Showing posts with label RV lifestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RV lifestyle. Show all posts

Monday, August 27, 2007

Working from the road and your RV

The last thing many RVers want to do on a trip is something related to work, but some RVers find their camper is the perfect place for getting things done.

With greater availability Wi-Fi hotspots and web-based office software, your office can be anywhere now. That is a blessing or a curse depending on your point of view.

The Digital RV blog features an entry on "portable professionals" and an RVers experience with working on the road. He describes what tech gear he packs for road trips and what tasks he handles from his laptop computer.

There is also a link to a recent CNN article about Business in a Backpack, about another mobile worker.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

RVers are no longer "roughing it" when traveling

RVers want to experience the great outdoors when traveling, but without the hassle of "roughing it" in the wild.

The Northwestern.com features a story on the Apple Creek Campground and the services RVers are demanding when camping.

According to the story, RVers want parks that feature electricity and amenities. RV parks are catering to the needs of their visitors, offering rec rooms, laundry services, and landscaping to make parks more attractive.

RVers are returning the favor, choosing RV parks as alternatives to hotels.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Camping by the beach in California

The Orange County Register features a story on camping at Doheny State Beach between Dana Point Harbor and San Clemente, California.

The 122-space campground was built back during the depression, by the California Conservation Corps.

The story reports that 150,000 campers visit the park each year, drawn by seaside views and peaceful settings.

Have you taken your RV to a beachside campground? Do you have a favorite? Leave a comment and tell us your story.

Friday, March 30, 2007

RVers enjoy the comforts of home when traveling

According to the Chicago Tribune, more travelers are making their RVs feel like home, with flat screen TVs, family photographs on the wall, and kitchens almost identical their counterparts in a suburban home.

Monday, March 26, 2007

RV industry optimistic about future sales

How much impact are gas prices having on RV sales? According a story on Sun Herald.com, gas prices are having little effect on dedicated RV owners. The RVIA expects a modest decrease in sales, but expects 2007 to be the fourth best in the past 30 years.

Many RVers feel the flexibility and comfort of RV travel far outweighs any pinch they feel at they fuel pump. To offset the impact of fuel costs, RV travelers are traveling to destinations closer to home and staying longer in parks.

While retirees are still the bulk of RV buyers, younger buyers in their 30s are showing interest RVing and expanding the market for RV dealers and maunfacturers.

What do you think? Have fuel costs changed your RV plans? Do you plan to buy a new RV in the future? Tell us your story and leave a comment.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Get Ready, Here Come The Boomers! How RV retirees will change the face of camping - Part 2

By Jane Kenny - RV Lifestyle Specialist

Read Part 1

Today’s RV retirees won’t be low-budget type campers tooling on down the road in a little motor home with wiggling plastic hula girls on the dashboard. No longer are they the older folks perched in vehicles high above the road. Nowadays they are yuppies, former flower children with well-funded 401K’s, traveling comfortably in their high-end, modern “big rig” motor homes with price tags to match.

With new, roomy RVs on the market – this mode of travel is an attractive option, not only for retirees who have had some experience with camping, but for those who never camped before. Motor homes and fifth-wheel trailers have evolved to vehicles with double, triple and even quadruple slideouts. Many of these new RVs are aptly named COWs – condos on wheels. It can easily be said, “This is not your father’s camper.”

The price tag on a new RV is not the same as the price of your father’s tent or pop-up, either. However, Baby Boomers bring to their retirement years an unmatched level of financial independence. Consequently many can afford RVs that price out well into six figures. Many Baby Boomers who never thought they’d own a gas-guzzling motor home are considering the purchase in order to fulfill their dream of traveling the country.

Retirees who want to travel extensively are attracted to RVs because:
  • Schlepping suitcases in and out of hotels is a thing of the past. Their clothes are with them, neatly hanging in closets or folded neatly in drawers, in their home on wheels.

  • They don’t have to deal with the hassles of air travel, namely passenger screening, changing planes and being at the mercy of tight schedules and weather delays.

  • RVers can set their own schedule…travel when they feel like it and stay wherever they want for as long as they want.

  • They sleep in their own bed and have their favorite pillows. They are sure the bathroom is clean. They have a kitchen and enjoy home-cooked meals on board.

  • The “dream vacation of a lifetime,” one that lasts many months, even years, is affordable and achievable in an RV.
Current market research data show that RVs are increasingly viewed as status symbols. Large motor homes and fifth-wheel trailers are in vogue these days after being out of fashion for most of the 1980’s and 90’s. Boomers show a penchant for retiring earlier, traveling more and doing both in style.

A growing number of high income people prefer to spend their leisure time in high end coaches. While it’s true that they may spend a night or two en route in a campground, their final destination is always an ambiance RV resort in popular vacations spots such as Palm Springs, Hilton Head or Naples. Golf and gaming destination resorts are becoming as popular fishing destinations for RVers. Casino resorts throughout the country are scrambling to add RV Parks to meet the demand. Many newer RV Parks are quick to identify themselves as “ambiance resorts.”

Boomers who can afford to pay for it will demand luxury in their home on wheels as well as at their destination resorts.

About the author: Jane Kenny’s second book, RV RETIREMENT, How To Travel Part-Time or Full-Time In A Recreational Vehicle, is available from Roundabout Publications at www.TravelBooksUSA.com (1-800-455-2207) or at Amazon.com.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Get Ready, Here Come The Boomers! How RV retirees will change the face of camping - Part 1

By Jane Kenny - RV Lifestyle Specialist

By the year 2010 one-third of the population in the U.S. will be over the age of 50. That means the Baby Boomers – all 76 million of them – will be retired or on the brink of retirement. Retirees in the 21st century are healthier and will live longer than their parents and grandparents did. During their retirement years, Baby Boomers want to be active, enjoy life and fulfill dreams. For many (if not most) traveling is a big part of the retirement dream.

Despite high gasoline prices and low miles-per-gallon, retirees are still heading out to the open road in recreational vehicles. Why?
  • They want to fulfill a dream of a lifetime – traveling and seeing the county during retirement.

  • The overall cost of traveling in an RV is not as expensive as other modes of travel.
Recent surveys indicate that Boomers will revolutionize society’s concept of retirement. Baby Boomers are largely ignoring the traditional model of a sedentary retirement. They opt for an active retirement lifestyle and expect to make time for travel…lots of travel!

Retirement on the open road? Many Boomers consider this to be an idea whose time has come. All over the nation retirees will be heading out in a new wave of RVs. And this will change the public perception of “camping.”

Camping holds a special appeal for Baby Boomers. They were the hippies of the 60’s in the beat-up old VW bus with the peace symbol on it. They were the ones who camped out in tents or under the stars, the environmentalists who wanted to get back to nature. By heading out to the open road, they come full circle to the free-wheeling days of their youth. But they are somewhat older – and richer – now. These days, their campers aren’t tents or VW buses. True, they want to get back to nature, but with more creature comforts. Enter the “big rig,” the 21st century Boomer version of the camper.

To be continued...

About the author: Jane Kenny’s second book, RV RETIREMENT, How To Travel Part-Time or Full-Time In A Recreational Vehicle, is available from Roundabout Publications at www.TravelBooksUSA.com (1-800-455-2207) or at Amazon.com.