So happy to find a group like this. I am a retired journalist. I have been a travel writer for many years and an editor of magazines. I am also a sailor and most of my personal travel time has been in boats, delivering some up and down the coast of California. I have spent the past few years making a house on the water habitable. Now that it is just the way I want it, I am thinking about taking off and driving around the States. Go figure.
After months of looking at Sprinters, going back and forth, trying to figure out what kind of RV I wanted, could afford, and did I want one at all, I found the Rialta. I had a list of everything I would want in an RV and it fit the bill for many of them. I had thought I needed something big enough to carry my grandkids...not really...how much time do they have to travel around with me? I also wanted a "made up" bed, and that would be nice, but it means you have to have a pretty big rig. The Rialta just kind of spoke to me. I flew to southern California, bought it and registered it in my name in a few hours and drove it home to the Bay area. It took me a couple of days to realise I had actually done this!
I am now in the process of sewing slipcovers for the furniture in my new tiny home and trying to figure out where I am going to go and what I am going to do. That is where this site will be invaluable. I have hardly even camped out in an RV, so have a lot to learn. I did rent a Navion sprinter for 3 days and decided I really did not like the slideouts and the large feeling of driving it in towns.
I hope to take a cross-country trip in the autumn with my Bichon-mix Lucy (she rescued me)....maybe for the winter, don't know. When I get back, I will either sell the Rialta and go back to boats and water, or I may decide to become a land lubber. I cannot imagine being a full timer, not in a Rialta anyway, and not as long as the summers at my house are so great, but who knows what the future will bring.
If you have any advice on how to go about learning the ropes, please let me know. My initial reaction (RV rental) was that I did not like lining up about 5' or 10' from another RV and paying $80 for that. Of course, I know I can't always sleep in parking lots, nor do I want to. I guess I would still like some back-to-nature, hiking and peace without having to backpack to get it. I need to find out about off-the-beaten-track places; would also love to spend a month in New Orleans...as close to the city as possible....for that I would pay more money. My expectations of a John Steinbeck road trip are probably unrealistic.
Look forward to meeting some of you.