Lowden State Park In the Rialta

IMG_1640  Jenn and I had been talking about it for awhile and finally did it; we bought an RV.  We had been looking at conversion vans like a Roadtrek but found them rather expensive.  In our searches we came across the Rialta, which is a tiny Winnebago.  We got a ‘98 RD, so it has four chairs up front and a dinette in back.  It can seat 8 with seat belts.  It has an expandable bathroom with a toilet, sink and shower.  There is a 2 burner stove and a small refrigerator.  The dinette folds down into a double bed and 2 of the seats up front fold into a smaller than double bed.  For an RV, it has rather small waste tanks- a 13 gallon black tank and a 6 gallon grey tank (the shower drains to the black tank).  It can hold 20 gallons of fresh water.  I’ve done a bit of work to it, and I’m afraid I failed in my pre-purchase examinations; finding many water leaks (a week after purchase) during a storm.  I’ve started trying to find and repair them but so far they aren’t going away.

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This weekend, Walnut and I took the Rialta on it’s maiden (camping) voyage! (I drove it back home from Connecticut, about 800 miles)  We went to Lowden State park, near Oregon, Illinois.  We stayed in the White Oak campgrounds.  It was lovely.  Though the ground was a bit soft from recent rains, Walnut and I did a few miles of trail from our site to the Black Hawk Statue.  The statue is about 50 feet tall and it’s supposed to be one of the tallest monolothic statues in the world.  It was a feat of engineering at the time to create it.  They are doing repairs to it so we didn’t actually get to look at it….

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The main camping area was pretty full and had rather little space between sites.  We opted for the more private area with no hook-ups.  There are facilities here but part of the point of this adventure was to use the RV’s facilities so I get the practice in preparation for next weekend’s trip to Michigan where we hope to meet other Rialta owners from around the country.  I’m not sure if we will head home today or move to another park.

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Shabbona State Park in Illinois

  We decided to head to another park.  While at Lowden we met a lady that refurbished a ‘73 VW campervan.  It looked pretty snazzy.  I guess it doesn’t handle interstate speeds real well so she has been keeping to the highways and side roads.  She felt she was seeing the ‘real’ Illinois that way.  It convinced me to take one of those highways down to another park and see some of it, too.  I think I didn’t take a particularly scenic route, though and we saw mostly corn.  We took it slow, and that made it a more relaxing drive than the one out to Lowden.

  Even though we got into Shabbona around 3, we couldn’t find the camp host to register a site until almost 5 so we got set up kinda late.  We went for a hike that would have been a 5+ mile loop but since we got started late and I forgot the Walnut bag, we turned around at 1.8 miles.  (the Walnut bag in this context is our orange Kelty hiking pack that I put Walnut in when he gets too tired to keep hiking)

  Shabbona is nice enough, but the rate for a site on Sunday night kinda turned me off (we do have electricity tonight though).  The sites where I am, Teal Bay, feel fairly private.  Of course, the whole place feels that way tonight.  I think there are 6 other sites in use out of 60.  I’m gonna go see if I scrounged enough dry wood to make smores.