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ohhell10339's avatar
ohhell10339
Explorer
Feb 11, 2018

If your RV is older, keep moving, stranger!

I've been investigating monthly stays in high-rent RV parks (places like San Diego, Oregon coast, etc.) where I might want to stay for an extended period. Most places I'm seeing charge considerably less per day for a monthly as opposed to a daily or weekly stay.

Though I consider many of these prices horrifying and ludicrous at the same time--$1000/mo or more for a 15x40 concrete slab with a water and sewage line!!!!!!--what seems to be an insurmountable obstacle is the idiotic and arbitrary 10-year rule. If your rig is older than 10 years, you DEFINITELY can't stay for a month and we might not let you into our Slabotopia at all, PEASANT! My rig is a perfectly presentable 1993 Class C, and though that obviously means I'm not one of the 1%, nothing about it says that I'm a no-good hippie who will deal drugs, leave trash on the lawn, or molest your sister.

You would think that such a policy would drive away business, but there are apparently so many deep-pocket seniors driving new Mastodon Industries 85-foot General Electric jet-powered Luxury Cruisers who are perfectly cool with coughing up $100+/night (to park on a slab!!!!) that I guess they don't need us little folks.

So for any of you who have suffered this bizarre form of age discrimination, how have you gotten around it? Does the prevalence of the "age rule" depend on how la-de-da the RV park is and how much the area is in demand? Have you managed to talk park managers into waiving the rule, maybe by dragging them by the scruff of the neck out to see your RV? And as far as that goes, how is such a blanket policy justified? Shouldn't it be on a case-by-case basis, or do these folks really think that the sight of a 2006 rig will detract from everyone else's experience?

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