Travels in a Teardrop Trailer – Day 3 (cont.)
Sis and I spend the morning unloading the wet tent, soggy chairs, and bicycles from the back of the Subaru and setting everything up to dry inside Bro’s garage. Our plan is to have Bro help us load the bikes on the top of the teardrop when he gets home, so we can take advantage of those bike trails at the campsite. Except it is still raining.
Bro planned to leave work early for a daylight departure on our two-trailer trek to Ft. Stevens State Park. Somehow that did not work out. He arrives at 6PM, we finish loading the trailers, truck, and SUV by about 7. It is still raining. The forecast is for more rain. We decide to opt out of biking after all. The bikes stay in the garage. Everything else fits so easily now! Off we go in the rain, following Bro’s Titanic. We arrive at the campground at about 8:30. The rain continues. It is pitch dark. Deja vu all over again.
But this time we have some better options! To start with, Ft. Stevens State Park’s trailer sites are all pull-through. No struggles to park! True, by the time we arrive and get set up it is too late and too wet for us to have the planned hamburgers grilled in the outdoor kitchen of the Titanic. But in our pop-up kitchen I happen to have all the ingredients for a one-skillet hamburger/noodle casserole which I had planned to offer on our return trip home. C fires up the inside kitchen of the Titanic, and in 30 minutes we are cozily sitting around the table in the Titanic’s dining area, wolfing down the casserole with the help of a nice bottle of zinfandel from the Titanic‘s wine cupboard.
[You can see from the state of the page how often this recipe has been used. You don’t need a “thermostatically controlled burner”. Enjoy!]
After dinner and dishes we are not ready to call it a night. Sis pulls out a game gadget which she brought along just in case. It’s called “Catchphrase” and is a combination of charades and trivia, driven by a little electronic gadget that one must toss from one team to the next between rounds. We were in hysterics by the end of the game (how does one act out “Ozzy Ozbourne?”)
Finally we decide it is time to retire to our traveling bedroom next door. It’s just a few yards to our trailer, and the rain seems not so heavy with a full stomach and recent laughter. And so to bed.
Coming up in Day 4: Ft. Stevens by daylight, an old friend, a Hidden Gem, and (believe it or not) sunshine!

Dry shoes for Sis, a couple of chocolate bars, working lighters for the stove, and a hot lunch in our stomachs – what could be finer than driving up I-5 as the sky clears and the sun shines on us. Our operating rule is that the driver minds the road while the person riding shotgun manages the heater/AC and the sound track. I’m driving so we are listening to Sis’s playlist of Scottish reels, blue grass, and Nova Scotian folk music. Not my favorite but she put up with my Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson, Joan Baez, and other 60’s relics for the previous day. Won’t hurt me to listen to something different.
The Douglas County Museum is at the far end of the
We get dressed in the confines of the tiny trailer. It’s not easy to pull on trousers without being able to stand up , but we manage it. Our water-resistant jackets are about dry after a night of hanging inside, and our moods improve as we plan on quickly making a hot breakfast on the two-burner stove in the pop-up kitchen in the back of the trailer. Sis fills the water carrier. All we need to do is boil water, and we’ll have coffee and instant oatmeal with fruit and brown sugar mixed in. So much easier than camping with a propane stove – nothing to set up, nothing to connect, just a quick flick of the lighter and….

In the morning, in daylight, we can see that the un-protected section of the tent roof is quite obviously not rain-proof. However, the bottom of the tent is water-proof, and Sis’s shoes are sitting soggily in a considerable puddle that has collected inside the tent.