One Year Anniversary of RV Life

Bridge View Park, St. Ignace, MI

On August 12th last year, we moved into Samwise the Brave to embark on a journey around the 50 states. Throughout this year, we’ve spent considerable time soaking in where we are and planning where to go next. The places we explored, the borders we crossed, and the long travel days we kept each other company with our thoughts and anxieties and ideas — we never imagined one year of life could be this fulfilling and this energizing.

During a recent drive, we discussed a piece in Medium that said the cure to burnout is experiencing “profound and utter awe.” The most compelling example is the perspective shift astronauts gain after seeing the earth from space and feeling a “universal connectedness” that transforms how they think about their lives. Having just left the jaw-dropping scenery of Niagara Falls and Toronto and finding ourselves perched above the great blue strait between Lake Huron and Lake Michigan on the Mackinac Bridge, we couldn’t help but breathe a collective breath of awe.

This sense of awe has fed us and fueled us this year. Every mountain, canyon, and roaring waterfall. Every sunset, skyline, and capitol dome. Every week had something in store that amazed and renewed us. String 52 of those weeks together, and you get the opposite of burnout — a year of burnin.

Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada
Jockey’s Ridge, Outer Banks, NC (July 4, 2019)

In place of complacency, we now know the empowering feeling of taking deliberate steps toward goals we set ourselves. In place of spectating others or wishing to have done something, we now push each other to do it and not feel shame if it turns out it’s not something we enjoy doing. In place of seeking external validation, we try to keep the fire of what truly matters lit on the inside.

There are so many ways full-time RVing has strengthened us as people, as a married couple, and as citizens of this country. Looking forward to the next chapter of our life in Denver after we wrap up our journey next month, we’re grateful and excited to carry the fire into the future!

Seven Points Campground on Percy Priest Lake, TN

Preferred RV Resort Review: Camping in Pahrump, NV

We really enjoyed our stay at the Preferred RV Resort! Here’s a look at why:

Camp NamePreferred RV Resort
LocationPahrump, NV
Club (GS, PA, KOA)Passport America (2 weeks), Good Sam
Price$475/month normal rate; PA $20/night
Site TypeLarge gravel back-in, full hookups, space
for car, mature tree
BathroomsSeparate mens/womens, shower+
toilet stalls
AmenitiesHeated indoor/outdoor pool with
activities, indoor hot tub, common
kitchen, entertainment room, pool,
wood shop, sewing room, stained
glass workshop, small fitness room
Grounds: playground, horseshoes,
cactus garden, koi ponds
Wi-Fi QualityMedium speeds download/upload,
enough to stream
Verizon Coverage 2-3 bars LTE, medium speeds
TVAntenna, Las Vegas channels
Local AttractionsPahrump Winery, Johnny’s (diner),
Casinos Red Rock Canyon (45min),
Las Vegas (1hr)
Bottom LineBest value RV camp we’ve stayed at!

Tell Us Tigers: Sharing our Story with the Princeton Community

Our alma mater invited us to share our story as part of their “Tell Us Tigers” series. We were honored to be able to take part and hope that our story might inspire others to chase their dreams. The post can be viewed on Princeton’s official Instagram or Facebook, and the content is included below.

Cathedral Rock, Sedona, AZ

When Yi invited me to watch the X-Men trilogy in the theater of Colonial Club in 2011, we had no idea that one day we’d be newlyweds traveling the country in a Winnebago RV. But a simple common interest led to more movie nights, shared meals and conversations that saw the sun rise.

A year later, we took our first road trip to Mt. Rushmore to commemorate Yi’s naturalization and our anniversary. On that trip and each after, we fell in love with each other and the road, and our road trip romance came full circle when I proposed at Colonial during Reunions 2015 and we celebrated our wedding at Mt. Rushmore in 2017.

By then, we’d already started researching RVs and full-time travel, but most days it felt like a pipe dream. We’d followed traditional paths, me through law school and Yi through business school, and attained the success and stability our parents worked so hard for after migrating to the States from Puerto Rico and China. Moving into an RV meant big changes — downsizing, leaving my law firm, setting up a remote office and more — but we were committed to turning our ‘one day’ into ‘day one.’

In September, on day 29, we celebrated our first wedding anniversary as full-time RVers. We hit day 100 last week. This photo was taken on day 91, hiking the Baldwin Trail in Sedona, with Cathedral Rock in the background. In these months, we have traveled to 19 states and 11 national parks (bringing us to 45 and 20 total). Our goal? Visit all 50 states and as many national parks as possible to witness history across their diverse cultures and landscapes.

We call ourselves @rvleaguers and nomad nerds because Princeton taught us that learning doesn’t stop once you walk out of FitzRandolph Gate — it’s a lifelong journey. On the road, we challenge ourselves to explore the unfamiliar and truly taste freedom. We have a marriage founded at the best damn place of all (Princeton!), unfolded over thousands of miles and growing every day. The road can be long and unpredictable, but RV life has shown us that if we face it together with love and curiosity, there’s no limit to what we can do.

Our Road Trip Planning Basics (with itinerary template)

In the summer of 2012, Yi and I planned our first road trip together from New York City to Mt. Rushmore. Neither of us had ever planned or taken a road trip of this magnitude (3400+ miles roundtrip), so like any member of modern society, I turned to the all-powerful Google. Using a basic Google Sheet, I plotted out our route with the basic details laid out for each day: date, day, origin, destination, travel time, lodging, and a goal. Looking back at the spreadsheet now, I’m pleasantly surprised at how functional – though sloppy – it was for an initial effort.

We made it!

Of course, we couldn’t iron out all the details from the outset. There were a lot of blank spaces under “lodging,” and on day one we decided to drive considerably farther than planned (to Cedar Point in Ohio – no regrets). But that’s part of the magic of road trips; you have the flexibility to shift things around spontaneously depending on where the road takes you on any given day. That’s also why it’s good to have a plan laid out to provide a framework and make sure you’re able to reach your “must see” destinations during the time allotted for your journey.

Cedar Point: The Roller Coaster Capital of the World, a worthy addition to any itinerary

Over the years, we’ve used this same basic template, with some modifications, to plan road trips ranging from a few days (Turbo Northeast Loop!) to several weeks, all over the United States, as well as in Australia and New Zealand. I’m not going to say this is the absolute “how to” template, but it has certainly worked for us. Right now, there are at least some people who, like us in 2012, are thinking of going on their first over the road adventure and wondering where to start. In the hopes that this can be of value, I’ve put together a simple template with a sample itinerary excerpted from our most recent travels. Click Here to View/Copy

Our Jucy “Campa” at the Wanaka, New Zealand campground (August 2016) 

Start with the basic framework of your trip and ask some initial questions:

1. How much time do you have for your trip?
2. What is the farthest place you can reach in that time frame?
3. Where can you visit along the way?
4. If taking a round trip, is there a different route you can take back to see new sights?

Use another familiar tool, Google Maps, to plot out potential routes. You can then fill in the other details from there. You can even fill in details as you go. Planning and taking a successful road trip requires effort, especially for longer itineraries, but I promise that it is much simpler than it might seem and totally worth it!

Happy Trails,

Dan