โMar-17-2016 09:00 PM
โMar-20-2016 04:08 PM
themoreweexplore wrote:
@valhalla If you did trade work, or let them stay for free, would your regular insurance cover it? In other words, does money have to exchange hands, or is "trade work" still considered commercial?
I'd like to get a piece of property someday and host other RVers.
โMar-19-2016 09:05 AM
โMar-19-2016 08:30 AM
Mr. Camper wrote:valhalla360 wrote:3oaks wrote:
Unfortunately, Mr.Camper those "good old days" are long gone.
Back in those times, hitch hiking was a convenient and for the most part, safe mode of transportation. However, today society as a whole is in a downward spiral. ๐
Reality is it's no more dangerous today. 40yrs ago, you wouldn't hear about an incident 100miles away. Now you hear about every incident 2000miles away.
This is basically the same as uber or airbnb. Very good chance it's illegal and not insured. As a camper, your risk is probably fairly low. If an issue comes up, you will be asked to move along. As an owner, someone trips and falls, expect your insurance company to laugh when they find out you are operating a business.
Unless it is an ideal location with something special, not sure why you would bother. We've used airbnb where a nearby hotel runs $150-250 and we are getting a place for $30-75. Campsites typically run $15-40. There just isn't that much to save.
There was no liability on anyone's part in my '73 trip. I always asked for permission to camp on their land and of all the people I asked I had only four who said no. One each in Ohio, Nebraska, Arizona and the last one in Mississippi. Where I asked about fishing in their pond I made deals to give them half my catch. Since I only caught one for me for dinner and breakfast I usually caught two for the landowner. Only one woman asked me to clean the fish for her. No money changed hands and I was gone by sun-up.
โMar-18-2016 12:12 PM
โMar-18-2016 11:34 AM
2gypsies wrote:
Here's another similar site. I don't know if it's used a lot or not. We never did.
https://www.boondockerswelcome.com/
โMar-18-2016 08:30 AM
โMar-18-2016 08:04 AM
โMar-18-2016 07:27 AM
โMar-18-2016 07:23 AM
โMar-18-2016 07:20 AM
themoreweexplore wrote:I don't understand the issue. That's how a B&B originally worked: you stayed in a bedroom of someone's house/apartment and shared the bath, and were furnished breakfast. Shoot I did that several times when I was in Europe in the 60's-70's. You did it then because it was super cheap.
I never would have imagined air bnb would take off. On paper it sounds crazy: letting a stranger stay in your house whole you and/or your family is there too. Crazy! But it's working.
โMar-18-2016 06:55 AM
valhalla360 wrote:3oaks wrote:
Unfortunately, Mr.Camper those "good old days" are long gone.
Back in those times, hitch hiking was a convenient and for the most part, safe mode of transportation. However, today society as a whole is in a downward spiral. ๐
Reality is it's no more dangerous today. 40yrs ago, you wouldn't hear about an incident 100miles away. Now you hear about every incident 2000miles away.
This is basically the same as uber or airbnb. Very good chance it's illegal and not insured. As a camper, your risk is probably fairly low. If an issue comes up, you will be asked to move along. As an owner, someone trips and falls, expect your insurance company to laugh when they find out you are operating a business.
Unless it is an ideal location with something special, not sure why you would bother. We've used airbnb where a nearby hotel runs $150-250 and we are getting a place for $30-75. Campsites typically run $15-40. There just isn't that much to save.
โMar-18-2016 06:36 AM
3oaks wrote:
Unfortunately, Mr.Camper those "good old days" are long gone.
Back in those times, hitch hiking was a convenient and for the most part, safe mode of transportation. However, today society as a whole is in a downward spiral. ๐
โMar-18-2016 06:29 AM
โMar-18-2016 06:27 AM