Our Camper Remodel

Are you itching to jump into a camper remodel, but need a little kick in the butt encouragement?! I’m here to do just that. Hey there, fellow adventurers! If you’re anything like us, you know that hitting the road with a travel trailer in tow is an epic adventure. But let’s face it, sometimes those factory-standard interiors feel like you are taking a trip back in time. Really, why do even new ones, often feel so dark and dated?

But let me tell you, there is a lighter and brighter camper life waiting for you! Settle in and I’ll give you the run down of our own camper remodeling journey.

Our “Needy” Camper

We’ve been proud owners of a trusty camper since it was delivered from the factory and we’ve enjoyed many memorable road trips across the country with her while chasing our dreams of visiting all 50 States . But over the course of the years, our kids naturally grew, we became all too familiar with a few pain points in packing the 4 of us in it and I hate to admit, but I wasn’t the best at keeping up with the routine and proactive maintenance…all these led us to both needing and wanting to make some changes and updates to our camper.

We began noticing a growing soft spot in the floor right inside the entry door, then leaks on the front wall. I know that that these problems would continue to grow and cause further damage to our tiny home on wheels the longer we put off addressing them. So in the fall of 2022 a camper renovation project shot to the top of my priority list.

Planning Stage

Once my handy dad confirmed his recruitment to my project 😁, the planning stage began. First, I defined the scope of work and priorities;

1) Necessary repairs: damaged floor and walls

2) Design and layout: Desirable modifications to create more floor space, seating, clothing more accessible, shoe storage

3) Cosmetic updates: lighten, brighten and make the space feel more homey. Including paint, update fixtures and accessories, cover upholstery, new bedding, luxury vinyl flooring

I spent countless researching materials for the must do repair projects including appropriate flooring and wall repairs. I also did a lot of research in how to address the root cause…sealing up all the potential points of water entry. Then the fun part was looking into other camper remodels for design and style inspiration.


Necessary Repairs

The repair process started from the outside and worked in. The first step was to address the source of the leaks. That meant caulking and sealing all the gaps with non leveling lap sealant on the vertical surfaces. On the roof, I used self leveling sealant and then opted to use a roof sealant tape as an added precaution.

After the outside was sealed, we began demo of the inside. The first thing to go was the bed and frame at the front. This allowed us to pull back the linoleum flooring and the front wall to assess the extent of the water damage. We ended up tearing up most of the floor, then proceeded to replace or reinforce floor joists as needed before putting in new insulation and OSB.

Once the new subfloor was in place, we installed luxury vinyl plank for its durability and aesthetics. The front wall was replaced with a bead-board look paneling.


Design and Layout

Once the necessary repairs were addressed, I set out to design a space that would improve our experience inside by addressing some of our pain points.

One of the best decisions we made was to reconfigure the front bed to better suit our desire for more functional space. The original floor plan had a built in queen bed frame which lifted up for storage beneath. Under the bed was the only place we really had to store clothing and overflow pantry items while traveling. However it was quite inconvenient and awkward to retrieve items from there. The bed also served as our only seating besides the tiny dinette. However, it fell short for comfort or practicality in that regard. Another area that our camper was not meeting our needs in was floor space. Especially as our kids grew into larger bodies, it became more cramped and uncomfortable trying to function inside the tiny space.

By making this one change in removing the bed we successfully addressed three of our biggest pain points. In place of the bed, we installed 2 benches that pull together to form a full size bed. Laundry baskets fit under the bench and slide out for each access to clothing. We almost doubled our floor space with the addition of foot room between the benches. There is now comfortable seating for 4 in addition to the dinette. We can even slide the dinette table over to the front seating area for a more roomy dinner setting. Plus we were able to build in a shoe rack on the end of one bench to eliminate the pile of shoes that forever lived on the floor in front of the door!

I happened to find these benches at Aldi. They were outdoor loungers, made of wood and included cushions. With just a few modifications, they fit perfectly into the space.


