djsamuel wrote:
SidecarFlip wrote:
Good way to look at it. HGTV effect.....
In 35 years of RV'ing I've always stayed smaller. Smaller means 'less stuff' to pack and unpack, better fuel mileage from the motor and easier to store. I winter my unit inside my barn so storage is a non-issue and no storage fees. At one time I thought as we (my wife and I) get older, we'd want a bigger unit but that never played out. We stayed small. We have no issue with it, have learned to pack accordingly and are quite content with smaller.
+1 My wife and I really enjoy our 24' camper. Normally just the two of us, sometimes a visitor or two. When we watch the huge units coming in a park or going down the road, we look at each other and say that we like ours better. That is for our situation. We see many cases where the situation would require a unit much bigger than ours. Of course my wife started camping as a kid with her parents and five brothers and sisters in a 15' Shasta.
I started in a tent with a backpack as an Eagle Scout. Tent, backpack, cook kit (still have it and the pack), the tent rotted years ago, Some non perishable food, my favorite was DAK canned ham, spam and bread. powdered milk and cereal. Always took my fly rod along too. As I got older, graduated to a COX tent camper, then a Serro Scotty that I had a long time. Then a Lance truck camper (had that a long time too) and now a P'up truck camper. Such luxury. It has a wet bath (I used to use a stream to wash in), toilet (always dug a hole and used that) and a bed that is off the ground and not subject to getting flooded when it rains and I have a real furnace too and a fridge so I can keep stuff cold, take perishable food and actually eat 3 squares.
What a life.
Still take my fishing rod though. Very seldom, if ever use a campground. With my outfit, any turn off or primitive spot is a campground. Preferrable in the woods, away from other people and those distractions and irritations.