2022 campgrounds

Another interesting summary of 2022 — the places we stayed during the year. A much longer post than 2021, which you might also want to revisit.

For each location, I’ll include a link to the corresponding blog post, so you can click through to see a lot more information, and a picture of our site. Enjoy!

You can also see all of the campground-related blog posts via the campsite category, with the earliest posts at the top, or the latest posts at the top.

Black Rock RV Village in Salome, Arizona:

Campsite

Xscapers Bash at Lake Havasu Rodeo grounds in Arizona:

Our coach

Leaf Verde RV Resort in Buckeye, Arizona:

Campsite

Catalina Spa and RV Resort in Desert Hot Springs, California:

Our campsite

Orangeland RV Park in Orange, California:

Our site

Ocean Mesa RV Resort near Santa Barbara, California:

Our site

Lakeview campground in the Rancho Jurupa Regional Park in California:

Site

Thousand Trails Palm Springs RV Resort in Palm Desert, California:

Our site

Buckeye Desert Backyard in Buckeye, Arizona:

Coach at Buckeye Desert Backyard

Picacho/Tucson NW KOA Journey in Picacho, Arizona:

Our site

FMCA “Sunsets + Saguaros” annual convention in Tucson, Arizona; pre-convention site:

RV

FMCA site:

Our site

Thousand Trails Verde Valley RV & Camping Resort in Cottonwood, Arizona:

Our site

Grand Canyon Railway RV Park in Williams, Arizona:

Our site

Lake Mead RV Village in Boulder City, Nevada:

Site

Young’s RV Park in Caliente, Nevada:

Our site

The Riverside Ranch in Hatch, Utah:

Our site

Thousand Lakes RV Park in Torrey, Utah:

Our site

Green River KOA Journey in Green River, Utah:

Our site

Monument Valley KOA Journey in Monument Valley, Utah:

Our site

Ancient Cedars Mesa Verde RV Park in Mancos, Colorado:

Our site

Montrose / Black Canyon NP KOA Journey in Montrose, Colorado:

Our site

Vernal / Dinosaurland KOA Holiday in Vernal, Utah:

Our site

Tiffin rally at the Sweetwater Events Center in Rock Springs, Wyoming:

Our site

Mountain Valley RV Resort in Heber City, Utah:

Our site

Village of Trees RV Resort in Declo, Idaho:

Our site

Ambassador RV Resort in Caldwell, Idaho:

Our site

Fish House Inn & RV Park in Dayville, Oregon:

Our site

Thousand Trails Bend-Sunriver RV Campground in Bend, Oregon:

Our site

Gill’s Landing RV Park in Lebanon, Oregon:

Our site

LL Stub Stewart State Park in Buxton, Oregon:

Our site

Mt Hood RV & Camping Resort in Welches, Oregon:

Our site

Alder Lake Park Rocky Point Campground in Eatonville, Washington:

Our site

Mom’s house near Shelton, Washington:

Coach and truck at Mom's place

Concrete / Grandy Creek KOA Holiday in Concrete, Washington:

Our site

Brookhollow RV Park in Kelso, Washington:

Our site

Plymouth Park Campground in Plymouth, Washington:

Our site

Gilmore West Campground in Farragut State Park in Athol, Idaho:

Our site

McGregor Lakes RV in Marion, Montana:

Our site

Moose Creek RV Resort and B&B in West Glacier, Montana:

Our site

Jim & Mary’s RV Park in Missoula, Montana:

Our site

Osens RV Park in Livingston, Montana:

Our site

Buffalo KOA Journey in Buffalo, Wyoming:

Our site

El Rancho Village RV Park & Cabins in Wheatland, Wyoming:

Our site

St Vrain State Park in Longmont, Colorado:

Our site

Cheyenne Mountain State Park in Colorado Springs, Colorado:

Our site

Alamosa KOA Journey in Alamosa, Colorado:

Our site

Taos Valley RV Park in Taos, New Mexico:

Our site

Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta:

Balloons

Palomino Campground in Caballo Lake State Park in Truth Or Consequences, New Mexico:

Our site

Las Cruces KOA Journey in Las Cruces, New Mexico:

Our site

Slow Play RV Park in Ruidoso Downs, New Mexico:

Our site

Carlsbad KOA Holiday in Carlsbad, New Mexico:

Our site

Loma Paloma RV Park in Presidio, Texas:

Our site

Marathon Motel & RV Park in Marathon, Texas:

Our site with our truck in front

Pecan Valley RV Park in Junction, Texas:

Our site, with chickens

Hidden Valley RV Park in San Antonio, Texas:

Our site

Corpus Christi KOA Journey in Corpus Christi, Texas:

Our site

2022 travel days

I thought it’d be interesting and useful to include a summary of travel days. Here are links to blog posts, and a sample picture of the view of each, so you can see how the landscape changed as we travelled in our coach.