Cosmetic Updates

To lighten and brighten the space, I opted for a modern farmhouse aesthetic with black fixtures, white and grey textiles and a few accents pops of green

Choosing the right materials was crucial to the success of the project.

For all of the interior, I wanted durable, easy-to-clean surfaces that could withstand the wear and tear of an adventurous family of four while still looking great. I needed a paint that would adhere to multiple surface types. After much research, I opted for Sherman Williams Extreme Bond Primer and ProClassic interior acrylic paint. (Personal tip: Be sure to ask at the counter if your employer is in their system as a discount partner. We saved 50% through my husband’s employer discount).

To achieve a quality finish, I opted to purchase and take on a paint sprayer. I was quite intimidated with it to get started. So I did a practice run in my unfinished basement where the quality didn’t matter. It didn’t take long to get the hang of it. I do recommend purchasing a different spray tip than the one that comes with the machine in order to achieve a good looking finish in the confines of small spaces like cabinets.

When it came time to take on the painting portion of the project, I first sanded all surfaces and wiped them clean with water. I masked the interior like crazy to protect everything that I didn’t want painted. We removed the benches, all cabinet doors and bathroom door to paint them outside. Personal tip: Be sure to cover your hair when spraying inside the unit. It will be hard not to collect overspray and brush against wet walls in the tiny space. I simply had my hair in a pony tail and let me tell you I had a MESS. Paint and primer that did not come out for weeks!

Once painting was complete and the paint set up, we reinstalled the doors with new black hardware. I updated the faucet to a modern black farmhouse style. I covered the dated brown dinette cushions with slip covers from Amazon. I updated all the window treatments to crisp white curtains hung on easy to remove rods. Once everything was white, I craved a balance of some area of interest. So I hung a vinyl stick on wall paper as an easy clean back splash.

One of the most rewarding aspects of our remodel was putting it all together with little finishing touches that truly made the space feel brand new (yet comfortably familiar).

Completion and Final Touches

After weeks of hard work and late nights, our camper remodel was finally complete – and let me tell you, the transformation was amazing! We completed it just in time to take it to cross country camp in the summer of 2023. I can’t wait to take our fresh camper on many for adventure this year and in the years to come. It was so worth the efforts we put into the camper remodel!

If you’re thinking about embarking on your own camper remodel adventure, my advice is simple: go for it! With a little creativity, a lot of patience, and a healthy dose of elbow grease, you can transform your camper into a space that’s uniquely yours – and create memories that will last a lifetime. Happy travels!

If you are intersted in details of the items I used in our camper remodel, check out this Amazon list.

Our Family Goal To Visit All 50 States

Our Family Goal To Visit All 50 (fifty) States. #50statesgoal #50statesbucketlist #explorecaptureshare

Do you dream to visit all 50 of the United States? Have you taken that dream and turned it into a stated goal with activity and plans to realize it?

I think I’ve always casually dreamed of visiting 50 states. It was a thought and idea that lived in the back of my mind for as long as I can remember. But I guess I didn’t really see it as realistic. I’m not quite sure why. It just seemed that not many people I know have, nor did they seem to have a desire to. I suppose it seemed like something out of the norm for whatever reason.

But one day that changed. One specific and memorable day, something clicked inside of me and that idea changed from a dream, into a goal. A goal that I was going to put actions behind to accomplish. But it wasn’t a goal to visit all 50 states myself. It was a goal to show my kids all 50 states before they leave the nest.

The Origins of My 50 States Dream

The most influential people in developing my love for travel where my grandparents. They were always traveling. And as a child, I frequently traveled with them. With a son in the navy, they traveled to see him and his family every year, wherever they were….Hawaii, Italy, Germany, etc. When my uncle retired from the Navy, he settled in California. Which meant every year my grandparents would drive across country to see him. On many occasions my parents would fly me out to meet them in Cali while they were visiting. But one year, my parents flew me out to CA on a one way ticket. Because I then drove back to Michigan with Grandma and Grandpa.

