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Full time RV Guide 
 

Life as a full time rver is full of excitement and tranquility. Fulltime RVing is relaxing and takes you away from the stress and trouble of everyday living.  It gives you a chance to stop, relax, and enjoy life and the buety of nature to its fullest.  . Today you can not only dream about the ultimate freedom an RV can give you, but you can start enjoying it. This article includes excepts from people who are full time RVers. We are also offering a  ebook which shows you 10 easy steps to start living the life of an  fulltime RVer today and enjoy the unimaginable freedom that a full time rv experience can give you.

 

Stop living for Yesterdays and start living for today.

 

Full time RV life is now easier and more convenient then ever. You don’t have to leave your life behind, but you can take it with you through email, cell phones, satellite TV and ATMs and the internet.  Campsite RV hook ups allow you to have access to all the amenities and comforts of home.  Prices on full time RV camping (6 month lease are very affordable and range from 150 to 1200 for a six month lease.  Use your Rv to see the world, or spend time visiting family or visiting with other full timers.  You have access to to phones, satelite TV and internet, ATMs and RV hook ups at virtually and campsite. People use RVs to visit family, see the world, or just enjoy spending time with one another.  Whether you are excited about life, retiring, or wanting to have a change of scenery, full time RVing could be right for you.

 

Ten Easy Steps to Enjoying Ultimate RV Freedom,

 

 

Young RV Fulltimer

 

I have been a full time RVer since I have been 35 years old. I love it and I have never looked back.  One of the more frequent comment I get is who’s granddaughter are you.  Well . . . I’m somebody’s granddaughter, but nobody’s here in the park.  In fact, I am a bonafide full time RVer exploring my own open roads.  Survey shows that there is somewhere between 200,000 and 1 million fulltime rvers on the road today.  I venture that a small percentage of those are younger full timers or pre retirement age rv fulltimers.  We younger fulltimers have different challenges than our peer who have retired and our living their RV dreams. For instance make a living.  Like work in camp, or find jobs on websites like coolworks.com.  Other full timers have been fortunate enough to bring their professions with them on the road.

 

Health insurance is another issue.  For all American, not just RVers.  But being a young full time rver we don’t have the benefits of say Medicare, and that can be a real concern.  Finding friend our own age on the road can also be a challenge.  Now we have lots of RVing friends, some our age, and some that just act our age.  But when we find those in our age group that share similar life experiences it’s a real treat.  We have also noticed that the friendships we have made in the ‘real world’ have changed.  We are just on a different life path.  Those friends typically have school aged children, mortgages, community responsibilities. We still nuture and grow those relationships, but they simply morphed into something different.

Another frequent comment I get is ‘good for you, I wish I had done this when I was younger and healthier.’  Yea, I think I am one of the lucky ones.  I’d love to hear your comments (on RV full timing).   Post a comment and happy travels.

 

Derived Feb 7, 2009 You Tube link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHhz2Lmnfaw

In part from Roadabode and rvtravel.com.

 

 

 Retired Full-time Rvers

By Jim and Jan Waytashek

            We started out with a Class C motorhome when we took our winter trip for two, maybe three weeks.  We would go away in the winter, for three week, than three months.  Then we decided to sell the farm and sell the house and we moved out.  With children we had live their for some time, but we moved out and we own what we live in which is our 5th wheel.  We put everything out that we didin’t live with.  Our children put their name in a bowl and made a list of the six things  they wanted.  Everything we owned that we could take with us we left at our different children’s houses.  From pictures, to a base to silverware to dishes, frm furniture to antiques, is in our children’s home. 

We spend six months here in Arizona and we go to Minnasota for 6 months and stay with our son in a campground he owns near the twin cities.  We stay with him and help him with the ground’s keeping for six months.  Here in the desert you would think full time rvers are alone, but we can go out to eat and visit campfires which are very popular out here. 

There are days when you go to write on the calander what you want to do tomorrow, but before you can turn around, your week is full.  Once a week I do my chores, dump and fill up the water tanks and that’s it.  Here at La Rosa in Arizon, We have two prices for RV camping. Short term, which is $25 for two weeks or full time which is $125 form September 15th to April 15th .  This include garbage, fresh water and dumping.

 As a full time RV person you can do as much as you want or as little as you want. You have no set thing to do.  You follow the sun and I guess you get spoiled and you can spoil yourself as much as you want.  Your body becomes climatized.  Probalbly 90% of full time people follow the sun.  We have solar panels on sunny days, anda generator for when it is cloudy.  For us full time rving is a good life.


Retried Feb 7 : You tube link youtube.com/watch?v=9gF5bzQjJ-U  From rvtravel.com.