|
JOIN THE RVCLUB
The RVClub has been a favorite virtual campfire to people passionate about RVing since 1997
|
| |
|
|
WHY RV?
Ever tried to talk to a non-RVer and explain why you enjoy the life
style so much? you'll probably be told how much more
comfortable a good motel is. you'll be reminded that even though
campgrounds are less expensive, when you figure in your initial
purchase, you aren't saving any money. And how about the
horrors of driving a rig that big? Why do you do it?
Well, the members of this forum have asked themselves the same
question. Following are some of their answers. The first an essay
that was prepared several years ago and probably summarizes most
of the others. Itâs author is Will Sill, affectionately known as "The
Curmudgeon of Sill Hill."
People who don't understand often ask: "How can you
justify such an expensive. . . uh, mobile home?" They
understand neither the terminology nor the motivation! Not
pretending to speak for all who own/use RV's [many of
whom disagree with me on general principles!] here are a
few of the reasons the RV lifestyle is popular in OUR
family:
We *enjoy travel* as much as the destination. We are
really thankful to live in a free country where one can
explore virtually any road we like without being hassled by
checkpoints or attacked by bandits. We can stop at a
country vegetable stand and talk about the harvest. Try
that from Flight 203! Unlike untold thousands of other
"campers", we do NOT want anything to do with squatting
in "campgrounds" that are really rural slums loaded with
moss-covered "RV's" and their semi-permanent porches -
complete with weeds growing through - and surrounded by
debris such as expired cars, broken lawn furniture, and
tarp-covered snowmobiles/boats/motorcycles. If THAT
environment is what people escape to, we wonder where
they LIVE that makes this look better!
We love to *see how other people live*, especially away
from huge metropolitan areas - and where there are few if
any motels, convention centers, and restaurants. This
country has vast reaches of beautiful farmland, spectacular
mountains, forests, grasslands, lakes, rivers.... Have ya
heard the one about where can an 800# gorilla sleep?
Anyplace he wants. We can easily refuse to stay in places
that have rules we think are idiotic, and if we are assigned
to a site with an obnoxious neighbor, it is not the end of
the happy hour... we can move.
We enjoy *sleeping in our own bed*, not wondering to
whom it was last rented, and without having to haul
suitcases in and out. Our 'motel room' is as warm, cool, or
well ventilated as we like. And we like to sleep with the
windows open.
We enjoy *solitude*, away from honking horns and roaring
jets - places where the most raucous noise is the cawing of
a crow. Where the most pungent odor is that of wild
flowers. We stay OFF the interstate system except to get
through a crowded metropolis, and as a result we arrive
slower but without the stress of being caught up in the
thundering herds of almost-outa-control vehicles
hammering along well over their personal skill level - to say
nothing of the (hahahaha) speed limits.
We *enjoy visiting* the relatives - whether or not they
have spare rooms or a convenient motel - and having our
own bathroom and privacy while we're there.
We love having *choices*: breakfast/lunch/dinner in the
motorhome, or that really nice-looking restaurant. Ponder
THAT as you hammer down the interstate in your car,
wondering if they used 40-weight Havoline instead of salad
dressing at the last take-it-or-leave-it diner with its
cardboard cuisine!
We like *having the grandkids with us* (sometimes!),
seeing a moose in person rather than watching Bullwinkle
on TV, and learning to get along with each other instead of
playing electronic doom games. They really enjoy the trip
more if they can move around instead of being strapped
into the back seat like captive zoo specimens. [please no
lectures about seat belts on the rear queen bed, huh?]
We love the *secure feeling* that a traffic tie up will not
create a crisis for us and stir up the personal stress level.
War story: Once a freak fall snowstorm virtually shut down
New England as we were returning from Maine. Stranded
by downed trees and traffic for a time, we were warm and
dry, with plenty of food & water. Contrast that with a
friend's true horror story about how he and his family very
nearly perished in a freak storm just this Spring. How's the
restroom in your Ford Taurus? 8-)
*Flexibility* is the key advantage for us - being able to
decide on the spur of the moment to go north instead of
west, and not worrying about being at the motel before 6,
or wondering if they over booked.
