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How To Keep Your Dog Cool While RVing This Summer

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Learn how to keep your dog cool while camping on hot summer days. Photo: Shutterstock

RV camping just wouldn’t be the same without our dogs. After all, dogs are an important part of the family and deserve a special spot in family vacations. However, hot summer weather can make life absolutely miserable for our pooches. Summer heat can even be deadly for dogs. And it doesn’t take long for the heat to kill, particularly if dogs are left inside an RV or other vehicle. 

Some dogs are more susceptible to heat-related illnesses than others. If your dog has a short muzzle, you’ll need to be especially careful that they don’t get too hot. Bulldogs, French Bulldogs, Boxers, Shih Tzus, Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, and Mastiffs are a few dog breeds that are more prone to overheating than other breeds.

Fortunately, no matter what your dog’s breed, there are many ways to help keep your dog cool while RV camping (even when it’s hot out). We’ve put together our top life-saving hacks from the advice of dog experts.   

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What Does An RV Propane Gas Leak Smell Like?

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What does an RV propane gas leak smell like? Photo credit: Shutterstock

How To Detect RV Propane Leaks

RVers use propane for cooking, heating, and even running the RV refrigerator. There are some great benefits to using propane in our RVs. Propane is abundant, affordable, and it burns cleanly. In addition, propane is extracted, produced, and distributed throughout North America, so it’s easy to find a retailer.

While we use propane in its gas form, it is stored differently. Propane is compressed and stored in its liquid state. Liquified propane gas (LPG) is propane gas that has been compressed into a liquid state. When we buy a cylinder of propane, it is in a liquid form that expands to a gas when we open a valve.

What does a propane gas leak smell like?

On its own, propane is colorless, odorless, and non-toxic. Even though it’s non-toxic, propane gas poses a significant health hazard to both humans and pets. If it is inhaled, propane can asphyxiate us very quickly.  

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10 Best Camping Crockpot Recipes According to Fellow RVers

Our RV Lifestyle Facebook community responded with DOZENS of crockpot camping recipes you can easily make in your RV. Here are some of the great recipes they recommended…

Continue reading 10 Best Camping Crockpot Recipes According to Fellow RVers at RV Lifestyle.

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RV Bike Racks: How To Take Your Bike With You Anywhere

Biking is one of the best ways to explore once you’ve set up your RV basecamp. Whether you’re exploring trails in the national parks or biking downtown to check out the local cuisine, transporting a bike on your RV expands your travel options once you reach your destination. 

But, it can seem daunting to get your bikes loaded onto your recreational vehicle and transported safely. The good news is that RV bike racks are made for all types of RVs, and you’re in the perfect place to find which type is right for you. 

Why Get a Bike Rack for an RV?

Photo by Camping World

If you have a motorized RV, you could always secure your bikes inside while traveling between destinations. And we’ve certainly known owners of new and used travel trailers that transport bikes in the bed of their tow vehicle or on a roof rack. 

Toy haulers are perhaps the easiest because they have a garage that can be used for gear storage. But fifth wheels make it tough because the pin box takes up so much space in your truck bed, and your 5th wheel cap needs room to pivot as you go around corners. 

While there are ways to transport bikes without a rack, here are the major benefits of RV bike racks

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Camping World’s Guide to Luxury RVs

RV camping is already a significant upgrade from tent camping and sleeping on the ground. But once you experience the comfort and ease of a traditional RV, it’s only natural to consider RVs with even more luxurious amenities. 

All RVs can be your home away from home, but few can turn heads like the best luxury RVs. Luxury RVs offer the chance to explore in style, with posh living spaces and unique amenities you won’t find on other campers.

If you’re looking for an RV that redefines glamping, luxury motorhomes and towables can’t be ignored. So let’s explore whether they’re the right option for you. 

What is a Luxury RV?

