Tag: Summer RV Tour 2025

Summer RV Tour 2025: A Retirement Adventure

57 Days. 4,700 Miles. Countless Memories.

The Summer RV Tour 2025 wasn’t just a trip—it was the first chapter of retirement, a rolling adventure across the American West with Bertie Bea, my Tiffin Allegro Open Road, and Rosie in tow. From the high plains of Colorado to the historic falls of Montana, every stop along the way carried its own flavor, history, and cast of characters.

Whether you’re a seasoned full-timer or dreaming of your first RV trip, I hope this post inspires you to hit the road, chase some sunsets, and listen to the stories each town and trail has to offer.


🚀 Launching Into Retirement

In May 2025, I shut down the work laptop for good. After years in the office, the open road was calling—and I answered. Retirement meant more than extra free time; it meant finally being able to live fully on the road with no deadline but the horizon.


🌾 Kit Carson, CO – Where the Wind Still Whispers

My first stop was Kit Carson, Colorado, a high plains town named for the legendary frontiersman and scout. The wind out there doesn’t mess around—one night brought 40mph sustained winds with gusts up to 70mph. I had to pull in Bertie Bea’s slides just to keep the toppers from becoming airborne.

It was wild. It was raw. And it was a beautiful reminder of why the frontier spirit is still alive and well out there.

🧭 Historical Side Note: Kit Carson helped guide the Frémont expeditions and played a significant role in westward expansion. His legacy is storied—and complicated—but the town bearing his name still holds echoes of that old west grit.


🎣 North Sterling State Park, CO – Friendship and Fresh Air

Next up: North Sterling State Park. Nestled around North Sterling Lake, it’s the perfect place for reconnecting—with old friends and new. The campground was alive with weekend laughter, shared meals, and lakeside chats that stretched well past sunset.

For me, this stop was a reaffirmation that RV life isn’t just about seeing the country—it’s about building community wherever your tires touch the ground.


🏛️ Laramie, WY – From Outlaws to On-Air

In Laramie, I found a quiet place to catch up on Wandering Gypsy RV Life projects and begin laying the groundwork for a brand-new podcast: On the Road with TechnoRV.

I also visited the Wyoming Territorial Prison, where the infamous Butch Cassidy was once incarcerated. Walking those cold stone halls was like stepping into another time.

📚 Historical Highlight: Laramie was once known as “Hell on Wheels” thanks to its wild railroad boom. Today, it’s a balance of college town charm and old-west heritage.


🎂 Alcova, WY – A Dam Fine Birthday Week

I rang in my birthday fishing the North Platte River in Alcova with my friends Brian Hilbert and Rowdy. The local slogan, “It’s a dam site,” was spot-on.

We floated, fished, and flung enough flies to make any trout nervous—and managed to land some beautiful rainbows. There may have been a few epic fishing fails too… but I’ll let my YouTube video tell that story.

🎣 Fishing Fan? Watch the video of my birthday week fly fishing adventure (and bloopers!) on YouTube »


🏞️ Medora, ND – National Parks and Rodeo Legends

Medora is a treasure on the edge of Theodore Roosevelt National Park. Rosie and I drove the scenic loop, where bison roam and badlands blaze in the sunset.

I also stopped by the North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame, where I was moved by an exhibit featuring Wayne Herman, PRCA World Champion Bareback Rider, and one of my childhood rodeo heroes. His grit and resilience made a huge impact on me growing up—and still does.


🐴 Miles City, MT – Museums and Military History

In Miles City, I toured the Range Rider Museum, located on the site of Fort Keogh—named after Capt. Myles Keogh, who died with Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.

The museum is packed with frontier history: rifles, saddles, wagons, and cowboy artifacts from every era. It’s one of the most authentic looks at the American West you’ll find.


🌊 Great Falls, MT – Tracing the Lewis & Clark Trail

In Billings, I met up with Doug Simcox from the Beyond the Chutes podcast, and we made a road trip to Great Falls to explore the very ground where Lewis and Clark once stood.

The expedition had to portage five massive waterfalls in this area—a grueling task that nearly broke them. Seeing those falls firsthand gave me a whole new appreciation for their journey.

🎙️ Bonus: Doug and I recorded some great podcast content during our time together—stay tuned!


🎪 Rock Springs, WY – Tiffin Rallies and River Days

The Tiffin Allegro Club “Riding the Range” Rally at the Sweetwater Events Complex in Rock Springs was 10 days of education, upgrades, and good old-fashioned fun.

I teamed up with Michael Kilbourne and the TechnoRV crew to record seminars and podcast episodes and even took a day off to fish the Green River with guide Austin Fox of The Solitary Angler—one of the best guides I’ve ever had.

It was also a pleasure to meet Bob Tiffin, the founder of Tiffin Motorhomes, and Brett Davis, owner of National Indoor RV Centers and 2025 Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year. Safe to say the RV world is in good hands.


🚐 The Road Home – 1,700 Miles and a Full Heart

After the rally, I drove 1,700 miles over four days and pulled into Kick Back Ranch & Event Center—my home base in Alabama—on June 26.

Fifty-seven days. Dozens of stops. More memories than I can count. And I’d do it all over again tomorrow.


