Friday, May 16, 2008

Meet Greet and smile

Yep we do that and clean a few toilets also.

Seems like we spend a lot of time and then can't seem to remember what we did. Our day today was to make a loop around the campground and note which sites were occupied for our AM report to the office. We checked the bath housed to make sure they were clean and had enough supplies and empty trash.

Two sites checked out today so we had to clean those sites. Not really much work as both campers kept a clean site.

We made some changes to the bulletin boards adding new information. We took a ride around the park to see what had changed and what was new. Found that there is a new car top boat launch in picnic loop B.

We made several loops of the campground doing a little of this and that.

After supper we made more loops of the campground talking to the new arrivals and visiting with the Kane's who arrived with their grand-tots.

Since there had been some raccoon activity we visited all the tent campers and took their trash to the dumpster.

The nice part of this "job" is meeting and talking to the campers.


3 comments:

Cindy said...

Great job, I want it. Yesterday at the end of a day at work I read your post with much envy, grudge and hostility. Now after a day on the farm, fighting mother nature, only the envy is left. Enjoy the raccoon stew.

Larry said...

You can't kill critters in the park. They are protected.

Cindy said...

You better not have thought I was serious. Everything's protected in my central texas swamp. My husband got back from the hospital shortly after I wrote this. He'd picked up a copperhead and was taking it out to the back field to relocate it. He's had a lot of experience picking up snakes, but either this one was a little stronger than usual or his attention wavered at the wrong time--and ouch.


Needless to say, every person who heard the story thought he was an idiot for not killing it on sight. We tried arguing, but what good it did....


I was happy that when he encountered the snake again a week or so later,
he completed the relocation--with a couple of long sticks and a bucket.


btw, great posts and pics! They're addictive.