Photo by Camping World

Luxury RVs aren’t necessarily defined by RV types. For example, there are luxury fifth wheels, travel trailers, toy haulers, and all types of motorized RVs. Some of their common traits include: 

Spacious floorplans, usually with multiple slide-outsTop-of-the-line, plush RV furniturePremium construction materials and componentsResidential appliancesUnique amenities (rooftop lounges, fish tanks, underbelly vehicle storage, etc.)

In addition, many RVs that are built to go off-road fall into the luxury category. This is because they must feature higher-grade construction than traditional RVs, as well as include amenities like solar panels, upgraded suspension and shock absorption, and higher ground clearance. 

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7 RV Safety Products for Seniors & RVers with Disabilities

Whether you’re getting older or have a disability, these safety accessories can help make RV travel more accessible, comfortable, and enjoyable for you and your travel companions.

Continue reading 7 RV Safety Products for Seniors & RVers with Disabilities at RV Lifestyle.

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How to Choose the Right RV Satellite Dish

There was a time when having a television in your RV was a unique luxury. But the days of fiddling with rabbit ears trying to improve TV reception in your RV are mostly behind us. Technological advancements have progressed to the point that having an over-the-air digital antenna and an RV satellite dish is normal.

Television in the RV market has changed dramatically over the years. Many modern RVs are now equipped with multiple TVs with access to hundreds of channels, including high-definition programming. 

Searching for a new dish can be overwhelming if you’re frustrated with your RV’s TV reception. Fortunately, you’re in the best place to learn how to choose the right satellite dish for your RV. 

Satellite Dishes versus Over-the-Air Antennas

Photo by Camping World

No matter your budget, needs, or RV type, there is a satellite dish for you. There are many RV satellite dish options, but you should understand how an RV satellite dish differs from over-the-air antennas. 

Over-the-air digital TV antennas can receive local broadcast channels over the air, for free and without a subscription service. What you’ll receive (standard or high-definition programming) is largely up to the broadcast output for channels within range. 

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The Importance of Your Motorhome’s Engine Air Filter

When maintaining a motorhome’s engine, most people focus on oil changes and ensuring they’re done on schedule. But changing your engine air filter regularly is just as important. Here’s why.

What Does an Engine Air Filter Do?

Image from Camping World

Modern motorhome engines, just like automobile engines, are built with very specific tolerances. Even a minimal amount of dirt or dust introduced into the system will reduce the performance of your engine.

Your engine air filter is your engine’s best defense against dust and dirt. 

Dirt in an engine is extremely abrasive. The tolerances referenced above mean each component of an engine is engineered and manufactured with precision accuracy, so each piece fits and moves perfectly within the system.

Engine air filters can only handle a limited amount of dirt and dust. As they get older and more clogged, airflow is restricted, leading to engine overheating and other issues. It can also cause dirt to pass around the filter, potentially impacting engine components’ seal and fit and decreasing the engine’s power and efficiency.

Engines on less developed roads require more filtration. 

Your engine air filter will pick up dust and dirt if you only drive on developed highways. But many RVers these days are seeking boondocking destinations that require navigating miles of undeveloped dirt roads. 

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The importance of your motorhome's engine air filter
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The Best Short Class C Motorhomes

Class C motorhomes come in a wide variety of lengths from 20 feet to over 30 feet. While a longer Class C motorhome might be right for you and your family, many RVers find that a shorter model works extremely well for them.

A short Class C motorhome is easier to maneuver on the road and around campsites and parking lots. These smaller Class C motorhomes are also more versatile as far as where they can travel. A really long Class C will be limited, and that can mean you’ll miss out on certain opportunities.

So, if you think a shorter Class C motorhome might be a good fit for you, then you should check out the options presented below. These are excellent Class C motorhomes that likely have exactly what you’re looking for.

Thor Gemini 23TW

Image from Camping World

If you’re looking for an RV with plenty of interior room and like the idea of a skylight above the cab of the RV, then the Thor Gemini 23TW is a perfect option for you. This model features a camp-side kitchen, a full bath in the rear passenger side of the RV, and a queen bed and Dream dinette on a slide on the driver’s side of the RV.

