Our site at Rose Bay RV Resort |
The Rose Bay resort sites were quite spacious by RV park standards, both wide and deep, and the park had the added perk of having the head of Rose Bay located in it, where we hear you can sometimes see manatees (something to look for when we return later in the season!). Also the laundry is only $1.50 to wash/$1.50 to dry - one of the cheapest prices I've ever seen! The ladies in the front office were friendly and helpful and our neighbors were friendly and quiet. There were two downsides to the resort...first, it is located a little bit of a drive off the highway, which meant Aaron had to drive through a lot of stop and go traffic going through stoplights, which stresses him out. Second, it was LITERALLY right on a train track, and the trains came through sounding their horns at all hours of the day and night, frequently shaking the RV.
The railroad was SO CLOSE |
The first weekend we were parked here we drove up to my sister's new house in St. Augustine to go with them to the Jacksonville Naval Air Station's air show. The highlight of this was getting to see the absolutely amazing Blue Angels!! We had not seen them in person before, and their portion of the show was absolutely breathtaking. The rest of the show was impressive as well, but nothing could compare to the Blue Angels.
With my sister's family standing in front of the Blue Angels' airplanes parked on the runway. The ladies and the kids are sporting USA sunglasses we picked up at a bank's tent. |
The classic diamond formation for the Blue Angels. Major kudos to Aaron for getting this amazing action shot! |
We spent a quiet week not doing too much at Rose Bay and returned to my sister's house the following weekend for Aaron's birthday. We went to an absolutely insane trunk-or-treat for their neighborhood, where people went all out decorating their trunks and had huge amounts of candy for the kids and alcohol for the adults!
My sister and I got Aaron an Established Title to 5 square feet of land in Scotland, which gives him the right to be called 'Lord Aaron'...make sure to remember that when you talk to him next! |
Dressed up for Halloween with his birthday cake |
At the trunk-or-treat with my sister's family |
After that things got interesting...well, we found out a little earlier, but this is when our plans changed. We were supposed to leave after two weeks in our standard Thousand Trails-County Park rotation, but about a week and a half before our county park reservation we got a call from Orange County to tell us that the one park we happened to pick for our first stay of the season was still closed due to damage and flooding from Hurrican Ian. While we were at Rose Bay we saw some damaged signs and huge piles of brush collected after the storm, but mostly everything seemed fine, so we hadn't expected any trouble in our RV stays. So much for that idea! So with 1.5 weeks to go we had to suddenly find an alternate location ... over a weekend ... in the winter season ... in Florida. We were a bit panicked as all of our standard campground choices were full. But we finally thought to ask at Rose Bay, and the helpful ladies at the front desk were able to work things out so that we stayed at our current site at a 20% Thousand Trails discount off their weekly rate, which brought the cost down within the range we were comfortable paying. Phew!
In our final week at Rose Bay we did a little more exploring of the immediate area. Sadly we're not really beach people, so even though we were staying near Daytona Beach we didn't actually go to the beach. Instead we explored nearby Spruce Creek Park, which had a nice little walking trail, and went to a local ice cream shop (Neighbors Ice Cream Parlor) where they made their own absolutely delicious ice cream.
Hiking at Spruce Creek Park |
Ice cream at Neighbors Ice Cream parlor - don't worry they're not both Aaron's, I had the waffle cone! |
So the title promised two hurricanes...just our luck, our time at Rose Bay ended with the approach of soon to be Hurricane Nicole. We took a look at the forecast for our travel day, where the winds started out the morning around 10mph or so but steadily increased to over 20mph during the time we should have been traveling to our next park, according to their check in time. Torrential rain was promised starting around noon as well. As a result, we rushed to get off the site early and got to our next park an hour before check OUT (two hours before check in). With our early travel we avoided the worst of the winds (very important when driving a massive windcatcher like a 40ft RV!) and most of the rain, and were able to both tear down and set up without being rained on. I'll tell you how we end up weathering the hurricane in the next post!