Comments on: Why #vanlife Sucks https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/ Outfit & Explore Sat, 30 Jul 2022 18:05:49 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 By: Why Choose The #Vanlife As A Family - Camperguru https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2116 Wed, 07 Apr 2021 20:55:29 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2116 […] You can read up on more downsides in this nice article on OverlandBound: Why #vanlife sucks […]

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By: Randy Reek https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2115 Mon, 11 Feb 2019 20:48:53 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2115 We don't LIVE the #vanlife – BUT we have traveled a LOT by van. For my take on travel and camping in vans, please visit GoneCamper

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By: Anak https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2114 Fri, 08 Feb 2019 21:11:04 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2114 This case made me think of this thread:

https://www.courthousenews.com/judge-blocks-san-diego-rv-parking-restriction/

It will be interesting to see if San Diego comes up with a new law that is acceptable to the courts or if this will turn into a precedent forcing other cities to back down on enforcement.

The challenge is that many of the folks who are living out of vehicles are folks who typically don't make good decisions.  Their reputation affects everyone else.

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By: Why #Vanlife With Family | GuruCamper https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2113 Tue, 05 Feb 2019 20:02:39 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2113 […] More great downsides, in a nice article on OverlandBound: Why #vanlife sucks […]

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By: CSG https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2112 Thu, 10 Jan 2019 07:18:53 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2112 Over the decades, I've done three long trips with only the second one where our rig was our only home.  I spent a month in 1980 when I 29-30 living out of my little pick-up with a camper shell and old school carpet kit.  Traveled California and Utah, mostly.  Then, in 1992, my wife and I sold out and hit the road in our pick-up and Lance camper.  The world was our oyster and we traveled 16000 miles through the western states and western Canada.  The goal was to find a new place to live because California was so over for me.  We lasted six months and went back to California and rented a place.  Over the next year and a half we reviewed our trip and where we'd been.  Settled on Idaho and got here in 1994.  A few years later, we had kids and ended up with a 5th wheel.  Did lots of western trips when they were really little but decided to take a bigger trip in 2007.  We homeschooled them that year and were going to travel the entire USA even though we now owned two homes in Idaho.  Got as far as the Great Lakes and spent a total of 3  months on the road before going home.  Didn't see the whole country.

What was the issue with these trips?  I had to do every damn thing myself and after a time, it got really frustrating/aggravating.  What I learned is that long term fulltime living in an RV of any sort is not for me.  Now, I travel for up to a week or so in my camping van which is great because now that the kids are grown, it's just me doing what I want, when I want, where I want.  I always boondock but it's easier when it's just you.  It's also easier when I have a couple homes to come home to.  No worries with the coppers and have never had a negative experience in the decades I've been doing this.  Of course, I don't look like a Deadhead and my vehicles are conservative in their appearance. (I do admit to Steal Your Face stickers on both of my rigs ;)).  But with the NPs being overrun and that fact that I've been to all of them many times, today finds me often taking my Cruiser into the SNRA or one of our countless areas where I can boondock a night or two and rarely see another sole.  I read,  fish, drink some wine and eat baguettes and a nice Brie, maybe do a little birding, perhaps use my small refractor to do some stargazing and get some real perspective, do photography, look at cool stuff on hikes and know I've got a nice house to come home to after a day or two.  These little trips are my favorites of all the traveling I've done since the late 60's.

I remember how many people told my wife and me how smart we were back in '92 to do this sort of traveling while we were young (and we were, smart, that is).  So at a more advanced age with a been there, done that mindset, I really admire all the people who are doing this while they're young because youth is over quickly.  I don't like most of the countless YT vids I see of the 'look at me!' couples and I think they are missing out on so much with the drones, video production, and need to be noticed but that's fine, it doesn't hurt me any.  I just hope these vanlifers are in the moment enough to really enjoy the positives of open ended travel with your stuff along for the ride.

Geez, but what a ramble.  Sorry, folks! 🙂

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By: OutOfStep https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2111 Thu, 10 Jan 2019 03:51:50 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2111 I miss my 1985 Volkswagen vanagon Westfalia weekender. She’s the whole reason i got into the whole overlanding thing. I love that thing to death but unfortunately i had to sell her due to the fact that she’s also a money pit. Vanning is awesome, but you have to be prepared for the short and long term maintenance, mentally and financially lol. As for me i just don’t have the money and time for it, and i missed being able to get out there in the time she was not able to run and left in the driveway for a long. So i had to let her go and go with something new and reliable; my 2018 Toyota Tacoma 4×4 :] i will always miss the times i had with my 85 Westy but its time to make new adventures.

