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[email protected] princecraft49@gmail.com is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2012
Posts: 162
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On Wednesday, December 26, 2012 4:51:52 PM UTC-4, iBoaterer wrote:
In article ,

says...



On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 13:47:52 -0500, iBoaterer wrote:




I am saying I was not willing to drive to those places and trying to


pack your camping supplies on an airplane is not tenable.




At that point you are left with camping where you are willing to


drive.


My neighbor was an RV "camper" . He always had a six figure RV in his


driveway or in a paid parking lot facility (most of the time).


He always ended up losing about $50,000-100,000 when he traded them.


They were a maintenance black hole, got about 4-5 MPG on the road


towing another car. The campgrounds were not cheap and he still had to


buy food in or out.




We sat down and compared his cost to me and my wife, flying 1st class,


staying in suites in nice hotels, renting an SUV and cooking in


or eating out.


We came away cheaper and we got a lot more actual vacation out of our


2 or 3 weeks (unless driving a bus is your idea of fun).




Unless you actually go camping 4 or 5 times a year, locally, the hotel


is always going to be cheaper once you actually add up all of your


expenses..




I love to drive around the U.S.A. Did you realize you can see a lot more


driving than you can in an airplane?




You are not going to see much looking out the window on the


interstate. We drive plenty on these vacations, typically 1500 - 2000


miles but it is around one or two states, very far from here. The


plane gets over a week of driving behind you in 2 half days.


If you actually wanted to investigate every interesting thing you see


and you drive on back roads like we do, it would take over a month to


get to Colorado. That might be great if you were rich and didn't have


any reason to be home.




Harry doesn't like to see anything either. One of the best times I ever

had was my brother and I drove from New York to New Orleans and went

anywhere we felt like. We had a book called Roadfood and went to

whatever town we wanted to check out a food place, plus whatever we

wanted to see. Two weeks to get to New Orleans, where we stayed for

another four days. Met many people along the way that I'm still in touch

with, saw a lot of local things that you wouldn't have seen if you

hadn't spent time with the locals, etc.


Bull****...sounds like a BoogieTale.