The excessive heat warning continued today. There was a little more wind than yesterday. This made outside activity a little more tolerable if you stayed out of the direct sunshine. I didn’t hear the official high temperature for the day, but it was probably similar to yesterday’s 98 degrees.
More time in the water today than on land.
I got a late start the day which is unfortunate. The outside chores that I need to get accomplished can really only be done in the morning before it gets hot. I got a couple of the simple ones like dumping the tanks accomplished, but anything that is going to take an extended period of time is still on the to do list. Let’s see if I can get up early tomorrow. I refuse to set an alarm.
My activities today were scrambled by Amazon. I had a delivery scheduled for today and I don’t like to have the boxes sitting outside for a long period of time. I am a little suspicious about the security around here right now. While there are lots of cameras, there isn’t any access control preventing people from just driving in and wandering around. The other problem with leaving packages outside is the probability that they would get very wet with and unexpected storm or two.
Last week the temperature was back around normal in the low nineties and it was often overcast making it more comfortable outside. Over the weekend the weather started a transition toward hot. Excessive heat warnings have been issued each day since Saturday. The high temperature today was 98 with a heat index of 117. The display on my car dashboard said it was 102 at one point this afternoon. Basically, it was hot.
Nassau River
The day began with the sound of lawn mowers. It has been two weeks since this part of the park got mowed. They had a lot of work to do and it was messy. I listened to the sound of the mowers getting closer as I laid in bed this morning. I was up working on breakfast when they arrived at my site. They were back later with the trimmers to get a little closer to all the obstacles. The grass looks better when they finish, but today the roads and some of the RV pads were covered in cut grass because of the volume of grass they cut. I still think they should pass out noise protection to all the residents before they mow. It is not practical, but those machines are noisy.
I was surprised to find a lot of empty sites when I took my walk around the campground today. This is probably the emptiest it has been since I arrived at the end of June. My guess is it relates to the beginning of the school year this week. The folks that have been using the RV park for temporary housing may have managed to be in more permanent housing for the school year.
I finally made it to the Reddie Point Preserve Park in Jacksonville today. Last weeks attempt got rained out. The park is located on the south or east bank of the St. Johns River. My interest in the park started with a simple map search. A rather large green area on the map got my attention followed by a little googling.
Looking east toward the mouth of the St. Johns river.West view.
With a lot of help from my GPS I found the park after driving south on the I295 beltway followed by a winding path through a business district, a university area and finally lots of residential streets. Without the mapping software assistance I’d never of found the right combination of roads and turns. The preserve park was a forested area on the bank of the river with a small pond near the entrance. At the river there was a long pier for fishing and temporary boat tie ups. The view up and down the river was impressive. There were several family groups using the picnic area and even more people fishing from the pier. It was much busier than I thought it would be.
At the preserve park I walked the trails. They weren’t all that exciting. I found several groups of wildflowers worthy of pictures and startled or perhaps more accurately woke up a great blue heron roosting in a tree near a small pond. It took off with more screeching than normal for the species. After my heart rate slowed down I continued my walk. Overall it took less than an hour to check out all of the park. It was interesting, but I don’t think it warrants another visit.
I expected to get caught in an afternoon thunderstorm on my return to the RV park, but it remained dry. The temperature peaked in the low nineties.
It was very still this morning. Very little breeze was blowing. The temperature got down into the mid seventies overnight, but rapidly climbed to ninety this morning. The clouds started to thicken during the afternoon. The typical Florida summer afternoon thunderstorm arrived just before 4PM. After a heavy wave of rain and wind, light rain lingered for about two hours. The weather was much more comfortable after the showers.
Why did the goose cross the road? Is this Abby Road with a couple of extra Beatles impersonators? Hurry up and fill in the gaps.
This wasn’t a very active or productive day. I spent most of the day watching TV and internet videos with some reading thrown in for good measure. The afternoon rain was originally forecast to be coming earlier, so I didn’t venture out the RV park for any extended outdoor activities. I settled for two walks around the park today. One was before the storms and one was after. There weren’t a lot of good picture taking opportunities either.
