Guinness44
Adventurer
Those campkitchens, that pull out of a truck and are fullservice, are very nice. Then the enclosed bathhouses, and powered hotshowers. Privacy shelters, etc.
The one thing we arent basic on is the truckfridge (Engle), and hopefully a future drawersystem.
Our basic kitchen: Packed in a materialhandling container. Oneburner stove, 2 pans, (coffee stainless, foodcooking easy to clean nonstick). Two cups, forks, plates, and paperplates for campfirecamps, dishsoap, few ods and ends.
The dryfoodpantry is a cooler that fits on top of this box. Set up wherever, when it rains heavy, MREs might have to do.
The basic bathroom: 1 Gallon waterjug, with a hole poked int the top is a great "shower", prewash with soap diluted in water. Using a blue paper shoptowel (new one daily, saves rins it water). Same jug rinses dishes, same principle w. the "dishcloth". Potty time, is Wacbagtime, or digging, depending on terrain/rules. No shelter needed (LowLock camping means pretty private spots).
Tha basic watertank: Lots of 1 G jugs (3per day, PLUS 4 to 6 extras, Plus one flat of 500 cc bottles stashed everywhere). You never know when you need to hand some out to a hiker/bicycle or motorist who has miscalculated their needs (happens way too often).
The basic bed: inside the truck, on top of more materialhandlingboxes (future drawersystem). On top of the "shop" (tools, parts, fluids, more H20 stashed, that usually stays put, unless...) IF something is needed, now we tear the bed apart (hence the drawersystemwish).
The basic camp: We hope to be on a 4WD trail, sometimes it can take a couple of hours to find that spur, to get us off enough to camp in that private spot. Finding a preused spot is always possible. The best one is on top of a slickrockslab, a rare luxury to find (with treading lightly). The one requirement to be in Low Lock before stopping does get broken, just depends on where were at.
Clothing, packed in duffletype bags. They travel on the bed (no cant see out back), and during camp are on the frontseats.
Less basic, we do carry the comfy campchairs, and awnings to attach to the roofrack when needed.
Any other basic ideas?
The one thing we arent basic on is the truckfridge (Engle), and hopefully a future drawersystem.
Our basic kitchen: Packed in a materialhandling container. Oneburner stove, 2 pans, (coffee stainless, foodcooking easy to clean nonstick). Two cups, forks, plates, and paperplates for campfirecamps, dishsoap, few ods and ends.
The dryfoodpantry is a cooler that fits on top of this box. Set up wherever, when it rains heavy, MREs might have to do.
The basic bathroom: 1 Gallon waterjug, with a hole poked int the top is a great "shower", prewash with soap diluted in water. Using a blue paper shoptowel (new one daily, saves rins it water). Same jug rinses dishes, same principle w. the "dishcloth". Potty time, is Wacbagtime, or digging, depending on terrain/rules. No shelter needed (LowLock camping means pretty private spots).
Tha basic watertank: Lots of 1 G jugs (3per day, PLUS 4 to 6 extras, Plus one flat of 500 cc bottles stashed everywhere). You never know when you need to hand some out to a hiker/bicycle or motorist who has miscalculated their needs (happens way too often).
The basic bed: inside the truck, on top of more materialhandlingboxes (future drawersystem). On top of the "shop" (tools, parts, fluids, more H20 stashed, that usually stays put, unless...) IF something is needed, now we tear the bed apart (hence the drawersystemwish).
The basic camp: We hope to be on a 4WD trail, sometimes it can take a couple of hours to find that spur, to get us off enough to camp in that private spot. Finding a preused spot is always possible. The best one is on top of a slickrockslab, a rare luxury to find (with treading lightly). The one requirement to be in Low Lock before stopping does get broken, just depends on where were at.
Clothing, packed in duffletype bags. They travel on the bed (no cant see out back), and during camp are on the frontseats.
Less basic, we do carry the comfy campchairs, and awnings to attach to the roofrack when needed.
Any other basic ideas?