The mission was to visit Uncle Alex in Tennessee. The mission behind the mission was to find out what it’s like to travel in a camper.
The Wise Woman wanted to know. She’s been window shopping since we moved from La Casita, which began as a home away from home. She’s the enthusiast. I’ve been the foot-dragger. When we went to Tennessee, we rented a camper built on the chassis of a big pickup truck.
In many ways, the maiden voyage was a disaster. It took longer for greenhorns to load than you’d imagine. We forgot things — like phone chargers — and had to find a store. We hit Chattanooga at rush hour and spent almost two hours getting through town.
A big storm that the forecasters had been talking about hit as we were going through the mountains. It was dark when he reached David Crockett State Park and raining so hard we were reading signs by lightning flashes. It took a long time to find our campsite. We hooked up water and electrical connections in a gale.
We didn’t get off to a great start. But when we got up the next morning, we spent a while listening to birdsong and talking about the coyotes we’d heard in the night. Wild canines sometimes celebrate the end of storms with song.
We spent a couple of nights on the Cumberland Plateau and felt a connection to the place we wouldn’t have felt it we’d stayed at a hotel off the highway.
The jury’s out. But given enough time, I usually begin to see what my wife is talking about.