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Meet the people who live full-time in RVs. Some say it has improved their marriages and made them happier, even if they're earning less.
What do you think? Can you see yourself ditching the American Dream and living a nomadic lifestyle?
www.1stChoiceBHL.com
1 million Americans live in RVs. Meet the āmodern nomads.ā
By Heather Long, Washington Post, November 12, 2018
When Robert and Jessica Meinhofer told friends they were moving into an RV in 2015, most thought they were crazy.
The questions poured in: How could they go from living in a 2,000-square-foot home to living in a 250-square-foot trailer? What would they do with their stuff? What would their children, ages 6 and 9, do for school? Was this a midlife crisis? The hardest people to convince were Jessicaās parents, who grew up in an impoverished Latino neighborhood in the Bronx and worked hard so their daughter could have a better life. They couldnāt understand why the couple wanted to live like migrant laborers.
The Meinhofers are doing this by choice, not financial desperation. They are part of a movement of people ditching āsticks and bricksā homes that have long embodied the American Dream and embracing a life of travel, minimal belongings and working when they want.
āWeāre a family of four redefining what the American Dream means. Itās happiness, not a four-bedroom house with a two-car garage,ā said Robert Meinhofer, who is 45.
The Meinhofers and a dozen others who spoke with The Washington Post about this modern nomadic lifestyle said living in 200 to 400 square feet has improved their marriages and made them happier, even if theyāre earning less. Thereās no official term for this lifestyle, but most refer to themselves as āfull-time RVers,ā ādigital nomadsā or āworkampers.ā
Most modern nomads need jobs to fund their travels. Jessica Meinhofer works remotely as a government contractor, simply logging in from the RV. Others pick up āgig workā cleaning campsites, harvesting on farms or in vineyards, or filling in as security guards. People learn about gigs by word of mouth, on Workamper News or Facebook groups like one for Workampers with more than 30,000 members. Big companies such as Amazon and J.C. Penney even have programs specifically recruiting RVers to help at warehouses during the peak holiday season.
A million Americans live full-time in RVs, according to the RV Industry Association. Some have to do it because they canāt afford other options, but many do it by choice. Last year was a record for RV sales, according to the data firm Statistical Surveys. More than 10.5 million households own at least one RV, a jump from 2005 when 7.5 million households had RVs, according to RVIA.
Interest in āRVingā--either full time or on weekends--appears to be picking up, especially among young couples. Half of new sales are going to Americans under 45, and purchases by people of color are rising, RVIA found in its 2016 surveys, a change from the 20th century, when white retirees dominated campsites.
Below, some families share their experience of life on the road.
Penni Brink (62) and Chip Litchfield (59) have a āWelcome to Margaritavilleā sign outside their RV and the kind of easygoing spirit that immediately draws you in. The couple met in the late 1980s when they were working in the same business complex in Vermont, but Chip was married to someone else at the time. Their paths crossed again a few years ago at a craft fair and as their relationship blossomed, Chip suggested they travel in an RV. Penni was apprehensive at first.
Current location: Tennessee.
Vehicle: 2004 Tiffin Phaeton (They bought it used for $67,000).
āI made it clear I needed a big fridge in the RV because I like to cook,ā Penni said. āAnd I needed more than a tiny little bathroom.ā
Chip took Penni to a used RV lot just to ācheck it outā in 2015, but they ended up buying a 395-square foot camper they call āDaisy.ā They say they love this lifestyle now and have no plans to return to a typical home. Penni is selling her condo in Montpelier because they donāt think theyāll need it anymore. They track how many states they have been to on a map on the side of their RV. The current tally is 25.
āOur goal is to be able to travel and work at the places we travel to so we can stay in areas long enough to get to know a place and see America,ā Chip said. āThere is so much work out there for us, and we donāt have to make a lot of money.ā
Penni hung a āless is moreā sign in the RV and has become an expert at cooking on a stove top thatās about a third the size of a typical range. She used to run a small business in Vermont making drapes, blinds and other home decor and still does some work for clients in the RV. She sets up a folding card table for her sewing machine and sends Chip outside to clean the vehicle so she can have more space.
