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2gypsies

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Posts posted by 2gypsies

  1. Having been to Alaska a few times I really would not want to go with a group.  Too confining.  There were many times we stayed in a place for a week or so and at some places that we read about we left after an hour.  I really think it's best to explore at your leisure and do things that YOU want to do.  Of course, everyone is different.  We met people along the route that we would meet up with at another place.  We shared experiences.  It really isn't a difficult trip... just long.

  2. 1 hour ago, Ray,IN said:

    We stayed at Jacobs Lake and it's a good 30 miles North of the North rim gate that I remember, but it's the closest FHU CG. I'd have dry camped in the North Rim CG but no spaces for a 40' RV.

     

    Thad; anticipate snow at the North Rim in early May. How's that going to co-inside with your hiking permit difficulty??

    It would be rare to have snow mid-May especially below the Rim.  We rafted the canyon in mid-May and swam in the river.  It was very hot.  We did have one unplanned swim though.  Our paddle boat flipped all 7 of us out going through Upset Rapids, rightly named!  Also, we did fit our 40' in the campground but only a few sites would work.  😊

  3. I'd suggest you contact the backcountry office at Grand Canyon.

    This may help:   https://www.nationalparks.org/connect/blog/grand-canyon-rim-rim-hike#:~:text=On this epic Grand Canyon,again to the South Rim.

     

    "You can also show up at the Backcountry Office (in person) and request a last-minute permit. If you don't get a spot, you get put on a waitlist with better odds every day you are on it."

  4. 2 hours ago, D&J said:

    We stayed at Kaibab Camper Village, would not call it a resort but it was fine for the few days we were there. Everything else is dry camping in the area.

    Denny

    "Everything else" is not dry camping.  There are many RV park in the area.

    I just now looked at if the OP wants a 'resort' he may look into Grand Plateau RV Resort.

    https://gprvresort.com/

    https://www.campendium.com/utah/kanab

    There's also Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park which is a beauty & a 'must see' even if not camping there.   Also, Best Friends Animal Sanctuary is worth a tour.  It's in a gorgeous setting.

    Here's Kaibab Camper Village   https://www.campendium.com/arizona/jacob-lake

  5. I'm trying not to roll my eyes 🤪 but you have 7 days to drive 2500 miles with two dogs?  It will take 2 days to get across Texas!   Are you the only driver?

    I'd recommend not making reservations and just stop when you get tired.  Use WalMarts or Cracker Barrels or even truck stops.  That's not really 'boondocking'.  You don't have to know how.  Just park and you're there.  Nothing else to do!

  6. 5 hours ago, Danfreda1 said:

    Benson has 1 dry camping spot that does have full hookups. All of the regular lots have full hook ups but when the park is full you go to dry camp to wait for a site. The full hookup site in dry camp is the same price as one of the lots. Benson has a volunteer group that fills propane on Monday morning. 

    I think you mean there is ONE boondocking area with no hookups; not one spot.  The boondocking area doesn't have hookups; hence "boondocking".   Dry camping are the sites in BLUE.

    https://skpsaguaro.org/park-map-dry-camping/

  7. Don't overthink your Alaska trip.  We had regular flaps behind our wheels on the motorhome.  We didn't have a rear flap.  We didn't get any rock damage on our trip and we drove gravel roads.

    We pulled into a campground in Whitehorse Yukon and saw five people removing their rear flaps.  We had just driven the same road they drove. We went over and talked to them. They showed us their towed vehicles.  There was a layer of large stones laying at the bottom of their windshields and two windshields were cracked.  Their thought was that the flaps caused rocks to be tossed on the hoods and windshields.

    On our return from Alaska we were driving through Salt Lake City in heavy rain.  (I wasn't driving)  For lack of something to do I began noticing RVs going the opposite direction.  I could see that every one with a flap in the rear was tossing an arc of water onto the hood of their towed vehicle.  .  just like the rocks in Alaska being tossed.  A couple that just had the flap behind the wheels were not tossing the arc of water.

  8. Sounds like you need to change doctors.

    We established doctors where we typically wintered so we were always there or close by for a yearly checkup and/or any immediate medical procedure.  In between visits we were able to call for questions or if it was an immediate medical issue we chose another doctor wherever we were. We have regular Medicare and a supplement.  Medicare Advantage wouldn't work as well in most cases. We found that using hospital physicians was the best bet at getting a good doctor instead of just picking one off Google.  We did explain our lifestyle.  No issues with prescriptions as we used WalMart and they're all over.

  9. Don't bother finding a 'secret' hiding place.  As Kirk stated above..... in a fire or accident you, most likely, would not be able to go get your money.

    We had a friend who had a 'fireproof safe' "hidden' in the rear closet and had a fire.  When he was able to check the safe everything in it was in ashes for the heat.  Yes, the safe was fireproof but the heat was the culprit.

    We always kept a 'go' bag sitting right behind the passenger seat.  In it was our extra cash (not much) titles to vehicles and important papers.  Whenever we left our motorhome for maintenance or if we'd be siteseeing for the day we grabbed the bag, especially since we boondocked a lot on public lands and the RV was there alone.  We never had an issue of a break in though but we were just being cautious.

  10. 8 hours ago, palmeris said:

    We ask if there's a discount if paid in full with cash.  We have seen different percentages range from 2 % to 10% but the majority being no sales tax on the transaction...

    Never heard of 'no sales tax'.  Isn't that a law if required in a state?

  11. We had doctors all over the country with no issues.

    Choose a bank that has branches all over.

    Has any RVers ever heard of people getting 'caught' because of not having everything where their domicile was made?

  12. 8 hours ago, palmeris said:

    Cash Management while traveling is certainly a personal preference. 

    For us, we typically start out with 2500.00 and it is "distributed" so its not all in 1 location in case of compromise. DW and I each personal carry couple of hundred, the remaining is stashed in truck, trailer, car, motorcycle . Stashes used to replenish our personal carry as required. When cash stash gets below 1000 its time to hit an ATM to stoke the coffers, just do a google search for ATM near me and figure it in the travels

     

    Obviously, you don't use credit cards to feel you need to have $2500 in cash.  That amount in cash would last years for us.  😉

  13. 7 hours ago, rickeieio said:

    We carry cash.  Of course. "enough" is a very individual number.  I used to figure $1/mile from home.  Now it's more than double that.  And yes, when we went to Alaska, we left home with over $10k on board.  Even when not travelling, I don't walk out the door without $300 or better.  That said, we don't spend a lot of cash, but have it available for emergencies.

    Over the past year, we're seeing more businesses giving a discount for cash.  Good for them.  The card companies have been hosing them for years.  BTW, we always tip with cash.  It's not my job to make sure it gets reported.

    All I can say is WOW!!!  You carried $10,000 on a trip?  

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