On this road trip, I remember visiting the Great Salt Flats, Mt Rushmore, Wall Drug and more. I always knew that I wanted to do that trip again, especially when I had kids. I wanted to pass on that experience to my own children. Before I ever stated the 50 states goal, the dream I had and would share with many was “I want to drive across country with my kids”.

The Day The Goal Was Set

Despite my grandparent’s many travels, they never visited all 50 states together. They visited 49 together before my grandfather passed away in 2006. I never even realized that accomplishment until my grandmother casually mentioned a few years ago, “You know I’ve been to every state but North Dakota”. That instantly lead to my inquiry of “why?”. How could that be? How could they have gotten so close to 50, but not achieve it? Simply because it was never a goal that they set. Their 70+ years of traveling together just happened to take them to 49.

With this information, I set out to get my 90 year old grandma to North Dakota. So on August 21, 2013, my mom, grandma, my two kids and I arrived in Fargo, North Dakota for Grandma to visit her 50th state.

Bonanzaville USA, Fargo North Dakota. 
visit 50 states goal
Grandma Visits Her 50th State – North Dakota

It was this day that I firmly decided I would do the same. But I was not going to wait for it to just happen, nor wait until I was 90. I was going to actively put plans in motion to make it happen. But more than that, I decided I want to get my kids to all 50 states before they are grown and leave home.

It was on that day, the goal was officially set.

Progressing Towards Our Goal

We are not a full time travel family. Rather, we are an every chance we get travel family. We are a fairly typical, mid class crew. My husband and I both work full time. The kids go to public school and are fairly active in sports and other activities.

But we make use of every chance we can make to get away. Which is mostly during the late summer (after little league ball is complete), spring break, winter break and long weekends.

I share this specifically to illustrate that you don’t have to be a full time travel family to set and achieve a goal to visit the 50 states.

Less than five years from setting the goal, our kids visited their 48th state this past summer. Only Hawaii and Alaska remain, which we have plans to finish by 2020. Our progress has come through several road trips.

Pre-Goal States

Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota, Illinois, Indiana

Before the goal was ever set, our kids had checked a few states off their list between our annual drives to Florida, Midwest adventures and that trip to North Dakota.

Cross Country Road Trip – Michigan to California

Our family goal to visit 50 states - San Fransisco CA
Overlooking San Fransisco – California

Iowa, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska

In 2015, we purchased our little 17 foot camper and hit the road for our first summer road trip. We spent just over a week traveling a northern states route to California. Then spent a week with my aunt and uncle at their home just south of San Fransisco. And took about a week to drive a more southern route home to check off additional states.

North East Road Trip

Our Family Goal to visit 50 states
Boston Light, Boston MA
Boston Light – Massachusetts

Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland

The summer of 2016 included a 2-week road trip to explore the North East. From Michigan to Maine, down the Atlantic coast to Maryland and back home.

Impromptu Winter Road Trip

Our Family Goal To Visit 50 States.  Vicksburg, Mississippi
Vicksburg National Military Park – Mississippi

Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana

I occurred to me late in December of 2016 that the kids would have an entire week off of school following New Year. I then threw together a last minute, week long adventure to check a couple new states off the list.

Southwest Road Trip

Our family goal to visit 50 states Grand Canyon - Arizona
Grand Canyon – Arizona

Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Kansas

We continued our annual 2 week road trip tradition in 2017 by heading southwest. We drove from Michigan to Arizona, stayed with family friends near Tucson for a few days before heading up to the Grand Canyon and then made our way back home.

The Virginias and Carolinas Road Trip

Our family goal to visit 50 States
North Carolina
The Lost Colony performance – North Carolina

West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina

Summer 2018 was the road trip that achieved our 48th state. Another 2 week trip to cover the last 4 of the 48. On July 29th, 2018, we pulled over to the side of the road to take this picture to commemorate these two kids visiting all 48 of the continuous states.

