“An everlasting itch for things remote” – Moby Dick
This Pasadena night, nearly forty degrees, is too much magnetic. Like a dyslexic bird who knows it’s time to fly somewhere but can’t quite get the direction right, I can’t remember feeling more drawn to a location for pleasure. Strange that Rome, Naples, Barcelona never drew me like the cold dark place I am headed. I suppose birds who go this way in winter never deposit their genes into offspring. They are like old soldiers who never die; they just fade away. Was that MacArthur?
I put winter tires on the Jeep. |
I’ve been waiting five months to be where I’m going. I feel ready for the far-fetched goal of reaching Fairbanks by car in mid-winter. I have never driven so far in so cold, but I have read books. I know what to expect.
What is it that confers upon us our greatest delight? To me it’s discovery. To know that I am walking where no others have walked, beholding what human eye has not seen before. To give birth to an idea, discover a great thought. A nugget in the dust of a field that many brains have plowed before. To do something, see something before anyone else.
I have not been anywhere remote since Joshua Tree last July in
110-degree heat, and during these month of preparation, the Jeep was fitted with
an engine heater, antifreeze that won’t freeze in sixty below, tires that wont
slide too easily on ice, and windshield washer solution that won’t turn to rock. I made these modifications myself, to the
chagrin of my mechanic who said he’s never been asked these questions.
This trip is more different for me than anything I have ever done. I will not be Nordic skiing away from a heated motel room in International Falls, Minnesota, as I did in 2009-2010. This winter, unlike any others, is young.
My Jeep owners manual says, “The engine block heater, if
equipped, warms the engine, and permits quicker starts in cold weather. Plug it into an electric outlet at night.” I have read that most motels in the far north
provide plug-ins for this purpose, so. But
my jeep does not have a block heater.
Oil pan heater from China that I installed on this home-made bracket and placed it under the engine |
I spent many hours at auto parts stores, and on the internet, even with stores in the far north, and found no block heater that fits my jeep. I now know much more about my jeep than I want to know. Only one block heater online came close. With only nebulous specifications from Zero Start 400 Watt Cartridge Engine Heater, I ordered it on line and took it to Williams Automotive, where I’ve had good service for the past twenty-five years. He tried to install it and concluded that it will not fit. I returned it to Amazon.com for an easy refund. It seems odd that my 2014 jeep, built for rough roads, could not be fitted with an engine heater so it can start at sixty below zero.
Under the Jeep, wires from the oil pan heater rise to top of engine for connection to electric outlet. |
I was down to less effective ways of heating my engine: dipstick heater and pan heater. The easiest and cheapest is the dipstick heater. You remove your dipstick and put the heater in its place, where it heats the oil in your oil pan. Dipstick heaters are outlawed in Canada due to engine fires, but they are still sold in USA. I bought one online and had to return it because it never heated up. I bought another one and it burned out in the first hour.
An electric cord from the oil pan heater comes out the front of the Jeep for connection to outlet at night. |
I was down to only one possibility: oil pan heaters. These are electric pads that you place on the outside of your oil pan. I found several online that would fit, and by far the cheapest comes from China for $7.50 with free shipping. I installed it, and it works fine. But I thought two of them would do a better job, so I ordered two more. They were still in China a month after ordering, but they finally came and I installed them with brackets that I fabricated out of sheet metal.
The coolant we use in our California cars is no good in the
far north. It will freeze solid at a
mere -34 degrees Fahrenheit, and probably ruin your engine. That’s because it’s mad of 50% ethylene glycol and 50% water. Up north you need 60% ethylene glycol to
carry you down to -60 degrees. So I did
the calculation, and removed 48 ounces of California coolant and replaced it
with the same amount of pure ethylene glycol.
Maybe now the Jeep and I are ready. Just maybe.
Maybe now the Jeep and I are ready. Just maybe.
Hopefully, Sharon you have all you need because
ReplyDeletefrom now till the 3rd, you'll need a rest from
all that anticipation placed into major ACTION.