We like *saving money*. After all, our rig (we don't buy
the newest and most costly) didn't cost any more than your
car**. It gets terrible gas mileage by your standards, but
we don't HAVE to eat in restaurants all the time, and we
don't EVER pay $75 or 100 bucks for a motel room. When
the trip is over we have spent less money than if we went
by car, and we will have seen more, enjoyed more, and not
been restricted to a route that passes available food &
lodging. To say nothing of convenient clean rest rooms.
Other people have suggested additional good reasons
THEY enjoy it: after all, ball games, races, music festivals
and similar events are far more enjoyable when you have
your "house" along.
What's YOUR special reason for enjoying your RV?
**Postscript: Since this was written, most of you realize
we have splurged - buying a new-with-nubbies-on-the-tires
van for a class B conversion. First NEW vehicle for us
since 1961! But in spite of that, we expect to STILL have
fewer dollars invested than many folks have in their
Northstar or Town Car, and in terms of miles traveled we'll
still be 'way ahead. Our last Class C MH took us 30,000
miles in 18 months, so even though YOUR "mileage" may
vary and most of you will not be able to financially justify
your choice, for us RV travel is a clear winner
economically.
Dale Blankenship reminded us that the motel stays weren't quite as
good as other folks keep insisting:
I think we all like RVING, be it full time or just extended
weekends with a few longer get always thrown in for good
measure, like us. Having a RV of any type is just more
relaxing.Always knowing who's slept on your bed, who's
been in the bathroom, where your next meal is coming
from, and even the fact that you can have a meal, just about
anytime you want all contribute to the enjoyment we get
out of RVing.When was the last time you sat down and
had a conversation with the guy in the next room at a
motel? Man, that's even scary to think about. Granted
weâve only been RVING for about 4 years, but I wouldn't
trade it for anything. Even if we do have to bring the kids,
but at least they aren't sitting in a seat 2feet behind us, and
they can move around if they need to.
Having said that, let me tell y'all about my last 10 days. We
left last Wednesday for Miami to attend a business
convention. So we flew down, I hate even typing that! Got
to the Hotel, it was nice but it wasn't the motorhome, and
after 5 nights in the Sheraton Bal Harbor, I think the new
motorhome is on the back burner for a while. Ya know, I
don't think I ever had a 8 dollar salad in the motorhome!
To add to this wonderful time, my lovely wife Regina, had
talked me into taking a cruise afterwards. And to add to
my enjoyment, her sister and brother in law would fly down
bringing my 2 kids, their 4 kids and my in-laws! Got the
picture? If not, let me elaborate; pack at home, get to
airport, land in Miami and get to hotel, unpack. Have fun,
spend mega bucks(some on alcohol, but not enough) pack
again, get to boat dock, check into cabin, uh I mean closet.
I swear to goodness, the cabin was SMALLER than my
Motorhome, and damn near cost as much! unpack again,
have more fun, try to ignore kids, wife, nieces/nephews and
sea sick in-laws. Pack again, get to the airport, land, get
home and unpack and do laundry! Sound like fun? NEVER
AGAIN! Our convention next year is in Las Vegas,
Caesars Palace of all places . All I have to say is I hope they
have room for a 34 foot Southwind in their parking lot, OR
I AIN"THE GOING!!!
Whew, THAT'S why I like RVING. By the way Will, those
campgrounds with shoddy run down sites you were talking
about, I saw a lot on the cruise, there they call them the
Bahamas. After that, a run down campground woulda
looked like heaven.
Donna Ransdell added her ideas:
There's something about staying in a national park or forest
campground, while visiting that park, and being able to sit
outdoors in the camping/trailering area and enjoy the view.
You can't get the same feeling or "flavor" while staying at
the hotel or guest lodge facilities in the park, because
you're inside a massive building. When I think about the
national park camping facilities that we've stayed in over
the years, the only one that didn't have a great view or
outdoorsy feeling was Grand Canyon's Trailer Village. Had
we been over in the campground, it would have been
different perhaps.
Our daughters think, "Oh! An adventure! Motels!
Restaurants!" I think, "Oh, drudgery....motels that I have
no clue whether they're clean or not, restaurants that will
all taste the same every night. Suitcases to lug in and out.
Worry about the car being broken into at the motel.
Figuring out whether or not the motel's wakeup service is
reliable and how early it will open."
Jean Ann Sullivan reminds us that one of the attractions of our
lifestyle is the outdoors that surrounds us!
