bigHodad808
New member
Hello,
My son and I are taking a trip to Utah next week in our van. It's a 4WD van that is not fully camperized but the rear seat does fold down into a bed. I was hoping to camp in the van with my son in the Utah mountains so that we can get up the next morning, roll out of the van, eat breakfast and go snowboarding. I camped in a van once in the Colorado mountains when I was younger, and remember how cold it can get. Back then I had an electric blanket that worked well to keep me warm at nigh but we were staying in a campground with electrical hook-ups and I don't think that we will have that option this time. Is there a way to safely heat the inside of a vehicle without actually installing the type of heaters seen in campers and without running the van's engine all night? Somebody mentioned emergency candles, but that has me worried about carbon dioxide poisoning.
Suggestions please.
Thanks in Advance.
My son and I are taking a trip to Utah next week in our van. It's a 4WD van that is not fully camperized but the rear seat does fold down into a bed. I was hoping to camp in the van with my son in the Utah mountains so that we can get up the next morning, roll out of the van, eat breakfast and go snowboarding. I camped in a van once in the Colorado mountains when I was younger, and remember how cold it can get. Back then I had an electric blanket that worked well to keep me warm at nigh but we were staying in a campground with electrical hook-ups and I don't think that we will have that option this time. Is there a way to safely heat the inside of a vehicle without actually installing the type of heaters seen in campers and without running the van's engine all night? Somebody mentioned emergency candles, but that has me worried about carbon dioxide poisoning.
Suggestions please.
Thanks in Advance.