โJan-19-2019 11:10 AM
โFeb-05-2019 12:33 PM
Grit dog wrote:
^ Another good suggestion, a small house in a small town. Same little towns up in N WIsco, you can get an ok house on a city lot for like 40grand.
Issue there being maint, winterizing, rodents burglary all while โfull timing โ somewhere else.
Iโd be more inclined to the vacant lot idea and possibly throw up a maintenance free shop/garage. Maybe a full bath in it. Less to worry about but still a home base.
Of course I could live in my shop 365 days a year if it had a decent bath and the camper to cook n sleep in! But thatโs just me.....
โFeb-05-2019 08:17 AM
โFeb-05-2019 06:58 AM
wa8yxm wrote:
Do people have Pickup trucks as toweds.. YES
DO people have 4 door sedans as toweds YES
Do people have SUV's as toweds YES
Do people have ____ Fill in vehicle of choice___ and odds are very good the answer is YES
At least one RVer even has a helicopter as a towed.
The only limits on what you can tow:
Weight. For example I can tow, in theory 4,000 pounds or less. Some RV"s up to 10 thousand.
Transmission and other feature of the potential towed.
Not all cars are towable even with modification (My current towed (A Sedan) is modified) Some can be towed 4 down. Some dolly Some full trailer (4 up) some you simply should not tow. PERIOD even on a flat bed tow truck for any long ditances. (Short is ok on a flatbed tow).
โFeb-05-2019 12:42 AM
ScottG wrote:
We have lots of properties here in Wa. like that. Many of them are at or near ocean beaches and some have rules/ordinances that only allow you to park an RV on the space for six months (sometimes a little more) per year.
โFeb-05-2019 12:13 AM
PartyOf Five wrote:I would suggest something like this as well. Some of these small towns that don't have job opportunities have dirt cheap home's. Taxes usually are minimal as well. I know one person who purchased a lot and built a steel building for a shop and made a small insulated living area in the building.
I've wondered about this as well- how to get Urban amenities and a home base, without high overhead. I think finding a small house in a small town would be easiest, based on most of your requirements. My friend for example has a smaller house in Lebanon IN -and says he has everything he needs in town, everything he wants in Indianapolis 20 minutes away, and everything he can imagine in (or connecting through) Chicago, 3 hours away. I'm curious what others suggest.
โFeb-04-2019 06:53 PM
โFeb-04-2019 05:57 PM
packnrat wrote:
cheap, simple, and secure "not a home look".
two 40 foot shipping containers,
paint to match the area, trees bushes, etc. hidden from view. county would/might not think twice.
just place them on a good thick concrete pad. and maybe a cheap tin roof for rain drainage.
โJan-22-2019 10:21 AM
โJan-21-2019 08:27 AM
โJan-21-2019 08:08 AM
โJan-21-2019 07:26 AM
HadEnough wrote:
The main point of this thread is to ask this...
Has anyone every bought a small piece of land, just to use a maximum of 6 months out of the year as a getaway, set up water and electric on it (I can go to a dump station for black water) and used that piece of land as a seasonal spot for their RV?
What would zoning be like with this? I don't own any real estate so I don't understand how this works. I own boats and RVs.
Could I do this in an area that is less than a 2 hour drive from a Whole Foods in Florida? In Maine? Less than 2 hours from an airport?
Would I have lots of problems or is it considered a vacations property since it has nothing built on it and no permanent residency or dwelling?
I see no mailbox, no permanent RV there, no meaningful development of the land. Just a spot to park with water and electricity. Or even fully off grid if that's easier.
Would this work?
Basically, making my own one RV campground that's in use half the year?
โJan-21-2019 05:17 AM
โJan-21-2019 02:54 AM
โJan-21-2019 02:53 AM
SDcampowneroperator wrote:
Pickup as a toad? yes. Consider getting a couple of 80 gal. or larger plastic tanks, one for fresh, one for waste and a macerator pump to carry in the pickup. Then you are your own fill and dump station.
Some of the counties around where I live have a 3 acre minimum, outside city limits but no restriction or zoning on how you use it.
Find an area you like and check with the AHJs there.