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Daily Life

Full Time Traveler Diaries: How We Manage Showering

Full Time Traveler Diaries How We Manage Showering

There’s a lot of little things to to think about when you are traveling full time on the road. Where am I going to do laundry? What kind of campsite are we going to stay in? How often am I really going to cook? And how good is the camp shower?

A little Airstream anatomy for you: Airstreams (and most RVs) are equipped with 3 tanks underneath: the fresh water tank, the black tank (toilet), and the gray water tank (showers, sinks, dishwater, etc). A typical state park campsite will have hook-ups for both electricity and water but not sewer. Meaning, we have power and fresh water but no immediately convenient place to empty our tanks. Instead they provide a dump station where you pull up, connect your hose and then empty both your gray and black tanks. We try not to do that during the middle of our stay: it takes us about an hour to hitch the truck, stow everything for travel, drive over to the dump station, connect the hose, empty the tanks, put the hose back away, drive back over to the campsite, unhitch and re-stabilize the trailer. To save the time and hassle, we make the tanks last the entire time we are parked at a campground so that we dump on our way out.

Back to showering. Our Airstream does have one. Its actually quite a nice shower too. Just tall enough that you don’t have to slouch (Sam is 6′), and there’s a wand that makes showering Cara pretty easy. The biggest problem is water conservation when we don’t have a sewer hook-up right at our site. Not necessarily water coming in, but its the water going out that’s a problem. When you shower 5 people you tend to go through a lot of water no matter how careful you are. Add on dishes & hand washing and in 1 or 2 days our gray tank is full. Then it’d be the slog over to the dump station, and really we just don’t have time for that.

So, what do we do? Camp showers. Most of the state parks we have visited so far in Virginia, Ohio, Georgia, Florida, and Texas have a comfort station with bathrooms, sinks, electric outlets, and showers for overnight camper use. We have a bathroom caddy with our shampoo, conditioner, and soap, and we’ll throw on our flip-flops, grab a towel and walk over to the showers.

I’ll be honest, at first I was pretty hesitant. Do you know how many people have probably showered in there? Ewwww…. Turns out, 99% of the showers are kept very clean by the camp hosts. Most have really good water pressure, and I can just turn the water on hot and let it run, and run, and run. In a way, I prefer showering there as opposed to the water conservation act we pull most times we shower in the Airstream.

The absolute BEST shower we’ve ever been in was at Henderson Beach State Park outside of Destin, Florida. Their bathrooms were so beautiful they had to be new. The showers had clean tile & grout, and each shower was very loooooong shower so that you can store your clothes at the opposite end and they don’t get soaking wet by the over spray. The handle to turn the shower on wasn’t located directly under the stream of water so that when you turn it on you get blasted by cold water before the hot water comes out. No drafty vents at the top of the shower to let in cold drafts. Heated. It was serious heaven. I’m surprised I ever left.

Helping my kids shower without getting myself soaking wet is also an art form. Our kids typically do pretty well, only Cara seems to have difficulty when the water pressure is so high she wants to run for cover. Sam will take Andrew with him, and the girls will come with me. Rachel is a great big sister and often helps scrub Cara while I just hand her shampoo from the dry side of the curtain. Do they love it? No. Do we make them shower everyday? Definitely not. I figure we are cleaner than if we were camping so it has to be good enough.

In our travels we’ve seen some average showers, and some “I’m really glad we have full-hookups at this place because I would never, ever set foot in there” showers. Luckily for us we’ve never been in a situation where showering for days on end was just not a possibility. For that, I am truly grateful. 

 

Categories
Mommy Diaries

I Hope the Sunsets Never Get Old

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“Wow!”

I sit up quickly from my relaxed position on the couch. “What is it? Is everything okay?” I say.

“Check out that sunset!” Sam exclaims from across the table. “Its beautiful!”

I watch in amazement as he snatches up his phone, grabs his shoes and is out the door in 5 seconds flat. He’s gone for a few minutes and then comes breathless back in the door. I can tell he had been running pretty hard.

“Did you get it?” I ask.

“Oh yes,” he says as he shows me the sunset over the lake captured brilliantly with his camera phone. “Oh yes.”

How often do you notice the sunset? Everyday? We have spent lots of our life never seeing the sunset. Living in the Airstream gives us a window in our kitchen that faces West and we can watch as the sky lights up orange, red, yellow and then fades to black.

We have been full-time on the road for nearly 2 months now. 2 months of ever-changing scenery, glorious vistas, and stunning sunsets. I hope they never get old. I hope that we can continue to cherish each day. Each new place, each lake, forest trail, and museum will continue to force us out of the mundane routine. That nothing ever becomes “normal”.

This lifestyle is forcing us to live in the moment, and we love it.

