “Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head” from the movie Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. The show was not too bad, but the sound was not great and Thomas did not have a lot of charisma - it was kind of a boring show. After the show we headed back to the coach for the night.


Thursday, March 25th was the last day of the rally and we really didn’t have any seminars or sessions that we wanted to attend until afternoon. One of the things we had wanted to do was go to the Norcold representatives at the rally and complain about our refrigerator problems we had had last month. When we went to the booth in the vendor area they told us to contact the customer service rep at the service center, which was located at the Balloon Fiesta grounds, not too far from where we were parked. Since we had some time we went there only to find that the customer service rep had already headed home. We were talking to a guy who was Norcold’s service manager for the Western area of the country and told him our sad story, including that shortly after the cooling unit was fixed the ice maker went out. The service guy told us he couldn’t do much for us with regard to the cooling unit and our insurance deductible, he would come over and take a look at the ice maker for us. He followed us back to the coach, checked over the refrigerator and made some adjustments for us. Then he looked at the ice maker and told us that, yes it was shot and we needed a new one. He then offered to replace it for free to try to make up some of our unhappiness with Norcold. He then proceeded to put in a new ice maker for us. That would have been about $250 or $300 to get fixed, so we felt a little better about Norcold - or at least this particular representative of the company.


After getting the fridge worked on we headed over to the fairgrounds about 1:00 for the business meeting of the Elks International Chapter. Immediately after the meeting they had a social hour in the same room. Normally there are several hundred members at the Elks International meetings, however, this one was poorly attended, with only about 70 or so. After the Elks social we headed back to the parking area because I had scheduled a business meeting for the 100%ers Chapter at 5:30 in a tent near where our coach was parked. Unfortunately, only three couples showed up for the meeting and I needed four for a quorum, so we couldn’t have an official meeting. That was very disappointing because I had personally contacted at least seven members of the chapter and told them of the meeting and most told me they would be there. Unless we have a meeting our chapter will go into inactive status next year.


The entertainment for this night was being held in a large tent right in the parking area. The group was the Flying J Wranglers and was another local group, this one VERY country. A little too much so - we left after about 10 minutes and headed back to the coach for the night. They also held a “balloon glow” at the parking area, where several hot air balloons set up at night tethered to the ground and light up the bags with their burners. Unfortunately, it was too cold to go out wandering around the balloon field and we couldn’t see it from where we were parked.


Friday, March 26th we had to leave the Balloon Fiesta grounds and the FMCA rally. One of the other FMCA chapters we belong to is called the 3T’s Chapter. The sole purpose of the chapter is to hold a two day rally after each FMCA convention to allow members of the chapter to rest. The three “T’s” stand for “To dump, To launder, and To rest.” The rally is always held the two days immediately after the rally and always at an RV park within an hour’s drive of the FMCA venue that has full hookup sites. In this case we headed for a KOA about 20 miles from the Balloon Fiesta grounds. We got in around 12:30 or so and immediately headed out for lunch and to a local Laundromat to get our laundry done. That evening we had a nice meal at the park with the rest of the Chapter. There were ten rigs in attendance at this mini rally. Among them were Peggy and Vernon again, who we had encouraged to join the 3T’s.


Saturday was the “rest” day so after a relaxing morning we headed out with Peggy and Vernon to do some geocaching, something we had not done in a week or so. We found seven caches within a couple hours. After a stop at the grocery store we went back to the coach where Jackie helped Peggy register to be “real” geocachers. They now have an official geocaching name (Team 2Bs) and seven caches to their credit. Later on that evening we had a happy hour with the group and then the entire chapter went to a Chinese restaurant near the KOA for dinner. The food was very good and it was nice relaxing with our friends over dinner. We then headed back to the coach for the night.


