Mandolin Guy,
The best way to answer you is what a friend of mine did when his wife kicked him out of the house and he went out to the motorhome started it up and drove off. She is still looking for him after 15 years.
Seems the best part of his wife and home was when he saw it in his rear view mirror.
Regards,
Paul
Mandolin Guy wrote: Further defining is required: If your wife kicks you out of the house and you're forced to stay in the MH in the driveway, is it dry camping or boondocking?
I'm not married but I was just wondering.
Hmm... she may let you hook up. But I know if I was kicked out, I wouldn't be dry... I'd be swimming in my sorrows.
Thankfully it hasn't happened so far.
MK out of PA, My Wifey, and the queen Chloe, our little Shih Tzu
TV: 2002 Hyundai Santa Fe V6
Trailer: 2000 Coleman Santa Fe
(How about that, 2 Santa Fe's!!!)
Only 1 state? Quick, pack the trailer we have to CAMP!
ground pounder navy wrote: Greetigs, what type of a motorhome would be good for a dry/boondocking situation considering no finished roads or other refinements. The tag axle units and larger bus units might have problems in rural areas we would want to seek out.
I travelled with a pickup camper south to north and back in June of 66 and had a ball but things have changed but there are still places to go and see. What about a 45 footer diesel pusher with tag axle are they go to go on a limited off road situation? comments please. regards Paul
If you want to take your half million dollar house down a wash board road, knowing full well that these things shake loose before they fail completely, have fun. There are no motorhomes that are suitable for dry/boondocking a long way off the pavement in my opinion and there probably aren't many newer TTs or fivers that won't suffer consequences from the hard knocks.
The minute the pavement ends you probably need to rethink camping in a modern rv with sophisticated electrical, hydraulic, or water systems.
If you want to take your half million dollar house down a wash board road, knowing full well that these things shake loose before they fail completely, have fun. There are no motorhomes that are suitable for dry/boondocking a long way off the pavement in my opinion and there probably aren't many newer TTs or fivers that won't suffer consequences from the hard knocks.
The minute the pavement ends you probably need to rethink camping in a modern rv with sophisticated electrical, hydraulic, or water systems.
Chuckster11 has got an excellent point. For those wishing to get away, you are asking for trouble mechanically, and physically. We got our 36' DP buried in sand near Moab Utah once, but dang... it didn't cure me. Broken spring mounts, flat tires, constant tightening of nuts, bolts, and screws... everywhere, but ya know what? To us, it was worth it. The solitude and unbelieveable camping locations we got to few RVers will get to stay. To us, our RV was a truck first, and if the truck would make it, we'd fix the house as needed. If you do go our route, from personal experience I recommend you don't believe it when your copilot says... "go faster, we're getting stuck"!