You can see all of the travel-related blog posts via the travel category, with the earliest posts at the top, or the latest posts at the top.

Travel to Lake Havasu City, Arizona:

Highway

To Buckeye, Arizona:

Mountains

To Desert Hot Springs, California:

Inspection station

To Orange, California:

Freeway

To Santa Barbara, California:

Hollywood sign

To Jurupa Valley, California:

Coast

To Palm Desert, California:

Freeway

To Buckeye, Arizona:

Welcome to Arizona

To Picacho, Arizona:

Picacho Peak

To Tucson, Arizona:

Tucson

To Cottonwood, Arizona:

Cacti

To Williams, Arizona:

Williams arch

To Lake Mead, Boulder City, Nevada:

Entering Nevada

To Caliente, Nevada:

Rocks and curves

To Hatch, Utah:

Entering Utah

To Torrey, Utah:

Road and mountains

To Green River, Utah:

Capitol Reef National Park

To Monument Valley, Utah:

Rocks

To Mancos, Colorado:

Rocks

To Montrose, Colorado:

River

To Vernal, Utah:

Steep grade, sharp curves

To Rock Springs, Wyoming:

Highway

To Heber City, Utah:

Heber City exit

To Declo, Idaho:

Welcome to Idaho

To Caldwell, Idaho:

Snake River

To Dayville, Oregon:

Welcome to Oregon

To Bend, Oregon:

Hills

To Lebanon, Oregon:

Rough road

To Buxton, Oregon:

Our coach

To Welches, Oregon:

Portland

To Eatonville, Washington:

Highway 12

To Shelton, Washington:

Shelton sign

To Concrete, Washington:

Seattle

To Kelso, Washington:

Seattle Space Needle

To Plymouth, Washington:

Gorge

To Athol, Idaho:

US-395

To Marion, Montana:

Kootenai River

To West Glacier, Montana:

Coach parked at Woody's

To Missoula, Montana:

MT-35

To Livingston, Montana:

Smoky trees

To Buffalo, Wyoming:

Wyoming

To Wheatland, Wyoming:

Interesting rocks

To Longmont, Colorado:

Removing tire

To Colorado Springs, Colorado:

Heading towards state park

To Alamosa, Colorado:

Scenic mountains

To Taos, New Mexico:

Taos

To Albuquerque, New Mexico:

Rio Grande gorge

To Truth or Consequences, New Mexico:

Mountains

To Las Cruces, New Mexico:

Las Cruces and mountains

To Ruidoso Downs, New Mexico:

Mountains

To Carlsbad, New Mexico:

Pond

To Presidio, Texas:

Entering Texas

To Marathon, Texas:

US-67

To Junction, Texas:

Cutaway

To San Antonio, Texas:

Freeway overpasses

To Corpus Christi, Texas:

Back to our coach

2022 travel route

Happy New Year! 🎉

As we begin 2023, let’s look back at our coach travel in 2022. You may also want to check out the 2021 travel summary.

For another perspective on our travels, check out the Coach Timelapses playlist on the YouTube channel, which will enable you to watch all or some subset of the driving timelapses. Kinda interesting seeing how my editing style has evolved (minimally) — the first several videos didn’t even have a soundtrack.

We bought our 2017 Tiffin Allegro Bus 40SP diesel pusher motorhome on September 2, 2021, and other than a few times when we’ve been out of it during servicing appointments, we’ve lived in it full-time since then.

When we bought the coach, it only had 5,161 miles on it. In 2021 we drove it about 2,300 miles. In 2022 we drove another 8,772 miles, so have driven it 11,072 miles on our adventures so far, for a grand total of 16,233 on the odometer.

One of our goals is to visit every state. In 2022 we stayed in 5 new states: Nevada, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas, joining Washington, Oregon, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, California, and Arizona in 2021, for a total of 12. We actually went to all 12 in 2022, revisiting states we’d been to before. As we head back to our Pacific Northwest domicile each year, we’ll see a lot more of those states. Still lots more yet to visit!

Here’s a map of our coach travels and stays in 2022, via the excellent RV Life Trip Wizard website, using a variation of their maps that more clearly shows the state borders and color-coded time zones (did you know that a portion of Oregon is in the Mountain time zone?). The route starts south of Phoenix, Arizona, heads west to the California coast, back to Arizona, then heading north, doing a big serpentine loop though the states in a generally clockwise direction, ultimately ending the year in coastal Texas:

Timezones

Another variation of the map, with more detail:

Route map 2022

And finally, the route map with the travel in 2021 also displayed in different colors; our Yellowstone trip in brown, our 2021 coach travel in green, and our 2022 travel in blue:

Route map 2021 to 2022

Fascinating!

