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hpr_transcripts/hpr3650.txt
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Episode: 3650
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Title: HPR3650: Major Destinations
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3650/hpr3650.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 02:49:29
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,650 for Friday the 29th of July 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Major Destinations.
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It is part of the series Travel.
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It is hosted by Aoka, and is about 15 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is.
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It is about the plan around major destinations and using memberships to get discounted
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stays.
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Hello, this is Aoka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio in another exciting episode
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in our travel series.
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And we're continuing right now with going through the whole planning process because some
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of the things that we did, you know, it might be suggestions that you would find useful.
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And so what I want to talk about today is major destinations.
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When you know when you're planning a long trip and we're planning like three months,
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three and a half months, you know, kind of a thing, you have to have some major destinations
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that kind of anchor the trip.
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And it doesn't mean those are the only things you're going to do, but they're sort of the
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goal posts you want to set in to say these are three or four things I want to make sure
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I do.
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Now we were planning a trip around going to NASA Visitor Centers.
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That becomes the major destinations that we're looking at.
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Seeing all of them on this trip just was not going to be feasible for us.
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Some are more important and worthy of a visit.
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We first dropped the California locations because we thought that was further than we wanted
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to travel.
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Now a good rule is not to drive more than 300 miles in a day when towing a large RV.
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It is more strenuous driving that and towing it than just driving a car and you should not
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drive very fast.
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We planned a drive at around 60 miles per hour for increased safety.
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So 300 miles would mean five hours of driving.
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Then you have rest stops and when you get to where you'll spend the night, you need to
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set up the RV which takes time.
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When you get ready to leave you have to take down everything which also takes time.
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So this becomes a parameter in your planning.
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You may find that some of your major destinations are more than one day's drive which means
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you have to plan stopping points along the way as well.
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But it all begins with setting your major destinations.
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So what I did next was to investigate each of the Visitor Centers to make sure I knew
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the hours of operation, entry fees, attractions there and anything else useful for planning.
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If a particular site does not look interesting it can be skipped.
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Now to facilitate doing this and to share all of this with my wife I set up a Google sheet
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on a shared Google Drive to record the information and you can see on my website a picture of it
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and there'll be a link in the show notes for that.
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So it's a spreadsheet of all the NASA locations and the data that I gathered about them including
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things like nearby RV parks, nearby attractions, what have you.
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Now the three on our definite list were the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the US Space
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and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, and the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas.
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Our idea was to spend at least a week in each location, maybe more if there were other
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things to do in that location.
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Then we could fill in with other locations when practical.
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To reduce the total amount of driving it would make sense to refigured to start in Houston
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and then work our way east from there to get to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
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So let's see how that would work.
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I open my map of NASA sites in the My Maps section in Google Maps and again to get there
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first you open Google Maps then go to your places then to Maps and then open the map and
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select to open it in My Maps.
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Then I click on the pin in the map for the Johnson Space Center and then click for directions.
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That's an icon with two arrows, one to the left, the other to the right.
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I enter my home address in Michigan and Google gives me a driving route.
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This will be a fastest route because that's how Google does these things.
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It's a starting point.
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Now we have to take in a account.
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There are severe limitations to Google Maps and one of the big ones for us which is it does
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not take into account height restrictions which is important for towing a large RV.
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Ours is just a few inches over 13 feet or approximately 4 meters in height and we don't
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want to give it a bad haircut.
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There are resources for checking that which need to be used before you nail down anything
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and looking at the route I noticed it goes right by Memphis, Tennessee.
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Hmm, that's a place we might want to visit for a couple of days.
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So that's worth noting is the stopping point.
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To add it to the trip just click add destination in the layer box on the left.
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Now next I wanted to see the step-by-step directions to get more data and this is where I encountered
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what to me looks like a bug but with Google you never know.
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I had to close Google Maps and then reopen everything in my Maps to get the option to view
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step-by-step directions.
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This is in the three dot menu in the layer box.
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Opening this told me that the route Google picked would cover around 1,300 miles and take
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over 19 hours.
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Now, as I said this is not what I want to do in a day.
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My objective is to go about 300 miles in a day roughly so to me this looks like a trip
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that should take about 4 days.
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If we decide to stop in Memphis for a couple of days that makes it a six day trip.
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Looking at the map and just eyeballing it, Terahote, Indiana looks to be about a 300-mile
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trip.
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I did a quick check on that by opening up another instance of Google Maps on the side and
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it's a useful thing to do for a lot of these.
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It turns out it was 342 miles, it was a little more than the 300, but I have a candidate
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for the first stop.
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Then Terahote to Memphis turns out to be 390 miles, that's a bit much.
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But then I noticed Nashville and from Terahote to Nashville is only 261 miles.
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Okay that's starting to look good.
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So spend a couple of days in Nashville first then going to Memphis from Nashville is
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212 miles and we could spend a couple of days there.
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From there Texarkana is 278 miles and from Texarkana to Houston is 290 miles.
