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ktmrfs

Portland, Oregon

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Posted: 03/26/23 09:49am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Looks like John and I have similar approach to water when boondocking. As mentioned, dish washing is a once a day at most, sometimes even go another 1/2 day, We have two 32 gallon grey and a 32 gallon black tank and DW and I can easily go 10+ days before those fill up. Our fresh tank is shy of 40 gallons, but I carry the 7 gallon blue jugs with us. Fresh water lasts us about 5 days, then I either pull out 4 full 7 gallon jugs, or fill at the campground. I have an extra onboard water pump with outlet plumbed into fresh water fill, inlet is a SS dip tube on hose, stuff the dip tube into the jug, flip the "fill" switch on the extra pump and fill fresh tank.

John's ball valves on bath sink is now on my "to do" list.


2011 Keystone Outback 295RE
2004 14' bikehauler with full living quarters
2015.5 Denali 4x4 CC/SB Duramax/Allison
2004.5 Silverado 4x4 CC/SB Duramax/Allison passed on to our Son!


LouLawrence

Traveling the US!

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Posted: 03/26/23 12:32pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Our bus carries 147 usable gallons of fresh and that will last 5-7 days depending upon how many nice long hot showers we take that week. I'm OK not being out there in the middle of nowhere for an unknown amount of time.
Those who enjoy squeezing the last drop of water out of a thimble should be applauded (I suppose) but it does make interesting reading.

JimK-NY

NY

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Posted: 03/26/23 01:09pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

LouLawrence wrote:

Our bus carries 147 usable gallons of fresh and that will last 5-7 days depending upon how many nice long hot showers we take that week. I'm OK not being out there in the middle of nowhere for an unknown amount of time.
Those who enjoy squeezing the last drop of water out of a thimble should be applauded (I suppose) but it does make interesting reading.


I am not appalled at all. Having a big bus with 147 gallons of water goes perfectly with your desire not to be in "the middle of nowhere".

In fact I am very glad there are places for you big rig guys to stay leaving some of the great background areas less crowded.

LouLawrence

Traveling the US!

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Posted: 03/26/23 06:08pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

I said applauded, not appalled! I also enjoy BLM camping, I just might not go as far out off the road as you do. Nothing like the stars at night in a dark sky area.

profdant139

Southern California

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Posted: 03/27/23 01:02pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Lou, I agree with you completely -- there is no one right way to camp. It depends on what motivates you. For us, our goal is just being in the middle of nowhere, with no sound except the wind in the trees:

[image]
[image]Click For Full-Size Image.

But there are costs to remote boondocking -- we have to be careful about water and electricity and so forth.


2012 Fun Finder X-139 "Boondock Style" (axle-flipped and extra insulation)
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Our trips -- pix and text
About our trailer
"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single list."


JimK-NY

NY

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Posted: 03/27/23 01:26pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

You do not have to be in the middle of nowhere to have issues with water. The last time I visited the Cutbank campground in Glacier National Park, the water had been shut off for a couple of years. I visited another campground in Canyonlands NP and even at the end of September the water had been shut off until next season. At Great Basin NP, the water system was shut off due to some sort of emergency repair. All of that happened on the same camping trip.

Addendum: Oops I forgot about Mesa Verde NP. Campground was still open and due to close for the season in another week. Water was shut off.

2oldman

NM

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Posted: 03/27/23 01:32pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

JimK-NY wrote:

At Great Basin NP, the water system was shut off due to some sort of emergency repair. All of that happened on the same camping trip.
Lotta bad luck there!

It's common for almost any RV park or campground to have water problems.. much more than any other utility. Old rotten pipes, shifting ground, dry wells, pollution...

For that reason I always keep my tank well-filled and use it exclusively.

* This post was edited 03/27/23 02:23pm by 2oldman *

pianotuna

Regina, SK, Canada

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Posted: 03/27/23 06:20pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Any trip where you don't end up cold and hungry is a GREAT one.


Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

ktmrfs

Portland, Oregon

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Posted: 03/27/23 07:33pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

2oldman wrote:

JimK-NY wrote:

At Great Basin NP, the water system was shut off due to some sort of emergency repair. All of that happened on the same camping trip.
Lotta bad luck there!

It's common for almost any RV park or campground to have water problems.. much more than any other utility. Old rotten pipes, shifting ground, dry wells, pollution...

For that reason I always keep my tank well-filled and use it exclusively.


I've known quite a few campers who thought we were out of our minds traveling with a full fresh water tank, and never filled even at a campground. for all of them that ended when they were at a campground that (a) lost power and water, (b) at a campground that didn't have water for some reason when they got their (c) had potable water, but being potable doesn't necessarily mean you want to use it for anything. T

We just plan on leaving home with a full water tank, and then fill as needed. Carry along a portable "water stick" water softener for those places with water as hard as nails.

JBarca

Radnor, Ohio, USA

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Posted: 03/27/23 10:37pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

ktmrfs wrote:


We just plan on leaving home with a full water tank, and then fill as needed. Carry along a portable "water stick" water softener for those places with water as hard as nails.


To add to the list of those carrying water, we also carry full water from home. It starts here from our well and then through our softener from a water source I know and trust. Since I'm on well water, I do add my own chlorine to the fresh tank to low levels to keep the water clean, not like a swimming pool. I target 0.3 - 0.5 ppm chlorine and measure to confirm. When we go on 4 days trips, we have our own water. We do not go to many full hookup camps, so onboard tanks with electric or full boon-docking are most of our camping.

When we are on the road and have to fill up, I filter every ounce put into the camper. Seen too many campgrounds with excess dirt and rust in the water, not to mention other things.

I know some folks do not like to carry the extra weight, but the 350# of added weight on a 10,000# loaded camper pulled by an adequate truck does not know the difference. Our fresh tank is over the trailer axles, so it does not add or subtract from tongue weight, and I have a heavily built cage to support the tank for towing.

For this season, I bought an "On the Go" water softener as we will move more camps, and the hard water in the water heater is not great.

I see you found a mini one. Is this the one you have adapted to fill the fresh tank? https://watersticks.com/. I wish we had discussed this 5 months ago; I would have considered it. I also see they have KDF filters, h'mm may be a new source for me when I run out of current KDF/ceramic carbon filters.

Thanks

John


John & Cindy

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(I wish we were camping!)


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