Jan-25-2019 10:22 AM
Jan-27-2019 09:26 AM
pnichols wrote:BFL13 wrote:
"Real camping " is when you join the army and have to sleep in a mud-muddle. I chose the navy instead. No mud-puddles. I feel the same about RVing!
BF ... no,no. "Real camping" is when you're in the Air Force and sleep in the heated and air conditioned barracks before jumping into the heated and air conditioned plane. No cold ocean water. :C and :B
We leave the RV to hunt rocks fish, hike, photograph, bird watch, etc.. But when back in the RV we like the environment inside the box to be completely under our control at all times - unlike my backpacking days in a tent at 10,000 feet.
Jan-27-2019 08:50 AM
BFL13 wrote:
"Real camping " is when you join the army and have to sleep in a mud-muddle. I chose the navy instead. No mud-puddles. I feel the same about RVing!
Jan-27-2019 05:47 AM
Jan-26-2019 08:25 PM
Monster1 wrote:BFL13 wrote:
You guys are entitled to choose whatever "camping lifestyle" you like. There are many reasons to be out there in an RV instead of at home.
The RV lets you modify it from as new, so that you can live the "camping style" that suits you.
Just remember that not everyone chooses the same "camping style", and everyone's "style" is equally valid.
You don't get extra points for depriving yourself of the available comforts, but it might make you feel virtuous in your own right. 🙂
In our case, not being on a "downed pilot's survival course", we like having as many comforts as possible. 🙂
I'm sorry my post offends you.
Jan-26-2019 07:33 PM
BFL13 wrote:
You guys are entitled to choose whatever "camping lifestyle" you like. There are many reasons to be out there in an RV instead of at home.
The RV lets you modify it from as new, so that you can live the "camping style" that suits you.
Just remember that not everyone chooses the same "camping style", and everyone's "style" is equally valid.
You don't get extra points for depriving yourself of the available comforts, but it might make you feel virtuous in your own right. 🙂
In our case, not being on a "downed pilot's survival course", we like having as many comforts as possible. 🙂
Jan-26-2019 06:25 PM
Jan-26-2019 06:19 PM
Boon Docker wrote:
So you are not interested in "real camping" I take it. :B
Jan-26-2019 06:01 PM
Jan-26-2019 05:13 PM
Jan-26-2019 04:26 PM
Monster1 wrote:ppine wrote:
Just a thought. The whole point of camping to me is get away from modern life. Buying a large generator to run a microwave seems odd to me. You can easily make pizza in a Dutch oven on a fire. It is not instant, but it is quiet and you will always have enough fuel. No hookups, no generator, no problem. Teach your kids.
I fully agree with this. I grew up in the RV business and the boy scouts so I grew up both RV'ing and camping. I'm 45 years old now and this is my first RV. My family and I have been tent camping up till this point. It wasn't a light decision to buy our trailer. I knew there was a chance that we'd never be "camping" again. We've seen so many people pull up to a camp site, back there RV into the site and scramble out of the rig, look around and climb back into the unit never seeing them again unless it's to get into an outside compartment only to go back inside. To me, that isn't camping or even livin. I told the family if we were going to buy a trailer, it's for sleeping and getting out of inclement weather only (two years ago we were in a down pour for three days in our tent and I loved it!) Even though we now have the trailer, we still cook outside on the fire, sit around outside even though there is a nice comfortable couch inside, and we eat outside as well. The microwave is just for quick snacks and lunch when we don't have time to build a cook fire between adventures.
Jan-26-2019 01:10 PM
Jan-26-2019 11:37 AM
Jan-26-2019 11:19 AM
ppine wrote:
Just a thought. The whole point of camping to me is get away from modern life. Buying a large generator to run a microwave seems odd to me. You can easily make pizza in a Dutch oven on a fire. It is not instant, but it is quiet and you will always have enough fuel. No hookups, no generator, no problem. Teach your kids.
Jan-26-2019 11:00 AM
HadEnough wrote:
Sounds so expensive, heavy and like a chore.
A solar array, battery bank and inverter is a much more suitable setup for this situation. Microwaves don't need generators at all. They pull a lot of current but only for 10-15 minutes here and there, so Amp HOURS used is actually small.
Solar keeps the batteries topped off at all times too, unlike generator only setups. It's silent, always on and working and handles a situation like this with ease and no need for fuel.
These is no better case for solar than this one.
Jan-26-2019 06:35 AM