Planning
for a place to stay while construction progressed was tricky: We found the most
inexpensive living arrangements were to buy “Poopalicious,”
a low-mileage 17-foot Dodge motor home for $1000. It would cost us that to rent one for
a week! It was summer, so we thought it
was the perfect alternative. Nights were peaceful, going to sleep with the
chirping of tree frogs. (Crickets make a
different sound when rubbing their serrated legs together trying to attract mates.) Did you know that frogs don’t drink
water? They get their laps from leaves
that drip moisture from condensation at night.
Probably
at this point, you’re wondering why the motor home was named “Poopalicious.” As
most motor homes are made, it was self-contained with all the comforts of home
(?). It had a bed over the cab of the
vehicle, but close to the roof, so that on cold nights, the coolness radiated
directly down to the sleeper; simple physics really: Cold air sinks to a lower
level. The closet with accompanying
drawer would hold a weekend’s worth of clothes for one person, the
double sink was suitable for washing a few dishes at a time, and the bathroom
was extra handy...a teeny medicine cabinet over a “Barbie” sink, a shower hose,
and a toilet. The tiny drain hole could
be plugged, but we had to be careful about that: The bathroom had only a
three-inch lip at the door to keep the water from spilling out into the motor
home. The main reason for the tiny plug? It emptied
directly into the sewage holding tank and therefore plugged the smell that
could emanate from it. It also prevented
back flush from the holding tank should we not empty it every week. And why wouldn’t we empty it every week? “Stalag Woofie,” was an elaborate array of electrified hog wire
fencing imaginatively attached to the motor home and several pieces of junk
furniture. With four behemoth
territorial dogs, we took all precautions to contain them to our junior
compound. One day during shower activity and the drain unplugged, this brown,
putrid liquid started coming up from the drain.
The holding tank was full! Down
came the fencing and off to the dump station we went. A true family activity, our whole pack went:
four dogs, Spouser, and me. The motor home’s nickname was sealed; on our
way back home; the cap to the holding tank fell off, so there we were limping
down the Scenic
Highway,
being careful not to splatter motorists’ windshields behind us. Other
challenges loomed regarding liquid storage: Spouser
imaginatively hooked up a gravity-fed water system with the help of Jake, who
used his backhoe to move the plastic storage tank to higher ground. It worked wonderfully.