Wednesday 25 August 2021

A Sticker for the Motorhome and what it means.

As newcomers to the motorhome world we became members at the Caravan and Camping show earlier this year, to a club called the Campervan & Motorhome Club of Australia Ltd (CMCA).

The CMCA offer some great products and services to their members and becoming a member is well worth considering.

The CMCA also support an initiative called Self Contained Vehicle (SCV) Policy and Leave No Trace® (LNT) Code of Conduct.

Those who have a RV suitably equipped and sign up the Code of Conduct get a sticker for their rig.


The Leave No Trace® (LNT) Code of Conduct is as follows

As an environmentally conscious recreational vehicle owner, I/we hereby agree to the following: 

• To have my vehicle comply with the CMCA Self Contained Vehicle (SCV) Policy and to display the SCV
accreditation on my vehicle at all times. 

• To stay in any approved rest area for the period that the accommodation vehicle can be self-contained
or as designated by the relevant signage. This includes obtaining any necessary permission from
controlling authorities and or payment of fees where applicable. When camping in other locations please
observe the CMCA Bush Camping Code

• To always take care of the natural environment and respect community facilities to ensure future
generations of RV travellers can continue to enjoy what local authorities have provided. 

• To park my vehicle so as not to obstruct reasonable passage, exit or access to other vehicles or property.
To be courteous and do not park in a manner that impedes the movement of other vehicles especially in
rest areas used by heavy transport. 

• To dispose of all rubbish, and grey and black water in an appropriate manner. 

• Where time and means permit, support local communities and businesses as an appreciation for the
facilities that have been provided.


Quite simply be thoughtful and a responsible motorhome/caravan user.

In NZ the accreditation (an official NZ Standard - NZS 5465) allows those accredited motorhome/caravan users to camp in posted areas where there are no facilities and the environment is protected. Australia needs to follow suit.

Shouldn't we all be able to follow the above? Yes, but there are a few who give RV travellers a bad name.

Who would have thought that this would be necessary? telling people to bury their waste? A promotion by Aussie Travel Code


The mind boggles!





Thursday 19 August 2021

Memories and Observations

I look at today's problems and wonder if humanity is prepared or strong enough to handle what their parents, grandparents and great grandparents did in the past. Today we are used to a lot of creature comforts and haven't experienced real hardship. We are used to having what we want and not making do. Wars happen in far flung places and don't make regular headlines......

My parents clearly remembered WWII, Then they lived in the West Midlands in the UK, away from the German bombing of London and other key cities. Even so there were many incidents when lost German planes would drop their bombs in the countryside so they would have enough fuel to get home. 

My dad spoke of the bombs, shattered glass and the one occasion of a crashed German plane near home in Walsall Wood.

My Mother, in her later years, wrote about her childhood experiences in nearby Brownhills. here is an extract.

"Growing up during the war years I guess I didn’t realize the seriousness of it all for some families, living in a small coal mining village I didn’t have to go and live somewhere else as a lot of children of my age and be taken in as an evacuee and we used to joke and play around with our gasmasks not realizing what it would be like if we ever need to use it.

The nearest we got to being bombed was one night when we were under the stairs in the pantry with a chamber pot in case of emergencies when we heard an aircraft flying very low and then there was a big bang and all the glass in the windows in our row of houses in the street were shattered. A bomb had been dropped in the field at the back of the houses the only fatality was a horse that used to pull the ice-cream cart. All the children were very upset. After that the owner invested in a motorised van but it didn’t seem the same as the children all patted the horse and gave him a name.

We used to go into a cellar in some unused cottages near us until my mother fell and hurt her ankle carrying my baby sister. I remember one night I was knitting away when two American soldiers came down into the cellar and gave me some chewing gum it was the first chewing gum I had ever had and I thought that it was strange that you had to not swallow it after it started to taste awful. 

The nearest City to us to be bombed was Birmingham (edit: and also Coventry) you could hear the planes fly and making a path and see the sky light up from the fires. My dad was in the Home Guard as he was exempt from being called up so our family didn’t realize what it was like to have a father or husband that had gone to war. " 

Ann Anslow (Nee Preston).

Ann Preston's Identity Card


During the war and until 1954 there was rationing of food in the UK

An example of the ration books
This is a typical weekly food ration for an adult in 1942:

Bacon & Ham 4 oz (113.4 Grams)
Other meat  value of 1 shilling and 2 pence (equivalent to 2 chops)
Butter 2 oz (56.7 Grams)
Cheese 2 oz (56.7 Grams)
Margarine 4 oz (113.4 Grams)
Cooking fat 4 oz (113.4 Grams)
Milk 3 pints (1.42 Liters)
Sugar 8 oz (226.8 Grams)
Preserves 1 lb every 2 months (453.6 Grams)
Tea 2 oz (56.7 Grams)
Eggs 1 fresh egg (plus allowance of dried egg)
Sweets 12 oz every 4 weeks (340.2 Grams)

Families also would grow their own vegetables.

