Showing posts with label Flagstaff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flagstaff. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2016

Campground Expenses: September 2016

Alternate title for this post: Breaking The Bank In Just Over Four Weeks!

Flagstaff views
We spent a lot (for our budget) on campsite fees in September. I'll attempt to justify the cost below, but first, here's a breakdown:

Sunflower River farm (August 26 - September 4): If you haven't read about our WWOOFing experience, click here for what worked and what didn't. One important benefit: our stay at the farm - which included a 20 amp electric connection, interactions with interesting people, lessons in organic farming, and access to separate facilities - was free.

Cost: $0

American RV Park (September 4 - 25): As Trent explained in a recent post, we loved this park. The facilities were clean and well maintained, it featured a swimming pool that our son used almost every day, breakfast was included in the cost of stay, and the park was centrally located for our many Albuquerque adventures. But the campsite rates reflected all of those perks. At $223 a week, it was definitely at the high end of our budget... and we stayed for three weeks.

Trent said to say that it was worth the cost, and I tend to agree. Our experience here was excellent. We would go back. (We'd probably stay for four weeks the next time and take advantage of the monthly rate, which is more cost efficient.)

Cost: $669

Flagstaff KOA (September 25 - October 2): I'm ambivalent about this park. On one hand, our site was exactly as advertised with respect to hookups. The electric, water, and sewer connections worked perfectly. The campground is shaded by tall pines and has a pleasing woodsy feel to it, and Sam loved the playground setup. The biggest plus was that this KOA offers on-site access to some of the most beautiful hiking trails in Flagstaff.

On the other hand, it is so very expensive - even with our 10% membership discount - and at peak times it feels a bit like an overcrowded parking lot. There's no pool (which makes sense, given the climate), and there's no free breakfast (Trent said to mention that, too... You know, for all you all-included-breakfast fans).

In short, we probably wouldn't stay here again. There's nothing wrong with it, but even in an expensive town like Flagstaff, there are other options.

Cost: $251.64

Total campground expenses for September: $920.64

Comparison: our combined June/July costs came out to $565 and our August total was $503. YIKES.

A bit of a justification:

First, we didn't use our Thousand Trails membership in September. TT doesn't have any campgrounds in New Mexico. I suppose we could have bypassed the state altogether, but that would have been sad - we would have missed out on so much. As for Arizona, there's a TT property near Sedona, but it was booked solid at the end of September. 

Second, $920 seems insanely expensive until you start comparing that to the cost of a decent hotel room for the same period of time or, say, the monthly rent on an apartment. (For fun, we looked up apartments in Flagstaff. They appear to go for $1000 and up.)

Third, we had fun and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves, so... that was worth it.

October should be easier on the wallet. We are at a Thousand Trails site for the first week of the month, and then we've got plans to take advantage of our Escapees membership. I'm betting we'll come in above the summer totals but well below September's campground expenses.

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Rainy Day Downshifting


This post originally appeared on the PlantBased RunnerGirl blog

Susanne is your driver for this post. 

It’s our fourth day in Flagstaff, and here’s the current view from the bedroom window. 



It's pouring, sometimes so hard that the rain sends pinecones toppling onto our roof. The Weather Channel indicates that it'll be like this on and off for the next 24 hours. 

So we're going to lay low: get our homeschooling assignments done (Sam's got reading, math, and grammar on the docket), read, update the blogs, pay bills slash adult, maybe bake some fall treats in the toaster oven, maybe head over to the camp playground later if we get a break in the weather. Downshifting for a day sounds refreshing to me. We've been on the go lately, and I'm feeling a bit exhausted. On Saturday I ran 16 miles, followed by a family field trip to the top of Sandia Peak in Albuquerque. Sunday was the six-hour journey to Flagstaff. On Monday, we spent the entire day at the Grand Canyon, and yesterday, both Trent and I and our unacclimatized lungs went adventuring on the Fatmans Loop Trail

Seasoned full-time RVers are always trying to warn the newbies: Slow down. You're in absolutely no rush. Don't exhaust yourself. This isn't a monthlong vacation. You have all the time in the world to do all the stuff you want to do. If you don't see everything you want to see at a particular location, you can always come back. If you push yourself too hard, you'll burn out before a year is up. I am not good about following this advice. 

I'm afflicted with what I've diagnosed as Traveler's FOMO: Traveler's Fear Of Missing Out. When I'm in a new place, I have a deep-seated need to see and do it all so that I can really know the place I'm in. It's a well-meaning obsessiveness. But I remind myself that's just mental self-trickery. Nobody is grading us on How Many Things We Checked Off Our List While Living In Our RV. Nobody is docking points for staying in. 

A rest day it is, then. Biscuit, for one, seems fine with this plan: