Wednesday, July 10, 2019 – Runaround Day

Since yesterday we had taken labs samples before Hubby’s dialysis which we had to get to FedEx for overnight shipping tonight, we took the day to run around and do some shopping. We bought a few things that we’ve needed for a while and which we’ll really need here, like a new utility cart/wheelbarrow. I’ve been using a canvas bottomed folding wheelbarrow for quite some time, but the canvas wore out once already, and I managed to sew a new one last year, but then it got left out in the rain too long and when I tried to load up a tub of manure to roll it to the manure station here in camp, the material started to split. Pity, but I decided I needed something sturdier. I had been looking at those folding utility carts, both canvas and metal, but when I was in Lowes I found the perfect thing, a totally plastic utility cart on two wheels, only $40. Works perfect, super lightweight, but when I got back, I used it to carry four bags of feed at once with no problem! I also filled it up completely with manure and rolled it up a hill, and it was perfect again! Should have done that a long time ago, but I thought I needed a collapsible one, but when tipped up, this one hardly takes any more room than my folding wheelbarrow, and will fit just fine in the last stall in the back of the trailer. I also managed to find a new water tub, I’ve been looking for weeks but no one has had one (at least, not at a reasonable price) and managed to find a perfect one in Meijers in Lancaster. We also found a great clearance on peach and pear nectar, something that’s really good for Hubby, but really hard to find anyplace but in Publix, which they don’t have in this area. Now we know, though, Meijers has that, too! Filled three tanks of propane at what I was told was the local coop, but I’m not sure they were as inexpensive as I’d been told they were. That’s because they go by weight, not by gallons, and you pay a flat rate for the weight. Since one bottle wasn’t entirely empty, I’m sure it would have been cheaper going someplace that went by gallons, where they are more inclined to try to fit more in. It certainly seems like the bottles are heavier when I get it that way. Anyway, water under the bridge, I’ll stick to Tractor Supply for propane in future. Bought a big bucket of KFC before heading back to camp, and settled down in the screen porch until it got too hot, then headed into the air conditioning. The first night we were here there was a lovely cool breeze coming in Hubby’s window, but tonight there’s no air movement at all, and high humidity. Nothing like the heat in Kentucky, but still enough to be uncomfortable, so we left the AC on, as well as a fan in the bedroom, just to keep things moving. Just another day on the road!

Monday, July 8, 2019 – Travel Day to Hocking Hills Horse Camp

Was up early to start packing before it got too hot, and was happy to see cloudy skies, which helped keep the temperatures down. Spent nearly two hours packing everything away, and this morning, I managed to get Flash loaded in less than a minute, thank goodness! He's getting the hang of it, not hesitating quite so long, and not rushing quite so fast to get up the ramp. He wouldn't go when I was on his on-side, but as soon as I moved over to his off-side, where Hubby usually stands and gives him a quick smack to move him in, he went right up, without even a smack from me! I guess he's finally realizing that breakfast is inside the trailer, so he's a bit more inclined to go in without a fuss. The drive was cross-country, almost due north, on some quite rural and narrow and wind-y roads through Kentucky, but once we got to Ohio we were on some more major roads, and mostly flat. We have heard so much about Hocking Hills, all raves, so we're really looking forward to this place. Remarkably, the campground is free (even the sites with electric, would you believe! At least as long as their grant money keeps coming in...) and the trail map shows a lot of loops, so it should be fun. We're planning on staying two weeks here, so we needed to find a good spot, and we did! Close enough to the water spigot to reach with my hose, so as soon as we parked and I got the horses settled into the highline provided, I pulled out that long hose and filled the RV, then filled the water tank in the back of the truck so I can use it to keep refilling the horses' buckets instead of having to pull the hose out every time. It is so much cooler up here, partly because we're further north, of course, but also because there is so much shade here, yay! I did my set up chores, including getting up the screen room, and before we knew it, we were settled in! There was only one other couple camping two sites away (right across from the water spigot), named Phyllis and Ted, who are apparently regulars here, and we chatted a couple of times during the day. It wasn't long before the evening sailed away and we were ready for bed.

