Travel from Montrose, CO to Vernal, UT

We drove our coach 209 miles, about 4 hours, from Montrose, Colorado to Vernal, Utah.

The map route, heading north:

Map route

Leaving the Montrose KOA Journey RV park:

Leaving RV park

Leaving RV park

Leaving RV park

“Gateway to the canyons”:

Gateway to the canyons

“Tribute to agriculture”:

Tribute to agriculture

US-50 freeway:

Freeway

We were planning to stop for fuel in Grand Junction along the way, so I left the step cover open. Paladin enjoyed sitting on a step and looking out the lower window (which is typically called the “dog window”, but in our case is the “cat window”):

Paladin

Highway:

Highway

Hey hay:

Hay hey

Highway

There wasn’t a good place to stop at lunchtime, so I got up and made lunch while Jenn was driving — a nice option for a motorhome (but don’t worry, I sit down again as quickly as possible, and keep my seatbelt on when in my seat):

Driving

PB&J is quick and easy:

Lunch

Lunch

Very curvy road:

Highway

Switchbacks on the map:

Map

Highway

Highway

Steep grade, sharp curves, yay:

Steep grade, sharp curves

Curve

Curve

After all that, we found a spot on side of road for a break:

Break on side of road

Rough road:

Rough road

Maybe they should have workshopped that name a bit?

Kum & Go

Oil well:

Oil well

Train:

Train

Highway

Dinosaur city limit:

Dinosaur

Dinosaurs in Dinosaur:

Dinosaurs in Dinosaur

Dinosaurs in Dinosaur

I see what they did there:

Bedrock in Dinosaur

Welcome to Utah:

Welcome to Utah

Crossing another part of Green River again:

Green River

Vernal had more dinosaurs than Dinosaur:

Dinosaurs in Vernal

Dinosaurs in Vernal

Cycle shop

Mural

Our destination, a KOA Holiday park:

KOA

KOA office

Colorado National Monument

We visited Colorado National Monument, in — you guessed it — Colorado, west of Grand Junction.

Sign

We started by having a picnic lunch in a nice shelter:

Picnic shelter

Picnic shelter

Picnic

Then continued along the twisty roads, looking at the interesting rocks:

Rocks

Rocks

The first of three tunnels:

Tunnel

Tunnel

We stopped at several viewpoints:

Rocks

Morons sitting on rocks off the trail:

Morons and rocks

An open-ended canyon:

Valley

Valley

Valley

Rocks

Rocks

Rocks

Big horn sheep; we were excited to see her, as she was the first big horn sheep we’ve managed to get a picture of in the wild (we’ve seen them in a zoo in Palm Springs, and on the side of the road in Lake Mead, but not so close):

Big horn sheep

Big horn sheep

Rocks

Rocks

Rocks

Rocks

Tunnel

Info sign

Rocks

Rocks

Viewpoint:

Rocks

Viewpoint

Rocks

Rocks

Rocks

Tree

Rocks

Blooming prickly pear cacti:

Blooming cacti

Visitor center:

Visitor center

Artwork

Visitor center

Visitor center

Visitor center

Relief map:

Relief map

The Colorado plateau; been to all of those places:

The Colorado plateau

Views:

View

View

The other two tunnels:

Tunnel

Tunnel

Tunnel

Tunnel

Balancing rock:

Balancing rock

Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park south rim

The last national park for a month, Black Canyon of the Gunnison in Colorado.

Big enough to be overwhelming, still intimate enough to feel the pulse of time, Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park exposes you to some of the steepest cliffs, oldest rock, and craggiest spires in North America. With two million years to work, the Gunnison River, along with the forces of weathering, has sculpted this vertical wilderness of rock, water, and sky.

(From the NPS website.)

