Mrs. Rosas,
I must bring up an important issue with a 12yo RV. Check the age of the tires. There is a date code on them, and even if they are in terrific condition, seven years is about the maximum safe life. This is real serious and please do that check before you leave the neighborhood. Brake fluid should also be flushed with new and the engine coolant replaced. Remember, it is a 12yo truck witha 12yo house on it and treat it accordingly. 40k miles isn't really very much, but the rubber parts will age out no matter what.
An Important Maintenance Note for older coaches:
If you can't prove it was done, it didn't get done...
So check tires, change brake fluid and coolant, check the batteries.
(Does this guy know what he is talking about?? Look at the sig pix. We put near 12k miles on that antique this year and are planning more next year now that we are both retired.)
APU (genset) are notorious for bad battery connections. If the house battery is not a disaster already, you may get by just cleaning the connections that have been carefully ignored for a decade. Or, maybe you need a new house bank.
You will get a real thrill out of this kind of "camping".
My definitions are:
Dry Camping is anytime you are stopped for the night without any utility hookups.
Boondocking is like dry camping, but there is no pavement and when you turn off your lights, there is none. Maybe you can hear owls and other animal calls, but no truck engines or music.
Solar is nice if you do extensive doondocking. If you have enough and little enough power demand, you can go a long time before you need to run the APU to recharge the house bank. If you don't plan to do that, it is sort of expensive and good for not much past bragging rights.
What you will really enjoy is the set-up and strike time.
- Done -
Actually, depending on where you stop, you may need to get out block to level the unit before you shut down. (This in no-way compares to pitching a tent in the rain.)
What I will suggest is that if you have not been camping recently, you do your first night in the driveway. If you are like everybody else, you will discover what you overlooked.
Learn all about the coach systems, where the fuses batteries and the pump are, and how to dump the black and gray systems. More than that, collect all the documentation for the coach and its equipment that you can and carry it on board. Start a notebook with everything you did and discovered, if you have that as long as we have had ours, you will forget some things and just just because you are old (you aren't - yet)
Safe Travel
Matt
Matt & Mary Colie
A sailor, his bride and their black dogs (one dear dog is waiting for us at the bridge) going to see some dry places that have Geocaches in a coach made the year we married.