by Colliemom » Sat Jan 07, 2012 2:12 pm
Ah, Alaska, The Land of the Mdnight Sun, The Last Frontier, the dream of many, from the goldrushers to us modern day travelers.
I have driven some of her roads, seen her wildlife, walked in the wilderness of Denali park, back in away from the crowds at the front of the park, 600 miles in from teh Bering Sea, Marveled at the magnificent Alasaka Range, (unfortunately Denail itself didn't cooperate), saw the steam rising from the volcano's of the Chugach Mountains and felt the bumps of the permafrost under her roads. I've met Alaskans and Native Alaskans, have learned some of their culture and also the fragility and life of the tundra in Denali park.
I've stood on the banks of the Yukon River and thought of the goldminers who sailed it to find their dreams. And I've fallen in love with the Yukon too. Unofortunately time constraints prevented going to some areas, and I am hoping to go back.
But I beg to differ with you Beith, on the fact that gas prices don't matter. They do. Most, not all, RVers are retired these days. They are living on SS and other monies they have saved and scraped together to be able to live their dream. They have a set amount of money a month to spend if they want to live their lifestyle without cutting corners too much and that amount won't change. But everything else is. Gas prices, food costs, medical insurance premiums, vehicle repairs, and on and on. Little by little, you watch that money getting stretched a bit thinner and thinner and most of it is going into the fuel tank to keep traveling this beautiful country. Many who are full timers live a differnt life style from those of us who are recreational RVer's We travel to see the country and don't park in one spot for long. We have too much to see and do and want to keep moving. So off to the gas station we go, for the next number of miles. Many of us who still own stick and bricks and we have our expenses to contend with. besides Property taxes, home and vehicle insurance, cost of food, our health insurance premiums, phone, cable, internet and utitility bills that keep rising. And we have errands we must run to doctors, dentists, stores and yes even work. Some places, up here for instance, an appointment with a specialist in the health field can require a 60 or as much as a 200 mile drive. So we can put miles up pretty easy in a week and back to the gas station.
When I first started with my truck and trailer, gas was cheap. Then the following year it started rising and rising. That's when I found my income staying the same and having to pay out more for gas even to haul off to the campground. And it's the biggest complaint I hear from people here. Can't afford to pull the trailer, drive the motorhome, come up north to visit family members etc. And I can't afford to keep a small second car either, so it's either drive and feed the truck or get rid of it and hang up the keys on the RV for awhile. And I know there are a lot of others out there.
So yes, in my opinion gas prices are a big deal. They impact everything we do, everything we eat etc. But this is getting off the subject of Alaska. For those of you who are making the trek this summer, enjoy, send us updates and pictures etc. The rest of us will sit and dream for awhile and scrape our pennies together, retire or whatever and hopefully make our own trip down that road.
Sue and the Furry Crew