โOct-04-2014 04:07 AM
โNov-02-2014 01:36 PM
C-Bears wrote:Jafa wrote:
Reason I ask wife and I are wanting to either to full time or part time if we cannot sell our home before we retire. Did any of you start out with some sort of plan as to where you wanted to travel to. What I consider full time RVing would be constant travel and not staying in one place for more then two weeks.
When we started the only real "plan" we had was that we would spend several years seeing most, if not all of the United States. We also knew that we would never spend another winter in the snow, and we still wanted to have some time with our kids and grandkids.
We are following those guidelines and making the rest up as we go!
That is what is really great about being totally full time in an RV, you might be sitting around and decide "hey, lets take off and go visit_________ for a couple weeks".
โNov-02-2014 01:18 PM
Jafa wrote:
Reason I ask wife and I are wanting to either to full time or part time if we cannot sell our home before we retire. Did any of you start out with some sort of plan as to where you wanted to travel to. What I consider full time RVing would be constant travel and not staying in one place for more then two weeks.
โNov-02-2014 11:36 AM
โNov-02-2014 10:52 AM
โOct-22-2014 05:56 PM
โOct-22-2014 01:07 PM
C-Bears wrote:Roy&Lynne wrote:
So how do you plan where to go next? I met one couple who geocached and we like birding but how do you decide where to go next?
For us we like to be around the kids/grandkids for part of the summer. Even at that we may take anywhere from a 2 to 7 week trip out west or someplace else during the summer months but we try to spend a majority of the time around family.
By the time December rolls around we head for warmer temperatures. We don't go anywhere in the winter where the average temps are in the 60's or below, we try to go where the average is mid 70's or above.
I fish and the DW reads. We both walk and ride our bicycles. We can do our hobbies in almost any part of the country.
โOct-22-2014 12:20 PM
paulcardoza wrote:
I didn't realize there a formal rules! LOL!!!!
We are in our RV from April 1 thru Mid Nov. Unfortunatley, I still need to work, so heading toward warmer weather in the winter is not yet an option. I suggest we are fulltimers during the New England camping season.
Will the fulltimer police be knocking on my door? :hJohn & Angela wrote:
We are full timers. Have been for 11 years. Having said that we still work about 5 months of the year in the RV industry. During that time we stay on our own private RV property. From what I gather some would disqualify us from using the title as a result of that.
โOct-22-2014 11:24 AM
John & Angela wrote:
We are full timers. Have been for 11 years. Having said that we still work about 5 months of the year in the RV industry. During that time we stay on our own private RV property. From what I gather some would disqualify us from using the title as a result of that.
โOct-22-2014 10:36 AM
Roy&Lynne wrote:
So how do you plan where to go next? I met one couple who geocached and we like birding but how do you decide where to go next?
โOct-22-2014 10:25 AM
โOct-22-2014 08:46 AM
teamfamily5 wrote:
If you travel around the country and have no tax home then you are a transient or migrant ๐ if you have a tax home and travel around then you are a full timer
โOct-22-2014 08:32 AM
John&Joey wrote:Titles and being part of a group are more important to some than others.
Just wondering why it even matters?
โOct-19-2014 08:16 AM
C-Bears wrote:
To me "full time RV" means that you do not have a stick built residence, or if you own one you just rent it out but never actually live in it yourself. You live in your RV all the time and travel either full time or part time. If you live in a RV but it never ever moves then you are not a "full time RVer" you are a "trailer park occupant" IMHO. If you travel around the country and work out of your RV part time you are probably a full time RVer, as compared to someone who just lives in a RV, works full time, and never moves the RV.
โOct-15-2014 11:29 AM
dahkota wrote:
We use our mail forwarding service address for everything - it is our 'primary residence.'
All bills are sent to us electronically and paid electronically (credit cards, cell phones, satellite, health insurance).
Our funds are direct deposited into our credit union from the account which generated them (retirement accounts).
We only have a mailbox because we are required to have a physical address. Otherwise, everything is done by computer. Occasionally, we receive paper mail - car registration renewal, for example - which the mail service forwards to where ever we happen to be.