The unit features a Ford Transit chassis with a diesel engine that puts out 185 hp and 350 lb-ft of torque. This engine is great on fuel and provides plenty of power to get the RV around. The length overall is 23.5 feet. The model sleeps up to five people between the bed, the dinette, and the cab-over bunk.

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The Best Short Class C Motorhomes
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Annoying Things People Do At The RV Park

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Keep dogs from barking incessantly. Photo: Shutterstock

We have all been in a campground where at least one of these annoying activities occured. If not, you might be the perpetrator and not even be aware of it.

Commiserate with me as I list off these actions that we all wish would stop in order to make our camping experience more pleasant. This is not an exhaustive list, but here are some of the annoying things people do in RV parks.

Common campground rule breaking

Loud and disruptive campersLetting pets off leashesLeaving dog poop in public areas or your campsiteLetting kids run around the park unsupervisedSpeeding through the campgroundIgnoring quiet hoursOvercrowding vehicles

 

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RVers working together makes a quick fix out of a small park problem
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Are These the Best RV Road Trips in the U.S.?

We’re always trying to bring you great routes to travel, but we just came across a list of what just may be the best RV road trips in the U.S.

Continue reading Are These the Best RV Road Trips in the U.S.? at RV Lifestyle.

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The 2022 Federal National Parks Senior Pass – America the Beautiful

Hands down, the best value in the RVing world is the National Parks Senior Pass, officially known as the America the Beautiful Pass...

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8 Lesser-Known National Parks to Add to Your RV Bucket List

You know Yellowstone, Acadia, and Yosemite. You also know that those national parks—while beautiful—also come with loads of crowds. Part of the glory of visiting our revered national parks is experiencing the unbounded nature of our country.

If you’re more a nature-seeker and less a people-person—or even if you just want to see some of the most amazing parts of the country that are off the beaten path, here are eight national parks to put a thumbtack in on your map.

Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida

You won’t be getting all the way here in your RV (unless you’ve got some kind of James Bond-level upgrades) because Dry Tortugas National Park is a series of islands nearly 70 miles west off of Key West. If you’re already planning to camp in the Keys, though, it’s a perfect day trip. Take a ferry to the park (it’s a little over two hours by boat). Once you’re there, visit Fort Jefferson—a never-completed Civil War bastion—and dive or snorkel through the crystal-clear waters and coral reefs. If you feel like roughing it, you can camp in the one nearby campground, but it’s primitive and its ten first-come, first-served sites fill up fast.

Good Sam Campgrounds Nearby

Big Pine Key ResortSunshine Key RV Resort & Marina

North Cascades National Park, Washington

Not even 100 miles outside of Seattle sits one of the least-visited parks in the country. North Cascades National Park boasts some of America’s most picturesque views. As long as you don’t mind a few bumpy roads—many of the paths into and within the park aren’t maintained—you can camp, even in your RV. Otherwise, the hiking and backpacking, plus canoeing, kayaking, and fishing around the 12,000-acre Ross Lake are popular among travelers.

Good Sam Campgrounds Nearby

Maple Grove RV ResortTall Chief RV & Camping Resort

Congaree National Park, South Carolina

Though it sounds like a rainforest, Congaree National Park sits in South Carolina and is very much a deciduous forest. In fact, the many hardwoods in the park are some of the tallest in the country—some even the tallest of their known species. A good chunk of the park is pretty swampy, but a 2.4-mile boardwalk rises over the water and lets you hike without getting your feet (or ankles) wet. Of course, if you feel like dipping a toe in, one of the best ways to take in the park is by canoe. There’s no RV camping available in Congaree, but if you like to mix your camping styles up a bit, there are three available primitive campgrounds.

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Everything You Need to Know About Starlink Internet for RVers

Starlink Internet for RVers is very much a reality these days, making remote workers and boondockers particularly happy. Any RVer who has ever struggled with getting sufficient internet service while traveling is about to benefit from a big change in Internet technology. It’s all due to the work of a company called SpaceX.