Your comments on California coolant have me thinking
I should switch out mine for something more compatible
with the 'in the 20's' climate that Crestline reaches
this time of year.
I'll be following your blog, sitting in a warm place,
savoring a hot cup of tea.
Your excitement is so evident. HAPPY JOURNEYING
Love, Junnie of the 'not near as cold' mountain in CA
Junnie, I think you are okay with normal Southern California coolant in Crestline. They are usually 50% ethylene-glycol, which prevents freezing down to minus 34.
DeleteThanks for following the snowmobile with all the comforts of inside heating on our snowy journey.
Yes, Santa and I are relieved now that our preparations and anticipations are completed. Like bears, we can hunker down for a few days before starting in for next year.
I appreciate
ReplyDeleteyour nutty palabre
and thank G_d
eliminated
a similar Jeep
from my possessions.
Now I own a car
that doesn't need
an engine block warmer
as my arse
does the job very well.
I'll be following your trip
from inside a windshield
and a cozy 74 temperature.
I am happy to save you the trouble of actually doing this trip, Alex. Nice to have you join me through the windshield, if not through the rabbit hole.
DeleteDear Sharon, What an exciting journey to join without interruption of my knee surgery rehab! I appreciate very much for sharing your journeys! I shall have plenty of time to participate while hooked on CPM machine and cold unit while your car is being heated up. Love, Muhsin
ReplyDeleteThanks Muhsin, May your knee and you enjoy the trip. I wish you a speedy recovery.
DeleteHi Sharon, I, who don't care about cars, read about the outfitting of yours for your trip with interest and anticipation.All the best as you set on. Happy 2019!
ReplyDeleteI wish I knew who I am talking to, but whoever you are, I wish you also a happy 2019.
DeleteI thought it was cold in New Mexico (7000 ft level) and Nebraska (plains blizzards)! I hope you find only the best hot chocolate, the most brilliant Aurora Borealis, the kindest grizzlies and the most garrulous caribou.
ReplyDeleteIf you comment as "Unknown" then please include some hint as to who you are within your comment.
DeleteWednesday Poets were fortunate to host a preview of this trip in our Living Room Gallery. It was ony fifteen minutes but it made us feel even more there!left She left us the power point-- and we'll show it at Friday Poetry for any of you who wat to venture to cold Pasadena (hehe) Friday night. 4:30 pm.
ReplyDeletewith little contraptions
she gathers the warmth
of her friends
Love, Kathabela
It was a fine sendoff, to which I wrote during Rick's concert:
DeleteSending Me Off
persimmon cookies by Erika
broccoli given to Kathabela
returned to me cooked and seasoned
pears by Joyce
music by Rick
chilled soup by Pauli
like drifts of snow in Whitehorse
such abundant send-off
to such austere and lonely beauty
I want them all to come
Such a beautiful goodby poem Sharon we miss you already.I wish you could turn around and come back for Friday Poetry. But others are waiting for you ... Michael and the other black sheep... and yet...
ReplyDeleteclearly the nature
of our unusual everyday
flock of black sheep
WOW! Sharon, as always you are incredibly well-prepared, a truly thoughtful and thorough adventuress in your Jeep headed for new frozen terrains. I, like Junnie Starshine will witness your adventure with sips of warm Pacific mint tea. I am learning how to hike these paths and hills of Central Arkansas in weather colder than I am used to, this AM it was 38 degrees and nippy. So we will applaud and watch your journey in awe, and relish your profound observations along the way. Take care dearest, and stay warm! Kathy Leonard
ReplyDeleteKathy, It's nice to meet you out on the trail in nippy Arkansas. Here in Corvallis, Oregon, visiting friends, I also had a nippy walk among trees and friends of friends. I'll stay here a couple of days before facing the cold north.
DeleteWe hope you have a great journey to Alaska ! Thanks for coming to visit us in Corvallis... Love, Michael
ReplyDeleteThanks Michael, it's been a great adventure already.
DeleteHope you have a great time with your niece in Fairbanks...