Saturday, July 6, 2019 – Trip to Morehead, Day Off From Dialysis

Sorry to say I woke up at 3:15 a.m. to the sound of a generator outside my window, I ended up having to put earplugs in just to get back to sleep. Grrrr! I try to be patient with people, but really, I don’t understand why someone has to run a generator all night long! I didn’t see any medical reason for it, so I don’t know what the purpose was, but honestly, it really is inconsiderate unless there’s a need to run medical equipment all night. It’s one reason we decided again peritoneal dialysis, because it required a machine to run all night, and we didn’t want to do that to our fellow campers. Oh, well! Hubby decided he wanted to skip dialysis today, he hadn’t gained much weight even though he’d been drinking a bit more due to the heat, but I imagine he’s sweating some of it out anyway. We had to take a trip into the nearest big town, Morehead, to get some propane. It’s been a good week of experimenting, between running the generator for dialysis as well as for air conditioning, and we’ve learned that we use slightly more than a gallon an hour of propane. Thanks goodness we have four tanks! One 20 pound tank takes about 4.7 gallons, and lasts just about 4 hours. We took two tanks into town to fill up at the Tractor Supply, got a few horse feed supplies as well as some groceries before heading back for an afternoon of rest and relaxation. Since we’re not dialyzing today, we won’t need to use too much propane except to cool off the trailer at the end of the day, and we should have plenty for tomorrow. Our next stop has electricity, so we won’t have to worry about it too much there, thank goodness! But these are the things we needed to learn about our new trailer, just how much fuel a propane generator uses is just one of those things! Now we know! We stayed outside as the temps cooled down, only coming in after 9:00. A short evening, heading to bed early, happy to say our neighbors with the generator moved out this afternoon while we were in town, and, in fact, we’re the only one left in camp, so we should have a nice quiet night tonight! Yeah!

Thursday, July 4, 2019 – Company Comes, Bad Dialysis Day

We were surprised when no other campers showed up yesterday, thinking if anyone was getting Independence Day off they’s be heading out here yesterday, so we were half-convinced we’d have the place entirely to ourselves for the rest of the week, but alas, it was not to be so. Several trailers showed up today, parking a few slots out on either side of us, one for one night and the other for an unknown amount of time. One fellow gave me a couple of pesticide-infused bovine ear tags that he said was good for horses, too, and suggested I zip-tie them to my horses’ halters. I have to admit, the flies here are pretty bad, I killed several huge green-headed horse flies on Apollo this morning. I did as he suggested, and it seemed to work pretty well, though of course, I had put fly spray on them as well, so it’s hard to say which worked better, or if it was the combination of them both. In any event, we had a fairly quiet morning, then it came time for dialysis, and we had a lot of trouble today. I had trouble getting the needles in, probably because when they declotted it yesterday it shifted a little, so it took me a while to get that right. Then throughout the session, we kept getting errors, then Hubby started getting really dizzy and light-headed, and we had trouble getting his blood pressure to register on any of the monitors we had, and he even started going blind at one point, which we know is a sign of seriously low blood pressure. I gave him saline several times, but finally, we just decided to stop the session, he just couldn’t take it any more. Once he was off, he finally started feeling better, but not much. We managed to get him out to his chair in the screen room, and once he was able to get his feet higher he started to recover. Scary moment, that one! I think it may be partly due to the heat (it’s in the 90’s), but we’ve been running the a/c off the generator and that’s been doing okay. Once outside, I directed a fan directly on him and he improved, thank goodness. Too darn hot! That’s the one main problem at this campground, we’re surrounded by a forest, but there’s not a single bit of shade in the campground. I’ve found that to be the case in most Kentucky public campgrounds, they just come in and bulldoze everything, not leaving any shade for horse or human. Very poor thinking on the powers-that-be in this state. This will undoubtedly be a great campground in spring or fall, but summer is just incredibly hot when there’s not a lick of shade. My outdoor thermometer has been reading nearly 100 degrees every day, even though the forecast has only been calling for upper 80’s. What a difference some shade would make! Anyway, we finally settled down for a short evening, as it’s already later than usual with all the problems we had today, ready for bed!

Wednesday, July 3, 2019 – Day-long Declot Procedure

Up bright and early after a so-so night sleep, no breakfast since Hubby’s procedure wouldn’t allow him to eat, and I couldn’t very well eat without him. Took care of the horses, feeding and cleaning, making sure the fence was working since I thought it safer for them to stay in the fence area rather than tie them to the highline where they seem to be getting in the habit of getting tangled up together. Flash still hasn’t quite figure it out yet, though I’m sure he will over time. We left around nine, stopped for fuel before getting on the freeway and driving the 60+ miles to the hospital arriving about 15 minutes in advance. Naturally we took Lola with us, and I got her dressed up in her Therapy Dog vest and she instigated smiles everywhere she went. We got Hubby checked in and prepped, then waited for quite some before he was finally taken back for the procedure. Lola and I sent to the resident Starbucks and had a nice salad, then waited for some more time for Hubby to be finished. They had to do a lot this time, evidently, whereas last time they just did a couple of balloons to expand his veins and arteries. This time they actually put a stint in in additional to the angioplasty, so it took a bit longer. Thankfully, they fed him while he was in recovery, so that saved us some time when we left. We finally headed out after 6:00, stopped at Tractor Supply to fill up the propane tanks (we ended up using about a tank and a half for nearly a full day of air-conditioning), a quick stop at Wendys for Frosties, and finally a quick stop at Walmart for just a few essentials like ice cream, beer and peanut butter :-). Arrived back in camp, which was still completely empty except for us, at around 8:00. Being in Eastern time gave us the extra hour to get the horses fed and the paddock cleaned up, then we settled in for the evening. Turns out that if I put my cell phone in the window of the bedroom in the gooseneck, I can actually get a signal good enough to get Netflix and Amazon Prime, so we’ve been enjoying some old classic films of late. Will be in bed early tonight though, since last night wasn’t the best night sleep. Hoping for better tonight!

