Lessons learned from full-time RVing
Our friend Lloyd Treichel, in his Wandrin’ blog, recently wrote about lessons he’s learned as a full-time RVer. He has a good list. I especially like "don’t make reservations or commitments." Inevitably, you’ll end up rushing and leaving a good place before you want to. It happened to us in the first month of hitting the road plus many times since!
So, what additional things did I learn?
You can support yourself on the road. Bill and I had to work as we left at age 47. There are so many jobs for the RVer, you can always find something to supplement income or provide a free or low-cost site while in the area. (George volunteered at Big Bend; hiking one day a week.)
Slow down. When you first begin full-time travel, it is tempting to try to see it all. That means moving every day or two to cover the miles and get from one place to another.
Stay a while in one place. This a corollary to the previous one. It is a more relaxing pace and you get time to actually see things. If you are visiting a national park, you can get an
overview the first day, but come back and do a hike or two or visit an outlying area in the park. (Hiking in Red Canyon, BLM land next to Bryce Canyon.)
Full-time RVing means freedom. RVers have so many choices that people in stick-bound houses do not have. If you don’t like the area move. If you are near a barking dog or the weather turns cold —or hot— move to a new place. You can leave a job if things get bad.
You can live more cheaply. A full-time RVer has much more control of her budget, especially if you own your RV outright and are out of debt. You can boondock on public lands in the West at no charge. You need less "stuff" and that includes clothes. When do you plan to wear that business suit? T-shirts and jeans or shorts are the usual uniform. Again, it’s about choice.
Visiting family is (more) fun. Since you are bringing your own house, you have space when you want and need it. Many families will still try to get you to stay inside their house, but politely decline. Why pack a suitcase to go a few feet? You do have a real bed! And you won’t wake anyone if you go for a snack.
RVing can be the vehicle to make your dreams come true. Going to Alaska was
the big dream for me. Bill and I worked there for two seasons, opening doors to experiences like kayaking in Glacier Bay (pictured) and riding the White Pass & Yukon Route Railroad that I hadn’t even considered before. Kayaking among porpoises and whales was a high point in my life. Last summer, I finally checked Niagra Falls off my list.
Full-time RVing is a state of mind as much as a state of being. Once you settle into the RV lifestyle you are in whole different subculture. Much like veterans who return from war who find it hard to communicate their experiences to loved ones, you have to experience this expanded state of RVing to understand it. It is a choice to full-time RV. If it doesn't work for you, you can always make another choice. Maybe we'll see you out there!



We wanted to take a short drive Friday afternoon and 45 minutes later we were no longer in the city, but transported to the forest, amid the scent and sight of towering coast redwoods.
the federal government the 295 acres they had bought to preserve the few remaining redwoods in the area. Named after John Muir, one of the first conservationists, the ancient old-growth forest remains available for future generations.
go to the agency's Web site, type in the name of the monument to find detailed information about it: what to see, whether there is camping, directions, handicapped access, and more.
Yesterday we visited
onderful time crisscrossing the streambed high up on the Mogollon Rim in the Coconino National Forest before it drops into the wilderness.
milking, with stanchion and goat milking machine. Before licensing, John milked by hand; licensed dairies must use a machine. 


As we travel through the blooming Springtime deserts, the forests filled with immense trees, the coasts with their unending waves licking at the craggy rocks, it's natural to want to retain our experiences through photos and journals. In our early days on the road, many of us journaled and then sent mass letters to friends and family back home to give them a taste of what we were seeing and experiencing.
You may be interested in our book, Taking the Mystery Out of RV Writing, available in e-book or CD format. It describes the entire process starting with freeing your inner writer and getting your words on the page, and continues through magazine writing, book writing, and marketing to sell that precious book.
Storytelling is an art. A gifted storyteller knows just when to pause to heighten the suspense and keep listeners hanging on every word. We all love stories. We may be paying half attention, but when someone drops into the storytelling mode, ears perk up.
Eight storytellers, from all walks of life, told moving, humorous and poignant stories—some from legend, stories from other lands, others from real life. For example, Dorothy Anderson, a professional storyteller and playwright, specializes in historical tales of the Southwest. Dressed as a matronly flapper, she told of her "husband," Mick’s attempt to fly Leo, the MGM lion, across the U.S. and his forced landing in the rugged Hells Gate Canyon near the Mogollon Rim in Arizona.
Dee Strickland, aka Buckshot Dot, specializes in singing her stories, accompanying herself by guitar. One of her pieces was "Duct tape, bailing wire, bum or spit." A colorful character, she also tells poems and western stories and is an author and recording artist. Ricardo Provencio also has a unique approach; his stories are bilingual. 