Sunday, March 28th it was time to head out on our own again. We will be heading West from Albuquerque, working our way back through Arizona to Southern California for the remainder of the spring. Peggy and Vernon are headed East, towards Texas and then up to Michigan in the summer months. We have been traveling on and off with Peggy and Vernon for the last two months and we will miss them. Our original plan was to leave Albuquerque on Sunday, spend two nights in Gallup, New Mexico, two nights in Flagstaff, Arizona, and then down to Surprise, Arizona, near Phoenix, on April 1st where we have reservations for a week at a nice RV resort. However, I have been watching the weather and there is a storm coming in at midweek so we changed plans. We left Albuquerque at about 10:00 a.m. after a final breakfast get-together with the 3T’s and headed West towards Gallup, about 150 miles. We got into Gallup but only paid for one night. We didn’t even unhook the car since they parked us in a pull through spot.


Monday, March 29th we awoke in Gallup, New Mexico to 27 degrees! Way too cold - time to head out! We started West on Interstate 40 again, this time headed to Flagstaff, Arizona, about 180 miles away. Since we gained an hour when we went into Arizona, we got to the park about 1:00 p.m. and got settled in. Our cat, Smokey, is no longer traveling in a cage. He is now allowed to stay and, although he still does not care for the moving vehicle much, he does settle down on the floor after a little yelling at us. We stayed at the Black Bart RV park on the East end of town. Not the nicest park, but far less expensive than the only other park in town, the KOA. We registered here for two nights which will have us leaving on Wednesday morning. The snow is expected to hit Flagstaff on Wednesday night. By that time we should be down in the desert near Phoenix and safe from the snow. After a couple of quick errands we relaxed in the coach for the rest of the day and evening. I forgot to mention that I had been able to get the Silverleaf system hooked up to the coach and the laptop that I use for navigation and was able to use it on both Sunday and Monday as we traveled. It is amazing the information that you can get from the computer. I think it will be very helpful in getting better fuel mileage, and also ensuring that the coach doesn’t have any heating problems in the summer. A very nice system.


Tuesday we headed out for lunch at one of the two Triple D recommended restaurants in Flagstaff. This one was called Salsa Brava and was right on old Highway 66 on the East end of town. It is a Mexican restaurant with some slightly unusual things on the menu. I had a chicken chimichanga with a cream sauce that was very good. They also have a salsa “bar” with several varieties of salsa to try. It was a little on the pricey side, but the portions were good, as was the service. Not a bad place to try. After lunch we headed up to the Lowell Observatory which is on a hill overlooking downtown Flagstaff. One of the other couples who were at the 3T’s rally knew we were going to Flagstaff and gave us two free passes for the observatory. They belong to some society that gets them free passes to a variety of venues around the country. The Lowell Observatory was founded in 1894 and has been an active astronomical laboratory ever since. This was the observatory that discovered the planet (now ex-planet) Pluto back in 1930. We got there in time for a tour of the place led by a very knowledgeable docent. We got to visit one of the original telescope domes and tour the museum. It was a fun and educational tour. After the observatory we did some caching, but were only able to find three. We had tried to get to several others, but ran into access and parking problems. When it started getting late in the afternoon we decided to call it quits at three finds. We are both also starting to get winded from spending the last week and a half at altitudes over 6,000 feet. Neither Jackie nor I do well at altitude. She has been sucking on an inhaler for the last couple days. I find myself waking up in the middle of the night gasping for air. Take me back to the low desert - soon!


Wednesday, March 31st. We have been watching the weather and it shows that up here in the high country they are expecting snow Wednesday night and all day Thursday. Our reservation in Surprise, Arizona, in the Northwest Phoenix area, starts on Thursday. Time to get out of dodge before the snow hits. We pack up the coach under cloudy skies with a pretty stiff wind. About 10:00 a.m. we head out of Flagstaff and head South on Interstate 17 towards Phoenix. It is only about a 115 mile drive to our next destination, the Pioneer RV Resort, We arrive at the park about 12:15 p.m. and get settled in for one night. We are now under 2,000 of elevation, in no danger of snow and with air thick enough to breath! Yea!


A little background about Pioneer. There is a small park here with an “old west” town set up. It really is only a theater and a couple of store fronts, but it is a tourist attraction that has been here for many years. When I first started withe the Sheriff’s Office in 1970 our shooting range was here at Pioneer. Sometime in the late 80's the Federal Government, who owned the land our range was on, decided they needed the land to build a Federal prison. The Sheriff’s range was moved out to the far Northwest, halfway to Wickenburg on Highway 60, and the Feds built a minimum/medium prison on the site. We can see the prison from where we are parked.