Tuesday, July 2, 2019 – Hot and Muggy Rest Day, then Fistula Problems

Had a fabulous night sleep last night despite it only going down to 70 degrees with high humidity. Got up and fed the horses just before some heavy thunderstorms came in, clinching my decision not to ride today. Once the rain eventually moved off, I put the portable electric fence up so the horses would have more room to move around, and to get them off what was quickly becoming a quagmire around the highline. By 1:00, we decided to start dialyzing so we could finish early. It became so hot and humid once the sun came out, we were compelled to run the generator in order to use the air-conditioning. We’ve been wanting to experiment anyway, to see just how much propane we use when we’re running the generator, especially when we have a heavy draw like the A/C. Anyway, I started getting Hubby ready for dialysis, but when I first tried to cannulate him (stick him with a needle with a tube so we can connect him to the machine), I got a very poor result. I tried several times, even completely resetting the entire machine up a second time, but everything worked against me, and eventually I realized that his fistula was too blocked up to dialyze him at all, darn it! We had just had his fistula cleaned out in Florida in April, and it was supposed to last at least six months, but I suspect that since Hubby’s blood pressure is typically so low that may be contributing to the problem, but I’m just guessing. Anyway, I spent the rest of the afternoon solving that problem, getting in touch with the nearest Fresenius, who then contacted their resident nephrologist, who arranged for us to go into the St. Joe hospital in Lexington for a fistual declot. Our current clinic got them all the records they needed, and by 4:30, we had an appointment for 11:00 tomorrow morning. Disappointing that this happened, but we expect we’re going to cope with a lot of medical stuff on the road. Kudos to Fresenius, though, for handing this with such efficiency and aplomb, everyone was quite helpful and cheerful in that help, even though it undoubtedly kept them working past their regular hours. We settled down for the evening and went to be early, since we’ll need to get up fairly early tomorrow to drive the 90 minutes or so to Lexington.

Monday, July 1, 2019 – Travel Day to White Sulphur near Morehead, KY

Got up bright and early at what would have been 6:00 central time, started packing right away and managed to get on the road by 8:45 Central time. Of course, we were actually in Eastern time since we left Honey Creek, the time line is literally across the road from the camp. Except for 30 miles on I-75, we were on state and county byways the whole way, fortunately good enough for us, though Bryce at Honey Creek warned me against going east straight out of the camp, he said the gravel road would be a trial for us in our big rig, so we went west first, then cut across to pick up 52, then 27 north. Since it was only 180 miles, and I had topped off the tank last time we were out, we got here with no fuel stopping, or any stopping for that matter, so we arrived at the forest right around 2:00, then a slow 2.5 miles on gravel road to the horse camp had us backing into our spot and settling in around 2:30. No one else was here, not surprisingly, and it doesn't look like this camp gets a lot of activity, so it will be interesting to discover whether we get company on this upcoming 4th of July weekend. There are high-line posts here, so it only took me a few minutes to get my rope up and get the horses out of the trailer. I have to say that Flash was much better today. Though he did hesitate a little getting in, when Hubby came around to his rump side, it only took a tiny slap to get him to get into the trailer this morning, and he went much more quietly than previously, no panic whatsoever, so progress is made! Coming out he was pretty good, too, a lot less frantic, though he still nearly knocked me over. There's quite a bit of grass here, I may just get out the electric fence later and let them graze a bit. Pretty hot here, though, in the upper 80's to low 90's and quite humid, but once I got the screen room up and the fans going, it didn't feel too bad, at least I was able to cool off between jobs. Lola played with her GoDoGo fetching machine for a while, we enjoyed beer and wine, had a BLT for dinner, and fed the horses. Hubby managed to get a few local channels on the TV, but network TV is so pathetic we turned it off after half an hour, then sat outside in our lovely screen room, contemplating the idea of actually sleeping out here tonight. Surprisingly, I do, in fact have a cell phone signal, not a great one, not one good enough for Netflix, but good enough to check my email and hopefully update my blog. Really quiet, though we can occasionally hear traffic on the gravel road that brought us here, but I'm really looking forward to dark nights. One of the things about Honey Creek, since we were right across from the bathhouse, there was a bright light shining in on my side, and another on the other side that came in Hubby's bedroom window, too, but there doesn't seem to be any electric out here at all, so darkness is in store for us! I looked up if the International Space Station would be out tonight, and it is, but not until about 3:30 in the morning, so I'm going to miss it! It goes by again in the 6:00 hour, we'll have to see if I'm up by then, but I'm guessing not. Apollo usually whinnies a breakfast alarm, but usually not until much later, so we should be able to sleep in late tomorrow, fingers crossed! May or may not go riding, depends on how I feel in the morning. We have to dialyze tomorrow afternoon, so I may just rest tomorrow and ride Wednesday, depending on the weather. We'll just have to wait and see! So great to have so many options, including just being lazy! Whoo-hoo!!

