New owner, first trip, too many near misses
We are transitioning from a 19' Roadtrek that I've driven 50,000 miles in the last five years on numerous adventures. Our big plan is to go full time in a few years. We've been obsessing on what to buy for three years, cruising forums, attending RV shows and after looking at a couple hundred RVs at PPL in Houston and elsewhere through Texas and Oklahoma we landed on the non-slide 36' Foretravel. We've loved the build quality of our Canadian crafted Roadtrek and the excellent use of space. I was really nervous about the complexity of a diesel pusher and figured it would take a couple of years to sort out an older unit.
I've logged 3,000 miles in my bus and have made a lot of rookie mistakes. We like to camp in National Forests, State Parks and National Parks so that's the plan. First trip was to Canejos Mountains in Colorado with an 18 mile trip on washboard dirt road to meet my son for trout fishing. This meant some long ups and downs over a couple passes and then arriving in the dark to traverse 16 miles of washboard, narrow, dirt road. After inching along for an hour, couldn't find the campsite in the dark so just parked on a level spot in the road! Since I hadn't shown up my son went looking for me and found me literally in the road. Led me to the campsite and I didn't quite make it into the campsite before rubbing up to a post. Dang this thing is long and I'm not used to the swing or the turning radius.
Two days later we went to Navajo Lake State Park, misunderstood his instruction and wound up on the upper loop, in a campground area where I don't fit. Frantic cell phone calls, son says I can drive on through but I can't. Ditch the 5x8 trailer in a campsite (loaded with kayaks and scooter), guy has to move his pickup to give me turning room and three campers are inching me around a corner with a little jockeying back and forth. I'm thinking cutting torch, chain saw or Chinook helicopter from the National Guard Air Unit. They are all shaking their heads as I slowly wind my way out of the loop from h##l. My son hooked up the trailer and followed me to the site I had reserved. Two beers before dinner, nerves shot.
Next week head to Albuquerque where we pull into an RV park (once more in the dark) to attend a play, pick up wife at airport and then off to a favorite campsite north of Pagosa Springs. Another long drive on dirt road, campsites all full and it's going dark as we go into an unknown National Forest campground two miles down the road. No damage, lovely site and we decide to stay put for five days. Learn to use ZipDee shades on the windows but leave big awning for another day.
Notes to self: Learning curve is steep, some things are fun in the dark but not driving a bus into a remote campground. It's a lot more complex than Roadtrek, drives like a dream, lots of storage, a challenge to navigate in the campground. I really covet solar and this will be my first upgrade.
Funny note. After arriving home I'm going over the manual and checking specs. Decide to read the weight rating on my new GoodYear G670s that came with the coach. They appear to be way undersized! I spend hours pouring over the specs, searching for data sheets on the tires and go to bed sick to my stomach. Next morning wake up, hit the computer again and then after reading specs for a fourth time notice that they are given in both kilograms and pounds on the data sheet. Turns out the tires are well within specs once you convert the kilograms stamped into the sides of the tires into pounds.
Still wet behind the ears even though I've been RVing since I was eight years old.