After getting set up we headed North a couple of miles to the outlet stores located in Anthem, Arizona. Anthem didn’t exist when I left the Phoenix area in 1998. It is now a far reaching bedroom community. While we were wandering around the outlet stores I was wondering if Anthem was part of Phoenix, or an unincorporated area of the county like parts of Sun City. That question was answered when we left the stores to head home. We saw several Phoenix Police vehicles parked near a slope by the freeway. There was also a van from the coroner’s office and a Phoenix PD crime scene van. This tells my cop mind that there is, or was, a dead body somewhere in the immediate area. After we got home we put on the local news on the over-the-air TV, but didn’t catch any mention of a body up in Anthem. I guess in a metro area of 3 million people some dead bodies have to go unmentioned.


Thursday, April 1st we headed out of Pioneer and drove a grueling 25 miles to the Sunflower RV Resort in Surprise, Arizona. We will be here for a week and I am looking forward to seeing some of my family. My kids and most of my grandkids all live in the West Phoenix area, as well as one of my brothers, Ken, who lives in Goodyear. We are looking forward to getting with some or all of them during the next week. After we got settled into the park we did our laundry and relaxed the rest of the day. We have a nice spot near the back of the park looking East over the Aqua Fria River channel and Sun City.


Friday we went out after lunch to do some caching. We have never cached in the far Northwest part of Phoenix and there are a lot of caches out here. In a few hours we had managed to get 12 finds with no DNF’s. After caching we headed over to the Sun City Elks Lodge for a cocktail. We have been to this Lodge before, but it has been a couple of years. This is one of the larger lodges in the order with well over 2,000 members. Tonight was fish fry night and they were lined up out the door to get into the restaurant. We just had a couple of drinks. We also signed up for the Easter Sunday brunch that the Lodge is having. As soon as Jackie saw they were going to be serving leg of lamb she was ready to come. They will also have baked ham for me since I don’t care for lamb. After our cocktails we went down the street to the local Olive Garden for dinner. Had a very nice dinner outside on the patio. It was nice finally being back in nice weather where we could do that. After dinner we headed home for the evening.


Saturday, April 3rd I spent a good part of the day doing work around the coach. I needed to do my maintenance activities, checking fluids, lubricating things, that kind of stuff. I also did some minor fixes like a couple of loose body panels. Late in the afternoon we headed down to Goodyear to meet my oldest daughter Tye for dinner at the Golden Corral restaurant. Tye had wanted to buy us dinner. We got to the restaurant and met with Tye, her youngest daughter (and my youngest granddaughter) Jordan, Tye’s oldest daughter (and my oldest granddaughter) Crystal, Crystal’s husband Tyrell and their son, Little Tyrell. My son Roy was out of town and my other daughter Tracie was working. Tye’s husband Frank is disabled and was not feeling well, so he didn’t come. We had a very nice dinner at the restaurant, which was a buffet, meaning we ate way too much!


After dinner the five of them followed us back up to Surprise to the motorhome where they spent several nice hours visiting with us. It was nice to see at least some of the family again. Tyrell is my second great grandchild and the only one that lives here in Phoenix. It is fun to see him. He is pretty shy and still doesn’t come to me, but Jackie was able to pick him up and hold him for a little while, which is great progress. He is nearly two, so I figure in another year or so he will feel comfortable enough to let me hold him and interact. He sure is a cute kid.


Sunday, April 4th was Easter Sunday. We headed over to the Sun City Elks Lodge about 12:30 for the Easter Brunch. They seated us at a table with two other couples who were friends. They were both from Washington State but spent much of the winter in the Sun City area. They were very friendly and we chatted all through brunch. It was kind of funny because one of the women was convinced that she knew us from somewhere because we looked familiar to her. She kept taking guesses and asking questions trying to figure it out. They didn’t look familiar to us, but it kept the conversation going. The brunch was pretty good. They had lamb and ham along with scalloped potatoes and creamed green beans. They also had a small green salad bar and some breakfast items. The food was tasty, there just wasn’t a lot of variety. Nonetheless, it was still a good brunch and we had good company. After eating we thought we might go to the mall or something just to walk around, but we found everything was closed for Easter. We ended up going home and just playing on the computer for the afternoon.