It’s called the Starlink Internet system.

It’s the brainchild of Elon Musk, the guy who revolutionized the automotive industry with the Tesla, and whose SpaceX rocket company has been selected by NASA to get humans on Mars.

Starlink, which recently added two new tiers of service of interest to RVers, offers the potential of solving the congested Wi-Fi and horribly slow or nonexistent Internet that so often plagues RV owners on the road and in campgrounds. Staying connected on the road is a crucial part of the RV lifestyle.

I’ve been a Starlink customer for five months now and can report that while it’s far from perfect — there are growing pains and glitches and sometimes inconsistent speeds — the system works and generally offers broadband connectivity equaling and sometimes exceeding that of 4G LTE and 5G cellular.

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The RV Hall of Fame in Elkhart, IN

We’re in Elkhart this week hosting a rally we called the Elkhart Encounter and are camping right on the grounds of the RV/MH Hall of Fame museum. Our group of about 150 are touring the museum, attending RV maintenance seminars, enjoying food trucks, pot luck dinners, a catered meal, private tours of the production lines of our main sponsor, Keystone RV, and an RV driving school taught by Cortney Armstrong, aka the Flipping Nomad.

We decided to do this Episode 405 of the RV spodcast from the Hall of Fame and to interview Darryl Searer, the president of the Hall of Fame.

Continue reading The RV Hall of Fame in Elkhart, IN at RV Lifestyle.

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August Regional Travel — Stay Cool in the Midwest

As summer temperatures rise, it’s always a good idea to stay close to cool bodies of water. The following trips keep you close to some of the most beautiful rivers, lakes and streams in North America.

In Western Iowa, a pair of waterways give boaters and anglers opportunities for fun.

Ride and Fish the Rivers

Explore the Mississippi River from the port city of Davenport in eastern Iowa. Hop on a Channel Cat Water Taxi and ride the river to compelling sights along the banks. On the Illinois side of the river, board the elegant Celebration Belle and sail the Big Muddy in style on a four-hour lunch cruise. There’s also a Broadway and Movie Theme cruise as well as narrated voyages.

Sky bridge in Davenport, Iowa. Getty Images

Experience the river by foot by crossing the pedestrian-friendly Davenport Skybridge. Fifty feet above downtown Davenport, and 575 feet in length, the cable-stayed footbridge’s 8,000 LED lights create an ever-changing, kaleidoscopic, multi-color light show. Pause at the south end’s observation deck for a panoramic view of the mighty Mississippi.

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The Two Most Commonly Stolen Items From a Motorhome

For the most part recreational vehicles are not targeted by criminal events such as break and enter, component, or entire vehicle theft.  Any of this type of criminal activity is nearly unheard of during the camping season.  This is in part probably due to the vehicles being in use or even on and off throughout the season.  While during the off season, when stored for the winter, some break-ins and theft unfortunately do occur.  However, these are not that common, perhaps due to the low resulted revenue obtained.  After all, they only get maybe a TV and an in-dash radio. all of which may bring a hundred and fifty dollars at best when fenced.  RV wheels, tires, and related components are not targeted as they are from too much a niche market.

Well, all that was back then.  Today bigger dollar bounty has changed all that.  Ever climbing gas prices and large catalytic converters are the spoils that are attracting criminals to RVs.

When it comes to gasoline theft, to the perpetrator a motor home or a twin tank tow vehicle is like a fuel tanker with capacities of 75 to 200 gallons.  At today’s prices hundreds of dollars worth could be stolen in a short time.

Catalytic Convertor

The other item that has attracted people to turn thief is the catalytic converter.  These are found on pretty well all automobiles and trucks since their introduction and becoming mandatory in the early seventies.  Due to their containing a small quantity of precious metals in the form of palladium and platinum, theft of these has grown.  They are part of the exhaust system found between the engine and the muffler.  They can be cut off from beneath the vehicle in a matter of minutes.  These can bring hundreds of dollars and often a thousand or more, depending on the size and model.  Larger truck engines may have five times the valuable metals quantity, which of course elevates the price.