ReplyDeleteHey Sharon,
ReplyDeleteThe love and support of dear friends and family sustains us, for us to be filled as we move into the world solitary and autonomous on our journey. I think of a toddler who clutches at her mother's hem, to right her balance, then takes a breath, and steps away on her own. Love, Kathy
That's very true, Kathy, and well said.
Deletelove and support of
dear friends and family
sustains us as
into the world we move
solitary, autonomous
clutching mother's hem
to right our balance, take a breath
then step away on our own
Sharon, a poet has the distinct advantage of seeing anew those roads traversed by less observant travelers. I have no doubt you will bring back new vistas and we will discover the stark beauty of the heavenly north. No road races please... x
ReplyDeleteI hope to, Lois. Thanks for your confidence. It really helps.
DeleteWhat a waste
ReplyDeleteof good coolant!
We in Ukraine
drink it.
Na zdorovye!
lol
and as Rumi recited
Any soul that drank
the nectar
of your passion
was lifted.
From that water of life
he is in a state of
elation.
Death came,
smelled me,
and sensed
your fragrance instead.
From then on,
death
lost all hope of me.
And so it is with friends!
Na zdorovye! Again!
Alex, I looked up that Rumi poem and consider myself fortunate to have been thought of in its light. Maybe the “your passion” doesn’t refer to mine, but it’s nice to think so and of the contagion thereof, chasing away even death. You have brightened the dark woods. Thanks.
DeleteMiles and trials and lots of smiles, and so our Sharon goes again!
ReplyDeleteWe all visit with you and with each other along this, your journey of highways and pathways and new ways.
Love to You from the Starshine Mountain
I love the Starshine Mountain. Perhaps by now it sparkles with snow, and if not it rests between stark, barren, snowy, Mt. Shasta, and dark, colorful, wet Oregon forest. Isn't diversity great!?
DeleteHi Sharon
ReplyDeleteI wonder where you heard that your new tires "won't slide too easily on ice".
Maybe I'm out of date and don't know what I'm talking about, and maybe the automotive industry engineers have rewitten the book on the physics of friction since last I thought about it.
In any case, until I read your comment, I hadn't ever questioned (and frankly still haven't) what I came to believe a long time ago, which is that on ice there is practically no friction at all, and yes indeed you will slide around 'real good' on ice (to use some good old American vernacular).
The only practical 'antidote' for driving on ice that I'm aware of is studded tires, which I'm sure you don't have, not least because they are not allowed on pavement that is not covered in ice. This is what I came to understand, believe and indeed learn the hard way from driving in England and the Eastern side of the USA (not in sunny Californighay).
Driving on snow is a different from driving on ice, and yes the deeper and more angular treads and the softer, stickier rubber of your new snow tires will give you some (limited) degree of grip and friction on snow, to varying degrees depending in part on the ground (snow) temperature, the history of the snow since it fell, etc. By the way, tire chains are an alternative to snow tires for driving on snow.
I'm writing this (right or wrong though you may prove it to be) because I want to be sure that you hear a dissenting voice (mine) before you find yourself skating along on ice in directions unplanned, unanticipated and unknown, etc.
Paul
Paul, Welcome to my blog. I am happy that you have solved the formerly unsolvable hindrance to commenting.
ReplyDeleteAs for "winter tires," I too was not brought up on them, and lived in snow country for several years without ever hearing about them. But now my niece in Alaska, and many others, swear by them. Canada requires them on some of its roads in winter. I carry chains just in case, and I intend to drive cautiously, never having driven with winter tires. I have four-wheel-drive, and hope that will be enough. Thanks for your concern, and I'll let you know how it works out.
OK. My main point us to stay off ice.
ReplyDeleteWhen I used to spin my tires
ReplyDeletein place
and was getting nowhere
Li Po one day said to me,
You'll never get anywhere.
You, me and our tires,
ReplyDelete"we three will meet again,
deep in the Milky Way."
snowy roads
ReplyDeletelead to warm homes
friends and smiles
warm like summer
Kat Jacobson
Yes Kat, that was certainly true in Oregon. I expect it to be true in Fairbanks. Only 2,000 miles between, and hoping.
Delete