by OregonMs » Mon May 10, 2010 10:27 am
I have a 29' Bigfoot, class C and I tow a Jeep Wrangler. My traveling companion is a Golden Retriever named Lily.
My stick house is on the McKenzie River outside of Eugene, Oregon. I have a husband who is and has always been completely absorbed in his vocation and we have two twenty-something kids. My name is Karen. My aunt has always described me as having "itchy feet". I love to travel and explore, I love nature. Anyway, when family happened and tents and backpacks became impractical, when my spouse was always at work I made the decision that I could be home alone feeding and watering and nurturing or I could be where I wanted to be (camping) alone feeding and watering and nurturing. That's when I got my first truck camper, a used Alaskan camper (the crank up kind) and things gradually got bigger from there over the years. The kids grew up having had visited all 50 states before they flew the coop. Interested in the Oregon Trail? Lets follow it. Interested in the Civil War? Let's go to Gettysburg. We hit tons of National Parks. For a while we lived in rural Northern Maine, when school got out I told my husband we were going camping, he said where, I said Oregon. It was like that. It all worked out. I'm independent (so is he) and I was that way before he married me, he knew that. I'm fortunate to have found a man like that. On the other hand he's fortunate to have found an independent woman who can fend for herself because I've made a life of it.
The kids are now in North Carolina and Florida, my husband has a job where he's required to be there a week or more at a time every other week. The solution for that was an RV for him but I would not share mine so we bought him a truck camper. We are a two RV family. Disgusting. Ha! Mine's clean, his is his, enough said.
I just came back from a six week trip I'm taking another in June. What I love about living in Oregon is that I can grab my purse and my dog and jump into my rig and be somewhere exquisite within an hour or two. I do that a lot. I also jump into my jeep and hit the woods daily around here and like I said, I live on the river.
I'm not a club person and I'm not home all that much and I live in the country and travel alone most of the time. It's hard to make friends that way. Now that the kids are gone I realize that I have to be more proactive, maybe that's what brought me here.
I've tried to post pictures here but so far without success, I'll try again.
I feel like I've given you way more than you asked for, but truly, I'd like to make some friends and meet some like minded women. I'm hoping to meet some here..