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Inside the Airstream

Inside the Airstream: Where Does Everyone Sleep?

Inside the Airstream - Where Does Everyone Sleep

We had an Instagram follower ask us to detail where everyone sleeps in our 27FB International Airstream. I am more than happy to oblige. After we picked up the Airstream back in September 2013, we spent 8 days on the return trip from llinois back to Virginia. I’m pretty sure in those 8 days we tried every sleeping configuration possible. Fortunately, the short Queen bed in the Airstream had custom sheets the previous owner gave us, as well as two fleece sleeping bag blanket things. The weather was still pretty warm, so between the sheets, the blankets, and the hot weather we figured we’d last until we got back and could figure out what we wanted to do long term.

We tried converting the dinette into a bed and sleeping all the kids out in the “living” space with us on the queen bed. We tried all 3 kids in the queen bed (Cara apparently kicks in her sleep) and us out on the dinette. Then us on the gaucho (couch that pulls out into a bed). The kids on the gaucho. The kids on the floor. You get the idea. Our best configuration, by far, is the one we are currently using.

Where do the kids sleep?

ETA: This was our original layout. We have since remodeled our bedroom area and put in separate beds for the kids. See Part I of that process here.

The “FB” designation in the Airstream model stands for “front bed”. There are many layouts to choose from, but this was definitely our favorite. So those panaorma windows you see above the bed are the front of the Airstream with the hitch right below those windows. The door to enter the Airstream is in the back at the other end.

We gave up the queen bed for the kids. Sigh. Coming from a California King at our home in Utah, that was a pretty big sacrifice at first. The bedroom is also a nice enclosed space once you pull the curtain that divides it from the rest of the Airstream. What we realized pretty quickly, however, is that we can close off the kids at night and still have relative freedom ourselves instead of being “trapped” in the back while the kids are sleeping in the kitchen (midnight ice cream snack anyone?). Rachel and Andrew sleep on the queen, and generally do a good job of not hogging the covers. They each have their own pillows, blankets, and stuffed animals that I make them put away every morning so I can still have some semblance of a pretty bed. Mean, aren’t I? It is honestly still too cluttered for me, but I just keep reminding myself that its a kids’ bedroom and there’s bound to be clutter. They also enjoy their reading lights, as they usually read for about a half an hour before lights out every night.

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Cara sleeps on the floor in her “secret hideout” and absolutely loves it. There is just enough space between the queen bed and the wall of the Airstream to fit a Thermarest sleeping pad and her sleeping bag. Her Thermarest is inside one of those gray,  fleece, sleeping bag, blanket things I mentioned earlier, and she has her sleeping bag on top. That way she has some protection against the chill of the Thermarest and it doesn’t slide around. She usually has a stack of boardbooks, her dreamlight, and few stuffed animals lying around as well. To really make it a “secret hideout” involves taking the laundry basket and placing it between the bed and wall to hide her from view. Sleeping Cara here was not something we thought would work, but from the very first night, she loved it. As the weather turned colder, we’ve often checked to see that she is warm enough, and every time she has been as snug as a bug.

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Where do WE sleep?

Sam and I sleep out on the gaucho. There’s a board that slides out from under the couch, extending it, and then you just lay the cushions flat. Pretty ingenious design in my opinion. It doesn’t take us very long, so the hassle factor isn’t high. The total bed space is smaller than a double bed, but it turns out we really just don’t mind. We slept on a double bed the 4 months we were in New Zealand (just after we were married) and I feel like I have plenty of space. Sam’s story might vary slightly as he sleeps against the cold wall and I’m known to be a bit of a bed hog. [ Note from Sam: I prefer to sleep colder than Jess does, so being next to the wall is probably better. Jess IS a bed hog, but with a smaller bed, that means we get to snuggle more. 🙂 ]

We did try to sleep on the dinette space for a couple of nights, but wrangling the table down while holding the cushions out of the way got old really quickly. Plus, that space, while longer, is a bit narrower and we felt a little cramped. Our feet do hang off the bed a bit, but with our top sheet velcroed underneath, our feet stay warm. Sleeping on the outside, I generally am at an angle so my feet can rest on the dinette cushions tucked in close to Sam’s. See? We get to play footsie all night long. How adorable.

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For the trip back from Illinois, we slept just on the existing cushions and quickly realized that wasn’t enough padding. I have back problems (3 pregnancies will do that to you) so we definitely needed something with a little more cushion. We bought a 3 inch memory foam double mattress topper from Costco and used a sharp kitchen knife to cut it down to size. Using the included mattress cover + one we bought from Target we sewed together a sleeve for the pad since that thing sheds like crazy. We then got creative with a set of sheets and some Velcro and fastened together a bedroll that we can easily unroll every night. We also bought a fleece blanket from Costco, and it is amazingly warm and comfortable for how thin it is!