Video

Video: 2021 motorhome travel timelapses

I’ll soon be publishing a video showing all of our motorhome driving timelapses in 2022, so I thought I’d first publish one for 2021, to be complete. Or as complete as possible; I didn’t get a dashcam until about a month after we got the coach.

This video is 20x the speed of the original timelapse videos.

2021 modifications

We have done a number of modifications to our 2017 Tiffin Allegro Bus 40SP motorhome, to make it more comfortable as a full-time home, to improve the features, or to repair issues. This is a summary of some of the changes done in 2021.

As with previous summaries, for each I include a link to the corresponding blog post, and a sample picture; see the post for details.

You can see all of the modification-related blog posts via the modifications category, with the earliest posts at the top, or the latest posts at the top.

Removing couches; we removed the two couches that came with the coach, so we could replace them with our swivel recliner chairs and a desk:

Couch dissembly

Toad installation; installing the tow bar and related changes, to tow our truck behind the coach:

Tow bar

Minor mods including a towel holder, shower tweaks, necklace racks, and chair levelers:

Towel holder

Desk; a desk and cat litter box where a couch used to be:

Desk

Cooktop; replacing the induction cooktop:

Removed cooktop

Media cupboard; rearranging to fit our equipment:

Media cupboard

AGM batteries; we had the house batteries replaced with better ones:

Batteries

We also got a couple more solar panels installed; I didn’t do a blog post about those, though you can see them (covered in leaves) in the Valley of the Rogue drone shots post (I can’t believe I haven’t flown my drone since then; I really should do so):

Coach roof

Tire pressure monitoring system; to make sure none of the tires have an issue while driving:

Display unit

Upgraded Spyder control panel; a much nicer panel:

Upgraded control panel

Replaced lights; fixed some flickering lights:

Replaced lights

Smart surge protector; to help avoid electrical issues:

Power Watchdog

Clear sewer hose extension; to help watch the flow:

Wet bay

Toilet flush switch replacement; fixing an unreliable switch:

Trying replacement switch

There are a few more modifications that I did in 2021; stay tuned for posts about them over the coming days.

2021 attractions

One of the main reasons for traveling the United States in a motorhome is to explore the many wonders around the country. This is a summary of some of the attractions we visited in 2021.

I’ll skip the many Yellowstone National Park places; check out the Yellowstone posts for those.

As with the previous summary, I’ll include a link to the corresponding blog post, and a sample picture. Click or tap the link to see more.

You can see all of the attraction-related blog posts via the exploring category, with the earliest posts at the top, or the latest posts at the top.

Olympic National Park in the Northeast corner of Washington state:

Above the clouds at Hurricane Ridge

Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, OR:

Spruce Goose plane

Golden ghost town in southern Oregon:

Golden store and homestead

Oregon Vortex in southern Oregon:

House of Mystery

Lassen Volcanic National Park in California:

Visitor center

New Clairvaux Vineyard in Vina, CA:

Tasting room

Bidwell Mansion in Chico, CA:

Bidwell Mansion

Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, CA:

Gardens

California’s Great America in San Jose, CA:

California's Great America

Apple Park Visitor Center in Cupertino, CA:

Apple Park

Pinnacles National Park in Paicines, CA:

Rocks

Monterey Bay Aquarium in Monterey, CA:

Jellyfish

California coast:

Bixby Creek Bridge

Joshua Tree National Park in Indio, CA:

Joshua trees

Bombay Beach, Salton Sea, CA:

Beach art

The Living Desert Zoo WildLights in Palm Desert, CA:

Holiday lights

Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument in southern Arizona:

Visitor center

Painted Rock Petroglyph Site in Gila Bend, AZ:

Petroglyph rocks

Japanese Friendship Garden of Phoenix, AZ:

Pond

Pedal boats at Encanto Park in Phoenix, AZ:

Ducks

Scorpion Gulch and Dobbins Lookout in Phoenix, AZ:

Scorpion Gulch

Phoenix Zoo lights:

Zoo lights

Goldfield Ghost Town in Arizona:

Gunfight

Boyce Thompson Arboretum in Arizona:

Cacti

Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix, AZ:

Chihuly

We’re looking forward to seeing several more National Parks and many other attractions in 2022!

2021 campgrounds

Another interesting summary of 2021 — the places we stayed during the year.

I’ll start with buying our coach, then our Yellowstone trip in a rental travel trailer, and continue with our subsequent coach stays. For each location, I’ll include a link to the corresponding blog post, the campground map (if available), and a picture of our site. Enjoy!

