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November 2007

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?George_mule_ears_spring

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 Red_canyon_gb 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 Kayaking_glacier_bay 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!

Muir Woods: A Neighborhood Park

This Thanksgiving holiday, in addition to the joy of being with my son and daughter-in-law in the Bay Area of Calif., I give thanks for our country's national monuments. Sign_1107_reduced_2 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.

Many families walked in groups-- three generations together taking photos of each other to remember the day, young couples pushing strollers, hikers walking quickly using their powerful muscular legs, a few people in wheelchairs, children wandering ahead to explore. The procession continues because 99 years ago, William Kent and his wife donated to Alice_pushing_chuck_1107_reduced 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.

Next year commemorates the 100th birthday of Muir Woods. Come celebrate the preservation of wilderness just 12 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge. As RVers, we treasure the beauty of our country and appreciate the government agencies that support our scenic, historic and cultural places of interest.

Although national monuments tend to be smaller and less well known than national parks, they often are more accessible. Here are some Web sites to help you plan your own visit:

  • For a complete list of national monuments by state, visit Gorp.
  • To find out which agency governs each monument, visit Answers

After you discover which agency governs the monument,Redwoods_1107_reduced  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.

Happy travels,

Alice

Goat fudge and goat cheese - yum!

Goat_creamery_sign_2 Yesterday we visited The Ranch at Fossil Creek in Strawberry, AZ. Owners John and Joyce Bittner have a number of llamas and Joyce offers llama hikes, tours and overnight stays in yurts. Several years ago, Joyce took my sister and I on a llama hike on West Clear Creek. We trailered the llamas to the trailhead, packed them and took our hike. Llamas carried our lunches and we had a wGoat_creamery_llama_smonderful time  crisscrossing the streambed high up on the Mogollon Rim in the Coconino National Forest before it drops into the wilderness.

John has had a dream of having a goat dairy for years. He now has a state-of-the art dairy and creamery with about 20 goats. George and I and RV friends Pam and Rob got the grand tour during their open house. One room is for Goat_creamery_stanchionmilking, with stanchion and goat milking machine. Before licensing, John milked by hand; licensed dairies must use a machine.

Another room contains the pasteurization vat, capacity 60 gallons. The milk had already been pasteurized, rennet added and was now cooling and forming curds. Those were later removed and drained to make cheese. (see below)

We sampled plain cheese and a special holiday cheese — cranberry cheese, plus a delicious appetizer made with french bread, goat cheese and a bruschetta sauce. We also sampled chocolate and peanut butter fudge. Goat_creamery_remove_curds

Next year, John plans to build a cave into the side of the hill in order to make hard goat cheese. Hard cheese takes time to cure at a constant temperature.

After purchasing some of cheese and fudge, we visited the goats and llamas. The goats will have their kids around April and milk production will soar. (A pregnant Nubian pictured.) We saw the yurts that people can rent. It’s a fun getaway and a llama hike and overnight would be a real adventure for grandkids.Goat_creamery_nubian

A drive up Highway 87 from the Mesa/Phoenix area takes you close to the ranch. Call to see if John or Joyce will be there for a tour of the creamery. (928-476-5178 or fossilcreekllamas@yahoo.com) For a day trip, continue up 87 to where Highway 260 turns west towards Camp Verde. At I-17, head south to Phoenix again.

Photos by  George Bruzenak

Should an RVer carry a gun? Do you?

9_mm_gun_01
Skip, a fellow I know, went gun shopping yesterday and bought a 9mm handgun. He’d always wanted one. A 9mm is the size used by many police officers. Is this a good idea for an RVer?

Shortly after we began full-time RVing, my late husband, Bill, and I bought a sawed-off shotgun from another RVer (an inch longer than needed to be legal) after trying it out while Workamping® at the Grand Tetons. Bill added two clips in the bedroom to hold it secure while we traveled. The shells were hidden behind a drawer. Heading to Alaska to Workamp®, we declared it twice going through Canada (for hunting). The second time, the border official said we should get rid of it. While in Skagway, we gave it to the police department without ever having fired it again in the six years we had it. By now it was rusty. Between two summers in a rainforest in Alaska and the fact it was never cleaned or fired made it useless. Neither of us were gun people.

