One Awesome Inch said:
When I started out, I very seriously considered a minivan. Then I went to a wrecking yard and checked out a few in person. My immediate thought was "no way!". ..... For a true minimalist I believe a minivan CAN work as all one really needs to store is food and clothes. However being a musician I have a few other 'necessities' which I use on a regular basis as well as my milkcrate of tools. Besides food and clothes you need a one burner stove, a cooler, a water jug, a heater (with its propane tank) and really thats about it for necessities other that some a small amount of toiletries and dishware.
A few quick things I should note--in my Sienna I haul my full size guitar everywhere (I really should go smaller, it's too big for my body let alone the minivan, but haven't got around to it yet). I carry about 6 gallons of potable water with me in various water jugs, and a refrigerator, not to mention the house battery and electrical panel and everything. And while my tool collection isn't very large yet, I do keep a toolbox with me.
Not mentioned is the oodles of medications and other medical paraphernalia I need to keep on hand, which I keep planning to write a post on because it takes up so much space and I've had to get really organized with it all.
Of the things you listed, what I don't have is a propane setup, heater, or cook system. For heat I generally run the van for a bit, and since it's designed to blast heat into the back too this strategy works better than it did with my full size G20. Getting a cook system to safely work inside the minivan is going to be tricky but I'm leaning towards the microwave route.
I just wanted to mention these things because I definitely carry a lot more than just food and clothes, though admittedly not everything that makes most of the rest of you so comfy.
ascii_man said:
I'm pretty sure that Thunder Dan is a lot larger than Bitty, who has posted elsewhere that she and her boyfriend are both under 100 pounds (in case you couldn't tell by their respective usernames). In a tight space, things like "can sleep transversely" add up quickly.
Yes! Not under 100 pounds added together, just to clarify, heh...but yes, it makes a huge difference. I'm trying to re-do the bed and I keep recalculating the inches to fractions of an inch to find the precise balance of room on the bed to living space. One inch either way makes a palpable difference.
I also just want to mention in general I'm kinda uncomfortable being referenced as any sort of shining example of making life in a minivan work. I feel I've made it work because I had to--it was more a survival thing than anything else. I'm progressively making it more and more comfortable. The winter months reverted to total survival mode, and the heat of summer will do the same, but on the inbetween days now I have days where I'm fairly comfortable--IF I manage to be a stickler about keeping to the organization. I tell my therapist I feel I'm genuinely developing OCD because I've learned bad things absolutely
do happen if anything is out of place. E.g. a few things fell on the floor and I suddenly have no clear floor at all, put my foot down anyway and something breaks...now my foot is bleeding, no light, and where's the med kit dammit it fell in the trash can again! I could give oodles of similar examples.
So yes, I'm making it work, but I'm pretty stressed out doing it. Not saying it cannot be done comfortably, but if a fulfilled happy life in a minivan is what you're looking for I'm not the example to use, at least currently. With each improvement it's getting a little more comfortable!
One example of why I stay with it...the last ER trip had me completely wiped out for a few days, couldn't speak more than a couple words, couldn't sit up, couldn't eat. Boyfriend had to take care of me for a few days. Not only did the minivan not get moved, the curtain didn't even get put up between the front seats and the back! In bed, my head was just behind the passenger seat looking out the passenger seat window.
And we were parked inside a school zone. Counting the ambulance trip and those days of recovery after, my minivan was there for I think 4 days straight. No trouble from anyone whatsoever, not even a second glance. With how often similar things happen I find that level of inconspicuousness is absolutely necessary for me.
When a similar thing happened with the Chevy G20 parked 48 hours straight near apartments, I woke up to a conversation outside my van of a couple reporting my van as abandoned. The apartment serviceman they reported it to then called in the tow truck. I peeked out the windows and then quickly drove away when no one was looking and before the tow truck arrived. I had had a 103 degree fever just the night before and had an emergency medical procedure the day before that, and was driving away from the one person at the time who could care for me. Not a good situation.
Just trying to point out that while I have compelling reasons to choose a minivan for my situation and it's the vehicle that's worked out the best for me by far, there are specific reasons why (this, crime, and parallel parking in Seattle are the big ones) and if those same reasons don't apply to others the reduced space might not be worth it. For me, where I'm at and in my situation, I willingly trade comfortable space for peace of mind.
Hope I didn't hijack your thread Thunder Dan, I just wanted to make sure the information is out there!
SaltySeaWitch said:
I say sell the mini van and get a full sized van. Be happy.
I agree. There's no points for making yourself miserable!