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By: FRED FORSTER https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2110 Thu, 03 Jan 2019 19:55:04 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2110 After reading so many polarized views of van travel, what’s the big deal? Have van, will travel just means uncountable ways to experience, well, having a van and traveling. It’s almost like discussing what kind of suitcase travel works for you. In 2010 my wife and I bought a new Ford cargo van, spent a couple of months designing the transformation into a RV, and paid to have it those ideas realized—turned out pretty good for us! Our style was to do a multi-month trip each year, our favorite being spending the summer in Alaska, but have also driven across Canada, visited the SW Deserts a number of times and did a round trip from Seattle to Florida. Back in 2010 when typical attention spans could deal with blogs we dove into that as our means for “saving memories” and having something that we could share with others. So over the holidays we decided make a book out of that blog for fear that if no one clicked on it in WordPress for a month, it might disappear. It was only then that we realized how wonderful was is to have the memories “packaged” that way—it ended up over 600 pages long! It is a guess, but if you wanted to get a better idea of day-to-day van life, check out the blog at lugnutlife.wordpress.com. What we are particularly proud of is that we never used it to get paid by pushing crap on readers with those the little hyperlinks that some folks think they will be able to fund their retirement on. Check it out if you have a few minutes—ha!

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By: KNT https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2109 Thu, 27 Dec 2018 18:53:26 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2109 In reply to BayAreaTundra.

I have never understood people that can’t or don’t read, in place of a screen to entertain them.

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By: Kris Monroe https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2108 Wed, 26 Dec 2018 17:33:05 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2108 Very good write up!
Out of necessity I have lived on the road (2004 Tacoma, Xtracab, 4×4, 6′ bed) more nights than not, on the road for work (filmmaking, corporate photography, etc) and sort of fell into the #overlanding / #vanlife lifestyle without a van and without the instagram account (until sometime earlier this year, which isn’t even active).

That said, I’ve ALWAYS dabbled with the idea of wanting a van because of the luxurious space available! Although my need (personal and professional) for accessing remote areas is an immediate hard-stop on the van conversation. Living the nomadic lifestyle in a 4×4 high clearance vehicle makes a game-changing difference in sleeping options and bathroom availability, but drastically limits in-vehicle convenience, space, and internet access.

Pros and cons. I think one of the huge sad things about this entire topic of conversation is how so many do it for the instagram/social feed. Photography and video are how I make a living but using them as an inspiration to travel leads to a very quickly deflated experience. It needs to be about more than the images and content, it needs to be about feeding the soul – the lifestyle is for some, and it’s not for others, which is perfectly fine.

#Vanlife might suck, but so does sitting at a desk every day. It’s all give and take.

Write more! Love this article.

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By: Yngve https://www.overlandbound.com/why-vanlife-sucks/#comment-2107 Tue, 25 Dec 2018 09:27:34 +0000 https://www.overlandbound.com/?p=26060#comment-2107 “irony”. Not the art of ironing, but mastering the word. Vanlife sucks big time in the Arctic, try out freeze and pretend you could have a shower inside ?

Not gonna happen. Being on the dole, as the brittons say, is not much fun either and dating ? Does that have to do with dades ? Can’t remember. My rig is less than 5m long and just under 2m high so I guess I do not experience the twice as ling-van problem mentioned by the Sprinter Generation. The rest of it ? Yup.

Also – know the difference between “free camping” and “wild camping”, as the formar is what people “mean” when they describe their free camping life and the latter descibe the littering twats that give anyone a bad name/black eye.

Camping sites shut for “the season” that would normally offer both 230V current and recharging of batterie(s) on borard, that would offer showers, loo’s and perhaps even wifi ? Don’t mention it. It does not happen after some very early date in September and untill some very late date in April the camping sites are all shut & locked down offering nothing but a cold shoulder.

Luckily/sadly I only live in my VW T4 syncro during summer and when I do not have my daughter (50% of the time), so I get my clothes cleaned “at (a rented) home” between battles. But with no work, I cannot travel around. I stay put because it is “expected”, my being on the unemployment list. I apply for jobs but all there is are skarce temp jobs unloading truck trailers, containers or working as a fork lift (temp) now and then. Very low and stacato money flow. So I stay in the rented flat, with issues of this and that caracter, with bills stealing all the fun I could have had. At least I’m not that cold as I would have been burning diesel thru my Eberspächer air heater in the back of my van.

Vanlife sucks (again – if you do not know the frase irony, try google it).

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