Starling Travel

September 19, 2012

The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone

Filed under: Places To Visit,Wyoming — Laura Moncur @ 11:26 am

I love Yellowstone and I’ve talked about it many times over the years. One of my favorite features is the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, which is a sadly neglected part of the park. Because the area is only open a couple months of the year, Mike and I have only been able to see it every other year (or so). We usually visit in late April and that time of the year is a crap shoot for Yellowstone. Sometimes we are buried in ten feet of snow.

Yellowstone Park 04-20-08 by LauraMoncur from Flickr

Sometimes we enjoy sunshine, warm days and grizzly bears.

Grizzly Bear (click for larger photo)

Whenever we CAN visit the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, we do, and it never disappoints.

Lower Falls 2009 by LauraMoncur from Flickr

Here is a video from RV Geeks about it.

Just like all videos of majestic natural phenomena, it’s impossible to capture the grandeur of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone on video, yet people rarely talk about it when they come back from a visit. When it has to compete with huge jets of boiling water that shoot hundreds of feet into the air on a schedule, the loveliness and shocking size of the falls kind of gets lost.

The next time you visit Yellowstone, make sure you schedule it during the time of the year that the road to the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone is open and accessible. It’s worth juggling your time in order to see it live and in person.

Map info:

September 6, 2012

Pack-Away Bucket

Filed under: Camping — Laura Moncur @ 8:44 am

I LOVE the idea of the Pack-Away Bucket. It collapses and packs up nice and flat in the trailer.

Pack-Away Collapsible Bucket from Starling Travel

Unfortunately, it’s only available for sale from companies in Great Britain (like Wacky Practicals), so the shipping costs as much as the bucket itself. It’s not quite worth the 64 bucks to have a flat bucket for waste water from my sink.

Instead, I’ve been using a small paint bucket that I found at Home Depot. It holds a couple of gallons and is small enough to store under the dinette table when it’s down in the bed position for travel. It only cost a couple of bucks, so I guess it’s worth the sixty dollars I saved for the extra space to store it.

Still, that collapsible bucket looks really cool!

Via: Starling Travel / Collapsible Bucket packs up nice and flat in the trailer.

September 4, 2012

DIY Portable Air Conditioner

Filed under: Camping — Laura Moncur @ 8:08 am

I found this how-to on Pinterest today:

DIY Portable Air Conditioner from Starling Travel

It seems like a lot of work for something that takes up as much space as a NORMAL air conditioner. I found this General Electric 5,000 BTU Window air conditioner at Amazon.com for only $87 (I’ve seen a similar one at Home Depot for fifty bucks).

General Electric 5,000 BTU Window air conditioner at Amazon.com

It’s about the same size as that big red cooler, doesn’t require any tools and uses about the same amount of electricity with no need for frozen bottles of water.

Oh, and it gets your room MUCH cooler than a mere five degrees.

I’m all for do-it-yourself projects, but only when they make sense. A DIY project needs to make something that isn’t readily available or is more beautiful than what you can purchase in a store. It should at least COST less than the commercially made product you’re reproducing. This is one DIY project that isn’t really worth the effort.

August 31, 2012

1975 Playboy Land Yacht Concept Pales Compared to Today’s RVs

Filed under: Motorhomes and Campers — Laura Moncur @ 8:54 am

After looking at the Playboy Land Yacht Concept by Syd Mead, I was surprised at how simple it looks compared to the RVs of today.

Playboy Land Yacht Concept from Starling Travel

Here is the description from the 1975 Playboy Magazine:

THE OLD CHUCK BERRY SONG No Money Down told about a fantasy Cadillac with a bed in the back, phone, TV, shortwave radio and other optional extras; but the machine Chuck sang about couldn’t touch what’s pictured here and on the following pages. The land yacht we commissioned Detroit designer Syd Mead to create is a six-wheel wonder vehicle that combines many of today’s mechanical innovations with some space-age technology that you can expect to be incorporated into tomorrow’s assembly-line mobile homes. Not only does it contain almost all the same amenities you would ordinarily leave behind when embarking on an extended trip, or just out for a day’s cruise, it can also drive itself — via electronic sensors — while you and a companion relax in the yacht’s luxurious front lounge.

…you’ll see that the yacht’s pointed nose serves two functions: It provides the aerodynamic styling that a machine of this size demands and it allows for the four lounge seats up front to be arranged at a 45-degree angle to the axis of the vehicle, thus saving considering interior space.

Playboy Land Yacht from Starling Travel

When our land yacht is parked, its brain box (front center) can be closed and pivoted to double as a cocktail table. The bath is shown with its door cut away; to its left are the food-prep unit and audio-video center. At rear, you see the open-air skylight with its electronic sun deck partially lowered.

Playboy Land Yacht from Starling Travel

This is the rear lounge — and that bed, gentlemen, measures seven feet by six feet. In the center, below the TV and the movie projector (a screen rolls down over the rear window, foreground), is the bar capsule; it’s lined with crushed velvet, like the phone container to its right.

Playboy Land Yacht from Starling Travel

Playboy Land Yacht from Starling Travel

The nocturnal view — through the rear window — shows the expandable bathroom wall. Atop is the sun deck; when traveling, a bubble of air arches over the space so that the deck can be open. Obviously, the couple pictured here couldn’t care less about all of this.