Is it legal?
Laws vary by state. You can carry a gun without a permit or license in some states. An article, Carrying firearms in your car or RV, summarizes state laws about carrying firearms in a car or RV. Unless you have a permit/license in a state or follow the requirements outlined in the article in others, the firearm must be unloaded and not accessible to anyone in the vehicle.”

The article goes on to state, “... be aware that every state has different laws even when you have a permit/license issued or honored by any state. It is your responsibility to know and obey the laws for each state.” For example, according to Frank Gummersall in an article at RversOnLine.org, “An unloaded hand gun stored in a drawer in the RV with the ammunition, is against the law in California.”

Safe use
According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, if there are children around your home (or ever in your RV), the safest thing is to not have a gun. However, if you do, your gun must be safely stored. Proper storage of a gun includes keeping the gun in a gun safe, lock box, or a locked cabinet or drawer. The gun should also be stored unloaded with the bullets locked separately. In addition, you can also use a gun lock or trigger lock, plus make sure that your children or grandchildren do not have access to the keys used to lock your guns and bullets.

Then the question is, if your gun is locked up will you have access to it if you need it?

I don’t know Skip feels any safer now. Personally, I’d be more nervous having a gun in my house or rig than not. Would you feel safer?

Do you carry a gun in your RV or tow vehicle? Participate in our poll at RVHometown.com

Resources:
  • Traveler's Guide to the Firearm Laws of the Fifty States, by J. Scott Kapas, Esq. is available at Workamper.com bookstore and other online bookstores.
  • Purchase a pump action shotgun. The pumping sound is enough to deter prowlers.
  • Life on Wheels offers a “Guns and RV” class taught by Dave Baleria, former law enforcement trainer, which exams this issue.
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Trash can turkey

This year we won't be joining RV friends in Tecopa, CA who will be cooking a trash can turkey and sharing a meal, though we have in years past. We will be celebrating with friends plus a guest of theirs in the mountains of Arizona at our homebase.

This Thanksgiving morning I stopped to think how grateful I am that we can live the RV lifestyle. We live in a country where you can move from place to place. With RVing you can travel full-time or part-time. You have a lot of control over your budget—more than you do in a stick-house life.

Our public lands provide places where we can boondock for free or for a very low cost. The permits for parking for seven months on the Long Term Visitor Areas in AZ and CA have gone up to $180, up from $140, but still a bargain. Water, trash receptacles and dump station locations are available for this price. Areas where you can stay 14 days like Tecopa are still mostly free. Half-price camping clubs and membership clubs can also be a budget-saver now that many RV parks have hit the $25-$40/night mark.

By working or volunteering in an area we can see way more than the typical tourist, have a free or low-cost site and cover expenses and add to savings. Yet we aren’t stuck there. Our homes have wheels and we can move on at the end of the season or if things don’t work out as we had hoped.

The RV lifestyle also brings new adventures. I’m sure each of us has several places or things we’ve done that we would not have done in our former lives. I might have gone to Alaska but I wouldn’t have spent a summer in Skagway, ridden the White Pass & Yukon Route Railroad, or kayaked among porpoises and whales in Glacier Bay. I had always wanted to go to Niagra Falls but had never done so until last summer when George and I traveled by Buffalo, NY in our RV. We decided to see the falls so stopped for a few days in that area. Just like that.

If you are not a full-time RVer, traveling by RV is so much more pleasant. No living out of a suitcase. You sleep in the same bed each night. You have a choice between eating out or in and you have all the little things that make life more pleasant for you with you.

We are truly blessed to be able to participate in this lifestyle. We can be "home" for the holidays, wherever we are parked. We’ve spent Thanksgiving parked at family member’s homes, joined a group of RV friends for a potluck Thanksgiving at parks or in the desert and invited those who are alone to join us. We can create community any place we choose.

George and I hope your Thanksgiving is wonderful wherever you are and however you are celebrating—this year. Safe travels.

