2025 Season Epilogue
Well, I expected it to end well. But, alas, the fates dealt a different hand.
An epilogue is a short section at the end of a book, play, story OR BLOG that provides closure or describes what happens after the main events.
Epilogue: The End of the Season
I left Lake George and headed home to end my summer season of RVing. My plan was to empty the contents of Winnie and prepare it for storage. I was two miles from home, stopped for a red light in the middle of the Jan Peek Bridge near Annsville Circle. Suddenly, my transmission died — dead as can be. Couldn’t move forward, and I wasn't about to roll backward down the bridge with traffic stacked behind me. Every time I shut off the engine, restarted, and shifted into gear, it stalled again. So there I sat, blocking one lane of a two-lane bridge, watching cars edge around me, during commuter rush hour.

I called 911 — no emergency, just a traffic jam in the making. About a half hour later, a HELP truck arrived, set up cones, and flashed the big yellow arrow sign. I explained my predicament and his dispatcher ordered a heavy-duty tow truck. Winnie weighs over 9,000 pounds and can’t just be pulled away. The tow’s coming from Tarrytown — about 45 minutes out. Time slogged along. I then watched him pass me going the wrong direction, loop around Annsville Circle, and headed up toward the Bear Mountain Bridge — where he thought I was stranded. Ninety minutes later, he finally returned, coming south on Route 9, made a U-turn, and positioned himself behind me. Winnie had to be lifted from the back and towed backward off the bridge.
The tow cost? $1,100 plus tax to get from Annsville Bridge to the Mercedes Sprinter dealership in White Plains. The RV is considered a "commercial" vehicle and required a heavy-duty wrecker. If I’d gone with them, I’d have had no way home, so they dropped me at a nearby gas station, took the keys, and delivered Winnie on their own. I called neighbor, Diane, for a rescue ride. By 6:00, it was all over. We stopped at Table 9 for a well-earned drink — (I needed it more than she). I stepped into my apartment at 8:00 p.m. exhausted but home knowing this what just the first step into the unknown.
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The next day, I drove down to White Plains in my Caddy to clear out perishables, meds, and whatever else I’d need while Winnie’s in the shop. Fortunately, I’d already scheduled my 60,000 miles service for Monday, so she’s right where she needed to be — no extra storage costs. Now it’s just a waiting game: what’s wrong, how long it’ll take, and what insurance will cover. The towing claim is already filed. Eleven days later the check from my RV insurance company (Progressive) was deposited. Coverage for what was to come? None. The vehicle was not involved in an accident. Extended warranty? No more.
So there you have it — Part One. A fitting end to a terrific summer season of RVing. All’s well, because all I can think of is how much worse it could have been. The “what-ifs” and “supposin’s” are endless, but in the end, I’m a lucky guy. Hey, it could’ve been totaled by fire. What are the odds of that ever happening?
Eighteen days later and a rather hefty, 5-digit repair bill that combined the planned Service B maintenance and the unplanned torque converter and transmission replacement, Winnie was driven to its storage facility until just after Thanksgiving when once again, the drive south will begin blog year seventeen and my 2026 Winter Adventure. Till then, stay safe, warm and have wonderful Thanksgiving/Christmas/Hannukah Holidays.
“I cried because I had no shoes, until I met a man who had no feet.” — Persian proverb
Glad you made it home safely. Thank goodness it didn’t happen in Nova Scotia!
ReplyDeleteWow - so close to home; you were lucky in that respect. I'd do some Internet research to see if other "Winnie" owners are also experiencing low mileage tranny failures. You need to submit a complaint to the parent company for redress, esp. given that you followed the required maintenance schedule. Let them know that you're blog is followed by countless other RVers, who might now hesitate about buying one of these. Based on your experience, the company is 0 for 2, which is game over IMHO.
ReplyDeleteOh, Charlie ☹️! So sorry your trip ended like this. But…… the goood news is you are okay & Winnie will have new parts!
ReplyDeleteYour adventures will continue!
Happy it ended OK. As my mother would say, “That should be the worst thing that ever happens to you.”
ReplyDeleteWow, but if there s a bright side you could have been in Nova Scotia when it happened. Some one was watching over you. I been reading the horror stories of GM owners that have their V-8 engines actually seize for with no warning.
ReplyDeleteYou were lucky to be close to home.
So sorry Charlie...Harriette and I had a similar circumstance driving to Florida a few years ago. Our car was rear ended and totaled. You know those sad and forlorn people you see on the side of I-95? That was us.
ReplyDeleteIt is a most amazing story Charlie and one well told and documented. Yeah, what if it happened in Scotia or Edward or wherever. Thankfully you were so close to home but, even that has its mystery - so close but so far in more ways than one. What is the universe trying to say? And poor Winnie. She tried her best to finish the trip for you but exhausted, alas, she just gave up. We'll have to have a party when she is all well again. Maybe even christen her with a bottle of Champ for she will surely be "born again!" And so, with that, another chapter of the Charlie Tour shall begin with other tales to tell, only now these tales will be divided into pre-collapse and post-collapse. But I go on too much as usual. Just happy that no one was hurt, Winnie is on the mend and you are safe and well. See ya soon. sjg
ReplyDeleteSorry you had such an ordeal, Charlie. Glad it was close to home. So we see blessings in the details. Plus Winnie is ready for November! 🙌🙏 RF
ReplyDeletePoor Winnie and even poorer Charlie. This too will become good material for fire-pit sessions. VMG
ReplyDelete