Playboy Land Yacht from Starling Travel

For night driving, the yacht’s front lighting consists of two swing-down iodine quartz lamps, plus four normal high/low/intermediate lights, which are folded back when off, swinging out against adjustable stops (for proper aiming) when the sliding cover door is activated. In addition, a front-scanning infrared lamp produces a wide-angle fan of radiation, for pickup on the yacht’s console-mounted TV screen. What you see in the monitor is an infrared-filter view of the roadway. This system is an outgrowth of the exotic Air Force fighter-pilot technology, which produces an animated, terrain-characteristic “picture” in front of the pilot, regardless of the weather or visibility conditions.

Rather than being a futuristic take on travel, it appears to be a relic from the Seventies. In fact, it reminds me more of the vehicle from the 1970s children’s show, Ark II, than of a motorhome of the future.

Ark II Vehicle from Starling Travel

Via: WIL WHEATON dot TUMBLR, endlessme: Via triumphdisaster Ohhhhh…

August 29, 2012

Life Is Good in a Tent Trailer

Filed under: Camping,Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 9:38 am

I absolutely adore this drawing of a tent trailer from Life Is Good.

Life is Good Tent Trailer from Starling Travel

I would gladly buy this t-shirt from Life Is Good, but they only have it in white and in Men’s sizes.

I have been looking for good illustrations of tent trailers and before now, the best drawings I could find were these.

Tent Trailer Illustration. from Starling Travel

Tent Camper from Starling Travel

I especially like this one of Yogi and Boo Boo contemplating tearing open the pop up looking for picnic baskets. I just wish it were a better image.

Yogi Camper from Starling Travel

I think my favorite is this illustration from Zazzle.com. I just don’t need any postcards or business cards.

Popup Camper from Zazzle

I’m amazed at how quickly I went from “I guess it will do,” to “I LOVE my tent trailer.” We bought the tent trailer because our life changed and we had another human being to accommodate. I didn’t really WANT it. I HAD to buy it. Now, however, I LOVE our tent trailer and I am having a hard time imagining going back to a teardrop. How did things change so quickly?

Photos via:

August 21, 2012

Rocket Science Ice Cream

Filed under: Food — Laura Moncur @ 8:06 am

The folks at RV Geeks visited Rocket Science Ice Cream shop in Nappanee, Indiana. They create your ice cream for you, letting you choose whatever flavors you want. It starts out in a liquid form and then, using liquid nitrogen, they freeze it up for you right in front of your eyes.

Rocket Science Ice Cream from Starling Travel

Here is a video showing the process from RV Geeks:

The next time you find yourself in Indiana, make a detour to Nappanee so you can experience ice cream a whole new way!

Google Maps: Rocket Science Ice Cream shop in Nappanee, Indiana

August 18, 2012

Propert Folding Teardrop Trailer

Filed under: Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

This trailer from Australia is ingenious in its folding.

It was built in 1953 by the Propert Family in Sydney, Australia. They build trailers from 1952 until the 1970s when Thomas Propert retired. It looks absolutely adorable when it’s unfolded.

Propert Folding Teardrop Trailer from Starling Travel

I love the design and I’d like to recreate it somehow, but as long as there are three of us instead of two, I’ll have to stick with the tent trailer.

August 17, 2012

A Clever Way to Hang A Vintage Awning

Filed under: Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

The cutest thing about vintage trailers are those adorable awnings, but feeding them through the C-track can be difficult. Just watch this video showing how hard it can be.

Remember that she had practiced putting up her awning before doing this video and she needed a large ladder to get it on. Halekini, on YouTube, however, has found a really easy way to do it using a pulley on the C-track.

This is a brilliant way to to make setting up your awning all by yourself. Here is a closeup of his little pulley setup:

Easy Way to Hang a Vintage RV Awning from Starling Travel

If you are thinking of getting a vintage awning but are daunted by how difficult they are to put up each time, try this clever little trick to get your awning on its C-track without a lot of hassle.

August 16, 2012

Palomino Tent Trailers: How Little Has Changed

Filed under: Camping,Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

I was watching this video showing how to put up the new Palomino 280LTD Tent Trailer:

Aside from cranking up the top instead of lifting by hand, very little has changed on the trailer compared to my Palomino Pony from 1988.

The floor plan has changed quite a bit, with a sink, stove and sideways dinette, which explains why the new version is TWICE the weight of my light little 1988 model.

Palomino 280LTD Floorplan from Starling Fitness

I’m surprised at how much is the SAME however. The beds pull out the same. The supports under the beds look EXACTLY like mine. So little has changed that I feel a sort of comfort from Palomino RV. If I ever want to buy a brand new one, I might be tempted to buy this exact one, even though it’s so much like my current tent trailer.

There is something to be said for consistency. Automobile manufacturers change so many things from one year to the next that you can never buy the same car twice. If you really love your current car, except for the fact that it’s ten years old, you’re out of luck. They don’t make that car anymore. With a Palomino tent trailer, however, even if your beloved trailer is almost THIRTY years old, you’ll be able to replace it with one that works and looks almost exactly the same. I find that incredibly comforting!

August 15, 2012

The Most Luxurious Tent Trailer EVAR!

Filed under: Camping,Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 8:24 am

This video made me laugh out loud!

It looks like a normal video showing his tent trailer setup, but once you get inside, you really see what he has done to make the place comfy!

Most Luxurious Tent Trailer EVAR from Starling Travel

Check it out for a good laugh!

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