Friday, April 21, 2023

All About Relaxing RV Park - Theodore, Alabama (April 2023)

We were exposed to COVID and decided to leave the Cajun Caravan one day earlier than planned. We called All About Relaxing RV Park to see if we could arrive a day earlier than our reservations. The park was full, but we could stay in their overflow area with 50 amp power and water connections. We quickly agreed and hitched up for an early morning departure. 

We left Louisiana before sunrise. Our tire monitor system hadn’t registered with all of Rosie’s tires when we pulled out of the campground. (Rosie is what we call our Airstream trailer.) When it did, the alarm told us we had low pressure in one tire. It was dark, but we pulled into what we thought was an old gas station and got out the air pump. That was when we noticed a growing number of school aged children gathering next to Rosie. Yes, we were at a school bus stop and the number of students indicated that the bus was on the way. We were thankful that we were able to pump up the tire and pulled away before the bus arrived. 

The remainder of our trip was uneventful and we arrived at the campground early in the afternoon. 

We stayed at several campgrounds during the WBCCI Cajun Caravan that included the word “resort” in their names and I wondered what amenities they had that came up to to the level of a resort. This campground did not have “resort” in its name and we both recognized that it clearly qualified as a resort. It was more than the great swimming pool, which was open. It was more than the meeting areas around the park. It was more than the restrooms and showers, which may qualify as the nicest we have seen in any campground before. It was more than the manicured lawns and shrubs there. It was more than the friendly and helpful staff in the campground. The park's name didn’t include the word “resort,” but it clearly deserved that name.

Rosie in the overflow site


A nice meeting area in this campground


One of several spots in this campground to "relax"


Since we were exposed to COVID, we kept our distance from other people. That was perfect because the overflow site was away from the main camping loop. We walked around the park while avoiding crossing paths with other people. Isolation  was also hard on us since our son, his wife and our grandson were only a few miles away and we could not risk potentially exposing them to COVID. 

Walking Suzy in around the main camping loop


We pulled out early the next morning. We needed gas so we pulled off the Interstate Highway at a truck stop. Imagine my surprise when we merged back on the Interstate and saw our son’s car beside us in the other lane. He was headed to work and was as surprised as us to be sharing the road with his parents and Rosie for a few miles. 

Rosie in our son's mirror

Becky waving to our son as he exited the Interstate


All About Relaxing’s overflow spot didn’t have a sewer connection so we needed to stop at a rest stop with a dump station to drain and rinse our waste water tanks. Fortunately, most Alabama rest stops have dump stations. 

Dump station at an Alabama Rest Stop

Our return to the Interstate was memorable, but not as enjoyable as being on the road next to our son. I never returned to our cruising speed because traffic was at a standstill. We found out that a semi truck carrying hazardous materials turned over ahead of us about four hours earlier. It took more than two hours to travel a mere 10 miles. Then the bottleneck cleared and we were again headed home at our normal towing speed. 

By the way, we talked with our daughter-in-law as we headed home. She is a clinical pharmacist at a major hospital and she gave us the timeline of how long we should isolate ourselves if we continued showing no symptoms of COVID. We followed her instructions and ended up not getting COVID. Whew!

Here are some specifics about this campground:
  • We found one loop in this campground
  • Our site was a back in
  • Most sites had some shade
  • Most sites had some space on both sides
  • Our site was paved with gravel and we needed to use leveling tools to correct a side-to-side lean in Rosie 
  • Our site had a 50 amp electrical service 
  • Our site had a water connection
  • As the overflow site, it did not have a sewer connection 
  • There was a bathhouse in the campground 
  • The park did not provide WiFi service 
  • AT&T provided 2 bars of 5G voice and data service over our campsite 
  • We were able to watch ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC and PBS using Rosie’s TV antenna. Digital channels seen were Bounce, Charge, Comet, Court-TV, Grit, ION, LAFF, ME-TV and Stadium
  • There were restaurants and shopping nearby
  • This was a pet friendly park 




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