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Best Way To Retire One Weekend at a Time!

08 January
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Problem Solved

Experience teaches many things. Here are some of our most valuable hints that might help make your camping experience more enjoyable.

Pack your clothes in an Igloo cooler. Especially for tent and pop-up campers, this is a great problem-solver. If you are camping in any area where humidity is an issue, packing your clothes, towels and any open paper products in airtight coolers keeps the humidity out of the items. If you have experienced digging through damp clothes in a dark duffle bag, you will appreciate this suggestion. The coolers can act as small tables or seating options, as well. Keep the cooler closed, unless you are taking items out.

Bungy cords and Velcro wraps A supply of both of these in all sizes will save you in so many unplanned emergencies. We once had to tie our broken awning arm to the trailer body with bungy cords to return home after high winds ripped it from the exterior wall.

Install child safety locks on the cabinets and doors in your RV or trailer. We devised this solution after two incidents in our trailer. The first involved shattered glasses and bowls had hit the floor during travel when a cabinet door above the sink came open.
The second was more serious. We had a dining area slide that closed against a long pantry door. During travel, the pantry door came open and lodged against the slide. We discovered this after we arrived home and opened the slide, only to hear the solid oak pantry door crunching into splinters.

We placed magnetic child locks on all the cabinets
, and now stow the magnet unlocking device attached to the metal hood over the stove.

Hang pictures or wall décor with 3M removable tabs. Adding personal framed photos or other framed items to your mobile palace interior can really make it feel like home. But bumps during the ride there and back can cause these items to hit the deck, if they are not secured. The Velcro on these hangers holds decorative items tight, but allows you to safely remove them when you need to. You can’t really drive a nail into a trailer wall, anyway.

Prepare meals ahead and freeze them. Preparing and freezing meals to use while you’re travelling saves time, effort, and cleanup. Try sticking to disposable containers, such as vacuum seal bags that can go directly into boiling water or the microwave, or throwaway metal baking pans that can be tossed after use. You can eat less junk food, and spend less time cooking. Make sure you shop around for disposable pans that fit in both your freezer and oven! Remember – they are not as big as what you have at home.

Line your shelf areas with non-slip lining. This comes in rolls of various widths, lengths, and colors. Lining all your shelf areas, even where you store non-food items, can help in the war against things slipping around while you are travelling.

Make a “just-in-case” box. A clear shoe box storage container will do fine. This will never leave the RV. It should include: scissors, clear tape, a ruler, pens, pencils, safety pins, an emergency sewing kit, a small tablet, permanent markers, masking tape, paper clips, velco wraps, string, and a small role of all-purpose wire. If you know someone who just got a new RV, this would be a GREAT gift!

Under the Sink A few things you might not think to keep in that ”under the sink” area include: ant poison, bug spray, carpet cleaner, and air freshener. If you have small children, cabinet locks are a MUST here, unless you keep these items in an outdoor storage compartment. There are times you will appreciate having Wasp & Hornet spray, too.

Protect your microwave plate. This was the first piece of advice we received from the sales person for our first RV. If your RV is new and has a microwave, the glass turntable will probably come tightly set in Styrofoam. The reason it is packed in Styrofoam when you get it new is the same reason you should keep the Styrofoam and repack the plate each time you move your RV. It doesn’t take much time, and you will be really glad you took care of this little detail, if you ever arrive home and find your turntable dish shattered from an unexpected bump in the road.

25 June
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Tenting in Style

Devil’s Den State Park – one of the jewels of northwestern Arkansas.  And no, I do not live in Arkansas, or work for the Arkansas Tourism Department!  It is just a beautiful area to camp.

Our children attended summer camp at Camp Ozark, just out of Mt. Ida, Arkansas, most of their school age years.  But they weren’t the only ones having a wonderful time camping.  Several summers, we were able to drop the kids off at summer camp, and head off into the surrounding region with our family size tent in hand.  This particular year, our getaway was an elegant time to return to romance for mom and dad.

Devil’s Den State Park is located in Arkansas’s Ozark Mountains, between Ft. Smith and Fayetteville.  Built in the 1930’s as a CCC project, the park is filled with rustic wood and stone structures.  The special features that led us to set our sites on this location for our adults-only getaway included the 8-acre lake, mountain biking trails, caves for exploring, and the beautiful creek that runs through the campground.

This particular June, we were lucky to get a campsite right on Lee Creek.  Every night, we went to sleep to the sound of the water gently rolling and dancing over the rocky creek bed.  Hiking the trail that followed the creek, nature’s gift was an incredible display of early summer wildflowers that cascaded down the rocky slopes, broke slightly for the trail, and continued down to the creek’s edge.  And just when we thought we had seen Mother Nature’s surprises, including a healthy rattlesnake sunning himself on the rocky path, we came upon the most unexpected, blue swimming hole we had ever seen.

During the evening, dining was in five-star style!  Several weeks before our trip, the dinner menu had been decided.  Included were such delicacies as Crawfish Etoufee, Shrimp Scampi, Sour Cream Chicken over Noodles, and Chicken Marsala, all prepared ahead and frozen in sealed, plastic bags that could be dropped in a pot of boiling water and heated to serve.  Side dishes were prepared the same.  (No pots to clean!) All the dinner elements were frozen, and acted as the ice in our ice chest.  With a little additional ice over the course of the camping week, all remained frozen or very cold until ready to serve.

Two place settings of our good china, Kirk Sterling flatware, and Waterford crystal glasses were CAREFULLY(!) packed, along with a cloth tablecloth and cloth napkins.  Candles and candle holders were a must.  A small handful of wildflowers from the surrounding hills graced our table each evening.  And all this under the protection of a really substantial screen tent over the transformed, concrete picnic table.  Each evening, as we lit the candles and enjoyed our special occasion dinners, fellow campers would walk by, each stopping to take a second look at the dining room set up in the screen tent!

I know what they were thinking.  “I don’t want to wash those dishes,” or “I am camping – that looks like a lot of work,” or “those people must not have their kids with them.”  And they would all be right.  We have never camped in such style again; however, it made for a truly special memory that we wouldn’t trade for the world.  Make your camping trip a special occasion, at least once!

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