Let
me begin by telling you who about Gertrude. She is a 36’ Georgie Boy Cruise Air
Motorhome. Every rig needs a name, and Gertrude is hers. Why THAT name you ask?
Well, I’ll tell you. Years ago when my daughter was born my mother-in-law
decided an appropriate nickname for said child was either Gertrude or Agnes.
Neither are in any way a part of her name, nor are they family names. This
tended to drive me crazy, but what’s a mother-in-law without a little bit of
crazy mixed in. Ha!
We
acquired Gertrude on Sunday, 4 May 2014 in Galveston, TX. She was born in 1999
and has had two foster families before us. She’s a strong woman with a v-10 gas
powered heart. She’s modestly decorated (I’m sure that’ll change soon enough)
with all kinds of bells and whistles (that we’re still discovering). She has a
few minor issues that we need to work on, but nothing requiring major surgery.
While
I’m at it, let me intrude Gertrude’s traveling companions. First there is Kyle,
my husband. He’s a 40something guy from small town Texas. He went to school in
Central Texas and graduated from Texas A&M University-College Station in
1995. Whoop!! Gig ‘em, Ags! He works in telecommunications. He enjoys being
outside and traveling, namely hunting and hiking, or just relaxing with a cold
beverage. I’m Dorsey, an ALMOST 40something gal from Texas also. I grew up
around Bryan-College Station and Victoria, TX. I’m a homemaker and currently
spend a lot of my time volunteering with a JROTC group in Wylie, TX. Kyle and I
got together in 1994. Over the next few years, we had two kiddos, Joshua and
Hannah. Joshua is currently in the U.S. Navy and stationed in Jacksonville, FL.
Hannah is still in high school and is set to graduate June 2015 and go onto
college. She wants to be a teacher/college professor eventually. Our
four-legged traveling mate is Daisy Mae. She is a Chihuahua that was born in
January of 2001.
Her
maiden voyage as a member of the Bell family was taken on 8 May 2014 to Yegua
Creek Park on Lake Somerville in Somerville, TX. The night before making camp
at Somerville, we slept here with her parked in my uncle’s yard (he kept
Gertrude for us until Mother’s Day weekend). We weren’t hooked up to any power
or water for the first night. It was a little muggy, but we survived. The
morning of the 8th, I needed to take Daisy out for her morning
constitutional. There are a lot of sticker-burs in my uncle’s yard and I
couldn’t recall where I’d taken off my shoes the night before. So I just
lowered Daisy (clad in her harness) onto the grass and I took a seat on the
steps. Sitting there, I realized there was a growing need to free myself from
some gas build-up. So I leaned a bit to the left and let ‘er rip. Within a
matter of seconds I hear a loud *BEEP! BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!* Kyle comes from the
back bedroom wondering what I’ve done (“Woman, what did you DO?!?!”). I told
him, “I don’t know!?!?” Then we realized, I’d set off the Gas Leak Detector
located to the right of the steps. We both laughed and shrugged “Well, at least
we know it works.” I guess it detects carbon monoxide, propane, AND methane. Ha!!
The
grand plan with Gertrude is that when my daughter graduates from high school
she is moving into an apartment with roommates. The husband and I are going to
sell our sticks & bricks house and move into the motorhome full-time. Over
the next 13 months will be spent preparing the house for sale and paring down
our belongings to be able to fit into Gertrude. I, honestly, am looking forward
to not having 3000 sq. ft. worth of stuff to keep up with/keep clean. There are
NO plans to have a storage unit at all, if it won’t fit or one of the kids
don’t want it (or can keep it) then it goes to someone else’s home.
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