On Monday, December 17, MAN-Bresse, France, sent two e-mails to UPS, Louisville, KY, to develop the US- customs form. The end of the day finished without return from UPS and additional information on the UPS tracking website.
On Tuesday in the early morning the UPS site announced that the plane from Louisville had been delayed for technical reasons, then indicated that the parcel had arrived at Phoenix, AZ, in the late morning.
On Wednesday, the parcel was delivered by UPS at 10:09, local time. The shop foreman and the mechanic opened it and made the inventory of the parts. Work started. For me it was the critical phase. I hoped that they have necessary competence to carry out the assembly… and that there would be no detrimental consequences later on.
On Thursday around 16:00 we carried out the road tests. All seemed Ok. I crossed my fingers for the future, MAN workshop in Querétaro, Mexico, was still faraway. I decided to remain until Saturday morning at the hotel to put my truck in functioning order after 16 days of stop.
Butée d'embrayage, release bearing |
On Friday morning I took delivery of my truck around 9:30 a.m. with which I drive during around 30km. All seemed Ok, to follow. The day passed quickly in arrangements. It is always difficult to leave after a long stay.
I left Windermere Hotel the late morning to take again the road where I had left it on December 5th heading to Mission San Xavier del Bac at less than 15 km. The mission date back to 1692. The church is in the Spanish baroque style with polychrome wood sculptures. The day was warm and sunny. I wished to bivouac on the spot. The person contacted at the Mission advised me to go to see the police what I did. While walking on I met a car of patrol, I presented my request to the policeman who accepted it with a great smile.
On the way towards Phoenix I was passed by a Jeep which signaled to me to stop I recognized that one of Steve, met for the second time at St Davis at my bivouac. He introduced his French wife. We discussed at the edge of Hwy under the sun but with a very cold wind. They indicated a recently open museum the Musical Instrument Museum, MIM. I promised to them to visit it. While arriving at Phoenix I threw my reserved on Heard Museum which is according to Lonely Planet “… one of the best Native American museum in the entire world…” He is it de facto. Its collections are of a great wealth, I give a short outline of it. In the late afternoon I moved towards the MIM at about thirty kilometers further northwards. I bivouacked on the spot.
Rain God, 1890 | Owl, night guard 1800 |
Katsina Dolls, cultural & religious belief of Hopi |
Hohokam human figurines, AD 900 | The Future by Allan Houser, Chiricahua |