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This Week on Instagram

This Week on Instagram: January 4-10, 2014

Cara and Andrew fought over some game they were playing in the car. This resulted in both of them getting scolded by me. Silence for a few moments while both of them pouted.

We then overheard this conversation:

Cara (trying to start up again): And my guy was knocking on the door….

Andrew (super grumpy): No Cara. I don’t want to play anymore.

Cara (all quiet and innocent): Is it because of your attitude?

Sam and I had to suppress a chuckle in the front seat. Where does she learn these things?

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This week has been cold! Our only conselation is that it has been cold EVERYWHERE so we hunkered down and had game & movie nights, touched a baby alligator, visited the Houston Temple, and bundled up for cold walks at Brazos Bend State Park in Texas. We also met up with some college friends for Orange Leaf frozen yogurt. Yum!!

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Mommy Diaries

Why I Am Not a Pinterest Worthy Mom

Why I Am Not a Pinterest Worthy Mom

There are a lot of things I am not.

I’m not super skinny.
I’m not an amazing cook (I’m just decent).
I’m not a world famous photographer (not sure I could even deal with the attention).
I’m not a Pinterest-worthy mom.
And I really do hate glitter.

I struggle with this. In a world where there are amazing mommy bloggers that come up with cute crafts seemingly out of nowhere, take amazingly good photos of them, write a blog post and get a million pins on Pinterest, I feel a little out of place. They have so much ENERGY. How do they do that?

I hate it when my kids mix the Play-Doh colors, or when their water coloring activity ends up as puke brown smears across the paper. I just want to get in there and do it for them! It has to be PERFECT. I get stressed, kind of cranky and mostly just have to leave the room. And then I remind myself that they are just kids. They are little and still learning. Maybe eventually they’ll draw something I can recognize, but right now when my 3 year old looks at me with those shining hopefully eyes and hold up a paper of random circles declaring it to be her “best work” how can I not praise her efforts?

I loved when I posted on Facebook back in December about hating glitter and how it was everywhere in the Airstream after we put our names on our .99 Christmas stockings, and so many of my friends jumped in with “me too!” and “I hate doing crafts with my kids, I get so stressed out!” It made me feel a little bit less alone in this world where everything seems to be measured on the Pinterest Scale.

HOWEVER. I do have my moments. As time passes (and honestly, as my kids get older), there are certain crafts I can do with my kids that DON’T stress me out. Well, at least not to the level that I banish all the paint from the premises. We pulled off some of the crafts over Thanksgiving – and my kids looked absolutely adorable in their Native American headbands and vests. And the other is actually playing with modeling clay. Probably because I actually enjoy it, there’s an instruction manual, and my kids love it when I help them and their animals end up looking exactly like they do in the book.

Maybe there is hope for me yet. Until then, however, we’ll keep the crafts to a minimum and the adventuring to the max.

Thanksgiving Crafts with Kids

 

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Florida

I Learn How to Boogie Board in Florida

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This is a post by our 8 year old daughter Rachel. She asked if she could contribute and as we are working on writing skills as part of her road school curriculum, I happily consented. Please leave her some encouragement so she’ll want to keep writing!

 

I know how to boogie board!
It is hard to catch a wave.
It feels awesome when you catch one!
Andrew is learning how and Cara never tried.
I’m the champion of the family!
Sometimes I get dunked.                                                                                                                                                                                                         You go super fast when you catch a wave too.                                                                                                                                                               When I get tired I go make sand castles on the beach.

Tips for people who are learning (or who want to learn):

1. You can’t be too late or early, the wave has to be white or bubbly.

2. You have to have your hands high on the board.

3. Jump onto the board when the wave hits you.

4. You can kick your feet to gain some speed.

Footnotes by Jess: Rachel learned how to boogie board at Dr. Julian G. Bryce Saint George Island State Park. This state park is located out on an island off of Eastpoint, Florida. Its out there. You cross a bridge, go through a small town, pass through the ranger station, and then KEEP GOING. If you are looking for remote out of the way, beach goodness, this is your place. There looked to be plenty of vacation/seaside houses to rent, or hotels, but the campground is gorgeous. You can even kayak in to one of their primitive campsites (totally has hit my bucket list).

The campground has water & electric hookups, with a great shower house. There’s also playground for the kids and a nature trail that was good for running/exercise for me. The beaches were great, but not the long stretches of beautiful white-sand beaches you’ll find along the Emerald Coast to the west.

What to do while you are there:

  • Rent a bike in town. We saw lots of bike & kayak rental shops. There’s a paved pathway leading through town that Sam rode a portion of on his road bike. Most of these places were closed while we were (too off season?).
  • Play in the ocean. Obviously. There are a few different parking lots with boardwalks. We walked to the one closest to the campground and deemed it good enough. This is pretty much all we did for 3 days. Our oldest two learned how to boogie board, Cara played in the sand. I read my book. It was fabulous.