Sam and I get up in the mornings around 5:30am to work at the table, and the kids come out at 7am. The biggest downside of a small adult bed is that there is not enough room for us all to cuddle. I love it when my kids come climb in bed with me in the morning and we take 20 minutes to wake up together. These days we just take turns, and it works out okay.

IMG_4294-EditEvery morning, we roll up our bed, wrap our Fastex buckle straps around it, and dump it on the opposite side of the queen from Cara’s spot. It is generally out of the way and Cara can still take a nap on her bed if we think she needs it.

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We have plans to remodel the bedroom area and either put in bunkbeds for all of us, or create a more U-shaped configuration of 3 beds for the kids while we still sleep out on the gaucho. Nothing has been decided for sure, except that whatever we do will happen when we get back to Utah in the spring and Sam has access to all his tools.

While not the perfect arrangement, it works for now. Everyone gets enough sleep, Sam gets enough work in, and most mornings I’m so cozy I can barely drag myself out of bed.

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Photo Sessions Photography

The Grace Family Lifestyle Photoshoot

Back in Florida I had the opportunity to photograph this amazing family! We have been friends forever and it was completely enjoyable to meet the newest addition to their family. We spent the later afternoon at a nearby park and I LOVED the lighting. Beautiful, golden sunlight streamed through the trees, happy family. 

Everything was just perfect. 

We had a great time over Thanksgiving with them, and we just found out they are moving to Washington, so hopefully we’ll get to meet up again this fall when we head to the Pacific Northwest.

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I did a lifestyle shoot with this same family back in Utah in 2011. One of the pictures turned out to be a special one, and for this shoot, they asked me to recreate the same image including their beautiful new daughter. They are getting both of them printed as canvases to go side by side on their wall.

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Categories
Finances & Money

Health Insurance for the Self-Employed

Health Insurance for the Self EmployedOver the last 10 years, we’ve run into a lot of friends, relatives and acquaintances that were thinking about leaving the 9-5 hamster wheel and venturing off on their own. There are definitely a lot of perks. No set hours (unless you get a picky client), you can choose which clients or projects to take on, most of the time you get to work from home, more time with family, etc. The number one logistical technicality holding them back? Health Insurance. For some reason in our American culture, we have traded freedom and flexibility for the idea of benefits from a large (or small) corporation.

I’m guilty as well. When Sam was almost done with his Master’s thesis and we were looking around for the next step, I was giddy with excitement. We were going to have a REAL job, and they were going to give us BENEFITS. I wasn’t going to have to worry about health insurance anymore, it would magically be taken care of for me.

Not the case.

I realized I no longer had control over which health insurance company we would be associated with, that our employer did not pay ALL of our health insurance costs but a portion was still pulled from our paycheck, and that some of the plans really just did not meet our needs. I felt trapped. After years of being in control of our health care I really struggled.

After Sam quit the 9-5 and we went back on our own, I sighed with relief.

So, what do we do for health insurance?

Let me preface this by saying everyone’s needs are different. What I term adequate health insurance coverage may not fit your family’s needs. We are young, healthy, and have no plans to add any more children to our family. I also have not sat down with our health insurance agent to go over our options with Obamacare’s new rules. Since we’ve been on the road, we basically just kept the same plan as last year although there’s probably something better out there. We’ll sit down with him later this spring when we get back to Utah.

We have 3 different plans to cover our needs: and HSA general health insurance plan, Dental Insurance, and a Supplemental Accident plan.

The HSA: $258.51/month

 We have a high deductible ($10,000), Health Savings Account plan. The HSA plan is basically a savings account with a debit card that I spend on medical and health related purchases. Every month I transfer $200 from our personal checking account over to the HSA account (all of our accounts are currently with Chase), and then whenever we have something medical related I pay for it with the associated debit card. Its easier that way because I don’t have to keep track and reimburse myself for purchases. With the HSA account they give you a list of qualified purchases and you have to log in and verify that what you spent does indeed qualify. Over the counter drugs, sick doctor’s visits (well visits are covered 100% under Obamacare), and chiropractic visits are probably our 3 biggest expenses.  The HSA account also rolls over every year so you don’t have to go on a mad doctor spree in December to use all your money.

In a previous post, I talked about having a savings buffer. We have $10,000 sitting in our bank savings account to cover our deductible (or anything else for that matter). Yes, its a high deductible, and I’d probably cry if something happened and we had to use it but it also wouldn’t break us. We would recover. That’s what insurance is for anyway right? To provide relief so that any imaginable situation is not un-recoverable.

