Woodstock, Vermont

We drove through Woodstock, Vermont on a rainy afternoon.

An interactive map of the town:

Welcome to Woodstock (unrelated to the famous music festival, that was originally going to be in Woodstock, New York):

Welcome to Woodstock

Woodstock

Woodstock

Woodstock

Woodstock

Woodstock

Woodstock

We headed out of town, looking for a place to stop for dinner, and came across the Long Trail Brewing Pub:

Long Trail

Long Trail

Long Trail

Long Trail

Long Trail

Long Trail

A nice creekside view:

Long Trail

And tasty food:

Long Trail

Long Trail

Long Trail

Then we headed back to Woodstock; here’s another covered bridge:

Covered bridge

Woodstock

Woodstock

 

And another:

Covered bridge

We would have liked to spend more time exploring the town, but had to make do with a quick drive through.

Ben & Jerry’s Factory Tour

We visited Ben & Jerry’s original factory for their guided tour.

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Starting the tour:

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Unfortunately they didn’t allow photos during the tour, despite their site saying “there are plenty of photos ops”, perhaps because they weren’t manufacturing during our tour; it was a cleaning cycle.

Afterwards, a taste of ice cream:

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

While that would be interesting, the flavor we tried was actually:

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Examples:

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Available here:

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Gift store:

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Back outside:

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

Ben & Jerry's Factory Tour

The Flavor Graveyard of retired flavors:

Flavor Graveyard

Flavor Graveyard

Flavor Graveyard

Flavor Graveyard

Flavor Graveyard

Flavor Graveyard

Flavor Graveyard

A fun experience, though a little disappointing that they weren’t manufacturing at the time.

Quechee Pine Valley Campground

We stayed at Quechee Pine Valley Campground in White River Junction, Vermont. (Campground Reviews listing.)

They were called Quechee / Pine Valley KOA Holiday when we booked (fairly recently), but we got a first clue that they were moving away from being a KOA when they didn’t give us the KOA VIP member discount. They were changing the various signage away from KOA during our stay. They have a blog post about their transition back to a private campground.

Dates:

  • Check in: 2025-06-15
  • Check out: 2025-06-18
  • 3 nights

Weather:

  • Partly sunny, some rain
  • High temps 72-75°F, lows 55-62°F
  • Negligible wind, gusts to 17 MPH

Noise:

  • Some distant freeway noise
  • No train horn noise
  • No neighbor noise

Site:

  • #53, pull-in (unusual!), gravel
  • Needed to disconnect toad, parked beside coach
  • Unlevel site; high on driver side; used hydraulic leveling
  • Gravel driveway about 50 feet long by 20 feet wide
  • 20 feet to neighbors on both sides
  • Trees and slope between sites
  • Picnic table
  • Fire pit
  • Tall trees
  • Clean site
  • Elevation 760 feet, front facing SW

Utilities:

  • 50 amp power, conveniently located
  • 40 PSI water, very conveniently located
  • Good sewer connection, very conveniently located (1 10-foot pipe needed)

Internet (in usage priority order):

  • Starlink: 30-44 Mbps down, 16 Mbps up, 31 ms ping, significantly obstructed (lots of trees)
  • Campground Wi-Fi: used by Jenn, but not measured; seemed plenty fast
  • RoamLink: 20 Mbps down, 0.1 Mbps up, 150 ms ping (the RoamLink service picks the best network, so I’m not sure which one it used, other than not AT&T)
  • AT&T: no service

Amenities:

  • Garbage pickup from site
  • Pool
  • Package delivery (didn’t use, but asked)

Our review on Campground Reviews:

Hilly convenient location

When we made our reservation, this was a KOA, but upon arrival, they were in the process of removing all traces of KOA signage. It’s a nice campground, but with some very twisty, hilly internal roads and lots of trees. We had a front-in site at the top of the hill with a narrow road, which wasn’t a comfortable drive in a 40′ motorhome, but they escorted us to our site and made sure there wasn’t any oncoming traffic. Getting out was a little hairy as we had to back out and avoid the trees and the neighbors parked into the street. The site was a little unlevel, with no sky available for Starlink. The campground’s Wi-Fi was decent, and the location was good for exploring Vermont and New Hampshire. We camped at Quechee Pine Valley Campground in a Motorhome.

Campground map:

Map

An interactive map:

Our site; unusually, a front-in site (for motorhomes only):

Our site

Our site

Our site

Our site

Trees in front of our coach:

Trees in front of our coach

Other sites:

Other sites

Other sites

Other sites

Other sites

Other sites

Pool area (still with some KOA signage here, but since changed):

Pool area

Pond by the entrance:

Pond by the entrance

New entrance sign; clearly a KOA Holiday sign has been removed and replaced with a temporary banner:

New entrance sign

Seems like a nice enough campground, though a little hilly. We’d probably stay here again.

Travel from Richfield Springs, New York to White River Junction, Vermont

We drove our coach 261 miles, about five hours of driving, from Richfield Springs, New York to White River Junction, Vermont.

