Greetings from the farmlands and RV Manufacturing capitol of the US! We are camped at the lovely Monaco/Holiday Rambler customer service campground! It has hookups! They come pick up your coach from you at 6:30 am and work on it, then bring it back around 2:30. Meanwhile, you can have a factory tour, go sightseeing, or wait in the very nice customer lounge. I think some of these retired people just like hanging out here and have things fixed one lightbulb at a time. Harold is thrilled because the technician said our coach "drives like sh-t." Finally someone said it isn't just him and they can fix it. This is well worth cutting the east coast part of our trip two days short.
Meanwhile, we have seen alot of Mennonite and Amish homes. Beautiful farmhouses and great barns. When I grow up, I definitely want to have a barn.
What exactly do you want to put IN the barn (when you grow up?)
Posted by: Heidi Thompson | July 26, 2006 at 10:49 PM
Mom, I just looked at the new photo albums that you published. The New England photos were gorgeous!
Posted by: Heidi Thompson | July 26, 2006 at 10:59 PM
Your asking mom what you put in a barn? Come on Heidi, mom can find anything to put anywhere... AND in a barn? think of the possibilities~ sewing crap, baby and cat stuff she gets for free off 'the list', shoes in every shade of purple, diaper cakes, dad's automobiles, dad... wow, life with a barn! exciting!
Posted by: liz and andres | July 27, 2006 at 10:09 AM
Yeah, you see my point. And the barns come in so many differant shapes and sizes. I think the ones that look like they are falling down are the most interesting. Probably not the most practical.
Posted by: Terri Nicks | July 27, 2006 at 05:22 PM
We should have taken the fire hydrant from that guy and then you could put that in the barn. Every barn needs a fire hydrant!
Posted by: Michelle Kelley | July 28, 2006 at 10:37 AM
Are you still in Indiana? Wow! That's a LONG time!
Posted by: Heidi Thompson | July 30, 2006 at 08:05 AM