If you take a kiwi and an aussie
This blog is about an Aussie and a Kiwi couple who lived and worked in Australia, migrated to Canada in 2015 and are now living the RV life in Canada. It is not a "how to" or a "guide" for living the RV life. It is just the thoughts and experiences of a couple who never thought that their house would have wheels and the transformation and changes that led to the RV life. You can draw from this blog what you will and , I would hope it will give a view into the mindset that if you apply yourself you can achieve your goals . Life is not a destination it's a journey.
Just to bring you up to speed
Raewyn had lived and schooled in Pukekohe, New Zealand. After finishing schooling in NZ, Raewyn scrimped and saved to holiday and "to see what would happen" in Edmonton, Alberta Canada. Up to this point I had lived my life in Adelaide, Australia managing wool harvesting operations.
Raewyn and I met online 12 years later in a Microsoft "IT" chat room when I was working on a mixed farming operation in Eastern Victoria. After various share house accommodation situations in Adelaide and Melbourne. Chasing cows, sheep and planting crops wasn't all it's cracked up to be so I went back university to study project management and software development in Adelaide. We moved to Melbourne and rented in Brunswick the Goth capital of the world.
We were both living the cosmopolitan lifestyle in Brunswick and working in the trendy parts of Melbourne. Our story does not finish here. Australia we bought a place in the Yarra Valley in Eastern Victoria, Australia
Raewyn and I were living in the beautiful Yarra Valley in Victoria, Australia. We purchased a property nestled in a temperate rainforest that forms part of the Melbourne rainwater catchment area. The Yarra Valley had all the benefits of living the country life with being within a commutable distance from the CBD of Melbourne, that is if you didn't mind making public transport or your car a second place of residence.
Raewyn on her way to the platform at Lilydale on the outskirts of Melbourne, Victoria prior to working in eastern Melbourne. You know the 7:15am train was full three stops later at Croydon and it still had six stops to go as an express service. I guess I could insert a sardine can comment here. All was worth it considering we had this to come home to.
As previously stated the daily commute was inhumane, I eventually moved into viticulture and was working at a local winery called Yarra Burn just a leisurely 20 minute commute in the trusty Toyota Land Cruiser.
How we ended up in Canada
The year was 2014 and the Australian economy was beginning to very much look like a recession.
Raewyn was retrenched from Goodyear which was eventually bought out by German interests. After a few temp positions it was suggested that Raewyn could find better work in Edmonton Alberta, Canada. She missed her bud's in Edmonton anyway, so why not. So she packed her bags on a six month jaunt to the northern hemisphere. The plan was to reassess the situation in six months. It was at this point it was suggested that I should apply for permanent residency. So I made the application and started the renovations required to get the fortress of solitude in the Yarra Valley on the market.
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Vancouver, BC shares similarities with Melbourne, Australia. |
Meanwhile Raewyn was working to ATCO in Edmonton. I landed in Vancouver (pronounced Vangcoova) and processed my permanent residency then proceeded to miss my flight to Edmonton, a 12 hour long-haul flight does wonders for the soul. As a suggestion, fly Air Canada as they are more liberal with the booze.
We moved to Lethbridge in Alberta where I worked for a precision farming company running commercial sprayers and Raewyn was cooking the books for a local realestate company. We relocated to Oliver in the Okanagan, British Columbia for better quality booze and the chance to get some plonk on the cheap. We resided in Oliver for two years enjoying the mild winters and hot summers where it was so hot that you could fry an egg on a shovel in less then three minutes. Okanagan is the upper reaches of the Sonoran Desert, which extends through California and Mexico. Oliver, is an awesome place to be in Summer that is unless you have a fan to sleep under and yere, it's hot by Australian standards. It's an awesome place for water sports with close proximity to multiple lakes nestled in the Southern Canadian Rockies.
While Raewyn and I don't have an "expert palate" we do know what a good wine should taste like. After all we lived in one of the best wine growing regions in Australia, where a shiraz slaps you in the face and says. "Hey! I'm I'm a shiraz!". The Okanagan is a much younger wine growing region did you know they actually make wine in Canada? Hell yere, sure were going to grow as many varieties as possible and were going to grow it in rocks and sand!
