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rvshrinker's avatar
rvshrinker
Explorer III
Sep 07, 2018

First time boondocking report

Took family for four days and three nights of dry camping. Really happy with how it went. Everyone got one shower, and we were able to carefully do our dishes and dump that in the black tank. At the end of the weekend we'd barely touched the propane, had used 1/3 of fresh, 1/3 of grey, 1/3 of black, and 1/3 of battery, all according to sensors which of course are just guesstimates. We only ran the heat a few minutes every morning as we had highs in 60s and lows in 40s. Now we feel confident we could go five to six days in a pinch, and certainly 2-3 days of skiing this winter.
  • DutchmenSport wrote:
    The success to boondocking is camping like you would in a tent,
    Yah, that's one way of looking at it. Another is to expend some effort to get water and electricity.
  • Yep! That's the secret to the success. Camp in the trailer, but pretend everything about it is tent camping. The success to boondocking is camping like you would in a tent, with the excepting of having a bathroom on board instead of using a spot in the weeds.

    It's great when plans are successful!
  • Boondocking is great! Some of the "fun" of boondocking for me is living very well self-contained.

    "had used 1/3 of fresh, 1/3 of grey, 1/3 of black, and 1/3 of battery,"
    Consider eliminating any battery issue most days with a solar system.
  • Sounds great! I love camping in those temps. I sleep so much better than when it's warmer. And it's perfect weather to be energetic.

    Now that you have your basic usage down, you can fine tune things. I found for me, that I will run out of fresh water long before I run out of battery so I don't worry about solar or a generator. The Mr. Heater helps as I use that instead of the clipper furnace.
  • That sounds like survival camping but you'll get better at it. Lows in the 40s would have me running the furnace a lot longer than a few minutes. Skiing means much colder weather where you'll need more battery power.
  • So nice to get away from the confinement and crowding of a RV park and be in nature with all the luxury. Limiting water usage is really not a difficult thing to do and seems you got that under control right away.

    Consider adding a minimum of 200W solar for quiet battery recharging in the future. One caveat there is that you'll need to find areas to park your RV that get sun most or all of the day or use portable solar panels positioned in the sun.