All your pictures and stories are great.
For most of us, a week long trip is about all we can muster due to our other obligations and commitments that keep us grounded. A week really isn't that long- I could probably wear the same underwear for a week. We pack all the food and supplies we need before we leave and don't need to restock. Most of us can probably even get away without showering for a week. But on your extended journey, how have you handled these types of tasks? Laundry? What kind of food are you eating? How often do you restock? When you restock, what are you restocking? How often do you have a camp fire?
I think a lot of people may find these "less sexy" details interesting.
Great questions. I was thinking about writing a post to address that so might as well do some of that now.
Hygiene:
For water, I started off with the 12 gallon water tank in the bed that has a pump to a faucet in the back. I also had a propane heater so I could heat the water for a shower head. So at the beginning, I would use the water heater with the shower or swim in any of the vast fresh clean water options (typically very cold, I think the coldest that I checked with a thermometer was 43 degrees). But I learned that campgrounds/rv sites often sell showers for a few dollars which makes it so easy. And whats better after a long day of outdoor activity? Hot springs or hot tubs. Both come with shower facilities. And aquatic centers offer showers, a swimming pool and hot tubs for a minimal fee ($4-6 for a day pass). I got rid of the propane heater on the truck since it was more hassle than it was worth although it worked great. I also added another 7 gallons of water capacity with a 6" PVC tube on top of the truck. The shower can tap from either tank and during the summer, the PVC would get warm enough on a warm day. And for daily cleanliness, wet wipes work great.
There are plenty of restrooms everywhere you go, so that makes it easy sometimes instead of digging holes.
Places that may have showers: Gym, Climbing Gym, Aquatic Center, Campgrounds, Public Parks, Hot Springs, Trucker gas stations (last resort as they are typically expensive, I've seen $8-14 which is just silly).
Water:
Filling up the water has been pretty easy. Most gas stations that cater to truckers or RV's will have potable water. and some parks as well. I've also used this site to find them.
http://www.sanidumps.com/sanidumps_usa.php?id=64 I don't have a gauge on the 12 gallon tank, but I know when its starting to get low, and I always have the extra stuff on the roof if that gets low. The filler tube is smaller than it could be so you have to turn the water down when filling. That'll be addressed on the next rig.
Gas:
I still have not had to change out my full grill size propane tank! Its used daily for food prep and still going strong. I have a small backpacking stove for when it runs out, I just want to see how long it'll last. I went with a full size so it'd be easy for swapping out at any store along the way vs finding a place that recharges them but I've seen a lot of gas stations and stores that do fill tanks. I shut it off as I am finished cooking so it clears the line until I need to use it the next time.
Campfires:
They are fun to sit around and BS, but when you're alone... its just a hassle unless you are using it for cooking. I have only had two campfires this whole trip, both were with other people. I did bring a cast iron pan for cooking on the fire but I just use it on the stove.
Laundry:
I originally did most laundry with the Scrubba:
http://amzn.to/2ligjMK but I also had fresh glacier water and no humidity for hanging stuff to dry. It works well and is easy, but I ended up being close to cities or driving through so it just ends up being easier to do it at a laundromat. And then I can also do everything at once along with bedding. Now that I'm in the PNW, dry stuff gets slightly wet from the humidity in the air, so it would not work well at all.
Food:
Breakfast is usually oatmeal or eggs. I have a good sized rubbermaid bin that holds all dry goods and is overstocked for how often I swing by the store. I have a fridge and freezer which makes food storage much easier, but I have gravitated away from most meat just because it still takes time to cook it, store it so it doesn't leak when thawing, and clean everything properly during and after. I will have it occasionally (currently have some ground kangaroo since it was interesting and cheaper than beef). But tuna, canned chicken, fried chicken from the store, veggies coupled with pasta, rice, quinoa are the usual. I dont like fish (other than canned tuna that I can mask the taste with condiments) so I wasn't able to catch my own food.
Restocking:
Gas is always what I run out of first, so when I'm there, I'll get basic food while I'm there and do laundry or shower.
It has been much easier than I expected. I am actually trying to avoid buying some stuff from the store so I am forced to clean out the bin of dry food since I have stuff that I bought long ago.
And as far as camp sites, I've yet to pay for a site. Sometimes that does mean driving further to get to a legit campsite, or... sleeping in a Walmart parking lot. During the summer, when I would've liked to get a camp site, it was at popular national parks where they were already full and were charging $25+ per night for a camp spot. But there is usually something near. Thats also part of the reason I was going to avoid most of the California coast... it is not friendly for camping; or traffic, or being relaxed.
What I'll do differently next time:
Second water tank will have a 12v heater element for easy and reliable heating.
Aux battery for charging stuff other than using the 12v from main and only battery
More lighting for general camp lighting and better cooking light
If the next rig is a pickup, ideally it would have a tray and canopy but if a regular bed and cap, the cap will have a high top.
RTT's are cool, but being able to sleep in the vehicle without setting anything up and just looking like a parked car is very nice... its not as practical with multiple people, but certainly doable if you can use the entire width of the vehicle.