My mother was expected to look after her two siblings Jane and John as her mother was often unwell. (possibly clinically depressed) She cooked and cleaned along with attending school. With Mums dad, Norman being a butcher, meant a reasonable standard of living, but life still wasn't easy.

My Dad's father passed away when he was 6 years old and as a result life was even tougher for him and his older brother Dennis, living in Walsall Wood near the pit. His mother Annie, supplemented a meagre miners pension by taking in washing, ironing and was the midwife, common in a time where it was standard for childbirth to occur at home. Dennis worked to support the family.

My parents knew hardship was and I do wonder what they would think of today's world where people struggle to comply with some lockdown rules. 

We were supermarket shopping when I saw a man in his 20s having a meltdown because his favourite shampoo was unavailable! 






Thursday 12 August 2021

A Motorhome Morning Tea - In Lockdown

New South Wales is currently in a COVID statewide lockdown with new heavy restrictions in place. We cannot travel more than 5km and even then without an authorised reason.

All travelers have returned home. Some Grey Nomads, without a permanent address, have been fortunate and allowed to lockdown where they are.

We were in the preparation stage and doing some overnight trips with our fur family, so a morning tea in our garden allows for some acclimatisation.

Our plans for a day trip were cancelled just over a week ago, so this is the next best thing.

Lockdown home for the motorhome.



Watching the 11AM COVID update.
Even with good coffee, is somewhat depressing.

The Laptop is running (and being charged) on the 240VAC inverter from the House Batteries. The Solar Panel is keeping them topped up. Proof of concept, but still needs an overnight free camp stay to evaluate our electrical supply needs.


Everyone seems quite settled and relaxed.

Bambi and Buffy have already become acquainted with what it is all about and don't understand why we can't go anywhere. Mac and Cody explored the motorhome and made themselves comfortable, but have yet to experience a day trip.

Unfortunately it will be some time before we start traveling.

Thursday 5 August 2021

Day Trip to East Gresford - CANCELLED

Tomorrow we had plans to do another daytime shakedown trip, with all four dogs in tow, to Gresford. A prelude to doing some overnight travels around Mudgee.




However by 11am on Thursday our plans for Friday were canceled. A snap lockdown was announced covering a good portion of the Hunter Valley, including where we live in Largs by 5pm.


Our butcher has a queue and the mini supermarket did too. cars were struggling to find parking. Never seen Patterson so busy!

We had to be satisfied with a much shorter trip.


The Jeep is now back in the garage and we are keeping busy with Lockdown activities.

Lockdown Soups - Beef and Vegetable or Pumpkin? Both are very nice!

The lockdown is meant to last for a week, but I doubt it will and expect it to be extended.


Monday 2 August 2021

Modifying and Equipping Our Motorhome 1

 One thing that was annoying is the location of the Inverter switch.


To turn on the inverter you need to go outside, Unlock and open the Battery Compartment and operate the switch in the top right hand side corner. There isn't any indicator inside the battery box or elsewhere to show it is on or off. The Battery compartment, along with the LPG Gas compartment do not have internal lights

The inverter is made by REDARC and they have an optional remote panel available, which I was able to buy. 

Now to fit.

The cable path between the Inverter GPO and the Inverter is not as easy as it looks.

By feeding a draw cable from the left hand storage compartment and another  from the battery compartment to the outside, it was then possible to draw the cable supplied through and crimp on a new Plug.

It took a few goes and reminded me of my days working on "O Boats", the Oberon Submarines.

 The results
From Top to bottom
The added REDARC Inverter remote panel
The inverter powered GPO (General Power Outlet)
and at the bottom are 2 x USB Power Outlets

Now on a cold and/or wet evening I do not have to take a torch and go outside to turn on the Inverter. 😁
_____________________________________________________

LPG Cylinders are hard to manage. Are they full? ...and if not, how much is left?

There are some nice and expensive systems out there that use sensors stuck on the underside of LPG Cylinders, along with Bluetooth connection and a Android App. 

This is a Garth Gas Safety Gauge and shutoff valve from Bunnings for $19.89. We will see how well it works.


The gauge in place and reading correctly as the gas is off and there is a little pressure in the gas line.

Next is a radio antenna for CB and more importantly 2 meter and 70 centimeter Amateur Radio.



A Birthday