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Califbill Califbill is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2015
Posts: 920
Default Interesting Uber ride

wrote:
On Thu, 3 Dec 2015 14:14:03 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:



Interesting. I really don't get the appeal of these large camper/RV's.
If you want to enjoy nature and not sleep in a tent, the smaller campers
seem more than adequate. The behemoths you see on the highway are
expensive to buy and expensive to run and maintain, and it would take a
hell of a lot of nights in expensive hotels to justify towing a
$75,000-$100,000 or more RV. And then you have to drive it to where you
are going.

On our recent drive up from Florida, we stayed at a recommended motel in
South Carolina. Brand new, perfectly fine for the night, and...$70.



We live a little higher up the food chain on the road, First Class air
fare, Rental crossover and $200+ a night suites. When we compared
notes with our RV driving neighbors, we still came out money ahead
based on their 2-3 trips a year.
If you are like John and go somewhere once or twice a month, the gap
narrows considerably.
If you just weekend off to nearby places and go a lot, the RV might
make a lot of sense.
It looked attractive in Alaska because rooms are few and far between.
They were also expensive for mediocre places. I just wouldn't want to
drive an RV all the way to Alaska.


I drove my truck and truck camper to Alaska 10 years ago. Would not do it
again. Lots of boring scenery on the way through Canada. Camper was
handy, as rooms were scarce. Talked to people driving a car, and they said
they had to drive short days and long days at times to get a room. If I
did it again, I would fly to AK and rent an RV. There were 3 other couples
on the trip, towing trailers. One 5th wheel and one pop up camper. Pop up
was a pain to setup and takedown for a one night stop. Plus crap mileage,
and you had to be careful if trying a side road.