Sunday, December 27, 2009

Boondocking = Green

You’ve undoubtedly already made the connection between boondocking and a non-polluting, non-wasteful, natural resource saving, green lifestyle. About the only non-green activity associated with our green lifestyle is getting our rigs to our campsites. The mileage thing.

Manufacturers, however, are taking steps to reduce their waste and use of natural resources, and using sustainable materials in the manufacture of our motorhomes, trailers, and fivers, as well as now building smaller motorhomes with smaller engines. Winnebago’s Navion and View Class C motorhomes are producing mileage figures in the 15 to 19 mpg range. Freightliner has developed the first hybrid-electric Class A chassis, a mileage saving combination that became available toward the end of 2009.

Other chassis makers are testing electric and diesel hybrid combinations for commercial busses and delivery van fleets. These too will eventually filter down to the RV market. But given that our rigs, whether driving or towing, are not now miserly in the use of fuel, we are still conservative in our total fuel used since we usually go to a place and stay for a few days, rather than drive—or commute—everyday. Even though a passenger car will get higher mileage, a daily commuter drives more miles and in the end uses more fuel.

But what about the rest of RVing and the green lifestyle? When camping, we use fewer natural resources than when at home. The rig uses less heat to warm up the smaller interior, we use less water, less electricity for lights, a smaller refrigerator, microwave, and TV, unlike all the more power hungry electrical appliances and toys that we use in our frame houses.

We also tend to be more wasteful in our stick house when we don’t have to be concerned with running out of water, or filling up our holding tanks, or our batteries going dead. Try following some of the habits the next time you go boondocking that you follow at home--like not turning off the water between soaping and rinsing in the shower, or turning on all the lights, radio, and TV and leaving them on even when no one is using them, and see how long before your systems prove inadequate. When is the last time you had to cut down on water usage at home because your holding tanks were almost full? When you don’t have a sewer, you learn to use less very quickly.

Yes, boondocking—in fact all of RV camping—is far more environmentally friendly and much less wasteful than living in fixed housing with unlimited and too-easily obtained electricity, water, waste disposal, and trash pick-up. When boondocking we are, by the very nature of the lifestyle, forced to conserve and use less.

Learn more about boondocking with my new eBook, BOONDOCKING: Finding the Perfect Campsite on America’s Public Lands.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Boondocking electrical conservation tips

Not all boondockers start out with solar panels, a wind turbine, or an O2 converter that changes air into electricity (don't search for that one, that's a pipe dream). So until you do install or invent those sustainable energy sources, the following tips will help you to keep your electrical usage down and your generator run time minimal.
  • Turn off all appliances, lights, radio, TV, and anything else that requires electricity when not in use.
  • Don’t leave your porch light on (a particular annoyance to me when I am not so fortunate to be able to camp away from neighbors, and he/she leaves the light on, ruining my night vision for seeing night critters and star gazing).
  • Coordinate your generator running time with the use of power-hungry appliances. For instance, schedule your showers, water heater, use of microwave, coffee grinder, and dishwashing all within a short period of time when you can run your generator to power them, rather than pull juice out of your batteries. This also charges you batteries at the same time.
  • Time your day to match the sun, rising when it does and going to bed with it also. This cuts your light usage down considerably.
  • If you read in bed, try using small rechargeable battery powered reading lights. You can recharge the batteries when you hook up next time and you won’t run down your house batteries with your RV’s lights. And you will probably disturb your mate less.
  • Monitor your house batteries charge with a voltage meter so you don’t run them down too low, which can damage the batteries. Deep cycle batteries are considered fully charged at at over 12.6 volts and completely discharged at 10.6 volts. Recharge before they get below 60%, or 12.0 volts.
In addition to these ways to cut your electric usage, there will be times when you are in an LTVA or other boondocking or dry-camping situation (like a rally or week-end event) where you have close neighbors. Remember that there are all kinds of RVers, some—maybe yourself included—who do not mind the noise of a generator running and don’t even consider that the noise or exhaust fumes may annoy others.

I remedy this, as I’m sure others do, by taking a walk during the time my neighbor will be running his generator. But it would annoy me if I had just settled down in my camp chair with a glass of the bubbly when my neighbor fires up his generator. Be courteous to your neighbor and he will return the courtesy.

Explain to your neighbor that you have to run your generator, and for however long you expect to, and ask when would be a good time when it wouldn’t bother him/her. Maybe you can all coordinate times.

Avoid running your generator past a reasonable hour in the evening when others may be relaxing, sitting outside enjoying the stars and the quiet, or trying to sleep. The same rule holds for the morning before the late risers greet the day.

