Travel Days

What exactly does a travel day look like???

If we are on top of our game the bed of the pick up is all packed up and the outside stuff is pretty much done the day before we are actually pulling out. All the chairs, the outdoor rug, the toys, bikes… all of it in the bed of the pick-up all packed up.

We truly do not have to move much in the camper. There’s a little bit in each area that we have to secure or put away for travel. All my plants go in the shower, it turns into a little green house 😊 (My Grandma taught me that trick!) We pull the slides in and we are set for hooking up to the pick-up.

The last thing we do on the outside is disconnecting all the hoses. The sewer hose and it’s holder, the water hose with the filter system and the electric cable all go into a giant tub. This tub goes right inside our door. It’s the last thing we put away and the first thing we get out so it’s just easy for it to be right there. 

When the camper gets hooked up to the pick-up Chase guides me as I (and Merrick) back the pick-up up….he’s better at the guiding part 😉 and then Chase (and Mac) hook it all up. The last thing we put away after hooking up are the wheel chocks (things you put beside the tires so it doesn’t roll). There’s been 3 or so times we have forgotten this minor detail and they have gotten run over…easily replaced but hopefully we’ve learned our lesson enough on that one! 

As we travel we use three apps to really help us out: Trucker Map, All Stays and Google/ Apple maps. We use the trucker map app to show us the route semis would go from point A to B. We compare this to regular ole google maps and figure out our route. The “All Stays” app has so much info on it. It’s a map based app and it tells you about low clearance bridges, big down hill road grades, and most importantly to us…. where gas stations are that we can easily fit. Not just a Casey’s in a tiny town with one pump but the huge trucker travel center type gas stations. It’s gives details on these. Some big one even have RV gas lanes. An RV lane has no cover and are easily accessed by larger rigs. With our pick up and camper we are 3 ft shy of being as long as a semi….but we don’t have a diesel pick-up so we need huge regular gas lanes and they are not everywhere. Chase has become a pro at maneuvering through normal gas station when needed. 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼

When we get to where ever we are going and it is hopefully a pull through spot (exactly like it sounds you pull through to park) but if it’s not I get out and guide through the backing up and then we reverse everything we did on the packing up process. 

I’ve made a lasagna in the morning put it in the fridge during travel and then put it in the oven while we set up. We usually try to do something easy like that or leftovers etc for our dinner meal upon arriving. We pack lunches and snacks for the actual travel time. Our stops are for gas and that is when everyone has to try to go to the bathroom. The boys are sooooo good with this, I honestly can think of one time these past 15 months that we stopped because one of them asked to go to the bathroom. 

When we take off we say a family prayer and we play On the Road again by Willie Nelson and I usually take a selfie of all of us. Sometimes on longer travel days we listen to a story telling pod cast called “Circle Round”….20-30 minute story with a moral or audio books. It’s amazing how much we have all grown fond of Ingalls family after listening to 7 of the Little House on the Prairie books. (So fond we had to travel to a homestead of theirs, I’ll try to write about that one of these days!) We didn’t know what we were doing when we first started this traveling thing but we’ve really gotten the hang of it and travel days are an enjoyable part of the adventure!

Slowing Down

This camper life has truly allowed us to slow down. I’d say the overall word that has guided us this past year has been intentional. Intentionally spending our time. Intentionally spending our money. Being intentional in all areas of life. When your time and life feels like pinball machine going here and bouncing there, not in control of where it rolls but just going going going its hard to feel like many of the decisions are intentional.

This life we have lived the past year has been truly different than what it was before. Because our life is small it is naturally simpler and easier to slow down and creating true space to be intentional. I feel like small changes in each area have all add up to more time, and more time just seems to breathe life into intentionality.

Where do these time chucks come from?? Take laundry…we have one laundry basket and we have to do it once it’s full, there is no room for over flow. One load of laundry is very easily done. And then it has to be put away when done because there is no space for it to sit out. It’s the same with the dishes. There is no build up because there is no space for that. And it’s the same with toys and just about everything.

There are not hours of laundry, it takes 3 mins to vacuum, dishes are from a single meal not days worth, there is no day of the week devoted to chores. It’s a tiny bit of this work done each day. And this creates time, time to slow down and be intentional. When we go for a walk or a hike there is no time frame besides the setting sun 😉 (no one wants to get stuck out there in the dark!) There’s nothing to rush back for. The walk is not squeezed in between x, y, or z. It’s peaceful. So when we see something special it’s sweet to get to stop and watch. To stop and notice this little surprise God has given to us. To be still and know. 

It’s my prayer that the peace this mindset and way of living brings, sticks with us.

Boondocking….Ever Heard of it?

