winter jackets were necessary at Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah |
I am freezing my butt off!
Well, I wish, but it really is chilly here!
Campers are typically not made for warm weather. They tend to be a bit drafty and have very little insulation. With us on the road often, we have small propane tanks that cost more to fill. We go through about a tank a week. Thankfully the prices here in southern Utah are very reasonable at $20 a tank. I’d like to say we have 35 lb tanks but that is just a guess based off of a memory buried in the deepest recesses of my tired brain.
We have two electric heaters besides the furnace. With lots of blankets and warm jammies we do pretty good at night. It is just when I sit in the slide out to type on my computer late at night that I really start to get chilled.
Don’t get me wrong, we are not in the frigid temperatures of central or mountainous Utah. Still, with below freezing temps and the cool March winds picking up, we can still feel the bite of winter.
So is life in the desert; the days warm up nicely and the nights freeze.
I try hard to not complain. Before long it will be too hot and our electric bill at the campgrounds will reflect our air conditioner attempting to cool this huge beast.
When the sun sets in the desert it can get very cold! Zion National Park, Utah |