RV Lifestyle RV Podcast
Episode 121: Must visit ideas for Your 2017 RV Travel Bucket List
It’s a New Year and RVers have made their bucket lists and are ready to take on 2017. And in this episode of the podcast. We hear from lots of our fellow RV travelers who share what’s on their bucket list for this year. And in the process, they offer all of us plenty of ideas for places and events that wemay not have been aware of.
Plus tech tips, your questions and much more.
Click the player below to Listen Now or scroll down through the show note details. When you see a time code hyperlink, you can click it to jump directly to that segment of the podcast.
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Shownotes for Episode 121 of the Roadtreking RV Lifestyle Podcast
JENNIFER'S TIP OF THE WEEK
There are lots of ways to use a Roadtrek besides camping and boondocking. [spp-timestamp time="7:18"]
You can driveway camp at the homes of friends and relatives, use it to stay in the parking lot of a hospital, use it as a moving van or as a second vehicle for errands around town.
Meanwhile…
We have follow up report from Steve Dodd, a Roadtreker we met and interviewed last summer in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Steve shares a most unusual second use for his Roadtrek…. As Santa’s delivery van. He gives us this update on how it worked out for him this past Christmastime.
Be sure to send me your tips and suggestions for the RV lifestyle. You can use the “Leave Voicemail” link at Roadtreking.com. Just click it and then use the built-in microphone on your computer or mobile device to record a message to me. You can do it over as many times as you want, until you are satisfied. And then you just click a button and it comes right to my email inbox.
I love hearing from you!
Jennifer's tip of the week is brought to you by RadPower Bikes , an electric bike manufacturer offering direct to consumer pricing on powerful premium electric bikes.
LISTENER QUESTIONS OF THE WEEK:
A listener named Donna put her RV under cover and in storage. When she checked it the other day, the carbon monoxide alarm was chirping. She wonders what’s wrong…[spp-timestamp time="14:24"]
Carbon monoxide detectors and alarms are designed to alert you to unsafe levels of carbon monoxide. They do this by making noise and flashing lights. However, they also make noise and flash lights under other conditions. The noise that they make has been described as beeping, chirping, and even squeaking. Most detectors will make two sounds: a “beep” and a much shorter “chirp”. The beeping noise is used to alert you to unsafe CO levels. It is usually in the form of 4 beeps, a pause, then 4 more beeps. This pattern is repeated continuously until the CO level drops or until you press the “mute” button.
On the other hand, the chirping sound is used to report some problem with the detector. It is not as critical as the beeping alarm, but it should be addressed. The chirping is telling you that the detector may not be functioning or may fail soon. It may be reporting a low battery, an internal error, a unit malfunction, or the end of the internal sensors useful life.
If you do not have it plugged in, your batteries will drain down.
If the CO detector and/or the smoke alarms notice low batteries, they will beep to warn you the batteries are low. That is most likely what is happening.
My gut feeling is that your C0 detector is probably fine; but your batteries might need looking at and or replacing if they been drained down too often.
Sponsoring this part of the podcast is Van City RV in St. Louis, and their Partner Dealerships Creston RV in Kalispell, Montana, and Wagon Trail RV in Las Vegas. Bringing You the largest
INTERVIEW OF THE WEEK – Bucket Lists for 2017
Jennifer and I have a bunch of trips on our 2017 bucket list, too. We’ve shared many on the blog (see https://rvlifestyle.com/2017-schedule-roadtreking-gatherings/).
Mike and Jen’s big trips include:
January 20-22: January Freezeout, Tahquamenon State Park, Michigan
February 24-27,