We had never heard of boondocking until we got into the camper world, and we had never done it ourselves until July. The way we typically have our camper set up is the extreme opposite of boondocking. It has full “hook-ups.” We have unlimited amounts of water, we have electricity and can use any amount of it at a time, and we can flush our toilet without wondering if the black tank is at capacity. Not to mention WiFi and cable all included in our stay. 

Boondocking is when a camper has no hook ups…no electricity, no water or sewer. Typically you go find a random spot, park it and your done. It’s simple, it’s easy. No campsites, no reservations, typically free. It is also a super flexible way to travel, just pull over when you’re tired and go to sleep. 

When we were in Montana we told ourselves we were going to practice this sort of thing. We did have a site that we had reserved and it did have a water hose we could fill our fresh water tank with before getting to our spot…but that was it. So we had fresh water, we knew we didn’t need full hook ups because we weren’t truly going to be in the camper much. Just to sleep and it was going to get down into 50-60s at night so we’d be fine without electricity and air conditioning. Our fridge can keep cool via propane so we’d be just fine. 

Well all of those preconceived notions were true except the fridge part…our camper battery actually has to be used to keep the propane going to the fridge… our battery lasted about 6 hours and then went dead and the fridge stopped cooling. With no way to keep the battery charged (via solar or a generator) we just put everything in the cooler and skipped the fridge. 

This was a great learning moment. So we know we can handle one night of boondocking not a full week of it. 

We did do real boondocking for one night on the east side of the Tetons. We have friends that are pros at this they held our hands and showed us how to do it. Chase and the husband went and scouted out a spot right by a river. Just our two families right there. It was a pretty neat experience. They do have a generator and did let us charge our battery so we could have some lights on for awhile. We still have a lot learn but we did survive and actually enjoyed it!

After leaving the Tetons, we had a camp ground we wanted to stay at with full hookups (water, electric, and sewer) in south east Wyoming. After talking on the way there about going through Denver traffic in the morning we decided to keep trekking and get to the east side of Denver that night. Once there, we decided we were still awake enough to make it all the way to Limon, Colorado. Once there, we circled through 3 different gas stations to boondock for the night, the first two being completely full of other campers doing the same thing! We found our spot at the third gas station. We stopped pulled out the slides and rested for the night. (Fun fact….the boys LOVE “cleaning” the windows and are always excited when there is a long handled squeegee…it’s the little things in life!)

I honestly don’t know how much boondocking there will be in our future but we are so happy to know how to do it and what our camper is capable of, two things we knew zero about before trying it out ourselves! 

G stands for Gatlinburg and Gnats

We’ve gone gnat-y. What is that you ask?!?  It is when you stomp around (inside) the camper waving and clapping you’re hands over your head chanting “We’ve gone gnaty. We’ve gone gnaty.” The desired 🤞🏼outcome of this belly laughing escapade is to maybe just maybe have killed a gnat or two. 

What brings one to go gnaty is well… gnats…. EVERYWHERE! In the fridge ✅ on your towel after your shower ✅ flying around your face when you try to read a book ✅  I’m sure we’ve all consumed at least one. They are everywhere all the time and that is inside the camper! 

And it’s 💯 worse when you go outside. I remember running in college and coming back from a long run and having I don’t know 10 gnats stuck to me… that is nothing compared to this. You literally can not go outside with out fanning your face or else they are just pelting you. I’ve taken them out of Chase’s eyes. They drive the boys crazy.

We have made traps with soap and apple cider vinegar. We literally have a fly ribbon hanging in our kitchen. We are trying to do all the things to keep them from driving us nuts. But when desperate times call for desperate measures the boys and I go gnaty and Chase just rolls his eyes 🤪 and we all get a good laugh out of a (g)nasty situation! 

(That first picture…all those black dots…dead gnats in our fridge 😖)

**Chase wants you to know we can light a fire and the smoke really clears them up outside… I want you to know that’s the only reason we don’t go gnaty outside bahaha 🤣 

By the Numbers

We have spent approximately $42,000 these past 12 months. 

For 14 weeks we were “between jobs” aka….traveling. 

We’ve been to 9 national parks: Smokys, Hot Springs, Saguaro, Grand Canyon, Zion, Bryce, Glacier, Tetons, and Yellowstone. 

Lived for 3 months without cell phone signal or wifi in our camper.

Logged roughly 8,949 miles towing the camper!! 

Averaged 8 miles to the gallon while pulling the camper. 

For 40 weeks lived over an hour to the closest Target…hence we have spent $79.12 at Target this past year.  

Lived in all 4 different time zones. 

Spent roughly $3,500 on gas while pulling the camper. 

Been to 23 different states! 

Never in my life would I have thought we would live a year and have any sort of numbers like these to represent it but I’m thankful for them and the memories we’ve made!