Black Canyon of the Gunnison

Map:

Mao

We explored the south rim of the canyon:

Canyon

Canyon

Selfie

Visitor center:

Visitor center

Visitor center

Visitor center

Cancelation stamping:

Stamps

What’s blooming:

What's blooming

Canyon model:

Model

Canyon:

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Lizard

Viewpoint

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Viewpoint

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Viewpoint

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Canyon

Montrose / Black Canyon NP KOA Journey

We stayed at Montrose / Black Canyon NP KOA Journey in Montrose, Colorado. (Campground Reviews listing.)

Dates:

  • Check in: 2022-06-05
  • Check out: 2022-06-11
  • 6 nights

Weather:

  • Mosty sunny
  • High temps ranging between 83-96°F, lows around 53-60°F
  • Some afternoon wind

Noise:

  • Some road noise, no train noise
  • Some neighbor noise

Site:

  • #5, pull-through, gravel
  • Didn’t need to disconnect toad; parked behind coach
  • Not very level
  • Medium site: about 60 feet long by about 28 feet wide
  • Full hookups:
    • 50 amp power conveniently located
    • I didn’t note the water pressure; conveniently located
    • Acceptable sewer connection, conveniently located (1 10 foot hoses used)
  • Picnic table

Internet (in usage priority order):

  • T-Mobile: 31-41 Mbps down, 4-8 Mbps up, 35 ms ping
  • AT&T: 8 Mbps down, 4 Mbps up, 75 ms ping
  • Verizon: 0.5-2 Mbps down, 5 Mbps up, 65-190 ms ping
  • Starlink: not used
  • Campground Wi-Fi: not used

Amenities:

  • Garbage dumpsters
  • Pool
  • Package pick up in office

Here’s the review Jenn wrote on Campground Reviews:

Convenient to Black Canyon National Park

Firstly, I must give a shout-out to the wonderful lady in the front office who saved me from an error in dates. I’d accidentally booked the week before we were planning on being there. She called me up after we no-showed and asked if we were on our way. After discovering my error, she very helpfully rebooked us for the following week and didn’t even charge me the usual fee to do so. That’s what I call excellent customer service!

The park itself is your pretty standard KOA Journey. We had a nice, long pull-through with mature trees giving good shade all day. The downside to the nice, long pull-through site on the first row meant that everyone and their dog used the empty neighboring sites as a shortcut to the rest of the park. Our site was also not at all level; the automatic leveler gave up and I had to work hard to get them leveled manually. We camped at Montrose / Black Canyon Nat’l Park KOA Journey in a Motorhome.

The RV park map:

Map

The weather for our stay:

Weather

Our site before parking:

Our site before parking

Our site:

Our site

Our site

Our site

Our site

We visited another national park while here, so added a sticker; the last for a month:

National Park stickers

It wasn’t quite as windy as elsewhere, so we were able to use our window awnings for the first time in a while:

Window awning

Breakfast for dinner! Griddle potatoes, bacon, and eggs:

Griddle potatoes and bacon

Griddle and table

Griddle potatoes, bacon, eggs

Sunset:

Sunset

Let’s walk around. The KOA sign, with the office behind; our site was beyond the stop sign and cabin on the left:

KOA sign

A model plane ornament:

Model plane

Swimming pool:

Swimming pool

Pavilion:

Canopy

Quite a nice-looking cabin; our site was behind this:

Cabin

More cabins:

Cabins

A fiver in the site next to ours; interestingly the bedroom slide-out has a slide-out:

Fiver

More RVs:

RVs

RVs

RVs

A Spyder motorcycle arriving, pulling a trailer:

Spyder motorcycle with trailer

The trailer transformed into a surprisingly large tent:

Spyder motorcycle with tent

Our coach again, with the main awning out:

Awning

Travel from Mancos to Montrose, CO

We drove our coach 143 miles, about 3 hours, from Mancos, Colorado to Montrose, Colorado.

