Aluminum Camper Forum

Camping => Trip Report/Photos => Topic started by: Merlin on February 04, 2023, 06:09:07 PM

Title: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on February 04, 2023, 06:09:07 PM
We got our big U.S. map out at lunch today in the depths of Michigan winter and scoped out a 14 state, 6000 mile, month-long camping trip west. Most likely largely in September. We've stuck close to home the last 3 years and it will be fun to hit the road again. Our extended stays are probably in Utah, California, Oregon, and Colorado. Before then the camper gets some overhaul, with new batteries and a new heat pump A/C.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: djsamuel on February 06, 2023, 10:58:23 AM
Sounds great.  We did a nice east coast trip last May from Florida up to Massachusetts.  Took us 28 days and had a great time with stops at St Augustine, Congaree National Park, NaturalBridge State Park in VA, Gettysburg, Poconos, Springfield, MA (to visit friends), Grand Canyon of PA, Flight 93 Memorial, New River Gorge National Park and finally a week in Dillard, GA to wind down before heading home.  It was great and we're starting to plan our next big trip.

Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: ammobob on February 09, 2023, 04:05:44 PM
Quote from: Merlin on February 04, 2023, 06:09:07 PMWe got our big U.S. map out at lunch today in the depths of Michigan winter and scoped out a 14 state, 6000 mile, month-long camping trip west. Most likely largely in September. We've stuck close to home the last 3 years and it will be fun to hit the road again. Our extended stays are probably in Utah, California, Oregon, and Colorado. Before then the camper gets some overhaul, with new batteries and a new heat pump A/C.
Headed to Utah and Page AZ March 19-28. Hitting Canyonlands and Arches B4 heading to Antalope Valley at Page AZ then back to Bryce Canyon/Zion and Great Basin in NV on way home.

Spent a week at Klamath CA last year. Great coastal area and plenty of Redwoods.

Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on February 09, 2023, 05:43:02 PM
Quote from: ammobob on February 09, 2023, 04:05:44 PM
Quote from: Merlin on February 04, 2023, 06:09:07 PMWe got our big U.S. map out at lunch today in the depths of Michigan winter and scoped out a 14 state, 6000 mile, month-long camping trip west. Most likely largely in September. We've stuck close to home the last 3 years and it will be fun to hit the road again. Our extended stays are probably in Utah, California, Oregon, and Colorado. Before then the camper gets some overhaul, with new batteries and a new heat pump A/C.
Headed to Utah and Page AZ March 19-28. Hitting Canyonlands and Arches B4 heading to Antalope Valley at Page AZ then back to Bryce Canyon/Zion and Great Basin in NV on way home.

Spent a week at Klamath CA last year. Great coastal area and plenty of Redwoods.



Klamath is one of the areas we are heading for. Can you be more specific about camping there and can you camp right in the redwoods?
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on February 16, 2023, 08:22:41 PM
We plan to stay in mostly state parks and national parks for our trip west, but in some locations we'll have to stay in other public or private campgrounds. Yesterday I made our first night's reservations in a city owned campground and for our one night in August it was $78. Yikes! I hope that's not the new normal for cost.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on February 24, 2023, 12:42:49 PM
Planning update. My plan to stay at public parks is getting rough. I'm fighting with thousands of other campers for the last available sites in each campground as the reservation windows open. I just missed the last campsite in Theodore Roosevelt NP by being a second too slow (probably literally) on the mouse button at 10:00A today when the campsites were released for reservation in August. Doing this each day for 3 weeks is not going to be any fun. Nice to see the interest in camping, but this is getting silly. We will need to modify our trip quite a bit.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on February 25, 2023, 07:53:43 PM
We don't like to stay in private campgrounds that have dozens of paved sites slotted side by side. To my traditionalist view of camping, that's not much different than an overnight in a Walmart lot. That being said, we will be forced into those some nights on our trip west because public camp sites are already booking up 6 months in advance. I just reserved a KOA pavement slot site for the night after our visit to Theodore Roosevelt NP and the KOA site with water and 30A power was $98. !! 
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on March 15, 2023, 10:13:52 PM
Most of our sites for the trip are now reserved. After Labor Day, sites became a bit more available. A couple of the national parks we are visiting have a new timed entrance permit arrangement, but fortunately anyone with a camping reservation can enter the park anytime. Our solar set up will be busy because quite a few places we want to spend some time, like Arches National Park, have no power. I'm not even going to tally up the camping costs! Unless you're tent camping in national forest campgrounds, campsites are pricey these days.

We're looking forward to the Birds of Prey National Conservation Area in Idaho's Snake River canyon, the Oregon coast, the redwoods, several places in Utah, and the Rocky Mountains. All REALLY different than Michigan!
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: GoElectric on March 17, 2023, 08:32:15 PM
As we our preparing for our 2 mo. longest trip ever, we are running into the same issues. Split seconds count on the dates you need!  We have had some successes and some compromises, and many more to do in British Columbia which has a shorter window. Have dates marked on the calendar and alarms set on the phone. We just got fiber Internet to the home and it helps.  We would have liked a little larger camper, but went with the 16' (22' actual) so we could get in the smaller sites in the older State and National Park campgrounds which helps some.  We also noticed that the free BLM sites were getting crowded and limited too.  Also found our enroute commercial sites very high too.  Almost the same as some semi decent hotels such as a Microtel and thinking of that as an option.

