Sunday, February 23, 2003

Motorhomes

When we came back from our trip in late January, the next trip coming up in March seemed so close, and the weather was so mild, we decided to not winterize Shamu, and just plug it in and leave the furnaces set low. I don't like to winterize. I'm sensitive to the aroma and taste of the antifreeze. It takes quite a while to get all traces of it cleared out. For the first couple weeks, it seemed like a really good idea to not winterize it. Then we had some cold weather, and we used an entire tank of propane. When we took it out to refill, it caused us to reconsider our winter strategy when we realized it was going to cost us $50 a week during cold weather to keep the furnaces going.


We had some warm weather Saturday, so we dumped the tanks, weatherized the water lines, topped off the propane for next trip, then shut everything down. It's now dormant in the driveway.



The last time we had the motorhome serviced, we had them install a hot water bypass. Now it only takes one gallon of fluid to winterize the whole thing. Hard to imagine not including a hot water heater bypass in the construction of a new motorhome. Do they properly assume that most motorhomes don't have to go through cold weather?



We're now in the middle of some welcome winter weather. Fourteen degrees outside and it's not even dark yet. We'll probably get down to zero tonight. The clouds are right down in the trees, the windows are fogged, and it's snowing. I love it when it does this on the weekends, so I can be here to enjoy it.