About 3:40 in the afternoon I was sitting in the back of the coach at my desk and Jackie was up front at her computer on the kitchen table. I felt the coach start to move around, kind of like someone was jumping up and down. This went on for about 30 seconds and both of us, at nearly the same time, asked “are you jumping around?” Jackie said something about an earthquake and I told her, “Arizona doesn’t have earthquakes.” She said that it sure felt like one. I went on the computer and checked the earthquake site and sure enough, there had just been a big (7.2) earthquake in Mexico, just South of the border near El Centro, California. This was over 200 miles away as the crow flies and we felt it pretty strongly. As I always do when I feel a quake, I filled out the survey form on the quake web site for the shake map. I then spent the next hour watching CNN news cover the quake. Pretty interesting. I lived in Phoenix for nearly 40 years and never felt a quake before.


Monday, April 5th we headed out after lunch and went down to Goodyear to visit with my brother Ken and his wife Susan. Shortly after arriving we headed out with them to do some geocaching in the area. Earlier this year we had introduced them to geocaching and they got hooked. They are already up to nearly 400 caches and have hidden a couple of caches of their own. We went out first and found their two caches so we could sign them and get credit. Then we went out and found four others for a total of six caches for the afternoon. Most of them they had already found and signed, but we did find one that was only a couple of days old that was a new find for them too. After caching we headed over to Applebee’s for a nice dinner, then back to their house where I helped Ken with some of the geocaching software. They are getting ready to go on a Caribbean cruise in a week or so and are taking all their caching stuff with them. They want to cache in Florida before they board the ship and they have already identified caches on the various islands they will be visiting. Go Ken and Susan!


Tuesday we did some shopping in the afternoon after lunch. For lunch we did the West Phoenix location of My Big Fat Greek Restaurant. Both Jackie and I had the same menu items that we had at the location in Tucson, and both of us found them to be not nearly as good. As Jackie said while we were eating, “if this was our first time at this restaurant, I wouldn’t come again and wouldn’t tell anyone else about it.” The food in Tucson was very good, the food at this Phoenix store was marginal at best. Jackie said the meat in her gyro was salty and dry, my stuffed peppers were mushy and had way too much cheese. The potatoes on my plate were nearly inedible. All in all, this was not a good restaurant experience. We told the waitress about our concerns, and she didn’t seem to care at all and no one else came out to talk to us. We might go back to the Tucson store, but will not ever go to any of the Phoenix locations again.


Wednesday, April 7th we took a drive down to where my daughter Tye lives in Glendale. When they were at the coach last Saturday we had told her that she could take some Halibut and Salmon with her, but we forgot to get it out. We wanted to take some down to her. Although she was working her husband Frank was there. My son Roy was also there. He had been out of town on Saturday so it was nice to see him for a little while. After visiting Frank and Roy we did some caching up near Sun City and Peoria. We were able to find seven caches with no DNF’s. After caching we headed home for the evening.


Thursday morning we were up and packing the coach for a 10:00 a.m. departure for the Colorado River. We left Surprise and headed West for the 150 mile drive to Ehrenberg, a little town on the Arizona side of the river, just across from Blythe, California. The drive was pretty uneventful, other than a little wind, and we arrived just about 1:00 p.m. After getting set up in a nice spot right on the river we relaxed the rest of the day. We are staying at one of our Western Horizon’s parks, Colorado River Oasis, and will be here ten days. We have been to this park a couple of times before, but only for a day or two at a time. This will be our first extended stay here.


