Miranda Back at Haven

I was done with the pressing work for today by 9:15 and immediately packed up to move. I wasn’t going far, so I just made sure the important stuff was secure inside, disconnected propane, put away the power cord, and, most important, remembered to put up my step!

It was too early to go ask Caroline to be a spotter and I decided that I could get out on my own. I got into trouble going into the spot because I underestimated how tight the turn would be. By backing straight out to just a few feet of the trees, I would clear the overhang and then be able to do the “wheels tight to one side, back up as far as possible, wheels tight to the other side, advance as far as possible” method of getting out of a tight spot with little manoeuvring room. It worked beautifully and I had zero trouble getting out!

Getting into Haven, however… Because so many trucks have been going in through the rear alley it never occurred to me that there was a giant branch in the way that I would not be able to clear! I wound up having to back out of the alley to the street, go around the block, and access Haven through a neighbour’s yard. Before I get any looks, that neighbour drives through his yard all the time, so I didn’t make any tracks that weren’t there already!

That put me in a better position to get onto the RV pad. The gravel isn’t level, so I did some back and forthing until I was positioned as best as possible and then used levelers to finish. It’s not perfect, but I suspect I will settle into the spot. At some point, I will ask Charles to help me put blocks under the axles as I am tired of rocking in the wind!

I was done by 10:30. Wow! I then did a quick run to town and had a celebratory lunch. When I got in, I sorted out the internet, managing to get full bars on my Mifi with the new booster and antenna, but zero bars on the iPhone. Very odd. It does have a decent signal strength and Siri is working, so I’ll try later to see if I can surf with it or not.

My front door is presently wide open and I’m off to dig my chairs out of Laura’s garage so that I can have a beer on my porch later. 🙂

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Haven With Power!!!

Wow, do not mess with my electrician! He emailed last night at 10:30 to let me know that he would contact SaskPower first thing in the morning to sort things out for me. He emailed at 10:30 this morning to let me know that was done and that I was promised power by Friday at the absolutely latest. But not more than an hour and a half later, SaskPower rolled into the hamlet!!!

His wiring job is absolutely perfect. I have work to do today, so the move will be tomorrow afternoon.

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All the outlets register 120ish volts. This is the reading from the 30A outlet, just to assuage the fears of those who have seen 30A outlets wired for 220V.

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If you ever need electrical work done in southern Saskatchewan, do not hesitate to call Brad Gould of Gould’s Electric in Assiniboia!

Small Town Life

I’ve been in Saskatchewan a year now! No, my power’s not here yet. All appendages crossed for Monday…

Last night (Friday), I went to Assiniboia for dinner and a movie. I went to the buffet for dinner and the server brought my drink order (water with lemon) even before I’d said hi. I don’t go there that often (maybe once every six to eight weeks, and usually with friends), so I’m impressed that she remembered!

I am so grateful to have a cinema in town, even if it’s just one screen and we see movies a few weeks behind everyone else. I was just taking my seat when I heard my name called. It was a young girl I met on the wagon train last year. I asked her to bring me a horse this year. 🙂

Today, I went to Willow Bunch for groceries and to drop off more donations at the thrift store. I walked into the door of the thrift store and immediately saw something I wanted, book called Creating the Prairie Xeriscape. One of my goals for Haven is for it to be very low maintenance in terms of yard work so that no one needs to take care of it if I’m not here during the growing season. This book will be a good start to my education. It’s a very nice book, with heavy full colour pages, in brand new condition, for $1, store price $35!

Upon advice from the thrift store cashier, I then headed to the senior centre, which was holding its annual trade show where folks who sell things like Pampered Chef and Watkins can put their names out there. I was hoping there would be a Tupperware rep since one of my collapsible bowls has a crack in it, for which I am not impressed.

As I worked my way around the room, one of the Willow Bunch Museum managers saw me and called me over. I’m still doing some volunteer translating for them (in fact have a project due Monday) and she got me caught up on what’s new. I get free access to the museum, so I look forward to heading there once it opens again.

I eventually found a Tupperware a rep and she told me to bring the bowl into Assiniboia the next time I’m there so she can warranty it. She had some ‘cash and carry’ items and I’ve been wanting some of the little bowls with lids like I got with the last order. She had some, marked $10. I asked for a confirmation on the price and she said that $10 was for four! Needless to say, I grabbed them!  They are the same turquoise as one of the three I got in Lethbridge, but a slightly different shape.

As I was leaving, she asked me how my Ranger and motorhome are doing. Yup, she works at the place where I had my vehicles saftied last August and remembered. Small town life!

