dixonge
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Were you on Bondi Beach?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...dney-Australia-in-pictures.html?frame=3493672
That was from November, not today
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Were you on Bondi Beach?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...dney-Australia-in-pictures.html?frame=3493672
That was from November, not today
Thank you, I was aware of that. I was just trying to be funny. Silly me.
Now that looks like fun!Today I flew in a WW2 B-25 bomber
... I am helping him resurrect a 1991 Ford RV (30 foot job) that has been sitting for 5 years. This could be a long project.
Yep, long and potentially frustrating if moisture has invaded the RV structure, which it almost certainly has if it has been stored outside and not had the roof carefully maintained. Good luck.
Yes, it's been full of surprises so far (2 months). Everything is rusty, but the price was right.
Yep, long and potentially frustrating if moisture has invaded the RV structure, which it almost certainly has if it has been stored outside and not had the roof carefully maintained. Good luck.
It's tough to live in a motorhome or any RV in a real winter location. The 1" thick wall does not provide much insulation. The builder of my high-country home lived in a trailer while working on a home he was building after mine. One night when it dropped below 0F, he and his wife cried murder and fled to the lower elevation the next morning.
I guess if you have electric hookup plus a propane heater, it would help. The cost of heating can be huge though. I read the blog of a Canadian RV'er who decided to tough it out somewhere south of Calgary one winter. The propane bill to heat a class C was several hundred a month, as much as it cost to heat a home.
That's not bad at all. The Canadian RV'er I talked about built a skirt around the RV to help shield its bottom. It was perhaps colder there, because the outside propane tank often refused to gasify and she had no propane flow even though the tank was half-full.