Take Your Inner Writer RVing

Writing_escapadeAs 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.

As the technology improved, we were able to send group e-mails. One couple, Mark and Donia Steele, received such great feedback from the recipients of their emails that they polished them and turned them into a book, Steeles on Wheels. Now many RVers are creating their own blogs, incorporating their writing and photos to describe their adventures.

"But I'm not a writer," you say. "I can't do this."

In my experience at RV rallies leading the workshop, "How to Write Travel and Life Stories for Family, Friends, and Publication," I've discovered that EVERYBODY can journal. I teach these guidelines I learned from Natalie Goldberg, author of Writing Down the Bones:
Writing_group

  • Buy a plain spiral notebook

  • Set the timer for 15 minutes

  • Just write

  • >Don't think

  • Don't edit

  • Turn off your critic

  • Use your five senses for description: What does it look like, sound like, feel, smell, taste like?

You will be surprised at how easily the writing will come when you don't criticize yourself but just let the writing appear. Don't worry about grammar and punctuation. You can always clean that up later if you're letting other people read what you've written.

You may only write for yourself at first, but after a while you will start sending the best snippets to friends in emails or holiday letters. Or you may create your own blog. You may decide to write articles or even a book. When Jaimie and I first met fourteen years ago, we had never published an article or even thought we would be book authors.

Rvwriting150x152You 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.

For a free copy of my report, "Write Compelling Travel or Life Stories in 10 Easy Steps," send an email to me at youshoulda @ aol.com (remove spaces). We would love to hear about your travel blogs. Send us the URLs.

Set your timer and start writing!

Alice Zyetz

Holiday gifts at RVHometown for the experienced RVer

This is our third and final post about gifts for RVers at RVHometown.com. This one focuses on the experienced RVer. Find a gift for a friend - or - for you or your partner!

Besides our great reads and armchair travel books, look at these:

  • Drive Your Motorhome Like a Pro by commercial driver and instructor Lorrin Walsh is guaranteed to teach you things you didn’t know so you can drive more safely and effectively. Read more....

  • If your RV came with a convection oven, I've Got a Convection Oven in My RV Now What? by Adrienne Kristine is a must-have. Includes illustrated recipes and tips. Read more...

  • An RVer can never have too many campground guides. Add these excellent sources by Jane Kenny to your collection: Casino Camping and RVers Guide to Corps of Engineers Campgrounds. Read more...

  • Have you ever thought about writing now that you are traveling on the road? Whether writing down your family experiences, that book idea or articles as you travel, see Taking the Mystery out of RV Writing. Read more...

  • If the thought has crossed your mind that you’d like to volunteer or somehow supplement your income, see Support Your RV Lifestyle! An Insider’s Guide to Working on the Road. Read more....

Remember, if you are buying a gift for the RVer, space is limited in an RV. Two of the above are ebooks or CDs so take little or no space. Of course, RVers make exceptions for campground directories and reference books. For other gifts, food, gift certificates, photos on CD are always welcomed. Or make a basket with small things related to a hobby or RVing.

Tellabration - A worldwide storytelling event


                                "Have you heard of TELLABRATION
                                    Stories all across the nation.
                                        We succumbed to the temptation
                                            To join in the celebration."

Tellebration_don_doyleStorytelling 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.

The Saturday before Thanksgiving is when Tellabration, a worldwide storytelling event takes place. We attended with friends in Pine, Arizona. Don Doyle, founder of the Pine event and professor of theater at ASU led the event and has been a professional storyteller for twenty years. A $5 donation got you in the door and a chance to win a beautiful quilt. The Department of Public Safety Quilt Angels, Pine - Strawberry chapter sponsored the event.

Tellebration_dorothy_andersonEight 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.

Vic McGraw is an Arizona Department of Public Safety law enforcement officer in charge of air (helicopter) rescue. Doug Bland is a minister as well as writer and storyteller. Carol Knarr and Liz Warren are on the faculty of South Mountain Community College Storytelling Institute. They told real life stories. Dustin, a recent graduate of the Institute, added a unique angle to his African story. He used tap dancing to accentuate and illustrate his story—wonderfully fun and different!