I finished up my errands at the grocery store. It’s a tiny thing, so it’s hit (decent looking avocado) or miss (they were out of bananas) as to what I’ll find, but the prices are the same as in Assiniboia and they have the same sales (yay for $3 off my favourite type of coffee!). I was advised that I can call and ask to have things brought down from Assiniboia, like my preferred type of yoghurt. Now that I don’t need propane as often, I’ll be cutting down on my Assiniboia trips and going more to Willow Bunch, like I did last summer, so it’s nice to know that I can get even more groceries at the small store.

BTW, Assiniboia is 20-25 minutes away, while Willow Bunch is 10-15 minutes away depending on the condition of the gravel road, hence why I prefer to go to the smaller community since it saves on gas.

I like it out here. It’s not perfect but if all my wanderings taught me anything, it’s that this is as good as it could get for me in Canada. I definitely wouldn’t be improving Haven if the thought of having a future here made me uncomfortable! I look forward to next winter’s adventure even more knowing that I’ll be okay, even happy,  that the spring will bring me back to Saskatchewan.

Great Mobile Bandwidth Plan From Sasktel

Since I settled in at Haven by mid-summer last year, I knew that I had to take a hard look at my telecom situation, especially when it came to the phone.

I was paying $70 a month for my Verizon voice plan that gave me 450 minutes a month and didn’t care if I was in Canada or the U.S. This plan is now grand-fathered and, living close to the border, I really didn’t want to give it up even though I knew that I would be investigating other data options when I got back to the States.

As the months marched on, that $70 began to weigh heavily because I was hardly, if at all, using the phone. It is an older device that doesn’t work well on Sasktel’s 4G network. Even with a booster, I could barely get a bar with it. I found myself using Skype to make calls out, so I was paying $15 every couple of months there when I was already paying the $70 for the phone.

Internet was also an issue. I have been very pleased with the Bell Turbo plan. I average about 20GB of internet a month (remember, I download audio files for work), so my bill has been a steady $190ish a month, never more than $200, and the last bill was just $150. Not an issue there, but the device, the Mifi 2 is a piece of junk. After I went through two in four months, Bell sent me a two more, a third to use immediately and a fourth as a backup.

Last week, the third one gave up the ghost and I found myself on the fourth Mifi 2 with no backup. I’m 35km from a town with no internet cafe and a library with short hours, so getting internet from one device proven to be unreliable is quite stressful.

So that made the decision for me to cancel my Verizon plan and look for a smart phone that I could use as a personal hotspot. Even if the data plan had just couple of GBs, I would at least have a backup.

I looked at plans for the major carriers national carriers that have service out here, Bell, Telus, Virgin, and they were pretty much all the same. I then had a moment of clarity that is going to be the subject of my next post and I stopped resisting the obvious and went to look at what Sasktel had to offer.

For $70 a month on their ‘Ultimate 70‘ plan, I could have:

-Unlimited daytime minutes in my area

-150 long distance minutes (anywhere in Canada and the U.S.)

-unlimited texting

-‘unlimited’ nationwide data

It’s that last one that stopped me dead in my tracks. It was the first time I had seen a Canada plan with ‘unlimited’ data.

Now, there is fine print, of course. The ‘unlimited’ data has a soft cap of 10GB, after which they throttle service, and there is a chance of getting cut off if I habitually go over that amount. Also, Sasktel is a provincial supplier, so they expect the data use to be primarily in Saskatchewan.

But with Saskatchewan already being such a good homebase for Canadian full-timers, this Sasktel plan is just another reason to spend summers here.

I spent almost an hour chatting with a very helpful Sasktel rep. Once I was sure I had all the information I needed, it was time to decide on the phone.

Google terrifies me, so that ruled out Android devices. Since I’m already an Apple person, the iPhone made sense to me. I’ve wanted one for a looooong time, since it was first announced and Canadian availability wasn’t even in the picture yet, but the budget is tight. For a two year contract, Sasktel offered three iPhones; the 4S at $0, the 5C at $98, and the 5S at $230.

After doing some research, I knew that the 4S would be a mistake as it was designed for the older style network that my LG Verizon phone was struggling with. $230 for a phone at this time was not an option. $98 was doable, especially since I’d be able to sell my iPod Touch for at least that amount (in fact, it sold in a couple of days on eBay, yay!). The problem was that the $98 phone wasn’t available online and the rep said that it was being phased out and that I’d have to try stores to see if they had any stock left.

