We continued to have a good weather streak for our rally. Cool temperatures overnight made for great sleeping and the brisk morning air made the coffee taste especially good at 7:30 AM. The breakfasts are simple, help yourself, affairs with enough variety that everyone can find something they like while no one is burdened with fancy preparation. A toaster and bagels ensure that a warm breakfast choice is available.
As soon as we left the coach to get coffee, a distance of 40 feet from where we are parked next to the pavilion, we realized that two additional buses had arrived since we turned in last night. Carl and Cara Muntean’s MCI MC-8 was parked alongside the other building, and behind the building we could just see the nose of a late model Prevost H3.
The Prevost turned out to be the 2007 H3-45 executive coach that belonged to Coach Quarters from the Columbus, Ohio area. Mike Middaugh had the coach in the Detroit area representing Prevost and NASCAR at the Woodward Dream Cruise, and came on up to our rally when he was done with that work. Mike is a member of GLCC and CCO.
This particular H3-45 is a Marathon conversion with an interesting history. It was in a bad accident and was further damaged while being towed under a low overpass. It was considered a total loss, and Coach Quarters acquired it. Mike, however, has been in the converted coach business for a really long time and knew how to get it repaired and back in service.
The final result was a very nice executive coach that Coach Quarters rents out for day use by up to 14 people who need to conduct business while being driven somewhere. The coach is used to represent Prevost at events, including the Woodward Dream Cruise. For example, Prevost is the official motorcoach of NASCAR. The most famous use of this coach, however, was as John McCain’s presidential campaign bus.
Mike positioned the coach by the pavilion and opened it up for rally participants to see, including the interior, the engine compartment, and all of the bays.
Late morning I drove Linda back to our house as she had agreed to babysit our 8-month old granddaughter this evening. I contacted our driveway contractor to see if he’d had a chance to come look at our problem. He had been there, and had already formulated a game plan for fixing it that involved some additional material with finer particles to help lock the gravel in place followed by compaction by some heavy roller. Due to current commitments it will take a week or so for him to get back to the house with material and equipment. I drove back to the rally site and arrived around 2 PM.
Don tracked me down to see if I was still interested in going to see Bill’s bus barn. I was, and so were three other folks plus Don. He arranged with Bill for us to head over. Bill’s barn has doors on both ends, and a concrete floor with a pit. The pit is not full length, but more than adequate to work on the underside of one end of a bus at a time. It’s a “pole barn”, but the main poles that support the 12 foot ceiling are set in from either side, with lower sections on either side for storage. I’ve looked at enough bus barns at this point to see that a concrete floor with a maintenance pit is probably a necessity. It would also be nice for it to have an 18 foot ceiling so I can work on the roof, and be long enough for a 45 foot coach with a car attached behind it. A pull-through design with access roads on either end would also be nice, but not necessary. What I don’t think we need is the extra square footage for storing as much stuff as the barns I have seen.
From 4:00 – 5:30 PM was the official “open house”, although most of us had already seen each others’ coaches earlier in the rally. Dinner was pot luck, with grilled chicken provided as part of the rally fee, and there were lots of good things to choose from.
Immediately following the meeting GLCC president Larry Baker held a brief information meeting. Pat Lintner, the chapters National Director, also spoke and gave a brief update on the national convention that was held in Gillette, Wyoming in June and the upcoming GLAMARAMA rally scheduled for mid-September in Goshen, Indiana.
As soon as the GLCC meeting was done most of us moved our chairs over to Mark Reid’s coach for a CCO business meeting. There was discussion of the upcoming Halloween rally in mid-October, and further discussion about rallies in general.
All of the RV groups/chapters we belong to are facing the same challenge of getting members to host and attend rallies. No doubt the two things are related and determined in part by peoples’ personal financial circumstances and their general feelings about the economy. This seems to be a particular problem for groups that are formed around common interests, such as converted buses, rather than a limited geographic area, although even geographic groups are struggling. Several of us continued to discuss this informally after the meeting, but no one seemed to have a full grasp of the problem or any really good ideas as to what to do about it.
As with every other evening of this rally, the temperature cooled off quickly after the sun went down. Someone had a “Chinese lantern”. They lit the firepot and turned it loose. The flag at the rally site indicated no wind, but as soon as they turned the lantern loose it took off to the west. It rose to quite an altitude and we estimated that it was moving west at 20 – 30 MPH when we finally lost sight of it. Most folks turned in for the night after that except for a small group that stayed up and talked until sometime after midnight.
I think it’s John McCain. The editor in me…
Thanks Wendy. Linda also caught that and I thought I had fixed it. Apparently not. 🙁
Very nice article plus thanks for the pic of our coach!
see you next year,, we’re still not sure about Halloween rally as my older daughters expect us at their volley ball game on Sat
Carl & Cara
Thanks Carl. I did an article on the BTTB rally for BCM. I think they are going to run it in the Oct issue. We won’t make the CCO Halloween rally either; RV photo workshop/rally near Smoky Mountain N.P. same time.