Categories
Airstream Meetups

Airstream Boondocking with the Pros

Airstream Boondocking with the ProsOne of the reasons we chose an Airstream over a typical RV or 5th Wheel was because of the amazing Airstream community we found on Instagram. We noticed how they talked to each other, encouraged each other, and when they were in the same location they got together!

We watched a few Airstreamers converge on Arizona and the mild winter weather and knew we would be in a for a meet-up or two. We have been watching the Malimish Airstream crew for months now, and have been both inspired and encouraged by their adventures. They have been traveling for years, and have become boondocking experts. Also present, and equally experienced, was Leigh and Bryan from Aluminarium. After leaving our friend’s house in Tuscon, we headed north 30 minutes to meet the two Airstreamers at the Snyder Hill BLM land.Boondocking is the term used by travel folks to describe dry camping – camping with no water, electric, or sewer hookups. Although we have overnighted a time or two in a parking log, we have next to no boondocking experience. They assured us that they’d look out for us, and gave us the coordinates to the boondocking spot they had found just west of Tuscon.

We had a great time, and learned quite a bit about how to make it work. Our fresh water and grey water (sink water) tanks can last for a few days without too much grief, but the battery capacity of our Airstream only allows for one or two nights, depending how cold it is.  After our first night, we borrowed some solar panels from Dan (Malimish) and from Bryan (Alumanarium), and charged our batteries. It was afternoon before we got started, but we got enough charge to make it through the second night as well.

In addition to learning the first steps of extended boondocking, we really enjoyed socializing with fellow travelers. We talked technology, solar panels, projects in the works, and boondocking skills. Our kids loved playing with the wonderful Malimish kids, and we all really had a great time.  After waking up to no power and a cloudy day we said goodbye and headed north, a bit sad to be leaving so soon.

Malimish Airstream

These guys are rockstars. Seriously. I think they have close to 7000 followers on Instagram and have been traveling on and off with their kids since 2007. They are one of the families that first convinced us that we could really do this. We’ve loved stalking watching them as they travel and it was great to finally meet them! They are super nice, generous, and totally welcoming of us newbies. Get to know them on Instagram or check out their travel maps on their blog.

Malimish Family

Aluminarium

Meet Brian, Leigh, and Curtis (the sweetest dog ever!) of Aluminarium.com. These guys are amazing. They started out in an older Airstream and then upgraded to a nice, new one and have been traveling ever since. Both work during the day so we saw and socialized with them at night. Leigh does a great job of posting fun stories and people they meet on the blog, and they’ll occasionally post to Instagram. We are excited about their super secret awesome project which will hopefully debut this year! If you check out their blog posts they have a running campground total for the year. So far this year? They’ve paid $0. Pros? I think so.Aluminarium

We’ve heard at least 3 others coming in to join the larger group, as well as a few that just stop in to say hi. We feel like we left the party before it really got started, but Disneyland calls, so off we go!  We are definitely looking forward to future meetups with these wonderful folks.

Categories
Photography The Basics Tips & Tricks

8 Tips for Getting the Best Vacation Photos Ever

8 tips to get the best vacation photos ever

You’ve planned, organized, packed, sweated, and agonized over creating the best possible vacation for your family. Now that its here and you are going, how are you going to remember it? Photos of course. Here are 8 tips to help you get the best vacation photos ever:

1. Wait for the good light.
As I look through the hundreds of photos I’ve taken over the last few months, my favorites are always the ones during golden hour. In fact, I often plan our outings after or during dinner (bring a picnic!) to make sure we get good lighting. Beautiful back-lighting, gorgeous scenery, and cute kids. Always turn your subject away from the sun so they are not squinting.

IMG_3675-Edit copy

2. Let your kids just be kids.
The last thing you want when you get home is a folder full of your kids with cheesy smiles in front of various national landmarks. I don’t know about you, but my kids don’t smile all the time (or look at the camera) and it would be an unnatural reflection of whatever vacation we were on. Capture your kids pensive, silly, enjoying the moment or even the tantrum your 2 year old throws when she is exhausted.goblin valley 2013_006_WEB

3. Take photos of the details.
Thinking like a wedding photographer, I LOVE details. Signs, small hands holding a flower, the little things that happen. Too often I’m shooting with my wide angle lens capturing the entire scene and then all of my photos look the same. Mix it up. Shoot wide and then narrow in. I’m always amazed at how differently a scene can look depending on which part you focus on.

IMG_3208-Edit copy

4. Have your camera handy.
Nothing is worse than missing THAT moment because you are digging through your purse looking for the camera. Use a sling bag, a Capture Pro, or something similar so that your camera is accessible but not in the way.