As they travel, they often pick up jobs to earn money since they donāt want to tap their modest retirement savings, which they dipped into to buy the RV. Right now, they are working in the Amazon CamperForce program that hires about 700 people for warehouse jobs and pays their campsite fees. Itās hard labor--they often go to bed rubbing each otherās feet--but the money they earn from September to Dec. 23 is enough to allow them to take the winter and spring off. (Amazon founder and chief executive Jeffrey P. Bezos owns The Washington Post.)
āBeing able to travel in my 60s and see all the things I missed in my younger years is the best part of this lifestyle,ā Penni said.
Robert Meinhofer (45) and Jessica Meinhofer (40) have been living in their RV for three years and donāt have any plans to return to their old life in suburbia.
Current location: Georgia. (Last year they traveled from Maine to Florida for six months).
Vehicle: 2016 Forest River Grey Wolf 26DBH Travel Trailer. (They bought it for $22,000 and tow it behind a truck).
As they started having kids, Robert and Jessica wanted more time with them than a typical day job would allow. They watched a YouTube video of a family that traveled the country in an RV and thought, why not us?
āWe both had full-time jobs. We were doing the 9 to 5 grind. We had the house, but it just didnāt fit us quite right. We were just working, working working,ā Jessica said. āWe were longing for freedom.ā
When Robert was offered a job in Atlanta working for an airline, they didnāt think they had enough money to buy a āproper houseā for their two kids, their dog and their cats. So they decided to take the plunge on the RV lifestyle. Jessica convinced her company to let her work remotely so she could home-school their children and work in the RV anywhere in America. Robert works four days at the airline and then gets four days off, which he spends with his family in the RV.
Jessica warns itās not all fun on the road. āInstead of mowing the lawn, we do maintenance on the RV. Things donāt last as long as they do in a house. The level of chores is about the same,ā she said, adding that they have to go to the laundromat now. āBut it gives us the freedom to be by the beach one day, a mountain the next or a lake. Itās made all the difference for us.ā
The Meinhofers have met a lot of families with kids on the road, but they havenāt encountered many other Latinos. They think thereās a perception in some communities of color that doing this means you are destitute. They are trying to inspire others to join them with their YouTube channel, Exploring the Local Life, which has become so popular it is making them money.
Richard Booher (58) and Miranda Booher were debating doing the āsmall homeā lifestyle when a friend advised them, āyou donāt want a small home, you want an RV.ā They had never even been in an RV before, but they bought a Hitchhiker in 2016 that attaches to their pickup truck and took their family--five kids and a 10-year-old dog--on the road.
Current location: Tennessee.
Vehicle: 1999 NuWa Hitchhiker Premier (Bought for $10,000).
āItās been awesome,ā Richard said as he watched his 5-year-old son Teddy bike around the campsite waving at new neighbors. Later the kids, ranging from 2 to 10, went to the campsite pool and quickly made friends with other families.
The Boohers wanted to show their kids more of America and get closer as a family. Accumulating stuff stopped mattering to them. Instead, they wanted to accumulate experiences. Miranda teaches the kids and is a coach for a Christian organization called Mothers of Preschoolers (MOPS) that helps bring moms of young children together for support and fellowship. The Boohers get plugged into a church wherever they go and find lots of activities for the kids between church and the campsites. Teddy and Amy, 7, are eager to show off the Macarena dance skills they picked up at a recent kids party at a campsite.
Richard is working at with the Amazon CamperForce program for the second year. Heāll be at the warehouse from September to December. Itās very different from his career in IT, but the income allows the family to live this nomadic lifestyle. He earned $11.50 an hour at a fulfillment center in Murfreesboro, Tenn., which went to $15 an hour in November.
When the job ends on Christmas Eve, the family heads to Dade City, Fla., to be near old friends for a few weeks before figuring out their next steps. Earlier this year, Richard had a job offer to work at an Amazon return center in Kentucky, so they headed there for a few months.
āThe kids have so many friends everywhere we go,ā Richard said. āYou can definitely do this with kids.ā