We were tired of listening to the air-conditioning last night but it was warm in the bedroom so I turned on the third A-C to cool it down before we went to bed. Before turning in for the night I turned the fan to a slower speed and tried adjusting the thermostat, as it had gotten rather chilly, but must have set it too high. It was a little warmer than we wanted and the unit does not remove moisture unless the compressor is running. When combined with the noise of the fan it just did not make for a good night’s sleep.
Jasper (our male cat) was aware that I was awake at 4:30 AM and came up between our pillows to look out the window and get stroked. I tried to fall back asleep without success and finally got up at 5 AM. I turned on some dim lights and sat in the living room working on yesterday’s blog post for an hour until Linda also got up. She rearranged the kitchen so she could make vegan cinnamon rolls and I brewed a pot of coffee.
The cinnamon rolls took quite a while to make as the dough had to rise, get punched down and rolled out, “buttered” and spread with cinnamon and sugar, rolled up, cut, and allowed to rise a second time, topped with raisins and walnuts, and then baked. After baking they had to cool and then got drizzled with a glaze made from confectioner’s sugar and unsweetened vanilla flavored almond milk. A lot of work, but worth it.
We turned on our Verizon Mi-Fi and used Linda’s iPad to initiate a FaceTime session with our family members who were gathered at Meghan and Chris’ house. Katie was not there yet so this was just a “good morning” call. I brewed a second pot of coffee and we finally had our cinnamon rolls around 10 AM. Brendan initiated a Facetime session with us around 11 AM and we got to see Madeline open some of her presents. She just turned three years old and it was all very exciting for her. The armoire her aunt Meghan built was full of dress up clothes, some new (from us) and some hand-me-down from when Meghan was a little girl. She wanted to try on every costume, of course, so we watched for a while and then wished everyone “Merry Christmas” and signed off.
We had not opened our gifts yet so we did that next. Santa brought us chocolate covered pistachios (vegan, of course) and dark chocolate bars and left them in our stockings, which Linda had hung from the two light fixtures on each end of the sofa after we got to WCRVR. We had a box from Meghan and Chris that contained a pair of nice hiking socks and an insect repellent neck warmer for each of us. The REI box that was left on our entry step-stool Christmas Eve was from Brendan, Shawna, and Madeline. We each got a pair of hiking socks and a Columbia zip front polar fleece vest. Our children have done very well getting us gifts that we can wear, eat, or drink.
I had not planned on working today but the motorcoach had other ideas. I needed to investigate the drip that had developed yesterday from the air intake of the middle air-conditioner. Since I had to get tools out to do that I decided to also fix a couple of other things.
The gasket on the aft vertical edge of the awning style window in the entry door had come out again at the top and was preventing the window from closing properly. It was a simple enough matter to work the channels on either edge back around the metal edges of the window frame with a small flat blade screwdriver but I had to get the three-step folding stool out of the front bay and use it to position myself where I could do the work.
One of the end pieces that retains the spring-loaded toilet paper holder has been loose for a while. I thought I needed a small Allen wrench to tighten it but a small flat blade screwdriver turned out to be the correct tool.
With those two tasks taken care of I got my small drill and a #2 square bit and removed the air intake filter for the middle A-C from the underside of the upper cabinet. I also removed the louvered air discharge cover from the front of the cabinet. Not being sure what I was dealing with I emptied the right and middle cabinets so I could remove the floor from the middle section and slide the floor from the right section to the left and remove the right end wall, allowing me access to the evaporator from the side.
My working hypothesis was that the drain from the drip pan was plugged and the pan had overflowed. To test my hypothesis I located the drain line at the front outside corner of the house electrical bay where it goes through the bay floor, and had Linda watch it while I poured water into the drip pan at the front edge by the cooling coils. The water flowed right out of the drain onto the ground so either that was not the problem or pouring the water into the drip pan had cleared the obstruction. I was not able to see into the drip pan so I could not confirm visually what was happening.
I put the louvered air discharge cover back on the cabinet, reassembled the inside of the cabinet, and put the food items back. I left the air intake filter off, however, so that I might see where the drip was coming from if it reoccurred. I arranged paper towels on the desk top under the unit and turned it on. I put the tools away, except for the drill and square bit, and then settled in to work at my computer with all three A-Cs running while Linda went for a walk.
It did not get quite as hot today as originally forecast, reaching 83 degrees instead of 86. The humidity was in the low 60% range, so the conditions were tolerable when the sun was obscured by clouds. Direct sunlight heats the coach up beyond the outside ambient air temperature, however, especially if we get the afternoon sun on the front of the bus. Linda was hot and sweaty by the time she finished her walk.
I worked all afternoon on blog posts. I edited the ones for September 9 through 18 and uploaded the 9th through the 14th before dinner.
For our holiday dinner meal Linda prepared a baked Gardein stuffed mock turkey roll, vegan gravy, baked sweet potatoes, steamed broccoli, Mama Stanberg’s Cranberry Relish, and bread with non-dairy “butter.” We do not feel left out at the holidays, foodwise. With the heat from the convection oven we decided to turn off the A-Cs, open the windows and roof vents, and turn all three exhaust fans on high. We ate at 5 PM. The Friday night campfire did not officially start until 7 PM so I had time to finish uploading the blog posts for September 15 to 18.
A little before 6:30 PM Linda filled our flip top insulated coffee cups with red and white wine and we took them in our carry bag, along with our plastic wine glasses, to the fire pit. John was there and had a nice, small fire going. Jim and Carol showed up and then Tom and Cindy. Tom and Cindy did not stay long and after they left one of John’s neighbors came over. He and his wife lived on a 44 foot fishing trawler that was converted into a full-time residence and plied the waters of the Atlantic, Bahamas, and Caribbean for 10 years. Ali was not feeling well and stayed home. Jim and Carol were from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, where they still have a house, and were both retired educators. Jim taught high school biology and Carol was an elementary teacher.
At 10 PM John took his golf cart to make his rounds and lock up. We had a nice small fire going and stuck around to chat with Jim and Carol. John eventually returned and rejoined the conversation. It was almost 11 PM when I spread out the remnants of the fire and we walked back to our rig. We had apple strudel with Coconut Bliss non-dairy ice cream for dessert, watched a couple of travel programs on the Create channel, and finally went to bed at midnight after a long but satisfying Christmas day.