The rain managed to change my plans again today. It was cloudy and humid most of the day, but in the early afternoon a real deluge of a thunderstorm hit this area. It was part of a line of storms that moved through northwest to southeast. Overall the temperature remained comfortable never getting above the eighties.
I planned to drive around Jacksonville to the southwest suburbs this afternoon. My mission was to pick up my mail from the mail service. Just as I was preparing to leave the thunderstorm moved in. I waited for it to pass through before departing, but mother nature had other plans. As soon as I got onto the Interstate the sky opened up again. People don’t know what to do in heavy rain on an interstate. Some put on their four way flashers and slow way down, but keep moving. Other people seem to just pull over into the breakdown lane and stop. I believe the correct thing to do is slow down, maintain your spacing with the tail lights in front and continue on as best you can. It certainly isn’t accelerate and pass everybody at eighty miles an hour. Every option and then some was happening today.
This goose has difficulty walking. It arrives with all its friends, but after a little pecking at the ground it sits down. It is content as long as the others are in sight.
This was a real white knuckle, intense alert mode period of driving. There was a lot of standing water on the road in some construction areas. Visibility was down to about 100 feet assuming the car in front had its tail lights on. I found an exit off the interstate and looped back to my RV home on back roads. The rain was over as I got back closer to home. It wasn’t worth the risk to continue with the uncertain path of the storms. My mail will wait until Monday.
Blossom of the day
Later in the afternoon it was dry and cooler, but still very humid. I took an extended walk around the RV park. Once again it doesn’t look like there are many new arrivals for the weekend, but a few of the RVs that are empty during the week had people around in the evening. This isn’t really a weekend kind of RV park. It is primarily used by people staying an extended period of time or by travelers going north or south on Interstate 95 stopping for a night or two.
The rain got in the way today. The morning forecast called for a partly sunny day with no real chance of rain. The atmosphere had other ideas. Shortly after the noon hour it started to rain. It didn’t get dark. The sun was still visible on all of the horizons, but it rained steadily for about an hour. Overall it was a cooler than normal day with the high just reaching the ninety degree mark.
Blossom of the day
I had planned to take a hike in one of the county preserve parks this afternoon. The park is on the St. Johns river about half an hour away. The rain arrived when I was preparing to head out. It probably would have been dry at my destination, but I didn’t take the chance. Instead I just continued to work on various chores around my RV home.
A little extra length during my walk around the RV park this evening replaced the exercise I missed from the skipped hike in the preserve. The sights and features of the RV park are very familiar after more than a month of walks. There have been a few changes as RVs come and go, but for the most part I have seen most of the sights before. Today there was an Egret along the banks of the main retention pond. I have only seen an egret here one other time this summer.
Today’s weather was the type I’d like to see repeated every day during the Florida summer. The temperature peaked in the low nineties, the humidity wasn’t extreme, there was a gentle consistent breeze and the thunderstorms were extremely scattered. As long as you weren’t hanging out in the direct sun it was a fine day.
I sent some time this afternoon along the north bank of the St. Johns River. There are a parks, roadside turnouts and boat launches along route A1A before it reaches Little Talbot Island. There were people out in small boats and kayaks to watch, but I didn’t see the wildlife I was hoping to see. Getting there I drove by many of the big facilities that make up the port of Jacksonville. The road intersects with A1A when the route arrives on the north bank of the St Johns River after passage on a ferry. It might be interesting to take the ferry over the Mayport on the south bank sometime, but driving around is probably easier.
On my way back to my RV home, I stopped at Walmart to restock my grocery supply. My visit was late enough in the afternoon that I caught the surge of after work shoppers. The store also showed the result of a full day of shopping. Many of the shelves needed to be restocked. I was still able to get what I needed, but occasionally I had to do a little extra effort. Getting a couple of gallons of drinking water took a little climbing and reaching to get the containers from the back of an upper shelf. At the checkout I was behind a lady that was stocking up on back to school supplies. She must have been a teacher or school administrator. The purchase included notebooks, ruled paper tablets, pencils and other things I couldn’t identify. The quantity was probably close to 100 of each item. The cashier started counting each item before scanning it and ended up just assuming there were the same number of each item.
