After our day at Antietam we jumped on the Mid-Atlantic Backcountry Discovery Route as it crossed the Pennsylvania state line. Our trip south a few weeks earlier through Pennsylvania was one filled with traffic, congestion, and cities, but the BDR took us well off the beaten path and showed us a more rural, relaxed and beautiful side of the state that we enjoyed immensely.
Hey does this site still work? Yes, it’s been pretty quiet around here lately, but that is all about to change. After working every day but one since December it is time to get back on the road and on to new adventures.
We figured since we are here on the right side of the country why not give it a look around? We intended to do that when we moved to Vermont, however, it has ended up that we have only had 5 nights in the camper since last August, where we expected to have many dozens based on the lies we were told about the job we took. That is totally unacceptable and is changing starting today! What was the point of coming here anyway? Not to work 100 hour weeks, that’s for sure. Time is our most valuable asset, we have an unknown but finite amount of it, and we want to use the rest of ours wisely. Goodbye Woodshed, hello open road.
We are headed south out of Vermont on a grand road trip we are calling the East Coast Adventure. Now don’t get me wrong, Vermont is great, but if you aren’t able to get out and about what’s the doggone point? So here we go.
On July 30th we decided to move to Vermont. https://youtu.be/C9lD5yUyAno On August 1st we quit our jobs, and on the 16th we loaded everything in a U-Haul and started the drive across the country. Six days later we arrived in Vermont. We camped our way across country staying in Utah, Wyoming, Iowa, Indiana and New York. As much as you could say that staying in RV parks is camping. We normally don't stay in locations…