The Alumapalooza routine has set in again: up at 6 a.m. with the sun rising into a beautiful blue sky, quick blog entry, breakfast, on the walkie-talkie by 6:30 (in case I’m needed) and out doing whatever needs to be done by about 7 a.m. The hardest part of each morning is getting Emma out of bed so that she will go to bed at night at a reasonable time. Being 12 years old, she really doesn’t like waking up early
The orange-shirted staff are running things so well that Brett and I sometimes find ourselves filling the time by counting attendees to seminars (to see which ones are most popular), selling books, refilling the ice chests, and troubleshooting little problems that come up. It’s so much nicer than last year for us. Of course, now certain members are referring to us as management—or even more inaccurately, “Central Intelligence.” We’re really more like tropisms than intelligence.
Eleanor, Emma and I were scheduled to do a talk about “life aboard an Airstream” from a family perspective, and I was pleasantly surprised to find 84 people in attendance. We did a 60 minute Q&A session with the folks there, answering questions about full-timing, where to go, maintenance, campsites, traveling with a kid, selling the house, and many other things. A 42 minute slide show ran in the background while we talked, with photos of us starting in 2005 when we first began full-timing, and going through early 2008.
All day long I kept getting buttonholed by people with interesting questions and great personal stories. This event is generating quite a few leads for future articles in the magazine. I think that honestly I spent more time talking to people than doing any sort of physical work, which is quite a bit different from prior years. Again, that’s because the team is really hustling. The parkers (Lou, Larry and their team) fit in another 25-30 trailers yesterday, working from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Matt was everywhere from the sound board (for the stage) to the grills (for Dutch Oven class and Open Grill). Alice & Tim were making the water/electric job look easy, and Beth and Lori had Registration completely handled. Lisa and Eleanor are still on the Injured Reserve list but both are functional now and doing light duty.
The only problem seems to be the cursed Garbage Pickup job. Lisa was supposed to drive the Gator around every morning at 7 a.m., but that was before she was injured. We recruited Al & Shinim to take over, and they did a great job yesterday. But late in the afternoon, Al showed up with a large hemotoma on his leg from bashing it against something. Elly (a veteran of the Vintage Trailer Jam and an LPN) diagnosed it and sent him off with ice and orders to stay off it, so that wiped out our second team. A third team has been recruited and they did the job this morning, but we have given them fair warning about the history …
OK, quick summary because I’ve got to get out of the trailer and onto some jobs this morning. We had 13 ovens going at once during the first Dutch Oven cooking seminar, and huge leftovers (fruit cobblers) for everyone to sample. Open Grill was a big hit. People cooked for hours in a steady stream over the three big grills we set up. The ice cream leftovers from the Kids Social got wiped out last night by the grillers, so that’s good. Roving Happy Hour was a big hit too, and we’ll do that again tonight. (Photos today are all courtesy of Lisa Forsyth, Injured Reserve.)
This morning HGTV will be here to tour the factory and interview the staff for a show they are going to produce this fall. I’m on the interviewee list, but probably won’t appear in the final show. But that adds a complexity to this morning that I really didn’t need, so it’s rush-rush-rush to get everything done. Off to work—I’ll update tomorrow.






Yesterday was another hot one, but the weather service (our own Alex K) says that today will be a little cooler with a few showers in the morning, than comfortably cool all week. The day started with setting up the eye in the sky, while our parking crew flagged the fields and set out the big yellow “ALUMAPALOOZA” road signs. The big old & ugly box trailer that we use for winter storage was towed over and we unloaded all the gear, including a complete Airstream kitchen and stage sound and video equipment.
But those who were here seemed to make the best of the situation, heat and all. I got a chance to take a break around 6 p.m. and wandered into a group of merry-makers who were playing and singing some of Kirk McKellar’s songs.

Of course now the heat was nearing peak and the trailer had become completely heat-soaked, so it would take two hours to cool off again. I say “would” because then Eleanor began cooking an elaborate dinner of beef tenderloin, orcchiette pasta with a smoky mushroom tomato cream sauce, white bean & roasted garlic puree for the bread, and sfogliatelle (an Italian stuffed flaky pastry, courtesy of Elsa) for dessert. All of this meant all three burners of the stove and the oven running for two hours, which completely overwhelmed any good the air conditioner could do. We ended up turning it off and running fans despite the 91 degree temperatures outside. It was actually cooler that way.
This year was no different. We set up the Airstream, visited the horses, and took Charlie’s vintage Mercedes (300SEL, I believe from 1959) down the country roads to get some pizza. It was exactly what we needed: a chance to unwind and hang out in a peaceful, low pressure setting.
Or perhaps we were just delaying the inevitable. The forecast was quite different for Jackson Center, 200 miles away by road: 90+ degrees and “oppressive” humidity, and none of us were eager to get into that for the weekend. But we did arrive in J.C. by 2:45 p.m. and it was indeed oppressive. In fact, Alex K was already on site (he’s acting as our resident weather reporter this week) and he declared that the heat index was officially 100 degrees by late afternoon. It’s supposed to stay that way through Monday, but then cool down nicely for Alumapalooza. In the meantime, air conditioning is our friend.
We seemed to be nearly the last members of the advance team to arrive. Brett & Lisa got here Thursday, Alex & Charon also, Tim & Alice got here Friday, Matt & Beth were probably here a couple of days ago, and Lou & Larry beat us to the site today by about 15 minutes. In our defense, let me note that our drive was further than anyone’s at 2,450 miles total.