Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Office Window - Armitage Park Campground

Office view
The motorhome's dining table with one leaf in serves as my office when we are on the road.  In the past I've used just my laptop, then I brought one monitor, and eventually, I graduated to a setup closer to what I have in my home office.  While it means moving everything to the bedroom for dinner when we want to use the table, the convenience of having two monitors and a full-size keyboard makes the workday easier.

Dead Zone

Despite being near an urban area (Eugene, OR), Armitage Park Campground was a struggle to work online from.  The park has Wi-Fi, but the performance and reliability were a 1 out of 5 stars in my experience, meaning nearly worthless, and remember we were there mid-week.  I don't normally depend on Wi-Fi, so usually, my reliable backup plan is to turn my phone into an Internet Access Point.  On this trip, the location and dense foliage of the park, combined with the Verizon towers being on the other side of Eugene resulted in me seeing two bars or less.  At two bars you essentially have a really slow 4G/LTE Internet connection.  Since the Microsoft Skype conferencing software I rely on is basically streaming audio and video, I couldn't use it on two bars.  Phone calls worked, so I just dialed into all my conferences and forego viewing the slides a presenter might be showing (I'd follow along while looking the slides that had been emailed out before the meeting).  Email worked, it was just slow.  Even with my Weboost mobile phone signal booster, I was only getting two bars of 4G/LTE.  I walked around the park checking the strength of the Verizon signal.  None of the day use areas or the other campsites seemed to be any better than our present site #16.  When I moved to the entrance of the park at Coburg Road, my signal went to three bars and then four bars.  Later in the car, less than a mile from the park, I was getting five bars on Verizon.

Site #16
Those who love their satellite TV also suffer from connection issues when in a campground with a dense canopy of trees.  You see this type of feedback in online reviews of RV parks.  If the campground is lush and forested, reviews will complain about poor satellite service.  If the RV park has few trees, then reviews complain that it is a parking lot.  Being dependent on a good Internet connection can also create this same conundrum.

Surveys have shown that the desire to stay connected is not generational.  Today the Internet is used for everything from entertainment and news, to where to find a good restaurant and what are the operating hours of the establishment I want to visit.  So whether one is retired or still working with the option to work away from one' traditional office, staying connected is something we are becoming accustomed to always having.  On this trip, I thought I'd be fine because the online reviews didn't describe the park as a dead zone.  Unfortunately, a dead zone is what I experienced on this visit.

Traveling with Memories

Laura and I will celebrate thirty-two years of marriage this July, and one of the things I like about way we go RVing is the bits of family history we carry with us.  Here are just a few of those memories in the things we carry in our Safari motorhome:

  • 3x5 USA flag Laura's Grandma Evie flew from the porch of her home on Cape Cod
  • BSA hatchet from my years in Boy Scouts
  • A set of tools augmented with inherited items from my dad and Laura's
  • A Colemen stove, given to us as a wedding present by a good friend
  • Binoculars inherited from my dad
One of those memories is how it all began for Laura and me.  Our honeymoon involved a combination of Bed & Breakfast stays and camping.  We camped out of the back of my GMC S-15 pickup and used a dome tent borrowed from Laura's mom.

Fairholme Campground, Lake Cresent, WA, 1986 while on honeymoon.
Our honeymoon in 1986 included a stop in Seattle, where we stayed at the Chambered Nautilus Bed and Breakfast at 5005 22nd Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105.  During a visit to the Seattle waterfront, we had a shop on one of the piers create a redwood plaque as a keepsake.  Today that memento travels with us in the motorhome.

The redwood sign, made in Seattle, dates from our honeymoon.
Not surprising to our family and friends, Laura and I tend to favor RV destinations near water.  As lifelong boaters, both power and sail, we love it all.  Our motorhome is actually outfitted with a lot of gear that traveled with us on various boats we have own.  From tools and galley equipment to linens and the kayaks, we travel with a lot of familiar things.

Approaching Beacon Rock State Park in the Columbia River Gorge.
Today the kayaks aren't lashed to the bow, but the car rack has sure made finding our 2012 Honda Fit a lot easier to find in a parking lot😉

Our toy hauler with kayaks on top and bicycles hanging off the back.

In Search of a Stronger Cellular Signal

I took my Nikon with me as I went in search of more than two bars of cellular service.  What follows is a sample of the beauty that is Armitage Park Campground in Eugene, OR.

Group RV site with more than one pedestal
Laundry, shower, and restroom next site #16.


In the group camping area looking back at site #16.
A tent in site #17, followed by Celtic Safari in site #16.
Day use area at the north end of the park near the river.
More of the day use area.
A wide open grassy field in the Day Use area.
Same of the foliage where the staff doesn't maintain grass.
The understory foliage was very lush.
A parking lot for the Day Use area.
Beautiful textures in the park.
An oasis in an urban area.
The Dean Grossman Dog Park within the campground.  Two acres located near the entrance.
While the RV loop sites are in the trees, the center of the loop is a grassy field.
Uncommon pull-through with RV door facing loop road.  The result of the loop being one-way.

I never found that stronger cellular signal in the park, but along the way, I had a great walk and saw a lot of pretty awesome natural beauty.  My conclusion, in the end, is there was just too much foliage between the park and the cell towers.  Plant material is a known absorber of cellular signals.  Here is a good story on the Weboost site about what can block a cell signal:



Live well, Laugh often, Love much

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