It's still morning here in Wyoming, but just barely, so I will hurry and post.
Red, I had a similar good experience with factory service on my Fleetwood in Indiana. Only difference is that the campground was a parking lot with electric hookups, but they did keep you in the same service bay with the same team the entire time. It is certainly a better experience that dealer service, isn't it?? Instead of arguing with you and fixing things wrong and having to redo them, they got to work and fixed everything right the first time.
I arrived here at Keyhole State Park yesterday without much chance for exploring. Today is going to be a rest, work, and then ride my bike day, in that order. I enjoyed sleeping in and catching up on some stuff. I've got some work to do, and then will go bike riding around this place. There is a big reservoir here, but I can only see a bit of it through the trees. Wish the roadways were asphalt because the pickups driving around with boats are making so much dust I don't feel comfortable opening windows.
I added my blog URL to my signature. I had not done this before because my kids asked me not to post it widely because of their fears for my safety. I think they are more relaxed about it now, and I don't post anything personal or about where I am going to be very specifically.
Went to see Deadwood and Lead, SD, plus Mount Rushmore earlier this week, and then stopped at a very interesting place called Vore Buffalo Jump yesterday. It does not look impressive and there is a fee, but the place is non-profit and a dig site worked by the U of Wyoming so it is very legitimate. The place is where the ancient Native Americans used to chase buffalo over a small cliff so that they fell into a sinkhole and died. They butchered them in the bottom and left their bones and spear points. These have built up in layers over hundreds of years. Also, last spring a local log cabin company donated and built an incredible log teepee that is worth seeing in itself. You have to walk down into the sinkhole and go inside a building to see the dig site and bones. A few people have posted really negative things on TripAdvisor, but they clearly looked at it from the parking lot without paying the fee and were disappointed by just a hole in the ground--duh! (One person said a mudslide had covered up the dig this past spring, which is impossible since it has been inside a building for several years.)
So if you see a big white teepee on I 90 in Wyoming just west of the South Dakota border, stop at the visitor center and then drive along the road east. Can't miss it.