You can also see all of the campground-related blog posts via the campsite category, with the earliest posts at the top, or the latest posts at the top.

Pasco / Tri-Cities KOA Journey in Pasco, WA, where we purchased the coach:

Campsite

At our homestead in Estacada, OR:

Coach at homestead

For our Yellowstone trip in the rental travel trailer; Grand Hot Springs in La Grande, OR:

Grande Hot Springs

Campsite

Twin Falls / Jerome KOA in Jerome, ID:

KOA

Trailer

Madison campground, Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming:

Campsite

Jim & Mary’s RV Park in Missoula, MT:

Jim & Mary's RV Park map

Trailer and truck

Coyote Run RV Park in Connell, WA:

Coyote Run RV Park map

Campsite

Back into our coach, our first stop after leaving our homestead was Portland Fairview RV Park in Portland, OR (no blog post, so this is a newly-published picture):

Campsite

Mom’s place in the Seattle region:

Parked at Mom's house

Kevin and Julie’s Boondockers Welcome site in Chehalis, WA:

Campsite

Olde Stone Village RV Park in McMinnville, OR:

Coach and truck

Valley of the Rogue state park in Gold Hill, OR:

Campground info

Truck and coach in campsite

Heritage RV Park in Corning, CA:

Heritage RV Park map

Coach and truck in campsite

Coyote Valley RV Resort in San Jose, CA:

Campground map

Large site

Thousand Trails San Benito Preserve in San Benito, CA:

Campground map

Campsite

Truck and coach in new campsite

Orange Grove RV Park in Bakersfield, California:

Orange Grove RV Park map

Campsite

Shadow Hills RV Resort in Indio, CA:

Shadow Hills RV Resort map

Campsite

Sonoran Desert RV Park in Gila Bend, AZ:

Sonoran Desert RV Park map

Campsite

Dry camping at Straight Line RV in Phoenix, AZ:

Coach

Black Rock RV Village in Salome, AZ (blog post coming next week):

Campsite

I hope you enjoyed this tour of our campsites in 2021!

2021 travel

Happy New Year! 🎉

As we begin 2022, let’s look back at our coach travel in 2021.

We bought our 2017 Tiffin Allegro Bus 40SP diesel pusher motorhome on September 2, 2021, and other than a few times when we’ve been out of it due to our Yellowstone trip and a couple of servicing appointments, we’ve lived in it full-time since then.

We’ve driven the coach about 2,300 miles in that time, on the west coast, from as far north as the Seattle area, and as far south as the Phoenix area (actually Gila Bend, not far north of Mexico). We’ve stayed in it in just four different states so far: Washington, Oregon, California, and Arizona.

Here’s the map of our coach travels and stays in 2021, via the excellent RV Trip Wizard website:

Map route

If we include our Yellowstone trip, staying in a rental trailer, we can add Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming to the list of states:

Map route

You can see all of the travel-related blog posts via the travel category, with the earliest posts at the top, or the latest posts at the top.

I thought it’d be interesting and useful to include a summary of travel days. I didn’t start blogging about them consistently at first, but over time settled into a pattern. Here are links to blog posts, and a sample picture of the view of each, so you can see how the landscape changed as we travelled in our coach.

Travel to Mom’s place in the Seattle region:

Driving

Driving to Southern Oregon:

Freeway

Video timelapse:

Into California:

Nice view

Video timelapse:

Travel day to San Jose:

Horrible road

Video timelapse:

To San Benito, CA:

Highway driving

Video timelapse:

To Bakersfield, CA:

Trucks on freeway

Video timelapse:

To Indio, CA:

Desert road with lots of dips, and Joshua trees

Video timelapse:

To Gila Bend, AZ:

Welcome to Arizona

Video timelapse:

And a timelapse to Phoenix:

To Salome, AZ:

Road

Video timelapse:

What’s in store for 2022?

We are looking forward to the Xscapers Bash in mid-January, then will head to Disneyland for Jenn’s birthday in February, to the coast, then back to Arizona, and the FMCA convention, then north into Nevada, Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming to hit more National Parks. Then via Idaho into Oregon to visit doctors and dentists. After that, we’ll head north, then east, then south, heading towards Texas for next winter, as we slowly make our way across the country.

We already have reservations up till mid-June, but the rest of the year is subject to change.

Here’s the current route and stop map for 2022; starting from the Phoenix area, heading to the coast, then going basically clockwise:

2022 route

Still a lot more of the country to see, but we’re working our way across, with trips back to Portland each year. The maps for subsequent years will be similar to the 2022 one, but heading north from and ending up further east each time:

2022 route

2021 was an eventful year, what with the big transition from the homestead to coach. 2022 should be an interesting year, as we continue to explore. I hope you’ll enjoy following along via this blog.