Hello blog! It has been awhile since I sat down to write, but today deserved a new post. Today we said goodbye to Moby, our snug home of the past year.
We never planned to keep Moby. Traveling by RV was never a part of our family travel playbook. We have always driven or flown to a destination, staying in a hotel or with family and friends. Buying an RV was a means to an end, the way to make our trip work. But boy did we fall more than a little bit in love with our traveling house.
Moby made me feel like a turtle when it rained. Rain is an abstraction in a normal house – unless it is pouring it’s often hard to hear the rain. In an RV, the intimacy of the space means you can sometimes feel the pounding of the rain. Feeling the rain just inches away but knowing my shell would keep me nice and dry was a cozy feeling. Hazel and Ava loved their bunk beds. They would pull their bunk curtains closed, claiming their own private space. Ava in another world, lost in a pile of books. Hazel, staring up at the stars from the window that ran the length of her berth. Dan loved the simplicity of Moby. I think he remembers the mobility of his military days with fondness. He claims that, for most of his 20’s, he could pack the entirety of his belongings in a small U-Haul trailer hitched to his Jeep and be on the road to the next base in a day or so. Moby just made life simple. Everything got reduced to the basics. All the possessions, projects and obligations of our normal life were pretty irrelevant in Moby.
We knew it made sense to sell Moby. We wouldn’t use him enough to warrant keeping him. He would stay locked in a storage facility, wondering where his family went. Even the wonderful memories that caught in my chest every time I climbed Moby’s steps didn’t merit keeping him.
All that being said, there wasn’t a dry eye as we waved Moby off and watched him drive down Sharon Hills Road without the Muir-N-Slager family.
But the good news. The good news is that selling Moby was not difficult. We had dozens of inquiries – and about a half dozen offers. My sentimental self says that families looking at Moby could sense he was loved and is ready for a new adventure. My practical self says that Covid has created a sellers’ market and we probably priced Moby a little low 😊. It doesn’t matter, Moby is going to a good home. Dean, Christie and Lexi are ready to take Moby out on new adventures. Guided by mom/grandma Vicki, a former RV full-timer, they made the long trip from Dallas, TX to come get Moby. I get the sense they are poised to have some awesome adventures of their own.
Hazel and I, probably the two most sentimental of our family lot, were reminiscing about the trip and for some reason Hazel started thinking about Christmas morning in Moby. She said how much she loved waking up in Moby, being on the beach in LA and spending time later that day with dear family friends. She started to get a little weepy but then she brightened up and said “hey mom, if we can’t stand it we could always make a Moby 2 and have new adventures.” That’s my girl! She is so right. We didn’t really “buy” Moby, we “made” him through adventure and laughter and silliness and some tears.
Farewell our steadfast friend, be kind to your new family and show them the wonders of this fine country that we were blessed to see out on the great American road.








This is soooooo sad. I am grieving. What a beautiful ending to your wonderful year with Moby. He served you well. 🙁
I’ve missed your posts. I love that Moby served you well and your family will most likely have new adventures in the future with a Moby 2.
I have been wondering if you successfully transferred the queen bee from the hive after your extraordinary effort and have become full time beekeepers.
Also, I sincerely hope Ava’s knee has healed as good as new and that the entire family is well.
Awesome! Yes – how did the bee move turn out?
OK….now I’m tearing up! Great farewell to MOBY by your kind and loving family. Your new chapter should include writing!
Congratulations to all. It sounds as if you’ve made the very best of a good thing. You all have a year’s worth of memories which will stay with you; you’ve given Moby an opportunity to help another family make their memories in the years ahead. And, thank you for sharing this chapter with us. You’ve brightened many a day at our house and now you’ve done it again.
I was so excited to see another Great American Road blog in my email. But now I am crying too. And I am sad that the RV blogs have come to an end. Surely there are more adventures/blogs ahead for you all. I am fortunate to be an observer, sometimes a participant, in the adventures of the Muir-n-Slager family.
So glad the girls and Dan got home before Moby left. You all needed that one last goodbye.
Thanks so much for the update Carolyn! Your post comes to me at a time when I’ve been reflecting and reminiscing about times gone by (I’ve just returned from visiting the old family farm). We can either reflect on the loss of something, or we can reflect and celebrate the gains and lessons learned. I know you guys are solidly in the latter camp!
What a beautiful ending to a beautiful story. Welcome home!