The map route, heading north:

Map route

Leaving the RV park:

Leaving RV park

Bye Mesa Verde:

Leaving RV park

Delores, CO

Paladin sleeping in his safe space:

Paladin

A nice river next to the highway:

River

Another RV:

RV

A farm:

Farm

Horses:

Horse

River

Scenic mountains:

Mountains

Fire station:

Fire station

Rico, Colorado:

Rico, CO

Rico, CO

Delores, CO

Mountains:

Mountains

Mountains and lake

Mountains

Mountains

We paused near Telluride:

Telluride, CO

Mountains

Paladin looking out the windscreen:

Paladin

Mountains

Mountains

Mountains

Mountains

Mountains

Ridgway, Colorado:

Ridgway, CO

Ridgway, CO

Ridgway, CO

Paladin looking out the passenger window, while sitting on the back of the chair:

Paladin

A fuel stop at a Maverick station; unusual to not use a truck stop:

Fueling

Paladin in the step well:

Paladin

Arriving at a KOA campground:

KOA

Starlink internet

A couple of months ago I wrote a post on our cellular internet options, where I mentioned that we recently got Starlink satellite as an additional option.

Starlink is a satellite-based service from SpaceX, that uses thousands of small satellites in a low Earth orbit to blanket most of the globe. Older satellite systems use geostationary satellites, that orbit at the same rate as the planet rotation to stay in the same relative position in the sky all the time, which requires that they are further out, resulting in higher latency, i.e. slower response times. By using lots of satellites orbiting much lower down, Starlink can be much more responsive.

We don’t use Starlink all the time, but in some situations it is the best option, e.g. when we are in an area with no or limited cell coverage. For example, at a recent park we had no T-Mobile or AT&T coverage, only Verizon — but we have limited data available via that network. So we set up the Starlink dish for unlimited data.

The speed can vary widely, anything from 1 to 120 Mbps down, and 1 to 20 Mbps up, with ping times of about 30 to 120 ms, which is comparable to cellular connections. Not bad for a sky connection.

We got residential Starlink, with portability to let us access the network while roaming around. Starlink now offers a RV-specific plan, though it isn’t any better a plan; actually it’s worse, as the data rate can be more limited.

Here’s our unboxing:

Starlink box

The dish and stand:

Starlink unboxing

Below that, the router and cable:

Starlink unboxing

The dish set up in our coach; the marks on it suggest that it was refurbished, something that I gather was fairly common:

Starlink dish

I put the Starlink router on the edge of a basement compartment, below a power outlet; the cord goes out the bottom of the door:

Starlink router

The rectangular Starlink dish; in typical SpaceX and Elon Musk fashion, it is named “Dishy McFlatface”:

Starlink dish

When setting it up in a breezy environment, I secure it to the ground using long screws and washer-like discs (that came from stakes; screws are easier to deal with than hammering in stakes):

Screw

I also got the Starlink Ethernet adapter, though don’t currently use it, since routing an Ethernet cable is extra hassle; I just connect to the Starlink router’s Wi-Fi via the Pepwave modem; perhaps not quite as fast, but convenient:

Starlink Ethernet adapter

(One day I want to figure out a way to permanently route an Ethernet cable from the basement to the internet cupboard, but I haven’t thought of anything satisfactory yet.)

When positioning the Starlink dish, its app has a handy tool to check the visibility; you can point the phone camera at the sky to get a visualization and report of obstructions, to help find the best spot:

Starlink visibility app screenshot

I initially stored the dish in the original box, but a better solution was suggested in the Starlink for RVers and other mobile users group on Facebook: a Husky 12-gallon container is a perfect size to fit the dish along with the packaging material, simply by cutting off the bottom part of the packaging, like so:

Husky container

The dish and stand then fits in nicely:

Husky container

And the cable on top (and some people put the router there too, but I keep it in my basement compartment):

Husky container

The closed container:

Husky container

I keep the Starlink container in a basement compartment, safely stored until next needed:

Husky container in basement

Starlink is a great option when there isn’t cellular service.