The other side of longterm overlanding. It’s easy to put up with the uncomfortable moments when you know you’ll be driving back to a comfy house. Rain soaked gear can get hung in the garage or in the bathroom…not for those living on the road. Each day is full of sorting stuff to be prepared enough to move forward, more like the short game over the long game even though that is the long game.
We actually preferred the rainy season but we are from Florida so that was more of what we were use to. The dry season, ehh the flies and dust, had us at wits end. We’re not sure you have the room but a small vacuum makes dealing with the bugs a quick job, a tip we received from Pan-Am veterans before we set off. The bugs you just encountered sound like termites but that’s just a guess.
There is no shame in getting a room or an apartment. We did it many times. Why should only the moto riders get to have A/C and a bathtub ; ) Also, it might just be the only way to fully dry out. Central America in the rainy season means a clothes dryer is essential. Once the funk sets in it’s almost impossible to get it out. We had one spell of 17 days of constant rain.
Nothing really holds up to everyday use. The screens in our pop top are failing, as is the canvas, but we figure we used our top the equivalent of 80+ years based on how others use their vans. Things like that suck more than almost anything else when on the road. Reach out to Alu-Cab, they may work with you. Friends had issues with their ARB awning and they were sent replacement parts, they also had a new fridge sent to them to replace theirs that failed.
I’ll end with one of my favorite descriptions of long term overlanding by Graeme Bell: “You make life long friends you may never see again in your lifetime.” It’s one of the hardest parts.
Yours in the struggle
-JaM
We actually preferred the rainy season but we are from Florida so that was more of what we were use to. The dry season, ehh the flies and dust, had us at wits end. We’re not sure you have the room but a small vacuum makes dealing with the bugs a quick job, a tip we received from Pan-Am veterans before we set off. The bugs you just encountered sound like termites but that’s just a guess.
There is no shame in getting a room or an apartment. We did it many times. Why should only the moto riders get to have A/C and a bathtub ; ) Also, it might just be the only way to fully dry out. Central America in the rainy season means a clothes dryer is essential. Once the funk sets in it’s almost impossible to get it out. We had one spell of 17 days of constant rain.
Nothing really holds up to everyday use. The screens in our pop top are failing, as is the canvas, but we figure we used our top the equivalent of 80+ years based on how others use their vans. Things like that suck more than almost anything else when on the road. Reach out to Alu-Cab, they may work with you. Friends had issues with their ARB awning and they were sent replacement parts, they also had a new fridge sent to them to replace theirs that failed.
I’ll end with one of my favorite descriptions of long term overlanding by Graeme Bell: “You make life long friends you may never see again in your lifetime.” It’s one of the hardest parts.
Yours in the struggle
-JaM