Friday, April 9th we were up and out by 9:00 a.m. heading North in the car towards Lake Havasu City. Lake Havasu is in Arizona about 80 miles North of I-10 along the Colorado River. For those who have lived in a cave all their lives, Lake Havasu is where the original London Bridge was relocated back in the 70's. We are headed up there to spend the day with our camping group from the Indio Elks Lodge, the Desert Drifters. We had found out that the Drifters were having an outing at Lake Havasu this weekend and that 23 rigs, including our best friends, Barry and Colleen, were going to be there. They had all gone up on Thursday, the day we came to Ehrenberg from Phoenix. It took a little under two hours for us to drive up and we arrived at the RV park where the Drifters were staying around 11:00, just in time to go to lunch with Barry and Colleen. We had to hurry through lunch because the Drifters had rented a pontoon boat for the day and we were going out on it at 12:30 along with Barry and Colleen and several other friends of ours from the Indio area.


A van from the boat rental place picked us up at the RV park and took us down to the docks. We had nice inboard party boat, probably about 22 feet long, and headed out for a cruise. We were going to be out about 2 hours or so. We toured around under the London Bridge for a while, then headed South on Lake Havasu towards Parker Dam, the structure that creates the lake. The weather was just perfect, in the middle 70's, and it was very nice out on the water. It was a little too early in the year for swimming in the lake - the water was still rather chilly, but being on the boat was fun. After our two and a half hours we went back to the dock and took the van back to the RV park. The group was scheduled to go to the American Legion in town at 5:30 for dinner, but since it was only about 4:00 we decided to go to the Lake Havasu City Elks Lodge for a cocktail. Barry and Colleen, who are also Elks, went with us. We had never been to this lodge. We had a couple of drinks and got a lodge pin for our banner and then left to go to dinner. We got out a little late, about 5:40 and then realized we didn’t know where the American Legion was. We finally found it and arrived about 50 minutes late. Although the rest of the group was just getting served their meals, the tables were full and the food didn’t really look all that appetizing, so we left there and headed over to a nice restaurant on the lake for dinner. The four of us had a very nice dinner - a little pricey, but nice. The worst part was the drinks. We each had one drink (doubles) and our drink cost was a third of the total bill. The name of the restaurant was Shugrue’s, and while I can recommend the food, try to avoid drinking there if at all possible. It is very over priced on alcohol. It does have a very nice glassed-in dining area overlooking London Bridge and the water and has a very nice atmosphere. After dinner we went back to Barry and Colleen’s coach and decided to stay the night since it was nearly 9:30 by the time we got done eating. We slept on the couch, which was not too comfortable, but at least we didn’t have to drive home two hours in the dark. Saturday morning we got up, had some coffee and then headed back down South to Ehrenberg and our own coach. Barry and Colleen were playing golf and were leaving at 9:00, so we got out just before then. We got home around lunch time and spent the rest of the day just relaxing around the coach.


Sunday, April 11th we left the coach after lunch to do some caching. Surprisingly, there are not a lot of caches in the Blythe area. We did one “run” of caches up U.S. 95 from Blythe along the California side of the Colorado River. We were able to find seven caches before a low fuel warning light forced us back across the river to the Flying J in Arizona. There is about 20 to 25 cent difference in the price of fuel between California and Arizona. After caching we went home and I made a batch of chili for dinner.


Monday was a chores day, we did our laundry at the RV park and then did some shopping in Blythe. We did manage to get in one cache, a puzzle cache. Normally we don’t do puzzle caches, but this one was at a pioneer cemetery right across the street from our park so we couldn’t resist. Usually puzzle caches require you to find certain things, use the information you acquire to solve riddles or puzzles to find the actual coordinates of the cache. In this case we had to find a certain family’s plot in the cemetery, count the number of wooden crosses, find a clue on one of them and then apply all the information in a code to get the coordinates. We did it! Yea us! One more cache for the records.


