Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana
I did not write a post yesterday because it was a very bad day, so I am writing about yesterday. It started out OK. We continued to travel through Iowa. The farms were scattered across the rolling hills. Fields had been planted, but have not come up yet. There are some green pastures with cows and sheep and interesting barns.
We crossed the Mississippi River at Davenport, Iowa. Here is what the approach looked like.
The view up river toward Davenport, Iowa
Looking down river. Still very rustic in that direction.
The other side of the river is Illinois. We drove through Illinois and discovered that they have some of the worst roads we have been on yet. They have a portion of I-80 that is a toll road that isn't any better than their non-toll portion. This is one of the toll entrances, on the right.
The Illinois toll road has bridges across the highway. They are rest areas used by both directions of traffic. We have been to rest areas that are shared by all traffic, but usually they are located off the highway and you drive to them. These, you pull off to a parking area, like at most rest areas, but you walk in and up to the bridge where all services are located. Of course, there are more services here, since you are on the toll road and ordinarily don't get off until you reach your destination
When we took a break from driving and went inside the trailer, things were tossed around so much that somehow, either by being bumped by another object or just twisting and bouncing, the glass front to our electric fireplace was shattered. Thank goodness it was safety glass and turned into little pieces not shards of glass. Also, it still worked, which is nice. We had secured the cabinet doors, in prep for our travel to Alaska later in our summer adventure, so nothing had fallen out of the cabinets. Could the roads in Alaska be worse than what we had just experienced???!!!
That wasn't all. Once we found the campground for the night, we barely made it into the site as the truck was beginning to skid on the mud as Earl was backing in. To make things even worse, the leveling system for the jacks decided to be totally out of sync, causing it to say we were at a severe angle even though we were almost level. It wouldn't let us move the jacks up or down. We gave up trying and continued to finish hooking up the trailer. Wouldn't you know it. The electricity didn't work at the post for our site. We ended up running an extension to the site next to ours. Totally frustrated, we went into the trailer to get dinner, clean up the broken glass and prepare for going into the Escapade rally on Saturday, provided we could figure out what to do with the jacks to get them to retract and that we did not get stuck in the mud as we left the site.
We have eaten dinner, cleaned the trailer, and are going to bed and are hoping for a better day tomorrow.
Yeah, that doesn't sound like a good day.
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