![]() The bins all fit on the floor of the Pop-Up for travel, and then fit perfectly on the counters once we pop open and set up camp, which is where they stay for the duration of camp. ![]() We use both small bins with drawers and large bins with drawers to hold our clothing, dry food, sundries, games, and misc camp necessities. Organizing Clothing in Plastic Drawer Units And to help you stay organized you can print my free Ultimate Camping Packing Checklist!Īnd after you tour how I organize my Pop-Up camper, you can check out my other posts on how I jazz up my Pop-Up camper with some pretty decor and add fun retro vintages vibes and added privacy with these DIY camper curtains I recently created. I linked most of the storage and organization items and camping essentials from this post at the very end, including similar buffalo plaid pillows and blankets. ![]() If you’re tent camping, you’ll probably end up with a very different list.Though all Pop-Up campers have different sizes and layouts, you can use these ideas and modify them to fit your own camper. This list is pretty specific to our own camper, so it doesn’t include some things that just live in the camper, like bedding and such. I hope it helps! Free Camping Checklistĭownload your checklist following the instructions below. Feel free to use it and change it any way you want. So without further ado, here’s my camping checklist. (Maybe because I love lists, but that’s a topic for another day.) I still use that list, with a few of my own revisions, every single time we get ready to go. I thought it would help me as we were getting started on this new camper adventure, which it did, immensely. When we first got our camper, our friend David gave us a list that he got from a friend of his. As I was packing for our trip to Colorado last weekend, it occurred to me that I should share my camping checklist, in case some of you are planning trips of your own. However, carrying all the conveniences of home with you is a bit of an undertaking. He gets to be close to nature, and I get to sleep through the night without waking up 15 times, thinking every little noise is actually a bear about to eat me and/or my babies. ![]() You can call it camping because you do it in the woods and generally don’t have wi-fi, but with the camper, you can easily carry everything you need and get to enjoy all the conveniences of home. What can I say, I just love a good project! Why I Love Camper CampingĬamping with a camper is really the best of both worlds, if you ask me. Update: I ended up remodeling that camper too. I got the remodel out of my system, and then we moved on to some serious family camping time. I thoroughly enjoyed the remodeling project, which you can read all about here, and in the meantime, the whole family fell in love with camping.Ī couple of years later, we sold the Apache and bought a newer trailer camper, which is a lot bigger and more comfortable, but not nearly as cute as the Apache was. ![]() I think he thought it would be a good way to get me to love camping, so he agreed and we found our Apache. I’ll take my “roughing it” with a side of comfort and modern plumbing, please.īut I was looking for a project and decided I needed to remodel a vintage camper. My husband is an outdoors-man who loves hiking, backpacking, and generally any sport that requires peeing in the woods. I really had no interest in camping before that. Where it All StartedĪ few years ago, we bought our first camper, a sweet little vintage Apache pop-up camper. One of the best things about New Mexico is the mountains are never far away, and they are always cool and refreshing. Around here, we escape to the mountains whenever the desert gets too hot and dry. I mean what-happened-to-Spring-how-did-we-end-up-in-the-middle-of-Summer hot. ![]()
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