Before Christmas, back in November, I ordered a new awning, and a new emergency exit window. Christmas rolled around and neither item had arrived, so we'll hit the spirit of Christmas first.
As you might see, I've gone to the "Grinch" side of Christmas. The Grinch sign was given to us years ago by our oldest son and his wife, the tree I found at the Ace Hardware. Carol added the Grinch lights to it.
The park does a parade of lights just before Christmas. The parade consists of golf carts, bicycles, and vehicles decked out with holiday spirit; we got a couple of pictures of golf carts when we went to the after parade social.
Christmas came and went, without snow, as usual. Christmas presents began arriving around the 27th, in the form of parts for the new awnings, no word on the window though.
Christmas came and went, without snow, as usual. Christmas presents began arriving around the 27th, in the form of parts for the new awnings, no word on the window though.
Once the parts stared arriving, I inventoried them to ensure everything showed up, then I realized I forgot to order a slightly important part for the awning, the support arms. Fortunately, getting the support arms didn't take long. Poor design of the original awning was the reason we went to a different manufacturer for the new awning.
God works his plan like no human can imagine. Several sites from us is a mobile repair technician, who helped with the installation, more as a guiding hand. I did most of the manual labor, which meant cleaning up the original installation mess before installing the new awning. The installation was simpler than I thought. The portion I needed the tech for involved getting the awning fabric in place.With the awning in place and wired up, it was time to test its operations.
When I ordered the new awning, Carol and I decided that we wanted to add an awning to the slide side windows as well. Fortunately we do not need it in this spot, the sun stays on the south side.
Besides changing out the awnings, we took to experimenting with making jerky at home, nothing too advanced. Carol ordered a jerky extruder, and I went to town making jerky from ground beef.
OK... back to the emergency window. We decide to change it out after we saw a newer Arctic Fox with a window that was vented. As you can see, our current window was solid, and opens out from the bottom in an emergency. The new window will have a vent window at the bottom.
Well the new window finally arrived, after sitting in Dewey, AZ for almost a week. It sat there that long because the delivery route to Congress (40 miles away) only comes out on Thursdays. When I broke open the crate, I was a little surprised, but didn't think much about the window... so I installed it... and did a mighty fine job too.My first thought was that they changed their design for better ventilation; it still opened from the bottom for emergency egress.
With in place, it looked good... then the rain came.
It rained outside... and inside. This was proof that the design was a failure. Needless to say, I contacted the manufacturer regarding the issue. I sent pictures with a description of the problem, apparently that was not enough for the people that made the window... they told me I installed it upside down. With that explanation I sent more pictures, since words were too much for them to understand. (Kind of like don't walk signs that use to be words, but are now pictures).After these photos were sent, the next response from the window maker was... your new window is going into production. Those photos were sent to the "middle man" in late January. The replacement window got to the "middle man" mid-February, for delivery to us by 23 February.
It rained outside... and inside. This was proof that the design was a failure. Needless to say, I contacted the manufacturer regarding the issue. I sent pictures with a description of the problem, apparently that was not enough for the people that made the window... they told me I installed it upside down. With that explanation I sent more pictures, since words were too much for them to understand. (Kind of like don't walk signs that use to be words, but are now pictures).After these photos were sent, the next response from the window maker was... your new window is going into production. Those photos were sent to the "middle man" in late January. The replacement window got to the "middle man" mid-February, for delivery to us by 23 February.
Remember I mentioned rain earlier... well it rained. Wickenburg is located by a seasonal-dry river bed, called Hassayampa River. This picture shows it still flowing, but down from the raging waters it was after the initial rain; the same rain that came in our new window.
This winter has been an interesting one, with temperatures dipping below normal, the rain, and snow. Now, the snow wasn't such an issue, but happened once.
These pellets were not as hard as hail, but were firm, some were fluffy, most were the size of large peas. The hills around us saw most of the snow for a couple of days before the temperatures climbed back to normal.
These pellets were not as hard as hail, but were firm, some were fluffy, most were the size of large peas. The hills around us saw most of the snow for a couple of days before the temperatures climbed back to normal.
Not too much happening before we head out in mid-March. This week there is suppose to be some bad weather with gusty winds. I still need to climb up on the roof and remover the covers from the AC units.
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