Our family goal to visit 50 states.  State 48 - South Carolina
South Carolina – Their 48th state visited

The Final Two

So as of this writing, only two of the fifty states remain to check off our list. It is with specific intent that we will visit Hawaii next. This is because thanks to that uncle in the Navy and grandparents that often took me along, I’ve already been to Hawaii. Therefore, Alaska will be last (we anticipate a cruise in 2020) so that the kids and I can all accomplish our 50th state at the same time.

The poor husband is another story. He missed out on a few states due to work. I mention this specifically as encouragement to those who may not have a spouse or a partner present at all or have one unable to travel as much as the rest of the family. I’ve done trips solo with the kids, or with help from my mother or grandmother when the kids were very young. If you desire to visit all fifty states, then I encourage you to problem solve, trouble shoot, budget the money, budget the time, set the goal and make the plans. The experience has been incredible.

What’s Next?

Our family goal to visit 50 states.  Goal to visit every MLB Stadium
Kansas City Royals
Royals Fans For The Day at Kauffman Stadium – Missouri

This whole adventure has been so much fun. I can’t even tell you how rewarding it has been. And as we started seeing the finish of the fifty within sight, it’s honestly made me quite sad. Because I have so very much loved this journey. I love showing my kids this big and beautiful country that we call home. There is so much new and different everywhere we have been. So much beautiy to take in, so much history to absorb, so much culture to experience…so very much to see, do, learn and explore.

I don’t want our adventures to slow down or end. So I asked my son, what’s next? What do you think we should set as our next goal? His reply?…he would like to visit every Major League Baseball Stadium. With a smile, I said, “then let’s get started. I can’t promise I will finish that one with you. Sounds like a good one for you to continue into adulthood. But I will commit to getting you started”. And we have got him off to a good start with six ballparks visited to date.

How About You?

I hope you have found our own story one of encouragement to set a goal to visit fifty states. Or perhaps you find it as one that you can relate to as you work toward a goal of fifty yourself.

Are you in? Have you set the goal? How many states have you visited?

Please share your own stories in the comments below.

I’d love to hear them.

Our Family Goal To Visit All 50 (fifty) States.  
#50statesgoal
#50statesbucketlist
#explorecaptureshare

My 6 Steps To Winterizing Plumbing of Our Camper

We typically spend quite a lot of time in The Camper every year, so it’s a little sad when the temperatures start to get quite chilly and we find it time to pack her up to hibernate for the winter following our halloween/harvest camping traditions.

The first year after purchase of our trailer, the dealer winterized it for free.  But the following year we faced the decision of paying for it to be done or doing it ourselves.  I spent a decade wrenching on cars, pulling them apart and putting them back together.  But for whatever reason, I still didn’t know if I could…or maybe it was more so that I didn’t really have the desire to take on this winterization project.

After mentioning to a friend who had an RV, he laughed at the dilemma I was creating in my head of it and assured me that it was not that hard at all and I could do it my self for the price of one antifreeze bottle.

Being the cheap soul that I am, I took the leap and committed to learn to do it myself.  And Oh My Goodness….so easy!!  It literally takes me more time to sweep, wipe and clean out the interior of all our live-in remnants than it does to do these 6 simple steps.

Of course every unit will vary somewhat.  I share with you the general steps of what works for mine, which will carry over in many regards to others.  It’s notable that all our waste tanks were already drained immediately following our last night of camping.

Supplies and tools required:

1 bottle RV & Marine Antifreeze

1 1/16 socket and wrench

Phillips driver

Rubber hose (with treaded adaptor to fit RV)

Step 1:

Uncap all the low point drains.  

(My unit has 5)

Allow all water to drain

Replace caps.

Step 2:

Open hot water maintenance panel on the exterior side wall of the unit.