Peak Design Capture Pro with Cuff

5. Get on the other side of the camera.
I’m probably the WORST at this. No one can take photos as good as I can, so therefore I have to keep the camera the whole time. Right? Wrong. Poor kids are going to think they never had a mother. Hand the camera off – even if it won’t be an award winning photo (but really, you never know) at least you’ll be in it.

On the other side, it also helps to have a husband who takes awesome photos with his camera phone.

6a46646c5edb11e3bb44125da3cb3f33_86. Don’t forget the extra batteries!
Or the battery charger. Or your memory cards. Totally guilty of that. Nothing spoils the moment by stressing about running out of battery or not being able to use your camera at all.

7. Try a Different Perspective.
Sometimes I’ll look around online and see the same photos of famous places. How can you take that photo differently? Get down low, hold your camera up over your head, try off to one side. Experiment around until you find a unique perspective. Make the photos YOURS, not just a copy of someone else’s.

7.5 Direct but Don’t Pose.
I find there is a distinct difference. The photo below didn’t just happen. One of my kids was sitting there and I thought it looked like a sweet shot, so I asked everyone else to go sit down too. Then I said “just look at each other” or maybe it was “everyone look at each other” or “look at the Washington Monument”. I can’t remember exactly. I let them be themselves but in a place that made sense for my photo. My kids have gotten SO good at “everyone look at each other and laugh” that it makes ME laugh every time now too.

IMG_1022IMG_00388. Be flexible and just let moments happen. 
Some of our BEST photo opportunities have happened when we least expected or when we deviated from “the plan”. Whether it is taken a few extra minutes to pull of the side of the road because the sunset is just amazing, hiking just another half mile, or letting your kids make and then jump in a pile of leaves in Independence Square, those photos can end up being your favorites because they weren’t planned. Along the same line is to just let things happen. Don’t be in a rush, let the moment play out. Be Patient. Good photos come to those that wait.

IMG_2170-Edit copy

There you have it! All my secrets. 🙂 What advice or tips do you have for me?

 

Categories
Finances & Money Most Popular Posts

How Much Does it Cost to Live in An Airstream? January Edition

How Much Does it Cost to Live in an Airstream Jan 2014Another month gone by! Time seems to be flying. Another month means we re-evaluate the biggest questions: How much money is it going to take? Can we really make this work?

Comparatively, January was better than December. I think. We definitely spent less money on camping fees (staying with friends, boondocking, and turns out New Mexico State Parks are ridiculously cheap). However, what we saved on camping fees we spent on gas as we are still traveling too fast. It was also very cold for a bit there so we spent more on propane.

Going into February we definitely predict camping fees to go up. Moving into California, we will have a week in Disneyland at an RV Park, plus California State Parks are just expensive. We have put into motion the acquisition of a generator and that will help with recharging our batteries and giving us more flexibility on where we stay.

Enough talk. Here’s the numbers for January:

Here we go:

January 1st: South Houston, TX
January 31st: Halfway between Tuscon, AZ and Phoenix, AZ
Total miles driven: 2,443
Total miles towing the Airstream: 1,666
Average Towing Miles per Week: 416

Camping Fees (State parks, RV campgrounds): $276.70 ($15.37/night average)
# of Nights Courtesy Parked with a friend/free parking: 13
Gas: $834.19
Propane: $98.99
Groceries: $598.90
Laundry: $4.25
Dining Out: $85.83

And here are December’s just for comparison. Next month I think we’ll do a 3 month average:

December 1st: Tampa, FL
December 31st: South Houston, TX
Total miles driven: 2,247
Total miles towing the Airstream: 1,228
Average Towing Miles per Week: 277

Camping Fees (State parks, RV campgrounds): $842.45 ($31.20/night average)
# of Nights Courtesy Parked with a friend/free parking: 4
Gas: $626.88
Propane: $83.62
Groceries: $776.32
Laundry: $29.75
Dining Out: $180.58 (ouch! I didn’t think we ate out THAT much. It must’ve been the beignets in New Orleans!)

Obviously there are more expenses (clothing, entertainment, decorative upgrades, etc.) but these are the main ones. The thing is, what it costs to live on the road is highly subjective. Just as living in a house can be. How nice of an RV Park or Campground do you want (camping fees)? How far are you traveling every week (gas)? How many people in your family (groceries)? How cold is it outside (propane costs)? What do you like to do for fun (entertainment)? These costs completely vary from family to family just as they would in a brick house.

If you’d like another opinion on costs of traveling full-time, our instagram friend Kyle has a great article that breaks down various costs on his blog Where Is Kyle Now? Go check it out and let us know what you think!

