I JUST BOUGHT MY EQUIPMENT. NOW WHAT?

Go on some weekend runs to a campground fairly close by. Bring what you think you need. Add some paper and a pencil (to make a list of things you wish you'd brought). Don't forget food. Try out your new equipment on several occasions before venturing further from home or the nearest store.

If you bought some form of RV, don't forget to practice driving it, backing it up, and making huge turns in it. As you're driving it, and you encounter a double-left turn lane, take the outside lane. You'll have wider swing room. If you're attempting to turn right, learn the phrase, “Swing wide, sweet chariot”, and DO it. If you have a towable, learn to hitch up. It's helpful to have two people for this process, but a number of people have devised systems to do it single-handedly. Have a check-list available for your hitch-up process so that you won't accidentally miss a step and drop your trailer on its nose (or the back of your brand new pick-up truck, as happened to friends)

When you're comfortable, try a “shake-down cruise”. This would be further afield, perhaps a long weekend a little farther away from home.

Once you've done all that, you're probably ready for your camping vacation. Doing practice runs close to home is much better than trying to learn all this while in strange places.

A few smaller tips:
Don't leave your sewer hookup open when you're in a camping site. When you get ready to leave, attach the sewer hose and “dump” at that time. You might want to wear protective gloves for this purpose. Leaving your sewer open into the drain leaves you vulnerable to a stoppage.

Carry a spray bottle of bleach, a water pressure regulator, a water T (2 hoses on one water spigot), a pair of protective gloves, and a rag. At one time or another, you'll appreciate having them.

You may also want 50' of water hose and 50' of electrical cord, plus pigtails that fit your rig. If you only have a 50-amp hookup for your unit's electrical, get a 50-to-30 adaptive pigtail. You may also want a 50-to-20, but DO NOT run your AC or furnace if you have to use that pigtail!

If a seasoned RV-er in a campground gives you some advice, consider it carefully. One veteran suggested to a newbie, “Retract your awning tonight”, and he didn't. In the middle of the night, the wind whipped up and destroyed said awning. For that newbie, lesson learned.