Thursday, October 2, 2014

Alamo State Parks sets aside campsites for long stays

Alamo Lake State Park has designated some campsites for Long Term Camping from now through March 31, 2015. Guests who wish to take advantage of stays of longer than two weeks are required to pay in full for the first two weeks of their stay along with the $5 reservation fee. The minimum length of stay for a long-term site is 28 nights (4 weeks). The maximum length of stay is 84 nights (12 weeks).

Nestled in the Bill Williams River Valley away from the hustle and bustle of everyday life, the park is one of the best places to fish for bass in Arizona. The lake is surrounded by mountainous terrain speckled with brush, wildflowers and cacti making for a visually pleasing experience. The park has excellent wildlife viewing opportunities, and you may spot a bald or golden eagle.

For nature lovers, spring rains bring an abundance of wild flowers and the lake environment attracts a variety of wildlife year round, including waterfowl, foxes, coyotes, mule deer and wild burros. Stargazers enjoy the amazing views of the night sky with the nearest city lights some 40 miles away!

To reserve a long-term campsite, please call the Reservation Center at (520) 586-2283.


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Thursday, August 28, 2014

Water is getting scarce: Build yourself a rainwater collector

Planning on doing a little desert boondocking this winter? Or are you RVing in one of the major drought areas and are having trouble finding a free source of water? It could get worse if the drought continues.

Read how Dave Ulmer built a rainwater collector for his motorhome, a system that he says can produce 100 gallons an hour during a good rainstorm. And all it takes is some simple fittings that you can find in the average hardware store.

Watch the short 68-second video to see how he did it.

Monday, June 9, 2014

Arizona snowbird takes home corpse

Vendors love Arizona snowbirds. They buy all sorts of treasures to take back home with them at the end of the season. But a Michigan man who snowbirds the Grand Canyon State may have the record for the strangest thing taken home: A corpse.

Ray Tomlinson, a 62-year-old man from Clinton Township, made an acquaintance with a 31-year-old homeless woman from New Jersey. Tomlinson helped the woman out, and saw a lot of her. When winter rolled around, Tomlinson and his mother headed to Arizona, the girl friend to Florida. This spring, as the weather changed, the two contacted each other. She came out to Arizona, and checked herself into a hospital in Tempe.

The first of June, Tomlinson and his mother were ready to head back to Michigan, and the so-far unidentified woman checked herself out of the hospital and joined Tomlinson and his mother in his mini-van for the trip back to Michigan. It was somewhere in Texas that Ray Tomlinson said he noticed a problem: His friend was slumped over in the seat, and cool to the touch. Authorities think she may have overdosed on prescription pain medications she'd taken at a stop in Flagstaff.

What do you do when you find your girlfriend has passed away and you're in a strange state? Go for help where everyone goes these days: To the Internet! Tomlinson used his smart phone to search the web and found information that lead him to believe he had 48 hours to get his friend to a medical examiner or to a morgue. In a combination of what Tomlinson calls, 'Because I care so much,' and concern that his rig might be impounded, he made the decision to drive on to Michigan.

Before Tomlinson, his mother, and their deceased passenger could make it to Michigan, authorities were already on to the situation. The hospital where the girl friend had been checked in, called on her cell phone to check up on her. Tomlinson answered the call, explained what had happened, and told the probably weirded-out staffer that he had no intention of taking their advice to stop, and kept on driving. By the time the group had hit Illinois, police were calling Tomlinson, asking him to stop. The group continued on clear to Tomlinson's home, whereupon authorities found the body of Ray Tomlinson's girl friend had already started to decompose.

Authorities say they don't have any intention to charge Ray Tomlinson in the case. They don't feel there's enough evidence to charge him with a crime.