Wednesday, April 14th we went out after lunch to do some more caching in the Blythe area. We were able to find a total of ten for the afternoon. While we didn’t have any DNF’s for the day, there were two caches that we had started to head for and called them off before we got to the immediate area because it was clear that they were too far out in the desert and too difficult to reach. We drove about four miles out into the desert for one until we came to a steep wash that I decided would just not work with our Jeep. While we have four wheel drive, we do not have the trail package that I thought we would need for this descent. The other one we called off involved having to cross a golf course and there were golfers out playing. We didn’t want to get knocked in the head by a ball just for a cache. Sometimes you have let good sense prevail in this sport. After caching we went back to the coach and had cocktails with some of our neighbors who had invited us out for a chat. An interesting group. One is a single male traveler who has been full time for seven years. Another couple are from Sequim, Washington and travel about 7 months a year. We had a lot to talk about with them since we spent a week in Sequim last Spring. The third neighbor were a couple from Desert Hot Springs, of all places, right in our old backyard. We had a very nice chat before retiring for dinner and the rest of the evening in the coach.


Thursday we went into Blythe in the afternoon to take in a movie. There is only one theater in Blythe, and they only have three movies showing. The only one that was of any interest to us was “Date Night” with Tina Fey and Steve Correl. The theater was pretty shabby and for the first quarter of the film we were the only people in our theater. A couple of young girls came in a little later, but that was it. Pretty close to a private screening. Although the theater was a little junky, the seats were comfy and the equipment worked, so we enjoyed the movie. It was a pretty decent romantic comedy, certainly not Oscar material, but pretty funny. After the movie we went home and had another happy hour with our neighbors and then dinner.


Friday, April 16th, we headed out after lunch for some more caching. We had pretty much exhausted the close caches, so we had to head East to Quartzsite to get near some we hadn’t found yet. We were only able to find four in a couple of hours because most were desert caches that required some hiking. The last one we had to hike about a half mile out into the desert and it was a little rougher than we expected. We had to go through several washes and with the temperature nearly ninety degrees, we were pretty wore out by the time we got back. We did find the cache we went looking for, but it finished the day for us. After cooling down we did some quick shopping and then headed home. While out at cocktails with the neighbors we became aware that there was going to be karaoke at the clubhouse that evening. We had a quick dinner and headed over about 7:30. There were not too many people in attendance, and even fewer singing, so I got to do about a dozen songs. Had a great time and sang until 10:30 before heading home for bed.


Saturday we decided to stick close to home and we just hung around the house and relaxed. We had cocktails with the neighbors in the late afternoon and after dinner went back over to the clubhouse for more karaoke. There were a lot more people at this session than there were the night before. There is a regular residential mobile home park inside of the RV park and a lot of the residents were there. The crowd was also much younger, more people in their 30's. Because there were so many singers I only got to do about five songs all night, but we still had a good time. We headed back to the coach about ten or so.


Sunday, April 18th we packed up the coach and hit the road again. We headed West on I-10 for the 150 mile trip to Silent Valley, our ownership park in the mountains above Banning, California. We got into Silent Valley about 2:00 p.m. and picked out a nice spot near the clubhouse and store. When we arrived we found that our friends Ray and Suzie Babcock were parked right across the road from us. After we got set up we went over and had cocktails with them and chatted. We then had them over for dinner. We had been cooking pork ribs in the crock pot all day and we had plenty for the four of us. We had a very nice dinner and caught them up on what had been going on with us since we last saw them in Tucson at the Monaco rally. They didn’t go to Albuquerque for the FMCA convention.


And that brings us to the end of this episode of our travels. We are going to be here in Silent Valley for a full 30 days, so the next chapter will cover our time here in the mountains. Until the next time, keep the faith, keep the fun!

Source: http://travelingholts.blogspot.com/2010/04/from-rio-grande-to-rio-colorado.html

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Monday, April 19, 2010

Vietnamese Food Meme

I came across this list of 100 Vietnamese foods on Thuy's blog, A Blog of Salt, and I couldn't not play along!



The instructions:


Bold the foods you've eaten.
Leave alone the foods you haven't eaten.
Strike through the foods you don't ever intend to eat.