Within here, open pressure relief valve on top.

Use socket to remove anode at bottom and inspect.

If any water is present, allow to drain.

Close relieve valve.

Replace anode (with existing or new depending on condition).

Close panel.

Step 3:

From inside the camper, turn water valves to bypass the heater:

Close the hot valve on the plumbing exiting the heater.

Close the cold valve on the plumbing entering the heater.

Open the valve on the bypass line that runs between the hot and cold lines.

Step 4

Open access to the water pump. (Mine requires removal of a phillips screw)

Use the pig tail line to draw antifreeze into the system.  The line proved in my unit is too short to reach the antifreeze, therefore I use an additional length of hose threaded on to extend the factor provided one.

One end of hose should be connected to the system and the other in the bottle of antifreeze.

Open valve to to allow connection to the water system.

Step 5:

Turn on pump.

Turn on each faucet, one at a time, including hot and cold, until the pink of the antifreeze runs flows through.

Don’t forget, shower head and toilet.

Step 6:

Turn off pump

Turn off faucets

Pour remaining antifreeze in equal parts down all drains

Wipe up excess from sink and tub

After that is complete, we disconnect the battery and store it inside for winter.

Meet “The Camper”

When I was about eight years old, I boarded a plane in Detroit and flew across the country by myself to San Jose, California where I was received by my aunt and uncle who lived there and my grandparents who were visiting there (they lived back in Michigan too).  After about a week of visiting with my California cousins, I loaded into my Grandma and Grandpa’s car to begin the long DRIVE home.

At the time, I thought it was kind of fun yet I don’t think that I truly valued the experience for what it was.  I didn’t realize at the time, what it was planting inside of me, the bug that it was feeding.

I remember walking on the salt flats in Utah, spotting and counting antelope, wondering around Wall Drug, and staring in amazement of how large those presidents heads were at Mount Rushmore.

Through the years, I’ve always held on to those memories, but I wanted more.  I wanted to see more.  I wanted to do it again as an adult.  But I didn’t just want to do it myself, I wanted my kids to do the same as me.  I wanted them to experience a drive across this beautiful country.  But I didn’t want to stop and haul kids, food, clothes and more in and out of hotel rooms.  I dreamed of loading it all up in a pull behind camper where we would have our own little traveling home.

So in 2014, I finally decided to make the dream a reality and began shopping for a camper.  What I wanted was something as small as possible that had everything we needed including designated beds for everyone without converting a dinette or such.  As I dove further into my search, I furthermore decided that I wanted hard sides, with no popups, no foldouts, and no slide outs.  Just a compact self contained box.

And what we got was just that.  A 17 foot bunk house unit.  It has a queen bed, two bunks, a table for 4* (One child and one adult per side with a little overhang), dorm size refrigerator, sink, 2 burner stove, microwave, bathroom with tub and shower.  And the dinette does convert to a bonus bed (we’ve never used it as such)  It is a tiny space and we get under each other’s feet, but I love it!  We have everything we need (and more) loaded up and at our disposal on our adventures.  I absolutely love being able to jump into it when we make a pit stop on long road trips to use the bathroom (I’m kind of a germaphobe) or make a quick lunch.

Unfortunately we’ve never given this trailer a name, we just always refer to it as “The Camper”.  She’s been with us on road trips along the coasts of Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, and Lake Erie.  Over the the Mackinaw, Golden Gate and Brooklyn bridges.  She’s been from Michigan to Washington and down the Pacific coast to California.  She’s been with us up and down the Atlantic coast from Maine to Georgia.  And she’s been to the Grand Canyon and back.

Check out just a few of the places she’s rested across this country:

Georgia
Virginia
Texas
Missuri
New Mexico
New York
Rhode Island
Philadelphia, Pensilvania
New Jersey
Minnesota
Oregon
Nevada
South Dakota
California
Utah Canyons