Learn more about boondocking with my new eBook, BOONDOCKING: Finding the Perfect Campsite on America’s Public Lands.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Massive desert art: First intaglios, now Jim Denevan

Jim Devevan is not your average RVer. Yes, he has an RV, a converted bus. Maybe you've heard of him. He is an artist that makes temporary drawings on sandy beaches and scratched into ice. But not too many artists--I'm sure you can count them on one thumb--produce their art with the full knowledge that it will eventually be erased by forces of nature--waves and weather. And we're not talking here about a mere sand castle. Jim's art is large. Very large, stretched over--in some cases--an acre or more. Sometimes he manages to just finish his artwork before the tide comes in and obliterates it forever.

But this time Jim has out done himself. He has used his converted bus motorhome to create a massive art work by scratching and dragging an impression into the sands of the Mojave Desert in Nevada. Did I mention that this particular piece of art is massive? In fact, it stretches across the Nevada Desert for nine miles. He had to use a GPS to create it. In fact, it is the largest art work in the world. From ground level, it looks much like the famous desert intaglios, also etched into the desert floor by pre-historic Native Americans near Blythe and Quartzsite. From up close, you can't tell what is is, other than a disrupted section of sand and rocks. But from overhead, wow!

I mention this as a heads up to boondockers. As you know, you can boondock just about anywhere in the desert on BLM land. But when you head out onto a dry lake or low and flat desert floor, you just might want to stop and look before you cross any piece of ground that looks like it was scratched into the surface by man. It may be a piece of artwork, whether by Jim or another budding artist. What a neat way to boondock that would be, right next to a massive piece of human artistic creation.

Learn more about desert camping with my new eBook, Snowbird Guide to Camping and Boondocking in the Southwestern Deserts.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Boondocking battery/electrical tip


The amount of 12-volt electricity available to operate your systems limits your length of time spent boondocking or the time between recharging sessions. A single deep cycle 12-volt house battery will produce about 105 ampere-hours of electricity. Calculate the number of amps each of your electrical appliances draws and multiply by the time (hours or minutes) in use.

To make an educated guess at when you need to recharge, subtract the ampere-hours used each day from the total available, but allow only about half of these amps (about 50) to run your electrical equipment. It is best for your batteries to recharge at 50% capacity.

Take voltage readings at the battery terminals with a hand-held volt or multi-meter and when the voltage drops to 11.5 volts, start your engine or run your your generator to recharge the battery. Better yet, install solar panels or a wind generator. Installing a second house battery or switching to a pair of 6-volt golf cart batteries will increase the total number of available amps--and your time between charges.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Only the ghosts still live on the Clanton Brothers' ranch

I can still hear the shots. The bullets ricocheting off the stone blocks of the bank building; Virgil diving for cover behind a buckboard wagon. Doc, carefully concealing his body, firing around the corner of a red brick building, and Wyatt taking careful and deadly aim from beside the horse trough. When the famous gunfight at the OK Corral was over, several of the Clanton gang lay dead, the end of the cattle rustlers delivered from the hands of the Earp brothers and Doc Holliday.


This scene has played in movies, television shows, and in the regular Tombstone, Arizona re-creations. But did you know that you could visit the infamous Clanton brothers’ ranch? The ranch is where rustled cattle grazed secretly in 1881 when Virgil Earp was U.S. Deputy Marshal and City Marshal of Tombstone and when his famous brother Wyatt was deputy U.S. marshal for the entire Arizona Territory.

The ranch now lies on Arizona BLM land, where you can choose your own boondocking space among the cactus and creosote. To find the ranch drive East from Sierra Vista toward Tombstone to Escapule Road, a signed dirt road heading south (right) a mile before the Charleston Bridge across the San Pedro River. In about three miles there will be a BLM road marker and small parking area. Walk about a mile to the south along a fence until you come to a gate marked “Clanton Ranch” with some of the letters missing.

Go through the gate, but from this point on let the ghosts of the Clantons guide you to the decayed remnants of the former buildings and the old corral. Only a few crumbling walls and scattered pieces of rusty metal remain, but as you wander through the grass and under the towering cottonwood tree, try to visualize one of the Clantons, branding iron in hand, meticulously changing the brands of the newly acquired cattle to match their brand.

For additional boondocking possibilities, head on down to the Charleston Bridge for spots along the San Pedro River. Learn more about desert camping with my new eBook, Snowbird Guide to Camping and Boondocking in the Southwestern Deserts.


Friday, December 11, 2009

Efficient battery/generator electrical usage tip




Once you have some boondocking time under your belt, you will be surprised at how easy it becomes to limit or eliminate using some of those high energy appliances (HEAs. These are the ones that suck the available electricity out of your batteries like a vampire hooked on sulphuric acid. In many instances, cutting back on these appliances may be just a matter of breaking old habits.

Air-conditioning, for instance, is a luxury you can learn to live without while boondocking. Once your body adjusts to regulating its own temperature, you will only occasionally miss it. As RVers and boondockers we move around with the weather. We don’t stay in the desert when the sun is so hot it will fry eggs on a rock, or stay at hot lower elevations when we can cool off by climbing in altitude or camping in cool, shady forests. And do you really want to stay cooped up inside your rig with all the windows closed and the air-conditioner running? Much better to leave the windows open to air circulation and go outside and seek shade or a breeze.

