โFeb-03-2014 04:28 PM
โJan-12-2015 07:34 PM
dannydimitt wrote:
We came back down the Cassiar in 2013 . The wife and I thought it was by far the best part of the journey. From camping on the shore of Dease Lake , the wildlife , the solitude , and Hyder AK was awesome ! Loved the drive thru Smithers to Prince George as well !
โJan-12-2015 06:41 PM
โJan-12-2015 03:58 PM
โJan-12-2015 03:42 PM
โJan-12-2015 02:50 PM
โJan-12-2015 09:00 AM
โJan-11-2015 05:33 PM
โJan-11-2015 06:09 AM
dahkota wrote:
Since our aborted attempt last year, we have swapped the truck and tt for a class A and toad. While we are less equipped for road hazards this time, we are slightly better equipped for boondocking, which we hope to do often. With 60,000 miles towing our toad without a scratch I was in denial about rock damage - Welcome to the Alaskan Highway! I learned:
1. Covers collect dust, will rub the paint and have to be washed (best at a DYI car wash) every driving day.
2. Radiator repair places love vertical shields because they can and do bounce rocks forward into a rear radiator.
3. The best protection is the Protect A Toad type of screen.
We look forward to meeting up with anyone else that may be going our way both in the states and in Canada.Small 8.5x11 signs are easy to miss. Our big sign covering the toad tire attracted some fellow travelers including in parking lots, etc.
โJan-11-2015 05:09 AM
โJan-10-2015 01:08 PM
โJan-08-2015 06:42 AM
โJan-07-2015 09:25 PM
americanrascal wrote:
I tend to agree its likely I would not ever need it, but I do want a spare for peace of mind. This is our second Class A MH. Had one for about 10 years a decade or so ago. I had bad experiences with tires on that one having had one blow out and one wall failure (They were Michelins and brand new).Luckily that rig carried a spare. The new Itasca we got several months ago came without a spare and having run up the Alaska Hiway last year I just would not feel comfortable without having a spare. A used rim is to arrive today, then I'll add the tire and be all set!
โJan-07-2015 09:31 AM
trcgolf wrote:
I know its early but we have been planning for the past 3 months. I know its another 15 months at least till we leave but we are just going crazy...
So here is our very rough plan overview. Leave mid June from western NY; travel west up through Ill., Wis., Min., ND, into Canada.
Diagonally across Saskatch. and Alberta, BC, and YT...
Our first destination is Fairbanks, via Top of the World Highway... thinking of doing the Dempster to the Arctic Circle. I know there will many stops... some short, some long but all will be great.
Fairbanks to Homer with the obligatory Denali stop for a few days.
Homer to Portland Or; Oregon to San Fran; San Fran to home via the Northern US.
We have so much planning yet to do but reading all the Roll Call posts in 2013, and 2014 just keeps us going. Started to plan finances which brings us to the first major question.
I have heard all the diesel advantages and draw backs of the gas engines. We invested in a 32' fifth wheel and 2013 GMC 2500 HD with 6.0L Crew 4x4. The fiver weighs about 8K empty, I would guess 10,500 loaded. ( I will get that checked for sure)Brand new to Rving
The truck is my every dayer.... need the 4 wheel drive here in winter. The decision with gas was pure economics. A Cummins diesel and matching tranny was $9500 more. Doing the math it was going to take a bunch of miles to save enough in mileage to pay for the increase in price. About 100000 mile by my calculation. We not going to be full timers; one long trip a year to Florida.
Traveling around NY and Pa and maybe Florida, that all makes sense but going on a trip like this, I am not so sure gas was the way to go. So I am asking for those who used a truck like mine to haul a fifth wheel through Canada...Alaska...et al... What kind of mileage can I expect? Sorry for the novelette...I will get better at this.
Edited to add 'Alaska' within the title.
โJan-04-2015 01:36 PM
โJan-04-2015 11:48 AM