Cause it gets me out of the house! I already have the
sound of the crows, and the doves and parakeets, and a
giant size gold fish ready for the frying pan - but as I looks
across the back yards of my neighbors, I can see the
interstate which so many RVers use to travel from Arizona
across Hoover Dam, heading to the gambling center of Las
Vegas. I get a lump in my throat and a painful knot in my
stomach (no, its not an ulcer) and the urge to load up and
head em out can be so overwhelming. The MH which sits
in our driveway has a full tank of diesel and packed with
food and ready to go, but, alias! it is only a monumental
reminder of the wide open spaces and new horizons to be
reached but for only the time and a turn of the key.
We also enjoy seeing the different parts of the country, more than we could
probably manage without our RVs. Lem and Carol Hunter's experiences are
probably similar to many:
We call our country the Ultimate Suburb of America and
planned on making it an endless vacation to see everything
we could while we were still able to do so.
I had been to various cities to attend seminars and wanted
to share my experiences in those places with Lem; he had
been to some different places and wanted to share them
with me, so we set a date, August 1994, traded up for the
3rd time to a larger truck and trailer and put the house on the
market. My two daughters and their families helped us with
yard sales and fixing up. We had a great farewell party with
family and friends and set out.
To date, we have pulled this trailer to or through all but
the Pacific Northwest (had been there before in the van)
and Alaska. This past summer we counted the states and
did 26, though a lot of them we'd been in before. We
try to steer clear of questionable weather, follow the sun
as much as possible, and have enjoyed our membership
at RoVers Roost SKP Co-op Park in Casa Grande for the
past 2 winters, making side trips whenever we can get
away. We even went back and had a wonderful time
'doing' Colorado a couple years ago, seeing some of
the sights we missed before all over the state.
Full-timing doesn't mean the same to everyone,
but we have a tendency to do everything we do, with
gusto, as we're doing this. We loved the idea, and
feel that after 4 years, going on 5, we are jack-leg
authorities on "Just Do It." Our first 5W had a
bumper sticker on it, "We're out spending our children's
inheritance." I'm not sure if we're OUT, spending, etc. or
We're outspending, etc. but we do know what it's
like being on a fixed income and live accordingly, or
try to. Our richness has come from the many wonderful
people we've met all over the country and has restored
our faith in humans of all walks of life. We've seen the
hills and shores of Maine, the mountains Pennsylvania
and of the east, and shores of Cape Fear and the east
coast, Dauphin Island and the Gulf coast, San Diego
and the Pacific coast and almost everything in between.
The words of America, the Beautiful come to mind and
every time we encounter them in real life, we say them
over again. It's truly a beautiful country.
If you begin to have doubts when your friends argue for their
lifestyle, try a vacation *without* the RV! Shelley Zoellick tells of her
recent trip:
We recently took a 5,100 mile road trip, and decided, of all
things, not to take the fifthwheel. Our reasoning was, since
we live in it full time, it would be a nice 'change of pace' to
stay in motels, have maid service and eat out all the time,
and not have to worry about driving the big rig, hooking
up and unhooking all the time, etc.
Well, you've probably guessed by now, I regretted that
decision, and missed our 'big rig' the whole trip! For
starters, we spent between $65 and $150 a night on motels.
Even $30 KOA's look like a bargain compared to this! It
was necessary to rent two rooms to have any privacy at all
(and after spending all day on the road with two
rambunctious boys, our own room became almost a
necessity!) The first night out, we paid $70 for a room at a
Comfort Inn that was dirty and run-down. The rest of the
trip, it was potluck, but there was always the stress of not
knowing what kind of accommodations we would wind up
with. Sometimes there was nothing available at all - one
night, we drove till 3:00 am because every motel we
stopped at, starting at about 9 p.m., was totally full. Finally
we arrived at the Grand Canyon (our planned destination
for the following day), exhausted, to get the last available
room. For $72, we shared a cramped, shabby, rundown (oh
excuse me - I meant to say 'rustic'!) room with the boys.
Then there were maids banging on our door early in the
morning, even if we hadn't checked in till the wee hours of
the morning, and if we didn't get to the door in time, they
would unlock it and attempt to walk right in! The nicest
place we stayed in (near the end of our trip) was a suite
hotel in New Mexico. It was nice, yet I kept noticing the
cheap furnishings and cabinetry, and thinking of the Corian
countertops and oak cabinetry in our own fifthwheel that
we had left behind. Even though we wound up paying a
small fortune for lodging on this trip, we never once stayed
in a place that was as 'nice' as our RV!
