Bunpoh
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2022
- Messages
- 54
- Reaction score
- 60
Before I picked up my 1995 Safari Trek to fix up and FT in with my partner and two cats, I was inspired by many who had vintage rigs. I have some money and resources but don't want to eat through them too rapidly, and have also been dealing with too many basics and mechanical issues to do a good solar install. We finally have it running and have to leave my Mom's house because of major construction about to happen.
We still have business in town for another day or two. We'd like to at least start out with electrical hookups, if possible, though we can run our noisy stinky old built in genset, which we're doing here at my Mom's, but I'd rather not all day in 90+ degree temps in a campground.
I joined Boondockers Welcome, but everyone listed here has a one night limit, and we might need two. There's not a private campground in all of the Prescott/Quad Cities are that will take anything older than 2000, most won't even take anything older than 2012. Even the shady ones that everyone complains about.
Is this true everywhere, or are we just in some sort of Snotty RV Park enclave? Should we just be prepared to boondock all the time? We can, but we'll be really jumping into the deep end, as neither of us have ever lived in vehicles before. We've done thru-hiking for thousands of miles with like 20 pounds of stuff on our backs or less, but now I have my cats to look after. Does anyone know where we might stay?
We still have business in town for another day or two. We'd like to at least start out with electrical hookups, if possible, though we can run our noisy stinky old built in genset, which we're doing here at my Mom's, but I'd rather not all day in 90+ degree temps in a campground.
I joined Boondockers Welcome, but everyone listed here has a one night limit, and we might need two. There's not a private campground in all of the Prescott/Quad Cities are that will take anything older than 2000, most won't even take anything older than 2012. Even the shady ones that everyone complains about.
Is this true everywhere, or are we just in some sort of Snotty RV Park enclave? Should we just be prepared to boondock all the time? We can, but we'll be really jumping into the deep end, as neither of us have ever lived in vehicles before. We've done thru-hiking for thousands of miles with like 20 pounds of stuff on our backs or less, but now I have my cats to look after. Does anyone know where we might stay?