“What makes the desert beautiful is that somewhere it hides a well.” – Antoine de Saint-Exupery

I wondered if this balloon was going to get high enough to miss the wires. It did. — Photo by Pat Bean
Adjusting to a New Life
After exiting, but not abandoning, my nine-year RV home, Gypsy Lee, in an apartment complex parking lot, I wondered if I had chosen the right place to put down a few roots.
I was still remembering how claustrophobic I had felt after purchasing my last rooted home back in Ogden, Utah, in which I had spent seven years before moving into Gypsy Lee.
Right up until the last few months, when this old body decided it needed a bit more space and a few conveniences Gypsy Lee didn’t have, I never felt more at home than I did when traveling across this beautiful country. The road truly felt like home and the place I should be.
I had thought when I retired that I would have about five years on the road before I would need to settle down again. I almost doubled that. I also thought that I would find a place that would call out to me as being my next home. It never did.
I suspected I would end up in my native Texas, where most of my children and grandchildren live, and started looking, and continued doing so for almost a year. I found nothing that met my requirements – nice, dog friendly, large bath tub, light and airy, and near town conveniences but with a place to walk – that either appealed to me or was in my measly price range.
When I started looking in Tucson, where my youngest daughter lives and where I was headed to spend this past Christmas, I found what I had been looking for instantly, with the bonus of it being located at the foot of the Catalina Mountains.
But almost as soon as I had moved into my new, small, third-floor apartment, I broke my foot and also began having doubts if I had made the right decision.
A pair of Cooper’s hawks nesting in a tree in one of the apartment’s courtyards helped convince me — I’m a passionate birder — that I had, as did the beautiful view I have of Mount Lemmon to the north and the beautiful sunrises that have brightened almost all my mornings.
I never thought I would live in the desert and like it. But I’m slowly beginning to think of Tucson as home.
I’m especially enjoying a landscape where giant saguaro cacti — including one here at the apartment that is home to a pair of Gila Woodpeckers – dominate the landscape, and where it is not unusual to look up and see hot air balloons gliding by.
Bean’s Pat: Basil the Hippo http://tinyurl.com/cq9x969 I fell in love with this story – and Basil.
Basil bends a stately knee in thanks. It is an honour and a joy to receive this Pat.
Tell Basil this animal lover says he’s very welcome.
A friend of mine lived in Tucson for about 5 years and loved it. I would think of the broken foot as a sign that this was where you needed to settle down cause it’s not letting you move forward. Hope it heals fast.
I’ve sort of looked at it that way too. Deborah. Thanks for commenting Deborah.
I’m glad you’re settling in, Pat. Life has many surprises, eh?
IT does Len, which is what keeps it interesting Len.
We often have hot air balloons gliding past our house in Belgium, often leaving me with the wish of when can I do this?
I hope it’s soon. I’ve done it twice and it’s a big thrill.
Pat, do you give any up close and personal insight into your full time RV living? If so, where?
Most of my earlier blogs were about my full-time RVing. Just check out the archives.
Thanks, I just “found” your blog.