The RV park is in its quiet mid week mode. There isn’t any real activity during the day and in the evening there is only a small amount as people return from work or whatever. The geese continue to have free range around the park except when a park employee decides it is time to harass them with a golf cart. Then the peace is disrupted as the geese honk a lot and take flight. The other disruption to the quiet today was the Florida Air National Guard. They were busy taking off with full afterburners overhead several times today.
It was a very nice Florida summer day. The temperature was right around the seasonal normal in the low nineties. More important for a nice day during the summer is the thunderstorms weren’t wide spread and the few that did develop missed this area. Another line of storms may pass through the area overnight.
This wasn’t a very blog content filled day. I got my walks around the RV park in and took pictures of the geese and lilies, but most of my time was filled with chores and planning. I have about three weeks remaining in my stay here. I need to book some reservations to get me from the end of August to the middle of November. The plan needs to be flexible to allow running away from the path of hurricanes and I’d like to explore some new areas. The complicating factor is that I really should get a few lingering maintenance issues with my RV home worked on this fall. So I need to find both campgrounds and RV repair options.
As I look at various campground options I am again reminded of how much the nightly price has gone up. Prices seem to have gone up again. The first digit in the price seems to be one number higher. So prices that were in the forties are now in the fifties, fifties are in the sixties and so on. Places that I’ve stayed at a few years ago and begrudgingly paid in the forties now have nightly rates in the eighties. The real problem is I don’t need or value many of the amenities included in that rate. I don’t need a sewer connection for a stay under two weeks, although it is nice and I rarely use cable TV connections or any of the recreation facilities. The only upside is that weekly and monthly rates seem to be a little more discounted than they used to be.
My first task is to book the labor day weekend. I have identified a few options with plenty of vacancies, so I have a few days to think it through. The Columbus (or Indigenous Peoples) day weekend is also a concern for October, but I can wait a little longer for that one.
I woke up this morning to a dull overcast day. The sound of the lawn crew working on the grass in the RV park was distant. I rolled over and went back to sleep assuming I’d be awake again when the mowers arrived in my area of the park. It didn’t happen. It was well after 9AM when I woke up again. The mowing crew only did a small area at the front of the park.
It remained cloudy all morning. This gave me a chance to get a few outside chores completed before it got hot. There are still several more outside chores that I need to get done, but the sun broke through the clouds in the early afternoon. The temperature climbed into the low nineties before the usual afternoon thunderstorms started to arrive in the area. Once again, for the most part, the heavier storms missed this area.
The end of month turnover in the RV park continued today. Several more of the trailers that have been here for a long time departed today. The start of the month represents the beginning of leases in rental properties. The start of the school year is also getting close. In many Florida counties school begins this week or next. Families want to be in place before the kids start school.
The weather has returned to the above normal level with respect to temperature. It was in the upper nineties today with high humidity to make it seem even hotter. Severe thunderstorm warnings for the area started around 4PM. For the most part the storms avoided this area. There was a lot of wind at times and a few drops of rain, but most of the afternoon and evening the storms missed this area. As I write this blog entry at 9PM, the first real thunderstorm is overhead. It is raining steadily on the roof of my RV home and the lightening is providing quite a light show.
Blossom of the day
This seemed to be a big departure day in the RV park. Several of the RVs that were here when I arrived over a month ago departed. I suspect it may be related to the end of the month. Included in the departures was the RV on the site across the road that runs behind my RV. It has looked like they were getting ready to leave for a couple of weeks now, but today’s departure was well disguised. I thought they were just getting ready to go out for the day. They still had plenty of stuff scattered around their site, but when I looked out a few minutes later they were hooked up and pulling out. Somebody in a golf cart came by later and collected the two or three things they left behind.
Today’s walk around the RV park was a short one. It was very hot in the sun without much of a breeze blowing on my early walk. My second walk was canceled for fear of getting caught in a downpour. Most of my day was spent watching TV, chasing random information on the internet and doing a few inside chores. I have a backlog of outside chores, but I’m waiting for more favorable conditions.