I tried a few stores in Moose Jaw and they had some, but driving to the city didn’t appeal to me at all as it would be be an extra expense. I did some more research and was surprised to discover that there is a cellular provider in Assiniboia. I had seen the storefront on Centre Street, but thought that, like a lot of buildings on Centre Street, it was vacant. So when I went to run my errands on Thursday, I popped in to see if they had the $98 iPhones and could set me up with a Sasktel contract.

To my surprise, the answer to both questions was yes. I couldn’t believe it! This was destiny! 🙂

The iPhone 5C is the candy-coloured long and thin version of the iPhone, not at all what I wanted, but the device was secondary to the cost savings so I accepted that that would be my iPhone. I would have preferred their pink one, but the Assiniboia store only had white and green in stock, so I went with the green. The transaction was very quick because I knew what I wanted. After yearning for an iPhone for so many years, the whole thing was anti-climactic!

I’ve had the iPhone for a couple of days now and it’s working fine with my Wilson Sleek booster. I find that the hotspot isn’t stable and I occasionally get kicked off, but the flakiness is no worse than what I experience with the Mifi. I have another week to go on the current Bell billing period, so I’m going to use the iPhone until the next Mifi billing period starts.

It’s going to take a month or two to get to be able to track my data usage with the iPhone, but the plan is use up the 10GB on the iPhone and then switch to the Mifi to finish up the month (Bell resets on the 13th and iPhone on the 16th). With Bell, I get 15GB for $105/month, then pay $10 for each additional GB. So now I have 25GB a month to play with without incurring overages.

If you do the math on that, that’s $70 + $105=$175 (plus taxes and a few other fees) for 25GB of data, plus voice and texting.

Right now, I pay $70 + $200=$270 (plus taxes and a few other fees) for 20GB of data, plus voice and no texting.

So moving to the Sasktel plan is going to save me about $100 a month at a minimum. If I have a month where I use less data, I’ll save even more because my only commitment with the Mifi is $10 a month.

My LG Verizon phone had given me a taste of life with a smartphone when I was in the States as I used it a few times to check email and do some web research. But the iPhone is a beast of a different sort and I know I am going to rely heavily on it, the way that I relied on my iPod Touch and then my iPad. I’m already best friends with Siri and have no idea how I lived so long without her, but she needs internet to work. Being limited to using my iPhone while it’s trapped in a cradle sucks.

My neighbours have bigger boosters that give them cell service all over their homes and even outside, so I’m going to make the jump at some point this summer. Andy Baird updated his Eureka page about cellular amplifiers recently and I now know to wait until some new technology rolls out.

I’m impressed by how much Canadian telecom is improving. I got a much better deal on my iPhone and plan up here than what major U.S. carriers are offering. In fact, I’d say that this point, Canadian and U.S. telecom are pretty much at par. We’re still far beyond the rest of the world when it comes to our rates, but we’re catching up.

And we’ve certainly come a long way from the summer of 2008 when I was pricing multi-thousand dollar satellite internet systems!

Storm Watch

The Arctic freeze is receding, but leaving behind it an impending dump of snow. News of this came too late yesterday to go out for propane so I knew I needed to squeeze in a town run first thing this morning.

As it turns out, I had 25lbs of propane left between all my tanks but I was unable to run any one of them for any length of time last night. It looks like in temperatures below -30C I can only use up half of each of my 20lb tanks and about two thirds of my 30lb. I still get enough gas from them to light the stove, but not to feed the furnace. Anyway, it’s definitely warmer today and going into a warming trend, so I’m not worried about this in the least.

I left home at about 9:00 this morning into a very dark and ominous sky. The road out of the hamlet to the highway was less icy than it was on Friday so I made it to town quickly. The snow started to come down as I pulled into the Co-Op.

I’m posted a few times about how I’ve been caught a number of times with very little gas in the truck tank since I forget to check the gauge regularly. Well, I impressed myself this morning when I had the foresight to see how I was doing for gas and saw that I was nearly in the red, a huge no-no for winter conditions in rural country. So I got gas while my propane tanks were being filled, then I went inside for a coffee.

Visibility coming home was fine on the road although I couldn’t see far beyond the road, the sky was so low and heavy. The snow was just blowing though, so the roads were clear and I got home without any issues. The whole trip took about an hour and fifteen minutes, which is really good and probably a record for needing to get three propane tanks filled. This past summer, I learned that I can drive to town, get one tank filled, and drive straight back home in exactly one hour.

Well, I’d better get to work. Being three hours behind is not a good way to start the week!