Well we made it back safe and sound! Left on the 6th and just got back on the 31st. Route included:
Gilory, CA
Redding, CA
Goose Lake Recreation Area, OR
Mountain Home Walmart, ID
Grand Tetons Upper View Campground, WY
Yellowstone, MT
Glacier NP, MT
March AFB, WA
Kent, WA
Port Angeles, WA
Navy Pacific Beach Conference, WA
Astoria, OR
BlueBill Campground, OR
Cresent City, CA
Redwoods, CA
I will follow up with a more detailed trip report later when I have some time to fully map and digest. In short, I think the mileage was close to 3400 miles. I would say this trip was about 80% successful for what I had hoped. A few quick notes:
1. The mileage really did suck. For what we wanted to accomplish it was a necessary evil but if I had to do it again, I would cut the Oregon Coast out and make it it's own trip. I was visiting my manufacturing plant for this trip which is in WA hence why it was included to begin with. Yes, we could have bombed down the I5 over a couple of days but we also had friends on the coast we wanted to visit.
2. The twin babies did fantastic. The 7.3 just put them to sleep and they stayed asleep almost all of the drive.
3. Speaking of the 7.3, I lost a fuel injector going from Grand Tetons to Yellowstone. Unfortunetly ran the rest of the trip on 7 cylinders. It made it a challenge as I basically had only 2k to 3k rpm range. Anything below 2k had too much vibration and of course the engine redlines at just above 3k. I still managed the Homestake Pass into Butte, MT but it was a rough. I tried finding a shop to do the repair but everyone was 3 weeks out. Truck is headed to shop first thing this week.
4. Bigfoot Camper is fine for two adults but add in two teenagers, two babies and a dog it is a tight squeeze. The teenagers have a converted 12ft cargo trailer that has a queen bed and tv / nintendo and that helped a lot to keep them out of our space but they were often in the camper for food / bathroom or because it was too hot in the trailer in some locations. The biggest frustration was the narrow aisle our camper has (no slides). If it was just the wife and I plus babies, camper would be fine but reality is setting in that I think a trailer of some type is in our future. I love my camper but with our growing family, wife is adament that we need more space if we are going to go on extended (3 month) trips.
5. 100AH Battle Born LiFePo4 battery with 200w of solar was sufficient for our trip, even when running bottle warmers for babies (~300 watts) or a small coffee maker running on our 2000w inverter. We only had one morning where we ended up with a dead battery and I'm not certain exactly why that happened. I will likely add another 200w of solar to the camper and probably 600w of solar to the trailer (because I have the space, why not...) as future upgrades.
6. Our destinations we made it too where more like a drive by tour. Going in, we knew this was going to be the case simply because the babies where going to limit what we could do. We were often faced with the choice of waking up babies in order to go see a site or just let those in the front seats go see and get pictures.
7. We didn't get nearly enough relax time in camp. Every mileage day we had ended up taking twice as much time as I had planned. Whereas I thought a 200 mile day would have us getting to a campground by mid afternoon, we often didn't get in until 7 or 8pm. Much of this was because it's impossible to get two babies and two teenagers all coralled up and in the truck anytime before 10am.
8. Speaking of teenagers... I'm of the firm mind that electronic devices suck. Our older girls spent the vast majority of their time looking at what was 6" in front of their faces instead of the amazing beauty of God's creation out the window. For me, this is why I think the trip was only 80% successful. While I think the girls did intake at least some of what there was to see, I don't think they got the same experience we all got as kids staring out the window being bored and allowing our imagination to take over. You might be asking why not just take the things away? Well, it is complicated but suffice it to say, there were a few areas that I made sure they went away while others I just let it slide. It is a lot to ask of a teen to go 3400 miles in 3 weeks while just staring out the window.
9. RV parks are not campgrounds... This being our first extended road trip, it was the first time we used RV parks extensively. While I prefer public campgrounds, this being a last minute trip, we didn't have the ability to make reservations because everything was booked. A lot of public campgrounds aren't even open or their booking policy is multiple days out because of COVID. RV parks although not as ideal, where generally something you could still get reservations in. We used mostly KOAs because they are geared for familes with kids. They can be a mixed bag though. The KOA just outside of West Glacier is more of a park than a campground. It was amazing and we all agreed is worth returning too again. The KOA outside of Astoria is also really great for kids and worth returning to. The KOA in Kent Washington is a disaster. I literally locked the girls in the trailer at night just so I didn't have to worry about crazy long term resident 5 feet over. Other RV parks are a mixed bag but it seems like they are very much profit driven. One gem was the military family campgrounds. We stayed at two and both were nice and half the cost of RV parks.
There are other thoughts but this post is already too long. Suffice it to say, while I am glad we did this hurculean endevour, I think we will take some significant lessons learned from this trip to apply to future ones.
1999 F350 Dually with 7.3 Diesel
2000 Bigfoot 10.6 Camper