Catalina Capri 22, Celtic Myst, #239, Cap Sante Marina, Anacortes, WA. |
Celtic Safari
Monday, February 27, 2023
Friday, December 20, 2019
Christmas Cottage
Before we ever moved to Anacortes, Laura and I discussed how the Safari could serve as a guest cottage when we needed more room than afforded by our single guest room in the house. With our side garage door to the RV pad, the motorhome is literally less than ten feet away.
With our son and his wife planning to celebrate Christmas with us, along with Laura's sister, brother-in-law, and niece, we were looking forward to a great get-together. Laura's sister and family will be using the Safari during their seven-day stay. In preparation, I de-winterized the rig, switched the refrigerator and water heater over to electric-only, filled the water tank, and heated the space using thermostat-controlled electric heaters. The propane would remain OFF so as to not accidentally burn a hole in the RV cover via the furnace or water-heater exhaust, since the cover was still enclosing the motorhome. The basement bays are heated with an electric heater designed to keep the space just above freezing.
Friday, May 3, 2019
Moving In
With little more than the motorhome's picnic furniture, the living space of the home had remained empty in order to facilitate the installation of our new oak floors. We continued to live and work remotely in the motorhome as various move-in projects were completed, such as installing a side garage door, and moving the RV pad gate about twenty-four feet closer to the front of the house so the new door would be behind the gate and so the motorhome would not extend into the backyard. The floors reached their minimum cure time the day before our house belongings arrived today after the sale of the Vancouver house. I laid down heavy paper in the high-traffic areas to lessen the chance of damage as the movers bought in our furniture and decor.
The first week in May marked the end of our urban camping experience. For seven weeks the motorhome had served flawlessly as a home, workspace, and toolbox. With the arrival of our furnishings, house projects switched to internal painting, and prepping for the new kitchen. Since the home no longer had a full kitchen, I installed a temporary one that served us for months.
As we shifted to living in the house, the Safari got a thorough cleaning inside and out. All the consumables were restocked and all the systems were checked out before placing the rig under the cover. I use an Adco RV cover that stays on most of the year. The cover lasts 3-4 years with regular annual maintenance to repair chafing. At $600 per cover, that breaks down to $200 per year.
Laura and I were so happy to have the Safari for the move and the renovation. Being able to live and work onsite during the renovation definitely sped up the process.
Friday, April 26, 2019
RV Pad Living Must Have
Laura left for Vancouver today to coordinate the packing and moving of our household goods and to donate/dispose of those items not coming to Anacortes. I have stayed behind to work remotely and monitor the completion of the new floors.
It has been roughly six weeks since we relocated to Anacortes, and in that time we:
- fixed the door bell
- installed a new mailbox
- had a 30 amp electrical panel installed on the outside of the garage for the motorhome
- had 220 VAC run for a dryer in the laundry
- celebrated Laura's birthday
- attended our son's wedding
- Replaced the failed crawl space sump pump
- demo'd the old flooring
- demo'd the kitchen in preparation for the new floors and a new kitchen
- had new white oak floors installed throughout the home (now waiting for them to cure)
- joined the Anacortes Yacht Club
Must-Have for the RV
Critical to the experience of living out of our Safari while parked on the RV pad has been our FloJet Macerator pump that enables us to dump the black water and grey water tanks into the home's sewer cleanout. We first purchased this system in 2016 when we bought the home, and it has been a convenience for this type of situation ever since.
Sunday, March 17, 2019
Anacortes Day 1
With all of our furniture and decor sitting in our Vancouver "staged" home, arriving in Anacortes did not mean moving in. Major near-term renovation projects include: replacing all the carpeting and tired engineered wood flooring with a solid, finished in-place, white oak floor. and repurposing the old kitchen to the garage in order to make way for a completely new kitchen layout designed by Laura.
Our first full day in our new hometown started with waking up in the motorhome, breakfast at the Majestic Hotel, and ended with a sunset stroll along the Guemes Channel Trail near the Anacortes Ferry Terminal. It was amazing to think that we were here after a journey that started three years earlier when we purchased the home while attending the Tulip Festival.
Included in the day's activities was the purchase of a new bed, acquiring a decorative whale that would fit with the coastal, nautical, sea captain back story of the cottage Laura wanted to create in our new home, and acquiring a comfy leather reading chair and ottoman for the future home-office.
Saturday, March 16, 2019
Anacortes or Bust
March 16th marked the end of our twenty-one-plus years of calling Vancouver, WA home. With our "goodbye" pictures of the house taken, we prepared to head north with me driving the Safari while towing the Honda Fit, and Laura driving the Honda Odyssey and pulling a utility trailer.
The 250 miles journey to Anacortes took about five and a half hours thanks to the traffic moving well through Tacoma and Seattle. After we arrived at our home in Anacortes, I parked the motorhome on the side of the house behind the gate.
Sunday, March 10, 2019
Urban Camping While Staging Our Home
Urban Camping |
Our last urban camping experience occurred three years earlier when we purchased a home in Anacortes, WA, and prepared it for handoff to a rental property management company. Fast forward to March 2019, and we are in the final phase of staging our Vancouver, WA home for sale. The photo shoot for the real estate listing was coming up fast, so it was a mad dash to complete the last items on our ToDo list, and stage the house.
Moved for RV pad driveway repair |
One of the items on our list was to have part of the driveway leading to our RV pad replaced. Trees had damaged the existing installation. In preparation for the work, we needed to relocate our Safari motorhome. Fortunately for us, our home is set back from the street with a fifty-foot driveway, so there was lots of room to park in front of the garage.
The benefits of a long driveway |
With the motorhome moved, the crew was able to bring in their equipment to break up and remove the old driveway.
Breaking up the damaged driveway |
Shortly after preparing the area for new concrete, Vancouver got hit by snow and below-freezing temperatures for several days, so we had to delay the pour. Four days before the scheduled photo shoot, the replacement driveway sections were laid down.
The driveway is poured on March 11 |
March 9 was our last night in the house, so our urban camping experience started on March 10 as we continued to complete small projects and stage the house.
Prepping to sell |
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