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So now I have a tentative route that takes about 9 days, only one day is over 300 miles
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of driving and that's the first day, not too bad.
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And with a couple of stops in Nashville and Memphis the travel is broken up with some
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sightseeing.
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Now the next step is to plan where we will stay each night.
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We have a couple of memberships that can help with this and give us discounted stays.
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One is something called Escapee's and another is Passport America.
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So I look into what options they have.
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Escapee's has an online mapping tool that clearly uses Google Maps and you can either
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search near a specific location or put in a route and see what options you get.
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I first entered Terrahote and selected within 50 miles.
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I got several options but the one closest to our route to be Fallen Rock RV Park and
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Campground in Brazil, Indiana.
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When I plugged that into my site map it ends up being only 328 miles from our start and
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still pretty close to our route.
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That makes it a great option.
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The other way to use the Escapee's mapping tools to put in a route you want to travel
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and then let them suggest possible campsal on the way.
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Now I did not see anything around either Nashville or Memphis, however, and checking them
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as specific destinations instead of as part of a route confirmed that there was nothing
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there.
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These does have some parks but they're not the biggest nationwide chain so that's not
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a complete surprise.
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So I moved on to Passport America.
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Okay now just a side note on side maps.
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My main planning maps are in the My Maps section of Google Maps but sometimes you just need
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to check something quickly.
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The best way to do that is open a fresh instance of Google Maps and check a route, see how
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long it is, etc.
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Now back to Passport America.
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They have a lot more options.
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The directory here is a printed book arranged by State and Province.
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States for the U.S. provinces for Canada, that's what it covers.
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Going to the Tennessee section I see that Spring Creek Campground is not too far from Nashville
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and Big Buck Resort is not too far from Memphis.
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Now the point of looking through these places is that I can get discounts.
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There are limitations however.
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Sometimes discounts are not available when demand is very high and often weekends are
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not discounted because they will fill the slots with customers paying the full amount.
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Now there are other options like parks, state parks, national parks, even local parks.
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And there are Army Corps of Engineer Sites.
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These can be even cheaper, sometimes even free.
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But the difference generally is that you don't get the full hookups of electricity, water
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and sewer.
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And we've got enough to deal with on this trip that you're thinking, okay, I don't want
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to get into all of that right now.
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There are also areas on federal lands where anyone can camp, subject to a few restrictions
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for free.
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These include Bureau of Land Management lands, some national forests, etc.
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They may restrict you to certain areas and the general rule is that you cannot stay in
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any one area for more than 14 days.
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These never have any amenities other than nature.
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So if you want to be out in the wilderness, that's great.
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You have to carry your own water, you have to make your own electricity, that's the nature
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of the beast.
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Now one problem with that is that the vast majority of these lands, BLM and national lands,
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is that they're in the western part of the United States.
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Now since we're headed west, that's not necessarily a problem.
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But if you were wanting to do sightseeing in the eastern U.S., you'd discover there's
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very little there in the way of free national land.
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So the planning process proceeds by slotting in stops along the way as we have outlined.
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Work out how far you want to drive, find some likely overnight stops, etc.
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The next step is to check the tentative route.
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Google gives you for any possible problems.
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There are several ways to do this.
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Since there are apps you can use, there is a site called RV Life, it's a membership site.
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You have to pay to be a member, include something called the RV Trip Wizard, which is a very,
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very nice planning tool.
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You can put in your RV's height and weight, so it can help you to plan a safe route.
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Now an annual subscription to RV Life runs $49, I got it in a discount because one of
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the YouTube channels I follow got a discount for us.
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Then there are printed resources like Truckers Map Books that can do something similar.
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We ordered one of those through Amazon.
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And we use that to just double check, first we used the RV Trip Wizard, and then just
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to assure ourselves we use the Truckers book to check the route and just make sure that
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there were no low bridges or obstacles like that, and everything checked out.
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Now however you do it, don't leave this step out.
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You could do something like totally destroy your RV if you run into a low bridge.
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And even if you see it and stop in time, trying to back out could take a long time and
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make for a very bad day.
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Now the last step is to call the parks and make reservations.
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Some people just like to hit the road and take their chances, but that does not always
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work out well.
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There are certain parking lots you can stay in overnight, but this has problems and they
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are starting to disappear.
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For a long time Walmart was a place where you could park overnight.
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What has happened is a number of the Walmart stores are getting rid of it and many municipal
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jurisdictions have ordinances that prohibit overnight parking, even if Walmart was willing
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to let you do it.
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It's a disappearing resource.
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If you understand how to do what is called dry camping or boondocking, there's lots
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of ways to do it.
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But on this trip we decided we've got enough dealing with learning all of the ins and
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outs of RVing.
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And the other thing is I need to wear a CPAP machine when I sleep and that might mean
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more electricity than I can get from a battery.
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And with the discounts, we really had no problem paying for our nights in the RV campground
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and so that's how we did it.
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And so this is a hookah for Hacker Public Radio signing off and is always encouraging you
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to support free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, you click on our contribute link to find
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out how easy it may be.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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