Vietnamese 100 Foods to Try


1. Banh Bao (Steamed Bun)
2. Banh Beo (Rice Flour Discs with Dried
Shrimp)
3. Banh Bot Loc/Banh Quai Vac (Dum
plings with Pork and Shrimp or just Shrimp)
4. Banh Canh Cua (Udon-like Noodles with Crab)
5. Banh Chung/Banh Tet (Lunar New Year Sticky Rice Cakes)
6. Banh Cuon (Rice Noodle Rolls)

7. Banh Gio (Steamed Triangular Rice D
umplings)
8. Banh Hoi (Rice Vermicelli Sheets)

9. Banh It Tran (Round Rice Dumplings with Pork, Shrimp, and Mung Beans)
10. Banh It La Gai (Nettle Leaf Dumplings)
11. Banh Khot/Banh Cang (Mini Savory Pancakes)
12. Banh La/Banh Nam (Steamed Flat Rice Dumplings with Pork and Shrimp)
13. Banh Mi Hot Ga Op La (French Bread with Sunnyside-Up Eggs)
14. Banh Mi (Sandwiches)

15. Banh Pa Te So (Pate Chaud)
16. Banh Tieu (Fry Bread)

17. Banh Tom (Shrimp and Yam Fritters)
18. Banh Trang (Rice Paper) Bonus points
for eating soaked, no-soak, and toasted varieties.
19. Banh Uot ("Wet" Rice Noodle Sheets)

20. Banh Xeo (Sizzling Crepes) Bonus
points if you've eaten both the palm-sized Central-style ones, and the wok-sized Southern-style ones with turmeric and coconut milk.
21. Bo Thui (Beef with Roasted Rice Powder and Fermented Bean Curd)
22. Bo Bia (Spring Rolls with Chinese Sausage, Dried Shrimp, and Jicama)

23. Bo Kho (Beef Stew)
24. Bo Luc Lac (Shaking Beef)

25. Bo Ne ("Stand Back" Steak and Eggs)
26. Bo Nhung Dam (Beef Dipped in Vinegar)
27. Bo Nuong La Lot (Grilled Beef with Wild Betel Leaves)

28. Bo Tai Chanh (Beef Carpaccio with Lemon)

29. Bo Xao voi Khoai Tay Chien (Beef Stir-fry with French Fries)

30. Bo Xao Xa (Beef Sauteed with Le
mongrass)
31. Bun Bo Hue (Hue-Style Beef Noodle Soup)
32. Bun Cha Hanoi (Hanoi-Style Rice Vermicelli with Grilled Pork Patties)
33. Bun Nuoc Leo Soc Trang (Soc Trang-Style Noodle Soup with Fish, Pork, and Shrimp) Bonus points for its more pungent cousin Bun Mam (Noodle S
oup with Fermented Fish Broth)
34. Bun Rieu (Vermicelli Rice Noodle Soup with Crab Paste)
35. Bun Thit Heo Nuong (Rice Vermicelli with Grilled Pork)

36. Ca Bong Lau Nuong voi Mo Hanh (Roasted Catfish with Scallion Oil)

37. Ca Kho To (Braised Catfish in a Claypot)
38. Ca Phe Sua Da Phin (Iced Drip C
offee with Milk)
39. Canh Bi/Bau Nhoi Thit (Pork-Stuffed Winter Melon Soup)
40. Canh Chua Ca (Sour Fish Soup)
41. Ca Ri Ga (Chicken Curry)

42. Cao Lau (Noodle Soup with Pork from Hoi An)
43. Cha Ca Thang Long (Hanoi-Style Fish with Dill and Turmeric)
44. Cha Gio/Nem Ran (Spring/Egg Rolls) You only get points if you've eaten the Vietnamese egg rolls wrapped in rice paper, not the version with Chinese wheat egg roll wrappers. Bonus points if you've also eaten Central-style Cha Ram (Shrimp Egg Rolls) and Cha Gio Bap/Ram Bap (Corn Egg Rolls).
45. Cha Lua (Steamed Pork Loaf)
46. Chanh Muoi (Salty Lemonade)

