When we were preparing to pull out of Grand Canyon National Park on Sunday morning, we had some trouble with getting the bedroom slide to come in. Craig tried pushing it
in from outside, but that didn’t help much. We had the engine on fast idle to
provide more voltage to the slide motors, but then turned it off. Craig kept
trying the “in” switch lots of times, and was about to give up when one
activation made the slide twitch a bit inward, the next made it come in a
little more, and the next depression of the switch brought the slide all the
way in. We were thankful that we didn’t have to get a mobile fix-it man into
the Park to fix a balky slide.
But this was the second time
this slide had problems coming in, and it was definitely time to do something
about it. We were headed toward Nevada, so we looked up “Las Vegas” on the Alfa
repair forums. This yielded only references to “Johnnie Walker”. No, they
weren’t about drowning your repair worries in Scotch, there is a company called
“Johnnie Walker RV” in Las Vegas.
We drove to Las Vegas and boondocked
at a nearby Walmart. It seemed a
reasonable idea after cuddling through a bunch of cold GC mornings, but the
Vegas heat quickly got to us. It was
about 95° Sunday
afternoon, and Walmart hasn’t gotten around to providing hookups so we could
run our AC. Going to an RV park was mentioned, but lethargy had set in. We
opened all the windows and enjoyed a few breezes along with the sound of the
many 50 MPH vehicles on the road that was 20 feet away.
But we like to think of
ourselves as tough, like when Merikay said at about 4 AM “I don’t know when
I’ve slept so well!”. We were up bright
and early and pulled into JWRV at 7:30, which put us second in line for
service.
They got right to work and
had our problem solved by 9:30. The switch was bad. If you ever have an RV problem in or near Las
Vegas, look up Johnnie Walker’s RV. Their price was reasonable and the fact
that they fit us in so quickly was very nice.
While we were on our last
trip to Death Valley in January, Cyndi sent us an email suggesting we make
our way up to Valley of Fire State Park, north of Las Vegas. Unfortunately,
our reservations conflicted with getting there at the same time she and her
husband were there, but we put it on our “someday” list as a place we wanted to
go.
Thank you Cyndi. We spent two
days there, and were delighted by the unusual rock formations. You would think that after almost a week at
the Grand Canyon we might be tired of looking at rocks, but each park has its
own specialness.
Here is a sample of the
sights in the Valley of Fire Nevada State park.
Our RV spot was $30 per night
with water and power hookups. A dump station is available. Sites
were first come first serve, no reservations, cash or check only. There were only a few sites with hook ups, so early arrival is recommended.