Here’s a map showing our route, heading northeast — not the most direct route, but the easiest, sticking with interstates, instead of twisty highways:

Route map

An interactive map, with potential stops pinned; we went through Massachusetts, but didn’t stop, so that doesn’t count as a visited state — but we’ll get it in a few weeks time, so that’s fine:

A short video of engaging the tow bar and doing a pull test to ensure the truck wheels turn as we prepare to leave:

Narrow road:

Narrow road

US-20:

US-20

US-20

Exit to I-88 East:

Exit to I-88 East

Exit to I-90 East:

Exit to I-90 East

Tolls:

Tolls

Rest area:

Rest area

Starbucks for lunch:

Starbucks for lunch

Starbucks for lunch

South to I-87:

South to I-87

Exit to I-90 East:

Exit to I-90 East

Narrow roadworks:

Narrow roadworks

Narrow bridge:

Narrow bridge

Fuel stop:

Fuel stop

Massachusetts Welcomes You:

Massachusetts Welcomes You

Steep Grade Next 6 Miles:

Steep Grade Next 6 Miles

Exit to I-91:

Exit to I-91

Narrow roadworks:

Narrow roadworks

Exit to I-91 North:

Exit to I-91 North

Welcome to Vermont:

Welcome to Vermont

Rest area:

Rest area

5% grade:

5% grade

Exit to I-89 North:

Exit to I-89 North

Exit to US-4:

Exit to US-4

Arriving at campground:

Arriving at campground

Following coach up steep narrow curvy road:

Following coach up steep narrow curvy road

We were stuck! Slide-out failed to retract due to leaking piston

While preparing to leave the Four Mile Creek State Park campground recently, the big front driver-side slide-out started to come in crooked — the front side didn’t move, but the back side came in. This is very bad — apart from a potentially difficult and expensive repair, we could not move our coach with the slide unable to retract.

Here you can see that the front side of the slide was almost fully extended:

Slide partially retracted

But the rear side was mostly in:

Slide partially retracted

Looking underneath, the arm was twisted:

Slide partially retracted

That was the end result of our efforts: we stopped after a moment when we realized that it was coming in crooked, and tried re-extending and re-retracting a few times, to no avail; we stopped when it got that skewed, and we couldn’t re-extend it again.

Time to call for professional help! I looked on the RV Help site, and found Brian Villa (Villa Mobile RV Tech). He was enjoying some Sunday time with his family, but was willing to come help us, arriving within an hour or two. We spent some time investigating, trying to narrow down the cause, and eventually discovered that the hydraulic reservoir was empty, and when we added more fluid, it immediately leaked out over the top of the fuel tank:

Leaking hydraulic fluid

Unfortunately it isn’t easy to see the front hydraulic piston, as it’s above the big 150 gallon fuel tank, but we’re pretty confident that the piston seals have failed.

The next day, the tech got some caps for the hydraulic hoses, and capped off the two hydraulic hoses for that slide (here’s the first one capped):

Capped hydraulic hoses

He also disconnected the slide from both the front and back pistons (this is the back one):

Disconnecting slide from piston

Little bolts that hold the slide to the piston:

Little bolts that hold slide to piston

We were unable to push the slide in manually with just the two of us, so he used two jacks to raise the slide a little (as it has to go up before it goes in):

Using jacks to raise slide

We also recruited some extra “muscle” from the campground maintenance staff and other campers, and between six of us we were able to manually push the slide in — once we got it over the first inch or so, it slid in the rest of the way very easily (with a little gravity assist by tilting the coach using air leveling):

Manually pushed slide in

With that in, Brian built some bracing out of 2×4 boards to hold it in, since the hydraulics were disconnected. On the front side of the slide, there was a very sturdy structure on top of the slide:

Wooden bracing

 

Wooden bracing

Even screwed into the slide itself:

Wooden bracing

A simpler but still sturdy bracing above the slide on the rear side:

Wooden bracing

Plus a board bracing the bottom on the front side:

Wooden bracing

Thanks again to Brian for getting us back on the road!

To make it even more secure, I later added a heavy-duty ratchet strap on the rear side of the slide in the basement:

Ratchet strap in basement

Ratchet strap in basement

Plus a board under the couch feet, so they’re not hanging in the air (they sit on the floor when the slide is out):

Board under couch feet

And finally a couple of cabinet jack support poles adding extra bracing on the rear side:

More bracing on slide

Perhaps overkill, but we were continuing to travel while awaiting an appointment to fix it.

I initially made an appointment at NIRVC in Tennessee, which is coming up next week, but I discovered that the manufacturer of the slide cylinders, HWH, is not far off our planned route in Iowa, and they said they would be able to repair the cylinder and restore the slide (plus check the other slide and jacks), much cheaper than NIRVC would be able to (even if NIRVC had ordered a replacement part in time). So we’ll be heading to HWH in a couple of weeks. Hopefully they’ll be able to fix it as easily as they indicate!

Update: it turned out that HWH wasn’t willing to fix the issue, as they thought we’d have to drop the fuel tank to reach the piston. But it wasn’t a wasted trip, as they were able to sell us the required part. We later took our coach to the Oregon Motorcoach Center in Eugene, Oregon, and they were able to successfully fix it, accessing it through the back of the battery compartment.

Cooperstown

We visited Cooperstown, New York to go to the Baseball Hall of Fame (see tomorrow’s post), but before that we wandered through the town, and had lunch.

Village of Cooperstown

Downtown:

Downtown

Doubleday Field:

Doubleday Field

Doubleday Field

We had lunch at the HardBall Cafe:

Menu

Menu

BLTs, fries, mozzarella sticks:

BLT, fries, cheesesticks

More of the town:

More of the town

More of the town

More of the town

More of the town

More of the town

A cute town, but very touristy, unsurprisingly.