Dental Insurance: $54/month

Our agent found us a cheap one. We’d never really had dental insurance, but Sam has notoriously bad teeth and I figured we probably needed something for the rest of us as well. For a few years I just paid out of pocket, but that got old and really expensive. I’m still undetermined if it actually saves us money in the long term, but we’ll go with it for now.

We have dental insurance through a smaller Utah company called Total Dental Administrators of Utah, Inc. (TDA for short). You basically choose from their very small list of providers and set a dentist that you’ll go to every time. The insurance has a discounted price for what different procedures cost, and you pay that at the office. We chose the dentist recommended and used by our agent. He’s great. Probably my favorite dentist since we’ve been married actually. Nice office, close to home, and does great with the kids. Downside is that its in Utah so if we keep this plan we’ll have to travel through once a year and set up visits.

Supplemental Accident Plan: $53.10/month

This was also recommended by our agent. It basically covers any unforeseen accident. Whether its Sam using tools and he slices something, or one of the kids breaks an arm jumping off rocks we are covered. This gives me piece of mind that if something catastrophically accidental occurs our insurance will pay up to $7500 per person with only a $100 per person deductible.

While our insurance isn’t perfect, and does take a bit more effort than going through a company, I really like being in control of it. I’m actually excited to go back to Utah, sit down with our agent and discuss the best options that are available for us. For those of you that are on the road or self-employed what have you found for insurance that works for you?

Categories
Arizona Faith

Gilbert, Arizona LDS Temple Open House

Gilbert Arizona LDS Temple Open House

As we planned our travel from the east to the west, we realized that we would be passing near Gilbert, Arizona during the LDS Temple Open House.

LDS is an acronym for Latter-day Saints, short for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Also known as the Mormons. Why LDS? Probably because I’m lazy. LDS Temples are special buildings that are different from regular Sunday meetinghouses. When we go to church on a Sunday, we attend a meetinghouse. Temples are places where we learn of, covenant with, and worship Christ.

When a Temple is built, it is opened for public tours before it is dedicated and enters normal operation. After dedication, only devout members of the LDS church may enter, so an open house is the only time for anybody curious to walk through the inside and see what it’s like.

Temple Open Houses draw large numbers of people, and so there is a ticket system set up to help coordinate things. If you can plan in advance, get tickets to help things run smoothly. If you can’t plan that far ahead and get tickets before they run out, go anyway. Mid-day, mid-week is best for those without tickets. After finding some parking in an overflow lot, we entered the Guests Without Tickets line and shortly made it into a tour group. The tour is open to all ages, and is free.

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The tour starts inside the adjacent LDS meetinghouse with a brief, introductory video about why the LDS church builds temples in general, and specifically about the history and building of the Gilbert Temple.

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Each Temple is designed to complement the local area: The Mesa Temple has some design influence from southwestern buildings. The Gilbert Temple uses the Agave plant as a design motif, and the result is beautiful. Patterns in stained glass, etched glass, carpet, and woodwork drew from the shape of the Agave plant. During the tour, we learned that the Agave plant was chosen partially because of the impression that the leaves of the plant make on each other, symbolizing the impressions we have on each other through generations of people.

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After the video we were escorted with our group outside. Don’t let the long line scare you. It moved quickly, and we enjoyed the beautiful, Arizona, sunny afternoon while we waited. The line basically snakes through different areas of the temple with signs that indicate what each room is used for. We talked to our kids in reverent whispers, expounding on the signs and explaining a bit more what mom and dad do when we visit the temple.

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The inside is beautiful. They have some pictures online, but it doesn’t do it justice. It really is worth the visit to see it in person.

The temple grounds are almost as lovely as the inside. Beautiful gardens and waterfalls add to the amazing architecture and peaceful atmosphere that permeates the area. We enjoyed a few more minutes of sunshine outdoors walking around before heading back to the parking lot.

IMG_20140204_130424_1IMG_20140204_130757_1The temple will be open for the next few weeks for tours if you are in the area, or check out the LDS website for other possible temple open houses near you. It is definitely worth an afternoon to visit one!

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This Week on Instagram

This Week on Instagram: February 1-7, 2014

This Week on Instagram Feb 1-7, 2014

February already! This week has been busy. We enjoyed our last few sunsets in Arizona before heading for the California border and Joshua Tree National Park. Being back in the west has also helped calmed my grocery shopping anxiety a bit with familiar stores (Winco! Chocolate covered cinnamon bears!), and I even shopped a sale at a Kroger store! We then immediately had problems finding where to put all my groceries. Oh well. I try.

One highlight was definitely the Gilbert, Arizona LDS temple and In-N-Out for lunch! More about that in a detailed blogpost tomorrow.