HOWTO: Setting Up Your Campsite
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© 2016 by Erwin Hymer Group North America, Inc.
Why drive all the way back to town just to smell someone
else's woodsmoke? Camp where you are.
Simplify, Simplify
Campgrounds capitalize on the helplessness of
non-self-contained RVs by charging a premium for full
hookup sites. You aren't helpless. With an electric-only
hookup, you drive a short distance to the campground's
fresh water source and waste water dump every few
days. Do it on the way to the store or other trip that
you're going to take anyway, and it's no bother. In
addition to saving money, you'll also have a choice of
more campsites, since not all of them have full hookups,
or the even better choice of no campsite at all to take
advantage of the Roadtrek's extended boondocking
capability. You can stay out there until you run out of
groceries if you want.
Freedom from hookups also opens up a whole range of
national and provincial forest campgrounds with limited
or no hookups to you. There is also dispersed camping in
national forests and crown lands and other boondocking
options, where you find your own campsite. There are rules for where you can and can't boondock, so check the forest
websites or drop in at the ranger station for information. Once you're out there, don't look around for those big rigs who are
dependent on hookups - they're all back in town. It's just you and nature, with the occasional backpacker.