Next fall, Jeanie and I, a mating pair of septuagenarian love birds and ex-hard core 4 wheelers are set to embark on a clockwise, circumnavigation around the U.S.A., 4 month trip with these parameters:
1. stay within 200 miles of an international border or ocean. We've already covered the complete beaches of the west coast and east through WA to ID so the trip will start at Sand Point ID.
2. time it so we are in the N.E. during leaf peeper season and make our way down the eastern seaboard to N. Fl. and back west again along the gulf and then the border states.
3. Leave on or around September 1st with return around New Year's Day.
4. campgrounds; NP's; NF's; N.M's; COE's; commercial campgrounds near cities; stealth camp in cities; stay in friends driveways; every 6 or 7 days stay in a high bucks hotel.
5. camp ON every beach that will allow it on the E. coast and Gulf. We are good on sand.
6. camp at a WA D.C. camp just out of the city with trams to D.C. and take in every monument, exhibit, museum, and attraction the place has for up to 10 days.
7. I have a list of "must-sees" along the way. Living in CA we've spent a lifetime already around the entire West, so we'll move faster through CA, OR, WA, ID, NM, and AZ.
8. Jeanie is the only truck camper gourmet cook I know. I call her "Queen Leftovah".
For a while we've been conjuring up this road trip, and our aces in the hole are, it's just us: no pets; no kids; a 20 year old, 1842 pound wet Lance camper on a prepared 2001.5 Dodge RAM 6 speed manual high output Cummins TD. I've been building both the truck and the camper since we purchased them, just for this happenstance.
**The cautionary part maybe for you is to have some specific goals to keep you semi-on-track with lots of wiggle room.
I've been dreaming of this for a long time. Our rig is fully self contained; weighs 10,400 pounds wet, and is 20 feet long; short enough to do the Highway to the Sun road in Glacier N.P., and yes we have, or park in a regular car parking lot. It will travel in any season; any weather, any road condition come hell or high water. Here's the high water part anyway: swimming upstream during a flash flood in Death Valley:
jefe