We took the BRV out on its first multi-day trip. We decided on Folsom lake mainly because by the time we looked for campsites this was the only state park with one available Memorial Day weekend within reasonable driving distance. Turns out there was a good reason for this: the campground was lovely, but it was on the far side of the lake, and pretty darn inaccessible from the south/west - basically an extra hour drive around the lake and up over the American river from where we thought we would be staying.
I never knew there was this enormous lake just a few miles north of Sacramento. I've only heard of one thing in the town of Folsom: a prison. And guess where that prison is situated....right on Folsom lake (the south side so we never saw it).
On this trip we learned a lot of useful things:
1. The BRV gets bad gas mileage
2. The BRV can accelerate up hill (unlike our car which requires a running start to get up a long hill, and is decelerating the whole way up)
3. The BRV can hold it's own speed in traffic, none of that lame driving in the right lane with the campers for us!
We can easily keep up with this man on a horse!
4. It is possible to be totally self-contained for 3 days in the BRV*
5. Dawn is good at food planning, Amber is good at BRV packing and organizing
6. The driver's door on the BRV will swing open at inopportune times (like while speeding down the freeway) if it's not closed just right.
7. Our van camping packing skills still need some fine tuning
(*especially if you have a brother come bring you a bag of ice on day 2.)
On that last point, after our big shopping trip we had a lot of potentially useful gear for the BRV, and this was our first chance to test it out:
Pans - whoops, forgot I had already bought a camping fry pan so I bought another one at the grocery store, and now we have two. But it's van camping, we have room for two!

Cooler - OK I know everyone uses these, but I don't think I've ever owned a real cooler. Just those cheap ones that don't really work for more than a few hours. I put veggies and chicken and other stuff in our cooler with a bag of ice, and after a really hot Saturday I started to get worried that the food would go bad before cooking Sunday night. But it was a 25 minute drive (each way) to the nearest store. Fortunately we had already planned some hiking with my brother so we got him to bring an extra bag of ice. But when I went to add the fresh ice to the cooler I noticed the ice in there was still totally frozen. It's like a miracle! The extra ice did not go to waste: we had a bottle of white wine that was nicely chilled for dinner Sunday night.
Bed-in-a-bag - this is the cheapest way to get new sheets and a blanket. In this case you get what you pay for. I think the sheets have a thread count of 10, and the very poofy comforter was just thick enough for sleeping on warm nights.
Radio - The BRV does not have a radio so Amber got us a portable one that has an ipod dock, and she tied it to the dash so that we have a pretty good radio right where it should be. The BRV runs a little loud on the freeway, but so does the Tracker so we're used to blasting the radio to hear over the car noise.
Note the fancy kleenex dispenser now built in to the BRV dash as well!

Firewood - yep, this stuff really works. And buying it before you get to the campground is a great strategy we plan to employ in the future.
Rain/bug tent - You know the big square contraptions that people put up over their picnic tables at campsites to keep out the rain and bugs? Well we seem to have purchased only the netting part of that. We're not sure if that was because I had a vision of using it to keep bugs out of the BRV (which clearly won't work) or because Amber wanted the whole thing but we didn't notice you have to buy the poles and top part separately. Either way, it was useless.
Marshmallows - 2 bags, a small accident of duplication, but you never can have too many marshmallows when camping, especially when you've got chocolate and grahams and firewood and a butane lighter.
What we didn't bring but should have:
- swimsuits - yep, we were camping on a lake and this didn't occur to us
- bowls - plates can't be used for everything
- mugs - 1 isn't enough for 2 people
- pillows - bed-in-a-bag doesn't include pillows, just the pillowcases
- quarters - showers at parks only take quarters, fortunately same brother who brought the ice also brought some quarters
The BRV also made some friends on this trip:
The BRV's little brother, owned by my little brother
This guy pulled up next to us on the freeway to ask the year of our van!
-Dawn
Great entry! A few thoughts that you have probably already thought of:
ReplyDelete- IKEA has cheap pillows. They sell them all rolled up... I'm not sure if they get back to being that small, but they might. Not that the BRV is lacking in space!
- Target has black out curtains that attach to any other style of curtain, just in case you REALLY want it dark. ~$30 for 27" x 80".
- Velcro is a very handy too to keep mosquito netting in place. Larger quantities are purchasable at any fabric, Michaels, or JoAnn Fabric store. I think Walmart has some too.
- Remember the Karate Kid's halloween costume? Well, if you got some sort of collapsable "legs" for it, you could use that for the shower bag... maybe. Just a thought!
- If you are never going to make the futon into a bed and leave the sheets on anyway, you might consider a mattress cover. It zips up over the entire mattress, and keeps any critters from living inside. Gross thought I know, but who wants critters, really?