Categories
Faith Mommy Diaries

Doing Hard Things

Doing Hard Things Through the Atonement of Jesus Christ

A few weeks ago I wrote a post about how I was not a Pinterest worthy mom. There are just so many crafty, cooking things I can’t do well and that’s what seems to be all over Pinterest. What interested me most about the post, however,  were the comments I received. I was definitely not looking for praise, or “no, you are so amazing” comments but I did get some. While it made me feel all sorts of fuzzy inside, I also realized something: the ability to adapt to a difficult situation is one of our greatest blessings.

Living a high profile, unusual life may seem glamorous, difficult, and even a little crazy. To me, though, its just life. I look at a family with 6 kids (6!) and wonder how on Earth the mother spends time with them all. Or a woman that works all day to help provide for her family and still comes home to make dinner and coordinate homework. Or even a mother that has an autistic or physical disabled child who never complains but serves in love. In comparison, coming up with fun activities for my kids in new cities every week, homeschooling, and living in a small space is a breeze.

A few Sundays ago, we had a discussion in Relief Society (think Sunday School for Women) about trials and how we are put in difficult situations to make us grow and become stronger. If we put all the trials of everyone we know in a pile and were allowed to pick any of them, the majority would always choose their own. Although difficult, the Lord will never give us trials beyond our capabilities. Each trial is tailored specifically for us so that we can grow.

Amid our struggles and difficulties the Lord also blesses us with capabilities beyond our natural ability.  In a devotional address given at BYU in 2001, Elder David A. Bednar expounded on this topic in way that resonated with my soul. The purpose of the Gospel of Jesus Christ is to make bad men good, and good men better – to change our very natures. In the Book of Mormon, King Benjamin teaches that “The natural man is an enemy to God, and has been from the fall of Adam, and will be, forever and ever, unless he yields to the enticings of the Holy Spirit, and putteth off the natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ the Lord” (Mosiah 3:19; emphasis added).

Elder Bednar states that putting off the natural man, repenting of our sins, and turning to Christ is the part of the Atonement that is talked about most. Becoming like a saint, however, is often overlooked. He says, “I suspect that many Church members are much more familiar with the nature of the redeeming and cleansing power of the Atonement than they are with the strengthening and enabling power. It is one thing to know that Jesus Christ came to earth to die for us—that is fundamental and foundational to the doctrine of Christ. But we also need to appreciate that the Lord desires, through His Atonement and by the power of the Holy Ghost, to live in us—not only to direct us but also to empower us.”

It is this enabling power of the Atonement that allows us to be and do more than we ever could on our own. By relying on the power, mercy, and love of our Savior, Jesus Christ He can “strengthen us to do and be good and to serve beyond our own individual desire and natural capacity.” Elder Bednar continues, “As you and I come to understand and employ the enabling power of the Atonement in our personal lives, we will pray and seek for strength to change our circumstances rather than praying for our circumstances to be changed. We will become agents who act rather than objects that are acted upon (see 2 Nephi 2:14).”

This is the beauty of the Atonement of Christ and how we can apply it our lives every single day. Rather than pray for our trials to go away and for things to be easier, we pray to be made stronger so that our burdens may become light. We adapt. We change. What may have seemed impossible only a few days before becomes easier as we rely on the strength and love of the Lord.

By design, we are mortal, weak, and unable to return to live with God on our own. It is only by relying on both the atoning and the enabling power of Christ’s Atonement that we can repent of our sins, and gradually change our very natures until we are perfected in Him.

Is living our life hard? It can be at times, but I suspect it isn’t any more difficult to us then your particular struggles are to you. In both cases, relying upon Christ will help us both be stronger.

Categories
This Week on Instagram

Tuscon, Boondocking with Friends, and Saguaro National Park

This Week on Instagram January 25-31

Travel Dates: January 25-31, 2014

We’ve had a busy week! We finished up our time at City of Rocks in NM and traveled on to Tuscon, Arizona to stay with some college friends. We LOVE visiting with friends, and using their waffle irons to make breakfast isn’t so bad either. 🙂 Sam also managed to lock us out of the Airstream (spare key locked in the truck with THOSE keys in the Airstream. Yeah. We’re good like that.), but AAA came to the rescue.

After a little sight seeing, and a haircut for Jess, we ended up at Snyder Hill on some BLM land with two other Airstreamers! We met Malimish & Aluminarium who introduced us to boondocking and the boys chatted about solar power for 2 days straight. We managed to squeeze in a trip to Saguaro National Park for the 5 kids to earn their Junior Ranger Badges and to check out the largest cacti we’ve ever seen. After running out of power and waking up to a cloudy morning, we said goodbye and traveled an hour north to Picacho State Park where we could plug in. We hope to add solar panels to our set up soon, but until then we’ll just have to keep the boondocking to a minimum.

Whew. There you have it in a nutshell. Look for posts detailing our group camping and visit to the National Park coming soon!