Tellebration_buckshot_dotDee 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.

We enjoyed the evening with its variety of stories. It is my 4th year attending this event. If I'm anywhere around Pine or another Tellabration, I'll be there!

RVers can find storytelling events at The National Storytelling Network is a good place to look for events as you travel. We’ve seen fliers posted in coffee shops and libraries and announcements in local newspapers.

RVers can find outlets for telling stories themselves, whether it be around a campfire or as a worker or volunteer on the road. But that's another story!

Tellebration_storytellers
Photos By George

Holiday gifts and fun reads for the RVer and the armchair traveler at RVHometown

This is the second of three posts suggesting holiday gifts. If you know an RVer who likes a good read or someone who is an armchair traveler, or, maybe you are looking for a good book to snuggle up with this winter, these make nice gift selections.

  • RV Traveling Tales: Women’s Journeys on the Open Road —an anthology. Fifty-two women answer the question: What is it like to be a female nomad on the open road? Read more...

  • Memphis 7.9 by Sam Penny tells what happens when a huge quake hits the Madrid fault. An RVer figures in the story. Broken River is the followup book. Read more...

  • 99 Days to Panama by the Halkyards is the story of their trip by RV from the U.S. to Panama. Illustrated. Wonderful armchair travel book and a how-to. Read more...

  • Travels with Susie by Gordon Grindstaff is an entertaining book that is a hilarious report of their experiences as they first went through the decision to retire and later, to travel the byways of North America. Read more...

  • RV Chuckles and Chuckholes by Darlene Miller is a lighthearted primer on the RV lifestyle. Read more...

  • Carol Weishampel’s three books—Grandma’s on the Go, Adopting Darrell, and Grandma's Ultimate Road Trip: Retired, Rejuvenated and Raring to Go from Texas to Alaska — are inspiring accounts of her adventures. In Grandma’s on the Go, she combines her love for travel with parenting a passel of children as she progresses from primitive, tent camping to a series of motor homes--while providing a loving nest for her young charges. Read more...

And, by the way, free shipping if you order three or more books!

Are you an RVing abibliophobic?

Travel without books to read? No way! Maybe you too are an abibliophobic or someone with a fear of being without books. If your partner is weight-conscious about your RV, this sets up a conflict.

Nicky Boston writes about this conflict in "The Addiction" in RV Traveling Tales: Women’s Journeys on the Open Road. She must have something to read, her husband; Don, keeps saying "weight," as she begins adding books.

So how do you find enough books to read without spending a fortune and without books becoming like the rocks in "The Long, Long Trailer?" Here are some ideas:

Finding books

  • Libraries often have giveaway magazines and used books for sale.
  • If you are in the area for awhile, see about getting a library card. Some do not require a local address, or, you can show you have received mail at a local RV park or the post office.
  • Cracker Barrel and Flying J, among others, have books on tape or CD you can rent in one location and return at another.
  • Book exchange/library at RV parks. Many have a deal where you can take one if you leave one.
  • Independent coffee shops may also have a book exchange area.
  • RV gatherings often have a book or item exchange set up where you can trade out one book for another.

Passing books on

  • Sell your books at a used bookstore, at Amazon Marketplace or on eBay. Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe, AZ will give you store credit or cash for your used books. At Bookmans, an Arizona used bookstore chain, you can buy, sell or trade your books.
  • Leave them at an RV park for others or donate newer hardbacks to a library.
  • Save them until you meet up with a friend. We have a circle of friends who like similar books and exchange them in the winter when we meet up. Occasionally we’ll use media mail to pass a book on.
  • Register your book with BookCrossing.com and leave it where someone might find it and pick it up. Betty Prange, contributor to RV Traveling Tales, gave a copy to a trip mate in Russia who took it to Australia where it is still circulation.

You’ll have to track down a copy of RV Traveling Tales to read the humorous resolution to Nicky and Don’s conflict. You could purchase one for a family member or friend who is curious about the lifestyle and read it yourself first. You’ll enjoy the many stories about life on the road.

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