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Stranded – A Canadian Snowbird Dilemma

A Snowbird Dilemma

The events of 2020 have affected many things in our daily lives.  One of these is the closure of our borders that separate the U.S.A. and Canada.  The freedom for residents and citizens on both sides to freely cross from one to another has been, for the time being, temporarily interrupted.  Fortunately, commercially shipped goods and authorized essential traffic has been able to maintain flow.

For the majority of the population, staying in place until it is open again is somewhat manageable.  However, for some people, like the Canadian Snowbirds, the managing may be much more difficult.  A great deal of Snowbirds have sold their traditional stick homes years ago and have opted to live in their recreational vehicles.  Many stay in their favorite RV campground in Canada from about April until October at which time they migrate to their pick of locations in the southern regions of the U.S.  This annual migration and following of the sunny warmer weather is repeated year after year.

That all changed on March 21, 2020 allowing Canadians only to cross the border back into their country.  This allowed the season of 2019/20 snowbirds to return home.  But, who would have thought this would last this long? The usual departure date for Canadian snowbirds has long past.  The border crossings are still shut and probably will remain so for a while longer.

This has stranded many Snowbirds from the eastern provinces to the Pacific shores.  Canada’s climate is not really suitable for weathering a winter in an RV with the exception of the lower British Columbia coast, Vancouver Island and the related Gulf Islands.  In addition, there are other locations in lower British Columbia and west of the Rockies that do not get as much snow and cold temperatures as one normally would expect in Canada.  Places like the Okanagan Valley, for example, may provide a winter shelter for some stranded RV full-timers.   While there are many RV parks in these areas, those that remain open for the winter accommodation are normally quite full with domestic full timers from the colder provinces.  This is resulting in many RV owners seeking any port in a storm.  Dry camping in the best Canadian winter climate location may be the best many can hope for.  It may be a long winter!

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5 Best RV Parks With Boat Access

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These waterfront campgrounds offer boat access and much more. Photo: Shutterstock

The Best Campgrounds With Boat Access

Sometimes, an RV road trip needs to be near water. Whether it’s for fishing or recreation, a good boat outing is just a must. While there are plenty of lakeside RV parks with boat access, five of the top-rated locations are highlighted below. You can find more campgrounds and resorts with boat access on RV LIFE Campground Reviews or while planning your trip with RV LIFE Pro

1. Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort & Marina

Between the beachfront RV resort and full range boat launch services, this California-based resort really does offer it all. More than a marina, Newport Dunes supplies ocean access, clubhouse amenities, and storage facilities, along with Orange County’s premier boat launch.

Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort. Photo by editor

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5 Awesome Portable Generators for Travel Trailers

The reality of trailer life is that you won’t always have access to shore power. That means you’ll either need a solar panel setup or a portable generator to keep your batteries charged. That’s not all portable generators do though. They also allow you to run larger appliances, like your AC unit. 

When you’re camping in a travel trailer, whether it’s a new travel trailer or a used camper, having a portable generator makes a big difference. That’s because many travel trailers don’t come with built-in generators, as you’ll find on most Class A Diesel RVs

Why Choose a Portable Inverter Generator?

An inverter generator provides electrical power you can use in your RV so you can utilize your RV air conditioner and other important features. You can buy non-inverter generators, but the power isn’t the kind you want for RV appliances and household electronics. Make sure you’re looking at an inverter generator and you’ll be good.

What Size Portable Generator Do I Need?

Before purchasing your generator, you should think about the power output you’ll need. If you get by without many electronics, you can probably buy a smaller portable generator. These are generally less expensive and have a lower power output. 

If you have a somewhat high power demand, you’ll need to get a generator that offers a moderate to high power output. These are usually larger in size and come with a higher price tag.

Champion 3500 Watt Dual Fuel Inverter Portable Generator
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