Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

Gypsies rally in Celina

Recreational vehicle owners gather at Mercer County Fairgrounds

By William Kincaid
Photo by Mark Pummell/The Daily Standard

RVs fill the Mercer County Fairgrounds this morning for The Gypsy Journal's Fourth Annual Eastern Rally. Seminars applicable to the motorhome lifestyle will be given though Friday. The public can attend for $5 each day.

CELINA - Sixty years ago, many Americans likened motorhome inhabitants to carnival folk, gypsies and conmen always ready to get out of dodge if the law encroached on their turf, historian Al Hesselbart says.
The RV lifestyle today is popular with many, from successful entrepreneurs and retired professionals to couples raising their children on the road.
Hesselbart, a historian and archivist at RV/MH Heritage Foundation in Elkhart, Ind., is one of hundreds expected at The Gypsy Journal's Fourth Annual Eastern Rally at the Mercer County Fairgrounds this week.
"Everybody here's business people," Hesselbart said Monday morning at the fairgrounds as vendors congregated.
Fellow motorists will socialize and learn about the lifestyle through multiple presentations and events held through Friday.
"This rally is more of a school than most any other rally I attend," said Hesselbart, who will speak this week about the history of RVs.
Rally coordinator Nick Russell, publisher of Gypsy Journal, said 100 trailers, converted buses and motor homes are registered from as far away as Oregon and as close as St. Marys. Russell and his wife, Terry, live and work out of their 400-square-foot motorhome year-round.
Whether arriving in a converted bus or a $1 million RV, those in the lifestyle come from disparate professions and economic backgrounds but all share an affinity for travel and adventure, Russell said.
Expected at the rally this week are a former cruise ship captain, a retired FBI agent, retired school teachers and nurses and a former NASA computer systems programer who oversaw early shuttle launches, he said.
"I think we Americans appreciate this great country of ours and look for a good excuse to see it," Hesselbart said, adding some don't want to live vicariously through pictures.
Also, with age comes a desire to downsize, he said, pointing out not everybody needs a four-bedroom house and all the stuff inside.
Hesselbart, who was invited by the Chinese government last year to talk about the history and evolution of motorhomes at the largest outdoor lifestyle show in Asia, said the idea of breaking the bond to real estate and land is appealing. People can park their apartment-on-wheels wherever they want.
Russell talked about the freedom of living on the road, such as deciding at a whim whether to go left or right at an intersection. He also pointed out that many in the lifestyle follow NASCAR races, Major League Baseball and Civil War reenactments throughout the U.S.
Hesselbart and Russell agreed that living on the road may be more affordable than people think.
If money is tight, RV dwellers can stay at a campground longer and cut back on driving, Russell said.
Hesselbart pointed out that people can find supplemental income through temporary work. Receptionist work at a national park can provide additional money and a free place to park the RV. Another source of income could be helping with seasonal harvest, like the sugar beet in North Dakota, he said.
Two years ago, the Russells switched from a converted 46-passenger Gray Line bus to a 2002 Winnebago equipped with a washer, dryer, kitchen, custom-installed work stations, Internet-access, shower and many other amenities. The 40-foot-long vehicle gets seven to nine miles per gallon, and the couple averages 10,000 miles per year.
Nick Russell publishes his 36-page journal from the road, as well as writes and sells non-fiction and fiction on the Internet. His wife runs the business and publishes a recipe column.
At the fairgrounds this week, presentations will be held on driving tips, insurance, windshield chip repairs, testing air brakes, preparing to drive to Alaska, blogging and more.
The public can attend any seminar - viewable at http://gypsyjournal.net/Eastern_rally - by purchasing a $5 pass each day at the fairgrounds.
Photo by William Kincaid/The Daily Standard

Nick Russell, publisher of The Gypsy Journal and coordinator of the week-long rally, lives in his RV year-round.

Additional online stories on this date
Parkway wins battle of state-ranked teams
ROCKFORD - The Parkway Panthers used a solid attack and stingy net defense to come away with a three-game sweep over Lima Central Catholic - 25-17, 25-20 and 25-20 - in a Monday night battle of state-ranked volleyball teams at Panther Gymnasium. [More]
LONDON - The time is ripe for entering the specialty crop market as demand increases for fresh, locally grown fruits and vegetables.
This type of f [More]
Subscriber and paid stories on this date
COLDWATER - Village manager/engineer Eric Thomas was given the green light at Monday's council meeting to apply for $2 million in loans for a sanitary sewer line replacement project next year.
Auditor questions transfer of TIF funds to pay for park improvement
CELINA - A state auditor cited the city for illegally transferring funds from the Staeger Road TIF to pay for roadway work at Eastview Park, city council members learned Monday night.
ST. HENRY - An engineering design firm will be tapped to devise a plan to reduce phosphorus levels in the village's wastewater as required by the EPA
MARIA STEIN - Work on a road reconstruction project in Osgood is nearing completion, according to reports presented to the Marion Community Development Organization at its September meeting.
Mercer County Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD) board of supervisors approved staff changes during a special meeting Monday.
Michael Watercutter was removed from the position of nutrient management technician and hired as a conservation technician at $16 per hour.
ST. MARYS - The issue of trapping squirrels in the city was again discussed during a council meeting Monday night.
Council member Jim Harris asked
WAPAKONETA - A 37-year-old Van Wert man accused of murdering his grandmother a year ago has waived his right to a jury trial.
Judge Charles D. Stee
Compiled by Gary R. Rasberry
The Celina girls' tennis team finished the home portion of their schedule on Monday and lost 3-2 to Findlay at the Booster Club Tennis Complex.
A Darke County farming operation run by two brothers has received a national environmental award.
Jeff and Alan Wuebker of Wuebker Farms, Versailles, received the Pork Industry Environmental Steward award sponsored by the Pork Checkoff program and National Hog Farmer magazine.