Newbie from Central Utah

Come on in and say hello.

Newbie from Central Utah

Postby hokiephile » Wed Jun 28, 2017 3:24 pm

I guess I'm more a Wannabe than a Newbie. I'm planning to retire in two years. I've lived in ten different states and I'm not sure where I want to end up. I thought maybe living in an RV for 2 or 3 years would be interesting and give me a chance to visit people I haven't seen in years, and give me time to decide where to put down roots. I've been studying RVs for a year and been to an RV show. I can't decide whether a class B would be too small to live in with two cats for a couple years (though easy to drive) or a Class B+ or C would easier to live in (but harder to drive).
If there's anyone in Utah (or traveling through) who might be willing to let me look at their rigs and share some advice, I'd spring for lunch! And, do any of you live in a B and have a cat? Where the heck do you put the litter box?

I'm a college professor so I have summers off. I'm thinking it would be wise to buy something during the upcoming year so I can use it next summer to make some trips and get the hang of it.

I"m so glad to find a forum for women!

Terry
hokiephile
 
Posts: 13
Joined: Fri Jun 16, 2017 2:18 pm

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby Bethers » Thu Jun 29, 2017 12:30 pm

Welcome, Terry!

We have another college professor in the group who know teaches online which fits this lifestyle very well. I'm sure she'll chime in. And we have many (and have had many other) wannabees - some who are now on the road. We also have people in Utah - as well as others traveling in Utah for the summer. So, you can meet up with some of us whether you have a rig yet or not.

Join in anywhere - ask any questions. We are friendly. (Most of the time :) )
Beth
“Dare to live the life you have dreamed for yourself. Go forward and make your dreams come true.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~
"He who treasures the small things in life has found the path to true happiness"
Image
User avatar
Bethers
 
Posts: 17836
Joined: Sat Jul 12, 2008 9:00 pm
Location: Arizona

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby MandysMom » Thu Jun 29, 2017 1:40 pm

Welcome Terry! A good person to chime in on drivability of same length B vs C would be Liz who had a I think Roadtrek B and now has driven a small C for a few years. Myself I love my 22 ft Sprinter based (B) Leisure Travel and could do full time myself with our cats but they would need to be leash trained ( mine are) so I could give them more exercise than a B offers or even a small C. That said I would probably put litter Box in rear in front of my sofa/ bed during drive and in drivers well in front of seat during parked times. The fridge in my B is quite small (4 cf) but easy to stop at a store. Newer B plus have a little larger fridge. My B drives like a large van, handles well and I love to drive it. Unless you get a much longer C which will have tail swing (which is the length of rig behind rear axle), a C should be quite easy, just like any new car you drive they all take getting used to. The larger rigs with tail swing you have to know where that rear is as you turn and as you go up an incline such as into a parking lot where bottom of rear may drag.
Stick around, our travelers will chime in as they park and or get Internet signal.
Velda
MandysMom
 
Posts: 4358
Joined: Sat Sep 14, 2013 8:26 pm
Location: Roseville CA

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby monik7 » Thu Jun 29, 2017 3:16 pm

Welcome from the San Francisco Bay Area. I have a small C (dealer called it a B+) and it's 24'9". It's so easy to drive. I don't full time but know I could with my 2 dogs and cat. I don't think I could in anything smaller.
Sandi
Bindi (Maltipoo) and Abby (Shih Tzu/Poodle)
Image

"Without the animals men would die of a great loneliness of the spirit." ~ Chief Seattle
“A dog can change the way you see the world.” ~ Anyone who has a dog
User avatar
monik7
 
Posts: 3020
Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2012 7:49 pm
Location: San Francisco Bay Area

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby BirdbyBird » Thu Jun 29, 2017 8:18 pm

Welcome to the forum. What space each of us feels we need is just another one of those personal decisions. Some much depends upon what "stuff" we need to bring with us as we travel. What hobbies we have? Do try to walk through as many rigs as you can and us you imagination of where you might store items important to you....like clothes and litter boxes... :)
Tina and the furry companions...Lark, Audrey and Jane
User avatar
BirdbyBird
 
Posts: 8579
Joined: Mon Sep 29, 2008 9:43 am
Location: Southwest Ohio

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby snowball » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:05 am

we used to have a forum member (she rarely gets on now) who travels with two cats...but also a big motor home...
as for me I have a 5th wheel...what part of Utah are you in Cedar City? I have a 5th wheel and pop into Northern Utah
every so often have kids in both Ogden and SLC...although my 5th wheel spends the summers in Eastern Idaho,..
will look forward to meeting you
sheila
snowball
 
Posts: 9527
Joined: Mon Jul 21, 2008 10:14 pm
Location: we full time right now in Quartzsite AZ

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby SoCalGalcas » Fri Jun 30, 2017 1:20 pm

Go to "things for sale" on our forum. A member has her very wonderful/well kept rig for sale. I high recommend it. LYN
Image

Limits exist only in the souls of those who do not dream./Desktop/IMG_0228.jpg
User avatar
SoCalGalcas
 
Posts: 2595
Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2013 7:00 pm
Location: Southern California

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby WickedLady » Fri Jun 30, 2017 2:57 pm