📣 Follow the Journey

If you enjoyed this recap, be sure to:

🔹 Subscribe to the Wandering Gypsy RV Life Podcast

🔹 Watch the fly fishing fails and road adventures on YouTube »

🔹 Follow me on Facebook and Instagram

Whether you’re full-timing or weekend wandering, remember:

“Not all who wander are lost.”
— J.R.R. Tolkien

Until next time, keep your coffee hot, your hitch tight, and your spirit wide open.

See you on the road,

– Stan

Winter-Ready RVing in Kit Carson, Colorado: A Modern Stay in a Historic Land


As I rolled into Kit Carson, Colorado, on a bright and breezy afternoon, it hit me—this tiny town in the Eastern Plains might be out of the way, but it sure packs in some surprising character. The vast prairie stretched out endlessly around me, broken only by a few grain silos, a distant water tower, and the occasional tumbleweed making its escape across the highway.

I was pulling into the newly opened Colorado Plains RV Park, a modest but cleverly designed campground that opened its gates in May 2024. Aside from the fact that I initially blew right past the entrance and had to detour 12 miles to turn around, what drew my attention was the park’s unique winter-ready water setup. It’s the kind of small-town ingenuity that full-time RVers like me really appreciate, especially when the mercury drops.


Frost-Proof Innovation on the High Plains

If you’ve RVed in colder climates, you know how tricky water connections can be once freezing temps set in. Many campgrounds simply shut off their water to avoid frozen pipe disasters, leaving you with a full tank and prayers that it’ll last until spring.

Not so at Colorado Plains RV Park.

Each site is equipped with a power-heated water spigot designed to prevent freezing, even in the biting chill of Colorado winters. It’s a Jones H-7000 heated hydrant, and let me tell you—it’s slick. Plug the cord into the nearby 20A outlet, attach your hose with a pressure regulator and filter setup, and you’re good to go, even if Jack Frost is nipping at your sewer hose.

Instructions are printed at every site for easy reference. The setup uses a black locking collar that twists to allow water flow, locks to prevent backflow, and disconnects with just a few firm motions. It’s the kind of small, thoughtful infrastructure that makes a huge difference for winter RVing.

Pair this hydrant with a Hose Grip drinking water hoseinline triple-stage filtration, and a quality regulator, and you’ve got yourself a winter water hookup that’s both safe and secure.


A Town Named for a Legend

With my site leveled and Bertie Bea settled in, I unhooked Rosie and decided to explore this namesake town: Kit Carson, Colorado. You won’t find a bustling main street or a stack of museums, but the name carries a frontier weight that stretches far beyond the city limits.

Established in the mid-1870s, the town sits along the old Smoky Hill Trail, a key route for settlers and gold-seekers heading west. When the Kansas Pacific Railway rolled through in 1870, it brought a flood of new settlers to the area. The town was named after Christopher “Kit” Carson, a man who was already a living legend.


Kit Carson: The Man, the Myth, the Mountain

By Mathew Brady or Levin C. Handy

So, who was Kit Carson?

Born in 1809 in Kentucky, Carson headed west as a teenager, chasing adventure as a trapper, scout, and guide. He became one of the most well-known mountain men of the 19th century, partnering with the famed explorer John C. Frémont on multiple expeditions through the uncharted American West.

Carson wasn’t just a wilderness survivalist—he was a U.S. Army officer, a frontiersman, and a controversial figure in Native American history. While he played a major role in opening the West for expansion, he was also involved in military campaigns that displaced Navajo people during the Long Walk to Bosque Redondo—a dark chapter in Western history.

Despite this, Kit Carson’s name became iconic. Streets, towns, counties, and even a national forest were named after him. For better or worse, his legacy looms large in the American West.


RVing Through History

As I sat outside that evening with a cup of coffee and the prairie winds doing their thing, I couldn’t help but feel connected to the deep historical roots of this place. Sure, it’s a little dusty. The nearest Walmart is nearly 60 miles away in Lamar, and the closest grocery store is a Dollar General in Eads, 22 miles south. But that’s part of the charm.

Kit Carson isn’t just a stopover—it’s a reminder of how much of the West is still wide open. Here, the roads are long, the sky’s even longer, and the spirit of the frontier is alive and well in the little things, like a smartly built water spigot in a brand-new RV park.

I’ll be in Colorado a bit longer before heading north to Wyoming, but if you’re ever traveling along Highway 287 and need a quiet, no-fuss place to park your rig (and maybe brush up on some frontier history), don’t sleep on Colorado Plains RV Park.


Pro Tips for Winter Water Hookups at Campgrounds

  • Always use a pressure regulator to protect your RV plumbing.
  • Heated hydrants like the Jones H-7000 can keep water flowing even below freezing—just make sure to plug in the cord!
  • Triple-stage filters are great for removing sediment, chlorine, and any odd-tasting minerals in rural water systems.
  • Bring extra hose insulation or a heated hose if temps dip lower than what the hydrant is rated for.

Until next time, keep the coffee hot and the tanks from freezing. And remember—not all who wander are lost.

👉 Want to see the full setup in action? Check out the companion video on YouTube and follow along on Instagram and Facebook @WanderingGypsyRVLife.