After all the research in preparation for life on the road, I never fathomed there could be things that would surprise me about the RV life. But I was wrong. Surprise. Today’s Listicle is my list of the 6 most surprising things about RV life.

Physicality of RV Life

Weightlifting. Photo by Victor Freitas on Unsplash

Who knew I should’ve been lifting weights in preparation for RV life?

I had very little physical interaction with my sticks-and-bricks house. I called the plumber, the electrician, the cable guy, the roofer, etc. for what needed fixed. I lived in a condo, so dues covered snow removal and lawn care.

RVers talk at length about how something on an RV is always breaking. It is a consequence of the constant earthquake-like conditions of driving a rig down the road. There were several reasons I bought a new trailer rather than a used one. And one of those reasons was to mitigate the hassle of things needing repaired. At least at the beginning. Aside from weather-related challenges and a few minor things, this has proven true in my first five months as a full-timer.

Still, I watched enough videos before I started the journey, you’d think I would’ve been prepared for the physical nature of living the RV life. Take repairs out of the equation and I was still surprised by the physicality of being an RVer.

RV life takes a lot of elbow grease. A lot. Pushing. Pulling. Lifting. Bending. Twisting. Positioning. Crawling on the ground. Things are harder, heavier and take longer than you think. Everything from attaching the van to the trailer to opening the battery bank compartment, from pulling out the stairs to connecting hoses. All this has been accompanied by a lot of bruises and soreness.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining. For me, it was just unexpected. It was one surprise of RVing.

Planning the Drive is Hard

Map of Colorado, p ad and pencil, cup of coffee. Photo by John Matychuk on UnsplashBefore I venture to my next location, I spent quite a lot of time on the internet. Because I hate driving, I follow the route advised by Mapquest because “route 1” is always the shortest one, time-wise.

If I was only traveling a few hours to my next location, then, this would not be as hard. Planning the drive wouldn’t have made this list. But, so far, I have managed to have more than 1,000 miles between my planned stays.

Still, planning stops along those 1,000+ miles has proven more difficult than you would think. I learned not all rest stops are 24 hours, not all Walmarts allow RVers to stay overnight in their parking lot (learned this one by a 3 a.m. knock on my door asking me to leave), places the internet suggests to stop turn out not to be good, and so on.

Stacked hay. Photo by Supersize LIFE.

Despite being lost, I had to stop and photograph this hay stack. I’ve never seen hay so neat and perfectly stacked.

Another planning aspect that continues to allude me is figuring out whether a road is a good one for an RV to drive. To date, I have blindly followed where my phone directed me. Once I ended up on a dirt road through a hay field, so for starters, electronic maps are not perfect. But what they really don’t account for—and I haven’t figured out how to account for myself—are steep inclines and declines that an RV would be better off avoiding.

This surprising thing, I hope, is temporary. I hope there is room for me to improve my planning. Maybe the possibility exists for me to hate the transition between campground stays less.

People Live in RV Parks

Extended-stay is what RV parks officially call it, but it didn’t take long for me to begin to recognize the telltale signs of a permanent resident. There is a general lived in look to their site, including satellite dishes and giant propane tanks on the ground, grills, bikes, welcome signs poked into the dirt, bird feeders hanging from trees, etc.

The thing that has surprised me is the large number of extended-stay people in RV parks. I had no idea. I assumed the people I’d meet at RV parks would be other travelers. Not so. I haven’t stayed at a lot of places yet, but of the ones I have, I estimate 20 to 30% of the sites are in use by local residents.

So Much is Free

Outside of Frazier Farmstead Museum

Frazier Farmstead Museum in Milton-Freewater, Oregon. One of many FREE treasures I’ve discovered.

When I embarked on my RV life, I knew I wanted to do and see things. I wanted experiences and adventure. For my definition of adventure, see Part 1 of the post I wrote about my time in Walla Walla.

And from the beginning, I had a line item in my budget for these things . The mistake I made was in assuming that everything costs something. Come to find out, you can do some fantastic things without paying a dime.

I’ve gone to museums, taken guided tours, done tastings, visited nature centers, watched films. All for free.

It’s been a delight—and a surprise—to discover.

Fear

I have tried to figure out where my fear come from. I’ve never been a victim of violence or abuse but the possibility of it has left me nearly paralyzed at times. For years—years—I would return home and do a thorough apartment/house search to make sure someone wasn’t lurking. Every closet opened, doors looked behind, beds looked under, shower curtains pulled back.

Hand silhouette behind curtain. Photo by Darkness on UnsplashWith this history, I mentally prepared for fear on the road. I expected it, expected not sleeping for fear someone would cut the screen and reach his hand into the trailer. I prepared for the sound of someone jiggling the door handle.

There are new sounds to adjust to at each new campground and I was ready to have difficulty sleeping during the first days at a new place. This one I wrote about in an early post, the first Listicle, in fact. It was a list of  the fears I had about the big life change I was about to make.

Of everything on this list, I remain most surprised that I have not been scared. Not once. Not yet, anyway.

I have adjusted easily to a variety of campgrounds and parking places . I sleep easily and well, and always with the windows cracked.

Boondocking

I am happy I was wrong about feeling fear on the road. I’m not at all happy to have to admit this next surprising thing.

Tiara and a cupcake. Photo by Mariana Yarritu on Unsplash

I haven’t earned the tiara yet.

Turns out, I may not be the boondocking queen I envisioned myself to be.

It’s hard to write, hard to reconcile the pictures in my mind of being in the middle of nowhere with the fact that I like full hook ups.

I like taking showers without worrying about how much water I’m using. I like watching my DVDs in the evening. On cold days, I like running my space heater. And on hot days, I like running the air conditioner. I like microwaved vegetarian burritos for lunch.

But mostly, I like not worrying one iota about whether or not I have enough battery juice to do any of those things.

That declaration made, I’m not 100% ready to forgo the boondocking queen title. Because I continue to feel a little lost when it comes to RV life, it possible that once I’m more comfortable all things RV I might be more open to broadening my horizons to make the pictures that danced through my head almost every night for three years as I planned my RV life a reality.

What do you think about this list? If you are an RVer, what things surprised you about RV life?

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