Boondocking: A friendly visit with Mother Nature

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July 20, 2013

By Bob Difley
Last week’s post, More places you may not have thought to camp or boondock
http://blog.rv.net/2013/07/more-places-you-may-not-have-thought-to-camp-or-boondock/
we looked at additional boondocking opportunities on public lands. There are, of course, other positive aspects of boondocking other than the ones previously discussed, like free or cheap camping, avoidance of crowded, noisy campgrounds, and the scenic quality of boondocking locations away from visual evidence of civilization. But there is also the environmental advantage.
It’s hardly a stretch of the imagination to connect boondocking with a non-polluting, non-wasteful, natural resource saving–or green–lifestyle. This lifestyle, and the good habits it encourages, not only enables us to extend our boondocking time in the great outdoors but is also good for nature and the environment. About the only non-green activity associated with our green lifestyle is driving our rigs to our campsites, though the newer motorhomes and trucks coming on the market are making positive improvements in the mileage.
Manufacturers are taking steps to improve their use of natural resources, using sustainable materials in the manufacture of our motorhomes, trailers, and fivers, as well as building smaller motorhomes with smaller and more efficient engines.
Winnebago’s small diesel Navion and View Class C motorhomes were the first to produce mileage figures in the 15 to 19 mpg range and others have followed. And soon we will see small hybrid electric motorhomes and trucks, which will be followed by others as gas prices rise, the crisis intensifies in the oil producing countries, and hybrid and battery manufacturing costs come down. Chassis manufacturers are testing electric and diesel hybrid combinations for commercial buses and delivery van fleets. These too will eventually filter down to the RV market.
But given that our rigs, whether driving or towing, are not yet miserly in the use of fuel, we are still conservative in our total fuel used since we usually go to our destination location and stay for a few days without further driving.
But what about the rest of RVing and the green lifestyle? When camping, we use fewer natural resources than when at home. The rig uses less heat to warm up the smaller interior, less water, less electricity for lights, uses a smaller screen TV, smaller microwave. Most all of our RV appliances are smaller than the heavy usage appliances and toys that we use in our frame houses.
We also tend to be more wasteful when at home since we don’t have to be concerned with running out of water, filling up our holding tanks, or our batteries going dead. Try following some of the habits the next time you go boondocking that you follow at home, like not turning off the water between soaping and rinsing in the shower, or turning on all the lights, radio, and TV and leaving them on even when no one is using them, and see how long before your RV systems prove inadequate.
When is the last time you had to cut down on water usage at home because your holding tanks were almost full? When you don’t have a sewer, you learn to use less very quickly.
Yes, boondocking—in fact all of RV camping—is far more environmentally friendly and much less wasteful than living in fixed housing with unlimited and too-easily obtained electricity, water, waste disposal, and trash pick-up. When boondocking we are, by the very nature of the lifestyle, forced to conserve and use less.  And that’s something to feel good about.

By Bob Difley

Last week’s post, More places you may not have thought to camp or boondock, looked at additional, maybe little known, boondocking opportunities on public lands. There are, of course, many positive aspects of boondocking other than the obvious–like free or cheap camping, avoidance of crowded noisy campgrounds, and the scenic quality of boondocking locations away from any visual evidence of civilization. But there is also the environmental advantage.

It’s hardly a stretch of the imagination to connect boondocking with a non-polluting, non-wasteful, natural resource saving–or green–lifestyle. This lifestyle, and the good habits it encourages, not only enables us to extend our boondocking time in the great outdoors but is also good for nature and the environment. About the only non-green activity associated with our green lifestyle is driving our rigs to our campsites, though the newer motorhomes and trucks coming on the market are making positive improvements in the mileage.

Manufacturers are taking steps to improve their use of natural resources, using sustainable materials in the manufacture of our motorhomes, trailers, and fivers, as well as building smaller motorhomes with smaller and more efficient engines.

Winnebago’s small diesel Navion and View Class C motorhomes were the first to produce mileage figures in the 15 to 19 mpg range and others have followed. And soon we will see small hybrid electric motorhomes and trucks, which will be followed by others as gas prices rise, the crisis intensifies in the oil producing countries, and hybrid and battery manufacturing costs come down. Chassis manufacturers are testing electric and diesel hybrid combinations for commercial buses and delivery van fleets. These too will eventually filter down to the RV market.

But given that our rigs, whether driving or towing, are not yet miserly in the use of fuel, we are still conservative in our total fuel used since we usually go to our destination location and stay for a few days without further driving.

But what about the rest of RVing and the green lifestyle? When camping, we use fewer natural resources than when at home. The rig uses less heat to warm up the smaller interior, less water, less electricity for lights, uses a smaller screen TV, smaller microwave. Most all of our RV appliances are smaller than the heavy usage appliances and toys that we use in our frame houses.

We also tend to be more wasteful when at home since we don’t have to be concerned with running out of water, filling up our holding tanks, or our batteries going dead. Try following some of the habits the next time you go boondocking that you follow at home, like not turning off the water between soaping and rinsing in the shower, or turning on all the lights, radio, and TV and leaving them on even when no one is using them, and see how long before your RV systems prove inadequate.

When is the last time you had to cut down on water usage at home because your holding tanks were almost full? When you don’t have a sewer, you learn to use less very quickly.

Yes, boondocking—in fact all of RV camping—is far more environmentally friendly and much less wasteful than living in fixed housing with unlimited and too-easily obtained electricity, water, waste disposal, and trash pick-up. When boondocking we are, by the very nature of the lifestyle, forced to conserve and use less.  And that’s something to feel good about.

For more RVing articles and tips take a look at my Healthy RV Lifestyle website, where you will also find my ebooks: BOONDOCKING: Finding the Perfect Campsite on America’s Public Lands, 111 Ways to Get the Biggest Bang for your RV Lifestyle Buck, and Snowbird Guide to Boondocking in the Southwestern Deserts (PDF or Kindle), and my newest, The RV Lifestyle: Reflections of Life on the Road (Kindle reader version). NOTE: Use the Kindle version to read on iPad and iPhone or any device that has the free Kindle reader app.

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