We couldn’t help but notice this crazy RV at one of the campgrounds in Moab. I had to take some photos of it and ended up talking to the couple inside.
They had it custom made in Southern Germany and had it shipped over to the US. They’ve been travelling in it for about 6 months now and can drive a max speed of about 50 miles per hour and gets about 11 miles per gallon.
We didn’t get to go inside, but from what we could tell, the interior looked really modern.
Dinner Last Night:
If you clicked through to the Vegan Richa Spicy Mac recipe and read her post, you would have learned that she was trying to reproduce a dish from a restaurant in Seattle called Plum. Well last night’s recipe comes from a book that the restaurant put out called Plum: Gratifying Vegan Dishes from Seattle’s Plum Bistro.
I found their creamy millet corn chowder with greens recipe online and it is by far the best corn chowder I’ve ever had. We have to go to this restaurant next time we’re in Seattle.
2013 Cost of Camping:
117 nights paid camping (through Saturday 10/26)
182 nights free camping
299 days this year
Total spent on camping this year: $3,201.29
Daily average cost of camping: $10.71
6 Comments
That looks like a UniCat vehicle, made in Germany.
Their website is unicat.net, here are some interior pictures: http://www.bornrich.com/camping-in-garbage-truck-has-never-been-so-luxurious.html
Keep in mind that these are all custom vehicles, so the interior would reflect the owner’s personal taste.
Unless you’re going to do some serious off-roading, and go to some very remote areas, these are complete overkill.
Ah good to learn the brand name! I’ve seen that garbage truck link before, love the interior. Ya, it’s a lot more RV than what we need.
Respekt bedeutet: Ohne Genehmigung des Eigentümers, keine Veröffentlichung!
Keine Bilder von Personen. Keine Bilder Von Wohnmobilen.
Ich hoffe Sie haben dieses Einverständnis!
Aber was will man von einem Land erwarten was von sich sagt wir sind Amerika.
Respect means without the permission of the owner, no release!
No pictures of people. No pictures of RVs.
I hope you have this permission!
But what do you expect from a country which by itself says we are America.
Hi Lorine,
That RV was on public land, and in the United States “when in public spaces where you are lawfully present you have the right to photograph anything that is in plain view.”
https://www.aclu.org/free-speech/know-your-rights-photographers
Here’s an interesting list of consent requirements by country:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Country_specific_consent_requirements
Actually that was a Unimog. They cost $600M ten years ago, but they can go anywhere.