This means that wine in the Okanagan needs to stand out, which it does however the pallet is going to be more subtle and refined you need to get in quick post harvest or you will miss out.
So let me recap, at this point Raewyn is now a fry chief at a local bank and yours truly is implementing a spray program for Burrowing Owl.
Now enter COVID and the downturn in the British Columbia economy. Raewyn is retrenched from the financial institution and takes a role at Hidden Chapel Wines in Oliver. Great! more opportunity for cheap plonk.
At this point the author moves to a oil and gas company in Peace River, Alberta for some extra spending money. The full effects of COVID are felt in the Okanagan with the closures of "non essential services" (which means cellar door sales). Meanwhile we come up with the idea of living in a 5th wheel. Well actually we met a few families that are already doing the "5th wheel thing" and were enjoying the lifestyle. Some seemed to be more stationary than mobile While this seemed to be a option for some people we felt that if our house is going to have wheels were going to make them turn.
It seems that there are a few categories that people who chose to live in an RV fall into.
You have the retirees in the $200,000 plus 5th wheel or Class A motorhome (usually a Prevost) who are spending the kids inheritance while they take a 12 month sabbatical around Canada and the States.
The Prevost, big bucks. |
The next category would have to go to the RV that hasn't moved in the last few years and wont for the foreseeable. When you find yourself in the Okanagan, British Columbia why would you move. I mean it's credited as having the mildest winters by Canadian standards and hot during the summer even by an Aussie's who has a tolerance to the baking Central Australian temperatures.
Seasonal workers and the semi-retired who winter down in Arizona and Texas. Due to COVID and the border closures winter options are Vancouver Island, which as of October 2020 is currently at critical mass with Snow Birds who couldn't make the trip south. The more determined are having their RV shipped south of the border then are flying to the states to continue on with their winter escape to the south. I'm sure this was frowned upon by inhabitants within the US however, apparently it works both ways as American RV'ers were found to be having a lovely little holiday in Canada whilst on their way to Alaska. Taking in the sights of the Banff and Jasper national parks.
The next category that we find is the seasonal worker, Summers in the Northern Canada working in the energy sector and South to warmer climates taking on various roles in southern Canada, typically British Columbia. Raewyn and I seem to fit into this category When British Columbia government deemed cellar door sales as a "non essential service" we picked up a Keystone Cougar.
How to make it all fit
The next issue was how to fit the contents of a one bedroom with study, kitchen with large entertaining/dining and make it fit into a 34 foot 5th wheel. First of all we had to go through everything and determine what we needed, then reassess what we actually needed. I mean, the RV looked fairly roomy with all the slides out minus any possessions onboard. At least we had the summer ahead to continue to figure out what works and doesn't within the confines of the RV as the issue is not only the ability of being able to live and work from the RV but the axle weight.
A 34 foot Keystone Cougar as a dry weight of 5,500 Kg which leaves a meager 600Kg for personal belongings. The vehicle that was to pull our new tenant on wheels has a towing capacity of 9,500Kg.
Looks spacious enough when it's empty, we were able to include a study for Raewyn.
The advantages of a 5th wheel is the high ceiling particularly in winter as heat rises and heats the bedroom as the front of the RV is over the 5th wheel hitch.
We managed to make most of the important fit. We started with the kitchen and quickly discovered that you can't store multiple of the same item. The advantage of a 5th wheel over a travel trailer (like a caravan in Australia and Europe for that matter) is additional storage space under the bedroom.
We found that the range and the oven is considerably smaller than a residential stove. The oven is 15 by15 inches so most of our baking pans needed to be replaced. No problem, after all it's just the two of us living in the RV. It's a small kitchen with a maximum occupancy of one person but everything is within arms reach.
We found that in the warmer weather seemed to spend alot more time outside than compared when living in our house. So cooking on BBQ's is a regular occurrence. The dining table only comfortably sits two anyway. I have to admit that that oven has the most accurate thermostat in RV history. We did need to place a pizza stone on top of the heat diffuser to prevent food from getting too hot at the base.
With most of the storage aside. Yes, when we left Oliver, British Columbia the combined weight of the RV and towing vehicle was 10, 500 Kg, a clear 1,000 Kg overweight and left for the Peace Region, Alberta.
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