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verdehunter

RV on cold hunt question

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I have a dumb question for the group….I have done plenty of cold hunts over the years, mostly in tents or staying in others trailers. I have a hunt coming up in 9 next week (late archery) and plan to take my trailer. Temps look to be high teens/low twenties every night. There will be a few days I will not be at camp, but my trailer will. No way to run heat while I’m gone.

How screwed will I be by putting water in the tank and it sitting a few nights in those temps? What are some options? Fill it with jugs when I’m there and then drain when I leave? 

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I had a COLD until 10 tag years back. Never had an issue accept the tank froze solid the last day. Granted we ran it every night.

 

Some sort of skirt would work great, I think Amazon also has things that attach to the tank to keep it warm.

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Your lines are going to freeze and cause problems if you don't winterize it. Propane is cheaper than fixing broken lines/fixtures. Leave the thermostat at 40/50. Ed F

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Can you leave the heat on low? Take an extra tank and put it in when you leave then bring back a refilled tank when you return?

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I was going to suggest the same thing but pretty scary.  Heater will run the battery out in 24 hours would be my guess and one over night will freeze it solid.  I'm sure there are aftermarket ideas (like mentioned above) - share if you try and work but I would be surprised if skirting alone would do much without some heat under there - at that point just insulating the frozen air. 

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I was hesitant to try skirting. Doesn’t seem like it would do much. I might just do my original idea of tranferring water into it while I’m there and can have heaters on. 

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I'm kind of in the same boat, but I won't be away from mine for extended periods. You might look into a couple solar panels to recharge your batteries during the day and keep the heater on but low. Also open up all the cabinets in the kitchen and bathroom to let that warmth in. Running multiple batteries in parallel will make them last longer, but will take longer to charge. Good luck, and let us know what you find out. 

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I was on a very cold weather sandhill crane hunt.  We stayed at an RV Park so it was no big deal but the water hose froze.  You need to use internal water.  I also have to the the little Honda generators for power if we go remote -- CPAP and O2 require a fair bit of power and the heater blower is not that big of a current draw and one generator will last all night.  The daytimes were not all that cold that it would freeze internal water lines.  I would never leave the trailer out all night with no power.  The alternate and smart strategy would be to winterize while you are gone.  You can NEVER be totally sure when you will get back.  We learned that at our trailer park when friends did not make it back up when they hoped.  Less than $20 in pink juice to winterize.

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Had the 6a muzzleloader  hunt  a few years back . Parked the trailer  Tues sunny and clear . My dad finally  got in and we headed  up for the hunt and it was blowing  snow. Nice 14 degrees and ice and snow  . Dad gets drawn and it's 60s every year. Anyway  it froze the water  in the trailers for 4 days . 50 gallons  in mine and a hundred  in my dad's toyhauler.  

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Leave the heater to 40-50 like everyone else said. Just make sure you park away from any brush and have insurance incase it burns down 😅

 

You can get a solar panel to top off the charge on the battery. I put three panels on my trailer and added an extra battery. I only need to run a generator when running AC or Microwave, or on a really cloudy day.

 

Heres one that should work.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D8BCD3G1/ref=sspa_dk_detail_0?pd_rd_i=B0D8BCD3G1&pd_rd_w=xzS7W&content-id=amzn1.sym.f2f1cf8f-cab4-44dc-82ba-0ca811fb90cc&pf_rd_p=f2f1cf8f-cab4-44dc-82ba-0ca811fb90cc&pf_rd_r=SSXW9GFYBV732RGVYX9T&pd_rd_wg=DHamq&pd_rd_r=cf029e58-6402-4fc7-80f4-dbd29a919df7&s=lawn-garden&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9kZXRhaWxfdGhlbWF0aWM&th=1

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I'm also a fan of the buddy heater.  Open up the cabinet doors and leave the door to the shitter open and let it go.  If I am counting on a buddy heater I run a battery powered carbon monoxide detector.  If you are running the buddy heater while in the camper set the alarm lower in the trailer then where the lowest person is sleeping.  It's not fun waking up dead.  

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