I'm seeing and hearing the problem is new RV's are being produced and sold quickly and you can see many massive RV Sales lots along the interstates but no new campgrounds are being built or expanded. No more winging it and going when and where you please without planning. I read about making Florida reservations next Winter and it said planning to the second, months or years in advance is the only way and you better like it and get used to it, or go without. What bothers us is arriving at our campsite and seeing the reserved units unfilled  :-[ and nobody be able to use it for a night or two. Seems like they reserve for just in case we want to go. Also, wondering if bots are reserving similar to concert tickets for resale.

Best wishes for success on everybody's camping reservations!
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on March 18, 2023, 12:26:07 PM
I suspect the use of bots to reserve multiple sites is the reason reserveamerica.com is now aggressively using anti-bot log-in credentials. Unfortunately I see where some folks have complained that in the time it takes to get through the reCAPTCHA screens someone else reserved the site they wanted. One web site I found is devoted to helping people get a site in California parks and recommended doing all the log in screens and even credit card entry so at the exact time a site becomes available there is no delay in confirmation.

And yes, we have also found private campgrounds can be quite a bit more expensive than a motel.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on May 13, 2023, 08:35:30 PM
Our camper survived another winter. Whew! I'm doing the spring fit-out this weekend in prep for a trip to state park on Lake Huron next week. Everything seems to be working ok and the only repair is a new bottom seal needed on the slide out.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on May 19, 2023, 08:50:26 PM
Our week on Lake Huron was cold! One day only made it to 47F. The migrating birds were fun to watch and hear, but we couldn't stay outside for long! We had a flat tire at the campsite but the spare got us home fine.

Our new Carefree Buena Vista screen room was a nightmare of bad design. The rafters didn't hold the weight of the side panels and collapsed repeatedly. The sewing was misaligned making the zippers hard to work. The plastic clips holding the screen covers left me with bloody fingers. The bottom skirt was at least 2 feet too long, making it difficult to get in and out without stepping on it and difficult to stake out. It's too bad Dometic doesn't make the Patty O Room anymore. Ours wore out and I would have bought another one.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Chappy133 on May 20, 2023, 10:57:59 AM
Somewhere on a RV Facebook page someone recently posted using garage screens for use with an awning as a bug room.  One double width screen and two single width screens is what I recall.  Would be best to measure  the lengths to make sure this would work. 
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on August 17, 2023, 04:24:00 PM
We were able to do some major modifications to our Carefree screen room that involved new rafters, removal of lots of extraneous material, and zipper fixing I think it will work now for our upcoming trip west.

I had to replace 2 clearance lights on the camper that had corroded and added some self leveling caulk to the roof corners. A new cell antenna mounted on the roof and going to the booster inside greatly improved the cell signal. 2 new FLA Interstate batteries and 2 full propane tanks (after chasing out the squirrel nest) rounded out the camper prep. I think all that remains is packing up.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: djsamuel on August 18, 2023, 08:42:37 PM
ENJOY and keep us posted!  Hoping that new AC works well for you.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on August 26, 2023, 11:06:15 PM
Now if I could just figure out how to post photos? 
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: djsamuel on August 28, 2023, 07:42:03 PM
Quote from: Merlin on August 26, 2023, 11:06:15 PMNow if I could just figure out how to post photos? 

I upload them to IMGUR.COM and then use the links provided there for forums.
Title: Re: 2023 Season
Post by: Merlin on October 15, 2023, 08:39:06 PM
We got back home to Michigan last month after our trip west. There were some amazing highlights.

We spent a week on the Oregon coast and one night had a cougar call right next to the camper! That night, I was typing on the laptop in the trip journal and my wife was reading. Just when it get completely dark outside, there was a loud, deep, resonant meow-like sound that went on for 3-4 minutes in the trees just outside our large window. We both said, boy that sounds like a big cat and our dog went crazy. After it stopped, my wife went back to reading and I looked up cougar calls on the Internet. She didn't know I was doing the search and when I played back the cougar mating call, she said: "Listen, there it is again!". We didn't go outside again that night.

We were amazed beyond amazed at the birds using Great Salt Lake as a staging and feeding area for migration. We camped on Antelope Island and were really stunned at the bird life; shorebirds and ducks galore, not to mention the buffalo wandering through the campground.

We had to significantly alter our trip plans due to forest fires and extreme heat. The campground we had planned for a 3 day stay in Redwoods National/State Park was closed by a fire too close by. We did get in a day trip to see the big trees, but it was disappointing to not be able to camp among them in California. The other major change was not wanting to camp in Arches National Park. There are no hookups in the campground and temperatures were in the mid-90sF the 3 days we had planned to be there. So we bailed out and traveled around much further north. We drove through smoke so thick it was fog-like in eastern Washington just before going through the Columbia River Gorge. We also had smoky air most of the time we were in Oregon.

I was able to take a fantastic jet boat trip 40 miles up the Rogue River in southern Oregon. If anyone ever gets into that area, take that trip on Jerry's Rogue Jet's out of Gold Beach and be sure to ask for Kevin as your boat captain :)   You won't ever forget that ride.

I figured 13.1 million revolutions of the engine crankshaft and 52.44 million spark plug firings for the trip. I guess I better go change the oil again.