One memory that is especially vivid, is driving along one of
the scenic byways in southeast Utah as the sun was going
down, and seeing the boondocked RVers parked here and
there along the river, just sitting back and enjoying the
breathtaking scenery of the rose-red canyon walls on both
sides. It was enough to bring tears of longing to a person's
eyes (and that wasn't caused by the smoke from the
campfires which wafted in on the crisp evening air as we
drove by!). Of course, there were no motels there.
Incidentally, that's the very night that we wound up driving
till 3 am...
Then there was our last night on the road, when we
reached San Antonio by midnight, and decided to push on
to Houston so we could sleep in our own beds! It was
raining hard and there were flood warnings. Then, just
outside of town, we came across a roadblock - the
interstate had been closed. Nothing to do but go back to
San Antonio and get a room for the night. We stopped at a
truck stop for a soda, and learned that they had just closed
the interstate on the other side of us, effectively trapping us
where we were! Faced with no option but to sleep in the
truck, the four of us tried to get comfortable in our Ford
F150 extended cab while the rain poured down. Right
across the parking lot were several RVs, one a fifthwheel
similar to ours, with lights in the windows. I could just
imagine them enjoying a late night snack and watching TV
before they crawled into their comfortable beds for the
night... After a couple of restless hours, we were able to
get back into town, but must have stopped at 15 or 20
motels before we finally found one with vacancy and slept
for the remainder of the night.
Next time, we are taking the 'big rig'!
Your friends are right about one thing, however ö there are some
things you donât get to do when you take your RV. John Daniels reminds
us of what we must give up:
There are some things which I do not get to do while using
my RV. I don't get to whack all my belongings except for
the ones I will need into a suitcase . I don't get to rush
through terrible traffic and a snarled parking lot to get to a
flight which will be either canceled or delayed for takeoff
anyway. I don't get to sit between two people of incredible
size. Nor do I get to wait for the bathroom to become free.
When I reach my destination there's no unpacking no
getting dressed to go out to eat (unless I want to). When I
walk around the campground at night there are always
friendly people to talk to not folks who look the other way.
Then there is the dreaded motel. They all have MO. That's
motel odor. Even with the perfume they put in the air
there is the underlying odor of bathroom disinfectant. Now
maybe not if you get to stay only in rooms renting for a
couple of hundred per night but in all the places I've been
in there is that odor. Also you get to eat what you want
when you want it. If you eat out all the time you will
invariably eat more than you really need or want. Here
comes the blubber. There's lots more but been there done
that ö hate it.
And when you consider the cost, we do have some advances (if
you ignore the cost of the initial purchase, of course!). Donna
Ransdell shared an article she recently came across:
There was an article in this morning's San Diego
Union-Tribune's Travel section. The couple in the article
had taken a "special discount rate" at a hotel for $189/night
for 10 nights. However, when they went to check out at
the end of the 10 days, the bill came to over $2500. The
extra charges were for hotel taxes (not included in the
quoted rate), plus they had had room service, laundry, the
hotel automatically added a tip for maid service to the
room, phone charges, etc.
Her 10 day hotel bill came to more than twice what we
spent on our 4 week RV vacation this summer. Ours
included ALL food eaten out, fuel, campground costs, and
miscellaneous costs. I hope they enjoyed that vacation as
much as I enjoyed ours.
Most of us in this group enjoy traveling on short notice. Lynne
Wendell reminds us of some advantages:
One of the main reasons that we RV is because it is much
easier to pack for four people including two preteens. I
keep the four different types of shampoo, three different
conditioners, two types of toothpaste, three types of soap,
etc. in the camper at all times. When we get ready to go
on a trip, I don't even have to think about all those things.
We keep toothbrushes and hair brushes in there. We keep
swimsuits in there. Yes, I know it is getting to be winter
but you never know when you will happen upon a hot tub
or indoor pool. I keep sweatshirts for everyone and yes,
we've had to pull them out unexpectedly in July. All those
"little things" that I might forget to put in the suitcase are
always in the TT.
And if you enjoy visiting your grandkids, remember an advantage
that Billy Doyle points out: "The little ones do not come into your
room, turn on the light at 5 a.m. and announce that it is time to get
up."
Most of the time we RVers like to argue among ourselves, but this
is one time we are in agreement: RVing is the way to go!
|