Friday, June 28, 2019 – Trip To Cookeville for Comm Unit and Supplies

Got a call late yesterday from our nurse in Tullahoma, saying that she finally received the comm unit that will allow us to be able to use an Ipad with our dialysis machine rather than all those paper reports that I have to do now, so we arranged to meet at 9:00 today in Cookeville to pick it up. While we were there, we went shopping, filled 3 of our 4 propane tanks because we wanted to be sure to have enough energy for next week when we’re going to be in the Daniel Boone National Forest without electricity, had breakfast at IHOP where we met a group of ladies who bred German Short-hair Pointers and who were admiring Lola, who was lying under the table with us. One had just come from the courthouse finalizing her divorce and was rather upset, naturally. In his usual way, Hubby offered words of encouragement, so hopefully she will be inspired to move forward in her life and not dwell too much on the past. It was nearly 1:00 when we got back to camp, and after unloading the groceries, covering up the hay because it was starting to cloud up, and starting Hubby’s dialysis, the afternoon went quickly. We are so tired of watching modern movies where the only resolution seems to be that someone has to die in order to resolve whatever the issue is, I checked out the Amazon Prime library of pre 1969 classics, and found a long list of great old movies, which we started watching. So nice to have movies where Good vs. Evil is clear-cut, the bad guys can be redeemed or otherwise get what they deserve, and it is possible to still have a happy ending. What a relief! It made the afternoon go quickly and enjoyably. I’ve been told there’s no cell phone signal at the next horse camp, so I expect we’ll be doing a lot of reading, which is fine by me. Of course, no cell service means no television, as we left our satellite dish back at the house. Had an enjoyable evening, and looking forward to tomorrow, when, weather permitting, I plan on taking a long ride on Flash.

Thursday, June 27, 2019 – Delivery Day!

Started the day off by cleaning the outside of the trailer. Got the pressure washer out of the attic and washed the inside of the horse trailer in anticipation of our supply delivery today, then gave the outside a much needed bath. Had several more phone conversations in preparation for NEXT month’s clinic and delivery before finally settling down for lunch. Not surprisingly, just as I was getting ready to eat, the delivery man arrived, so I had to put my sandwich back down and get the trailer loaded up with Hubby’s supplies. Finally, I was able to get back to my sandwich and settle down for the afternoon. I put Flash in one of the corrals behind us, the only one that isn’t totally muddy, and put Apollo on his anchor line, with just enough length to get him to his highline where I hung his hay, and short enough to keep him out of trouble and away from Flash’s hay and the feed at the back of the horse trailer. Oddly, he would come out and eat some grass, then eat some hay, then go back into one of the stalls for a while. Crazy horse! Door’s open, so he’s coming and going as he pleases. Finally settled down in the late afternoon, doing a few odds and ends, feeling like we had a very productive day. Even though I worked quite a bit today, though pacing myself between jobs, it still felt I wasn’t working anywhere near as hard as when we were at home, which was quite luxurious! Not having to dialyze today was also a great break, we’re really enjoying this new four day a week schedule!

Tuesday, June 25, 2019 – Cleaned The Home

Spent the day cleaning the inside of the trailer, a long overdue exercise, neglected because I had been spending all my time cleaning and clearing the house for the last two months! I also spent quite a while on the phone with the dialysis folks, we seem to be having a problem communicating the correct address to where Hubby’s supplies are supposed to be delivered on Thursday, even though I contacted them a month ago with the address, and again last week, and again yesterday, and again this morning, but they still plan on sending it to the house address instead of the horse camp address. Grrr! It’s the one problem we’re having to deal with doing dialysis on the road, everything else has been going fairly smoothly between clinics, but the delivery situation is a real problem that we need to solve. Anyway, after cleaning about half the trailer, and getting so disgusted with hair falling in my face, I forced Hubby to get out a pair of scissors and a comb and cut my hair. With the extra help of my fingers, he managed to cut it into a rather nice short haircut, despite his protests that he was worried he’s screw it up. In the end, it looked as good as any hairdresser, and a darn sight less expensive! Oddly, my hair, which has been straight my whole life whether it was short or long, is suddenly going curly, especially when it’s short. Perfect hel-hat hair! It was great to finish the cleaning without hair falling in my face every minute! Finally settled down for the evening, a productive day indeed!