June 28, 2009:
I’m
writing this from
Eagle
Creek
Regional
Park
, north-west of Asquith and about an hour’s drive in the motor home from
Saskatoon
. It’s the end of another outing with Sunseekers; all the rest have gone
home but we paid for three nights and, by gar, we’re going to stay for
three nights. We have no Internet here, so I won’t be able to send off
this Report until tomorrow morning when we get back to
Saskatoon
.
Eagle
Creek is a lovely regional park; like many, the surrounding country looks
like flat plains; then you dip down into a valley and find trees and water
and a very well developed park. Individual campsites are huge with lots of
room for slide-outs and awnings and visiting space. There is 30 amp power
at each site plus water, which I’m told is potable. We filled with
Saskatoon
water before we left so didn’t bother hooking up, but it’s there if we
need it.
We had
planned to come out Thursday afternoon, but Friday is garbage pick-up day
and in hot weather it gets ripe pretty quick so we put it out. The cans
hadn’t been emptied yet when we left Friday morning, but I’m sure one
of our neighbours would bring our can up from the street.
Friday
was hot and sunny and we were able to have our Happy Hour and evening
campfire outside. Saturday was cool and very windy, so we settled for
indoor games. We are camped right beside a campground kitchen which our
club built for the park last year. It is a great building, plenty adequate
for a group the size of ours, thirty-odd people. Very well lit and with
big windows with screens.
We
had Happy Hour inside Saturday because of the weather and got an
unexpected bonus – a very pretty girl on a very pretty horse rode up;
somebody opened the screen and the horse stuck its head in through the
window. Picture time! Then they moved a little farther away and posed for
some more pictures. That’s all it takes to make the day for us old
folks.
We are
really getting into campout season. We will get home Monday; then on
Wednesday we leave for Grimson’s at Mozart, where we will spend the
night, then on to Kelliher. That town is celebrating its 100th
birthday next weekend and we are meeting my sister, Cathy, there. That
will mean four days of dry camping so we hope our batteries will hold out.
We were worried about them for awhile, then I got some advice from Jim
Steadman that seemed to solve the problem.
The
following weekend, we have another Sunseekers outing at
Lake
Manitou
Regional
Park
, near Watrous. The weekend after that, we plan to attend the 100th
Anniversary celebration of the Maurice Marquette farm at Perigord, and
while we are that close, will spend at least a couple of days at
Kelvington and Greenwater. We’re not sure if we will take the motor home
to that one.
Towards
the end of July, we plan to go out to Carstairs again to visit Sandy and
Blaine; we will likely take the motor home, and Cathy will take hers.
Shortly after that, likely just long enough to do the laundry, we will be
off to
Manitoba
to visit relatives and see the country, and Cathy will be travelling with
us in her own motor home. We couldn’t wait to get on the road with our
motor home, and now we are moaning that we won’t get a chance to enjoy
our new home in
Saskatoon
in the summertime.