Tag Archive: social security


ANCHORAGE, ALASKA

Serial Killers on the loose in Alaska–
We have become gleeful serial killers. I woke this morning to the sound of someone banging on the wall of the RV. What was it? Just Jerry trying to kill another mosquito. Yesterday, the area between the screen door and the outside door had at least  a hundred mosquitoes flying around and coming into the motor home. Apparently, the RV door did not close tightly leaving a tiny opening to the outside. Mind you, no water came in during the many, heavy rains; the opening was that small! Somehow, the mosquitoes figured out that there was a wonderful, free blood meal inside and they should just enter through this minute crack. Thus, the start of our killing spree. With joyful shouts of “Got It”, we each killed countless little biters last night as we became possessed by our mission to rid the motor home of pestilence. For hours, the place sounded like a construction zone but we lowered the inside mosquito population dramatically. This morning we woke to only a few mosquito bites and a renewed commitment to finish what we started last night. The killing spree recommenced and now we see only a rare, skittish mosquito flying around in here. Jerry resealed the RV door by applying a thin insulation strip around the perimeter.  So far, no further invasions have occurred since the door sealing and our mass murder spree.
We’ve been told the the mosquito is Alaska’s state bird and we are beginning to believe it.

Medicare–
My mirror tells me I have been old for quite some time, but I will be officially OLD in a few more months. Tried to file for Medicare online. No go. A screen popped up and said I would have to go into the Social Security Office for this. So, this morning we drove to the Social Security Office in Anchorage. When we arrived at the office there were only two seats left. Soon the place was full to overflowing. Mostly, the people in the waiting room were young. Most looked to be in their 20′s, 30′s, and 40′s. Not what I expected. 45 minutes into our wait our number was called. The worker suggested I try to enroll online. When I explained the problem she said I could have an appointment to talk to someone in a week or two. Um, that won’t work. So now I’ll to try to sign in online and see if it works this time. Also, they said they would have someone from Social Security call me at 8:00 in the morning in a week. OK, so I may get a lot older just trying to resolve this.

Anchorage–
A city like every other city in the USA but cleaner, newer, a bit smaller and surrounded by beautiful mountains everywhere you look. The museum here is recommended but the recommendation was lukewarm and it is downtown with all the traffic and parking issues. We have been to quite a few museums in Alaska and have a pretty good feel for the history.  Think we will leave the city after having walked and driven around in it for awhile this morning. Anchorage has lots of traffic, road work, strip malls, big box stores, etc. We arrived in Anchorage at 7:00 am to beat the morning rush. Ha! There was a lot of traffic. Everyone in a hurry. Didn’t see anywhere to park our RV so stopped to ask a couple of police officers where we could park. At first, she sent us about a quarter of a mile away but when they realized we would be walking back to the Social Security office she looked at him and they both shook their heads no and nixed that idea. Apparently, we would have had to walk through a favorite hangout for homeless and they thought they should do some crime prevention and cancelled that plan. Next, they told us about an upscale neighborhood a few blocks away that should have lots of street parking as most of the folks that live there would be off to work. So that is where we ended our search for parking in the city. Plenty of room for the RV on a large, mostly empty, quiet street. We ate breakfast there, read the news on the Internet and then walked the few blocks to the Federal Building. Emptied our pockets into a plastic bin and went through the security screening. They had to “wand” Jerry as his jacket had more metal on it than mine did and the alarms sounded.
Side note–How can anyone be homeless in Alaska? That seems like it would be a climate limited condition!

RV maintenance–
The odometer computer flashed a sign saying it was time for an oil change so we went to a Jiffy Lube. Though they were busy, we were in and out of there in a short time.  We were in the parking lot of one of the two Costco’s in town so got gas at $4.07/gal. reg. with the Costco discount for members. While at Costco gas, I ran into the store to restock our larder. How I managed to spend $387.00 so fast amazed us both but we will eat well for awhile that’s for sure.

Last night in Wasilla we bought propane in an RV park for $4.00/gal.

Boondock–
Boondocked near a coffee shop in Wasilla last night. It had a great wi-fi connection so we made good use of it as our Millenicom signal was weak where we were. Tonight we will boondock somewhere south of Anchorage.

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For those wondering how we handle our bill paying, etc. while constantly on the move this is our explanation.