47. Chao Tom (Grilled Shrimp Paste Wrapped Around Sugarcane)
48. Che Bap (Corn and Tapioca Pudding with Coconut Milk) or any other coconut milk-based che such as Che Chuoi (Banana Tapi
oca Pudding) and Che Ba Mau (Three Color Pudding)
49. Che Sam Bo Luong (Dessert Soup with Dried Dates, Dried Longans, Lotus Seeds, and Seaweed)

50. Che Troi Nuoc (Dough Balls in Ginger Syrup)

51. Chuoi Chien (Fried Bananas)

52. Chuot Dong (Southern Field Rats)

53. Com Ga Hai Nam (Hainanese Chicken Rice) must be eaten with #82.
54. Com Hen (Clam Rice)
55. Com Lam (Sticky Rice Steamed in Bamboo)
56. Com Tam (Broken Rice)
57. Com Ruou (Fermented Rice Wine)
58. Cua Rang Muoi Tieu (Salt and Pepper Crab)

59. Dau Phong Luoc (Boiled Peanuts)
60. De (Goat)
61. Dia Rau Song (Raw Herb Platter)
62. Do Chua (Pickled vegetables ie. Carrots and Daikon)
63. Ga Nuong Xa (Grilled Chicken with Lemongrass)
64. Gio Thu (Head Cheese with Pig Ears and Tree Ear Fungus)
65. Goi Du Du Kho Bo (Papaya Sala
d with Beef Jerky)
66. Goi Cuon (Salad/Spring/Summer Rolls)
67. Goi Ga (Chicken Salad)
68. Goi Mit Ngo Sen (Young Jackfruit and Lotus Root Salad)
69. Hot Vit Lon (Fetal Duck Eggs)
70. Hu Tieu (Tapioca Noodles with Pork and S
hrimp) Bonus points for both Saigon, with barbecued pork and shrimp, and Nam Vang (Phnom Penh) style with liver and ground pork.
71. Kem Flan
72. Lau (Hot Pot)
73. Mam Nem (Fermented Anchovy Sauce)

74. Mam Ruoc (Fermented Shrimp Paste)

75. Mi Hoanh Thanh (Wonton Noodle Soup)
76. Mi Quang (Turmeric Noodles with Pork and Shrimp)

77. Mi Vit Tiem (Egg Noodles with Duck and Chinese Herbs)
78. Mi Xao Don (Crispy Chow Mein)

79. Muop Tom Xao (Loofah and Shrimp Stir-fry)
80. Nem Chua (Pickled Pork Sausage with Shredded Pork Skin)
81. Nem Nuong (Grilled Pork Patties)

82. Nuoc Mam Gung (Ginger Fish Sauce)

83. Nuoc Mia (Sugarcane Juice)

84. Oc Buou (Apple Snails) or any other sea snails
85. Pho Ap Chao Bo (Pan-Fried Rice Noodles Sauteed with Beef)

86. Pho Bo (Beef Noodle Soup) bonus points i
f you've eaten filet mignon pho and for Pho Ga (Chicken Noodle Soup)
87. Rau Ma (Pennywort Juice)
88. Rau Muong Xao (Water Spinach Stir-fried)
89. Soda Xi Muoi (Salty Preserved Plum Drink)

90. Sinh To Bo (Avocado Shake)
91. Sinh To Ca Chua (Tomato Shake)
92. Sinh To Dam (Aloe Vera Shake)
93. Sup Mang Tay Cua (Asparagus and Crab Soup)
94. Tiet Canh (Duck Blood Pudding)

95. Thit Heo Kho Voi Trung (Braised
Pork with Eggs)
96. Tom Tau Hu Ky (Shrimp Paste Wrapp
ed in Bean Curd Skin)
97. Tra Atiso (Artichoke Tea)

98. Tuong Ot (Chili Sauce) bonus points for Vietnamese American Huy Fong Sriracha Chili Sauce and extra bonus points if you use it to make Sriracha Buffalo Wings

99. Xiu Mai (Meatballs)
100.
Xoi (Sticky Rice)


I scored 85 out of 100, plus four bonus points for variants, so a total of 89. Not too bad, I guess. Will work on knocking off the rest on this list soon!

Source: http://12eaten.blogspot.com/2010/04/vietnamese-food-meme.html

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