The (HEAs) that run only a short while--like a microwave, water pump, blender, or coffee grinder--you can schedule to run when your generator is producing the electricity and will run the appliances. This will pump a little electricity back into your batteries, minimize your generator run time, and preserve the electricity--instead of depleting it--already in your batteries.

For instance, turn on your water heater after dinner while you clean up. When the water is hot (it only takes about ten minutes) turn on the generator so it is running the water pump while you wash up your dinner dishes. Your partner can shower during this time, followed by you. While you are showering, your partner is grinding the coffee beans for the morning coffee, drying and putting away dishes.

Leave the water heater on for a few minutes after you finish to replace the hot water you used. This will then last until the next evening so you can turn off the water heater, saving propane and the noise of it turning on and off. This efficient use of your generator and HEAs will make your available electricity last longer, minimize generator use, and make you feel good from having used your natural resources wisely.

Learn more about boondocking with my new eBook, BOONDOCKING: Finding the Perfect Campsite on America’s Public Lands.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Boondocker's wish list: Dyson's new super clean up machine


Are you still looking for a useful gift for the RVer in your life? This futuristic machine takes some serious consideration. I’m referring to the Dyson DC31, a powerful new handheld vacuum from the Dyson people that will have your clean up chores finished before the fun of using it wears off.

Dyson recently sent one of their DC31 vacuums to me to test (probably upon hearing about the current state of cleanliness of my motorhome) and I agreed to put it to the test. These are the findings of me, my wife, her sister, my brother-in-law (who vacuumed out his entire car), niece, and nephew, all who participated in the testing over the Thanksgiving weekend).

• The first thing I noticed was the powerful suction, the Dyson patented cyclone design. The claim was that it is the only handheld vacuum that doesn’t lose suction over the length of the battery charge. I can attest to this, having used it right up to the end of its charge.
• The DC31 utilizes a 21.6 volt lithium ion battery that gives ten minutes of continuous suction. And this battery, Dyson claims, re-charges three times faster than the competition. I can’t guarantee that, not having tried every other vacuum, but I can tell you that it charged up very fast. In fact, I seldom used it for the full charge, using it mostly for short quick pick-ups, and kept it plugged into its wall mounted charger when not in use and it was always ready to go.

This is what I liked about the DC31.
• It looks like a robot fighting machine out of Star Wars.
• It was not too heavy for my wife and young niece to use.
• It carries a two-year warranty.
• It picks up from carpets, linoleum, wood, computer keyboards, small children’s food trays, around litter boxes, in corners and crevices, and sucks up spider webs, beach sand, garden dirt, and the scattered remains of a Thanksgiving dinner.
• Changeable tools allow for most cleaning situations. The clever design of the main tool has a sliding brush head that slides back out of the way for use on hard surfaces. A crevice tool gets the hard to clean areas.
• A button on the back offers the option of ten minutes at lower power, or up to six minutes at 70% greater power—which even at this setting is not annoyingly loud. The lower power setting will handle most jobs, but the increased power setting really turns on the juice for tough jobs.
• To empty, I simply pushed a red release button and the bottom sprung open to empty the debris into a trash can. Then snap closed. (Open, shake debris out, close--four seconds. I timed it.) There is no bag to replace and the lifetime filter needs cleaning only once a year.

After using the DC31 to suck up everything I could think of I can recommend it as a very useful tool for RVers. It does the job admirably, and it fits in perfectly with our RV and boondocking lifestyles.

Learn more about boondocking with my new eBook, BOONDOCKING: Finding the Perfect Campsite on America’s Public Lands.



Friday, December 4, 2009

Benefits of camp hosting

The National Forest Service, Bureau of Land Managagement (BLM), US Army Corps of Engineers, National Park Service, state parks, and other entities that operate campgrounds, including those that farm the campground operations out to private campground management companies, hire camp hosts to perform a myriad of campground operations, such as registering and collecting fees, manning the entry kiosk, helping in the visitor center, gardening and maintenance, and conducting interpretive programs.

RVers who host are usually given a free hook-up campsite for their 20 to 25 hours of work per week. Private for-profit operators of federal campgrounds are not allowed to accept volunteer labor and are required to also pay a wage (Recreation Resource Management uses 450 hosts in 175 public land parks in ten states.

Often, especially at small primitive campgrounds that you will find in the national forests, the host's site may be the only one in the campground with hookups. The smaller the campground, the broader your duties. Sometimes you may be the only official presence. But these campgrounds are easier to manage and a lot of your on-duty hours consist of just being available to collect fees from arriving campers or answer questions. And it’s fun. You will meet people from all over the country and make many friends--as well as save on your campground fees budget.

Learn about Bob Difley's eBooks at RVbookstore.com

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