DOMICILE

The law requires that folks “live” somewhere specific, have a legal address.  A number of states welcome fulltime RVers and allow them to have a permanent address and make it fairly easy to do.  For tax purposes, voting, vehicle registration, drivers licences, and to receive our mail our research showed Texas and South Dakota were our two best options for our official domicile.   For various reasons including financial , South Dakota was the best choice for us so our official address is in South Dakota.  South Dakota seems to recognize a good deal for the state as fulltime RVers pay for vehicle tax/registration & drivers licences, spend money on sightseeing and then leaves the state without using any of the states’ services.    The vehicle tax/registration cost was fairly low and we don’t have to return to the state to renew as our mail service will do it for us for a small fee.

MAIL

We pay a mail service in South Dakota to collect our mail and to send the mail to us when we want it.  They provide mail service to numerous RVers so they “get” it.  Our mail can be sent by them to general delivery to a post office where we plan to be if that post office accepts general delivery or we can have our mail sent to a family member or a friend’s house we plan to visit soon (we also do this when we order something on-line).  When we want our mail we just email or call our mail service and ask them to forward our mail (haven’t had a problem with this method).  We rarely have our mail forwarded as almost everything is paid on-line and much of our mail is just a paper confirmation of payment.  If someone needs to contact us and time is critical, snail mail would not be the way.

CONNECTING TO THE OUTSIDE WORLD

We each have a cell phone using Verizon service which usually provides connection even in the middle of nowhere.   Our phones are not “smart phones”, think it might be better to have a smarter phone but the ones we have seem adequate for now.

Our internet connection is a Verizon MiFi but the data is restricted to 3 GB.  It costs $10 for each additional GB if we go over limit so it is not too pricy (we frequently exceed our limit).  Our MiFi can service up to 5 different connections so we can both be on-line at the same time and have let others use our connection when they were unable to connect on their own.  We are considering switching to Millencom as we understand it has a data limit of 20 GB with Verizon coverage but haven’t done enough research on this yet.   Jerry trades stock & options on-line each week day so we need a reliable connection.   He says he has a plan to not trade as we travel through Canada and Alaska this summer, in the meantime he is busy making hay while the sun shines.   Whenever we can get free WiFi we download as much as we can.  We have a Nano and an Ipod and like to download audio NPR programs such as Science Friday and Fresh Air.  In addition we like to watch videos of TED talks, so we download as many of these as we can–TED talks are usually way better than TV for us.  We have a “dead” email address that we use when ever we think we will get spam from a site.  We rarely check this “dead” email site, usually just to trash hundreds of advertisements and to quickly run through it to see if there is something on it that is important.

Our motor home came with a nice flat screen TV and though many folks have a satellite (DirectTV and Dish are examples) we don’t like TV enough to pay for it.  Have an oldfashioned RV TV aerial that here in Quartzsite, Az. gets 22 stations, albeit 8 of them are in Spanish.  We do get 3 PBS stations here and those are TV stations we will watch and donate money to support.

As for radio, we have gone through parts of the county that only have religious &/or Country Western  stations and while that might be OK for a while we wanted more options.  So now we can plug our Nano or Ipod into the radio and listen to our podcasts or music.  For another option we subscribed to Sirius Radio and now we can get the news no mater where we are headed or stop.

MONEY ISSUES–BILL PAY, BANKING

All our bills are paid on-line.  Insurance, taxes, phone, internet, radio, etc.  Found you can easily even sign up for medicare on-line.  Wow, it is a “brave new world we live in”.  I frequently shop on-line.  Our Social Security, Retirement and Stock Accounts are tied into our bank accounts.  We do all our banking on-line.  We have automatic bill pay which will be especially important when we cannot get on-line to see a balance and pay it off.  We are allergic to late fees so automatic bill pay works for us.  Right now we check our balances frequently and know what should be going in or coming out of our account.   Yes, we have heard the horror stories about handling money this way, do we think we are so special that we couldn’t have problems–no! but this method works for us.

Cash is something a fulltime traveler must consider.  We have a number of credit cards and use them to pay for most purchases.   Some stores will let you charge more than the cost of your purchase and give you the difference in cash, just ask.  We don’t carry much cash, don’t even want to think about carrying enough cash to fill our gas tank and buy groceries.  Think carrying a lot of cash may be asking for trouble.

 

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