Welcome to the forum. If whatever rig you get has a small cabinet at floor-level you could put the litter box in it. Remove the door and replace it with a curtain.
I fulltime in my 16' travel trailer with a big dog and, until recently, a cat.
WickedLady
 
Posts: 2001
Joined: Thu Dec 11, 2008 9:48 pm
Location: Long Beach, WA

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby Liz » Sat Jul 01, 2017 12:17 pm

Welcome! I started full-timing in a 2006 22' Class B Roadtrek 210. I had a 45 lb. dog and a large cat. The RT had a perfect place for the litter box where the dog couldn't get into it. I had a floor plan with twin beds with bedside platform with drawers between them. The large rear compartment under the twin beds was accessible with the rear doors open and accessible to the cat with the small compartment door open inside. (The dog wasn't able to fit through that door). Inside that compartment is a plastic lined ice chest- size space recessed into the floor. The bottom of a large kitty litter box fit in that perfectly, and the cover with cat door fit flush with the floor of the compartment. The cat could go into the compartment door and access the litter box, and I could access the litter box to scoop or clean from the outside rear doors.

I now have a 24' class c and if I still had a cat, I would probably try to configure something similar under the dinette bench seat.
Liz
Image
https://wheresliz2018.blogspot.com
"Life in the presence of God...is a life to be enjoyed every moment of every day." A. W. Tozer
User avatar
Liz
 
Posts: 7564
Joined: Mon Jul 14, 2008 9:22 am
Location: Traveling in the western states in 2016

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby JudyJB » Sat Jul 01, 2017 1:02 pm

I'm the part-time online college professor who teaches while I travel. For 23 years, I worked a regular job and taught as an adjunct. I've taught 13 years in a classroom and now 15 years online only, which works well for me. The commuter college I teach at in Michigan has been very good to me and treats adjuncts just as the do full-timers, which is why so many of us adjuncts have taught there many years. I enjoy teaching, and it is a very good retirement income, but I don't have summers off--we have four condensed semesters each year, so no time between except for December.

I started out looking at small Cs and then ended up expanding my needs--ended up with a 32' Class C and am very happy with it. I had never driven anything bigger than a mini-van, but it turned out to be pretty easy. (It drove my younger son crazy when he had to follow me when I drove it home 75 miles from the dealer! Actually, it still makes them nervous, but I have not had any accidents yet, other than backing into a couple of poles and scaping something when I got stuck between high curbs trying to get out of a shopping center once.)

Actually, after five years of full-timing, driving my big rig is fairly comfortable. I don't tow, so I take my motorhome into shopping centers and grocery stores. I also take it to museums and wherever I want to go. Very few limitations, really.
JudyJB
http://grandmajjb.blogspot.com/
https://2022humongousukadventure.blogspot.com/
"Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts." Mark Twain.
JudyJB
 
Posts: 7361
Joined: Wed Jul 14, 2010 9:15 pm
Location: In CA for holidays. Winter: NV, AZ, & NM.

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby hokiephile » Sun Jul 02, 2017 6:24 pm

Thanks for the welcomes and the advice!
Another thing I have to consider is having a second sleeping area for the occasional person who might travel with me. That's another reason (besides the litter box issue) that makes me hesitate about a B. Has anyone tried that bed across the front seats that Roadtrek shows on the floorplans on its site? Is it comfortable? Is it easy for a senior to get in and out of?
I have two extremely lazy boy cats. One likes to go outside on a leash. The other would rather scratch my eyes out than go out on a leash. The one time we tried it he spazzed out so bad he fell in the swimming pool. No more going outside for him. In fact, he's a bit of a flight risk so I don't even travel with him anymore other than the vet. Not that he would actually try to get out. It's scary out there and he's a big pussy. But if there were a car accident or something and an opening, he'd flea in terror and never come back. He really is a big coward.
JudyJB, perhaps you can offer some advice on how to get a part-time online teaching gig. I'm currently the director of my program and they're a little worried about who is going to teach my classes after I leave. I thought I might offer to teach them online but first we'd have to get online versions approved by the program accreditor and that's a ton of work.

Thanks again. I look forward to being involved.
Terry
hokiephile
 
Posts: 13
Joined: Fri Jun 16, 2017 2:18 pm

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby Bethers » Sun Jul 02, 2017 7:37 pm

When Liz had her RT, it had twin beds in the back... I much prefer that idea if you went with a B, and put storage where the rear seats are.
Beth
“Dare to live the life you have dreamed for yourself. Go forward and make your dreams come true.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~
"He who treasures the small things in life has found the path to true happiness"
Image
User avatar
Bethers
 
Posts: 17836
Joined: Sat Jul 12, 2008 9:00 pm
Location: Arizona

Re: Newbie from Central Utah

Postby IrishIroamed » Mon Jul 03, 2017 7:40 am

Hi Terry from Illinois. I was a Wannabe for a long time before I was (and still am) a Newbie. The ladies here are great for information.
Cheryl
Today me will live in the moment unless it's unpleasant in which case me will eat a cookie ~~~Cookie Monster

Image
IrishIroamed
 
Posts: 2559
Joined: Fri Jul 19, 2013 8:47 pm
Location: Wherever I'm Parked


Return to Introduce Yourself

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron