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#vancouple
makesh7thappen · 2 years
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Making a big life change is pretty scary. But you know what is even scarier ? REGRET. also wenn ihr je darüber nachgedacht habt euch ein Van zu kaufen oder einfach die Welt zu bereisen. Macht es. Die beste Entscheidung die wir je getroffen haben war diesen Van auszubauen und zu unserem Zuhause zu machen. 🤍🚐 #vanlife #vantrouble #VanLifeCamper #vanlifemovement #takearisk #schiebetür #camperconversion #campervanlicious #campervan #camperlife🚐 #coupletravels #vancouple #campercouple #camperlifestyle #camperlove #vanlifevirtual #cutetravelcouples #vanlifetravels #van #vanlifecamper #diycamper (hier: VanLife) https://www.instagram.com/p/Caz3O4poGzA/?utm_medium=tumblr
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vanlifia · 3 years
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Another clean simple modern setup. How do you feel about those tiles? 📸 @ittakesajourney #vanlifia #vanlifeo #vanlifediaries #homeiswhereyouparkit #projectvanlife #vancrush #vanlifeexplorers #vanconversion #vanlifeproject #vanlifedreams #vanlifeuk #campervanning #vancouple #vanlifecouple #diyvanbuild #vanbuilduk #vanbuildseries #conversion #vanlifecommunity #vanconversion #citroenrelaycamper #citroenrelay #vanlifemagazine #citroenrelayconversion #vanlifemovement #homeonwheels #limblossawareness #onearmdiy (at Vanlife) https://www.instagram.com/p/CPFaxQThZZS/?utm_medium=tumblr
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kamalganwani · 4 years
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Creativity . #vanlife #vanlifeisawesome #vanlifecamper #vanlifeexplorers #vanlifemovement #vanlifestyle #vanlifegermany #vanlifediaries #vanlifevirals #vanlove #camperlife #camperlifestyle #campervanlife #camperliving #livingvanlife #vanlifers #vanlifedistrict #dirtybootstravel #vancouple #adventurecouple #creativetravelcouples #reiselust #reisefieber #reisefotografie #reiseliebe #reisenmachtglücklich #lebedeinentraum #diekleinendinge #bonfire #travelgreece https://www.instagram.com/p/CF3hPgwA2qq/?igshid=1bqzg3w7bjoqy
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vanlifers · 7 years
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"Nothing can bring you happiness but yourself. Don't measure your days by what you have, measure it by the golden qualities of moments." Thanks to @ourvanstella for sharing this photo with us! #Vanlifers @Vanlifers #vanlifediaries #vanlife #projectvanlife #vanlifemovement #vanhome #vanstories #vw #vwbus #travel #wandermore #simplelife #littlethings #vancouple #vanoutlook #happydays #minimalism #livesimply #homeiswhereyouparkit
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californiaclassyyy · 4 years
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Good Friday 🐣 @freepeopleaustralia @freepeople #southaustralia #ootd #vancouple #backpackingaustralia #adelaide #beachlife #freepeople #goodfriday #88days #cotton #turtleneck (hier: Brighton, South Australia, Australia) https://www.instagram.com/p/B-ypDnlFp2d/?igshid=1sxrlq3jr23cw
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It's really beginning to feel homely and cosy in Florence. My charity shop find (plus a message I left on it for Mark 🙊) has found it's perfect place and we love it. It's hard to get a great photo of it, but I hope you get the gist. Anyone else soppy like me? 😂 #lightbox #lovenotes #fairylights #cosy #soppy #homely #homeiswhereyouparkit #vanlife #vanlifeuk #ukvanlife #vancouple #charityshopfind #thrifty #vanlifemood #loveyourvan #projectvanlife https://www.instagram.com/p/B0jgBBKhB7U/?igshid=1bhao2apmbxqs
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advanturers-blog · 5 years
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Instead of fearing the unknown, embrace it. . . . . . . #utahisrad #discoverutah #utahmagazine #openroadlife #seeknewroads #vanlifeexplorer #vanlifeunity #vanlifenomads #freedomvessel #livefortoday #liveyourbestlifenow #seekingtheoutdoors #getoutandhike #optoutside #betheadventure #seektheunknown #vancouple #theroadlesstraveled #adventureisoutthere https://www.instagram.com/p/Bxszop4ht61/?igshid=yffzryu649kp
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ladyclementine · 7 years
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Surviving Winter in a Van
Well...My partner, David, and I have been ‘living the van life’ for the past 5 months. Funny that I finally get the motivation to write about it in the dead of winter, one of the most miserable van-life experiences you can have. So it goes...
It seems a dreamy existence - get up and go whenever and wherever you like, have all of your possessions on hand everywhere you go...Basecamp is home. But it’s not all butterflies and daydreams. We both still work full time jobs and have to spend our ‘vagabond days’ close to home, which is currently in Colorado. Unfortunately, neither of us are snow birds. We very much appreciate warm weather, and our hobbies correlate with that. While we are lucky to have such a beautiful place to call home, the winter cold can be brutal, wherever you are, and we cannot yet pack off to Mexico anytime the temps dip below freezing. So I thought it couldn’t hurt to write my first post about how we are surviving winter in the van. Maybe it will help others in similar situations, or maybe it will remind me to never do this (for an extended period of time) again. 
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1. Layers. When it gets below zero we are certainly not flouncing around in our skiveys. We go to bed with our comforter, quilt, both sleeping bags, flannel pajama pants or under armour, hats, jackets, sweaters, and most recently, the AMAZING PATAGONIA CAPILENE ONESIE! I’m in love. In fact, I’m thinking of also installing a zipper in the front crotch so I can still use my pee funnel. Be prepared to slip into some cold sheets, get nice and toasty overnight, and have your heater at the ready to prep you for the morning opening of the cocoon. 
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                                           Chilly Mornings
2. Be prepared, but Insulation can only do so much. If you know you will be spending some serious time in the cold while pursuing the van-life, take time and money to insulate right. However, a van is only so big and you can only insulate so much. It’s going to be cold regardless, so be ready to deal. Things to note - Windows are going to leak cold all over the damn place. Insulate them well, but you can also take the insulation out during the day when the sun can shine in and warm up your space. I read another blog where they stuffed pillows in their window spaces at night to block the cold. I wish we had put more insulation in our floor, since a lot of cold comes in from under the van and if I’m not wearing my big wool socks and oscar the grouch slippers at all time, my cold feet bring the chill in to the bone. Pieces of carpet would be good, but would get way too dirty and soak up moisture. Still pending on ideas here.
3. Get a heating element. We have solar, but electric heaters take up so much energy they are practically useless in the van. We are borrowing a Mr. Buddy heater that runs on propane. We pretty much only use it before bed and when getting up in the morning. It heats up the place pretty fast, but the heat doesn’t stick around for long. We have a carbon monoxide detector in the van for safety, and we do not run it while sleeping, even in the negative degree weather.
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4. Ventilate. Be aware of moisture build-up. Though it seems counter-intuitive, given how damned cold it is in that metal box of yours, we recommend cracking your front windows at night. We noticed that we were steaming it up in there pretty heavily, and there was a lot of condensation forming on the inside of the van, which then turns into ice or mold, neither of which are ideal. No one wants to scrape ice off the inside AND the outside of their car windshield! Cracking the windows allows the air to circulate a bit, and while it doesn’t fully take care of the problem, it does reduce it quite a bit.
5. Memory foam is awesome - but it doesn't like the cold. I love memory foam, and it was very convenient to be able to cut our bed to size with a memory foam mattress, but when it is freezing out your bedding is also frozen. Get used to a rock hard pillow. You'll start to sink in once your precious body heat softens it up.
6. In fact, everything freezes. Seriously. All of our water is frozen, so no dishes can be done, which means eating out a lot more, drinking water must be used for brushing teeth, and anything else liquid is useless. Dish soap, medications, shampoo and conditioner...Laundry detergent? Make sure you have powdered on hand. Pee bottles? Go, then dump, or you’ll have a big block of piss-in-a-bottle taking up space until the spring thaw. 
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                                                No Laundry Today :(
7. Drain your plumbing. We have had multiple problems with water leaks from our foot pump set-up. We use a marine foot pump with tubes connecting to our fresh water and gray water tanks. These are attached with hose clamps and worked just fine over the summer, but once the temperatures started fluctuating drastically things got a bit more complicated. We forgot to flush the system when we had below zero temps and a piece of the piping from the faucet split and now sprays water everywhere (working on currently). The attachment points at the pump itself also started leaking when the temperatures changed too much, despite our hose clamps that seem to be working everywhere else, leading to more water leakage and a fear of water/mold growth under our flooring. Eep. Needless to say - just do it manually for a couple months. 
8. Get used to less sexy-times. Just being real here. It’s freezing, you hardly want to lift your nose above the covers, much less remove all your warm snuggly clothes. So unless you have superior fort-building skillz and room for all those blankets...So if you are a couple in a van take every opportunity you can when you can. 
9. Budget to eat out more often. It’s a dangerous habit, and not something you want to get TOO used to, but you’re already saving on rent by living in a van, right? When you wake up and you can hardly bear to get out of bed, your eggs are frozen, water is frozen so you can’t do dishes...Well, you’ve got to eat something. Also, tea. Lots and lots and lots of warm, delicious tea. 
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                                   Frozen Meatballs
10. Take advantage of the Holidays. Have friends in town? Family? Staying in one area long term? House sitting is the way to go. Offer your services taking care of a lonely home or pet(s) that need left behind. Fair exchange - They get free care and you get a hot shower, television, and heat. Beautiful. 
11. Laugh about the little things. What the hell are we doing? We hate cold! I love looking at and playing in snow...when I know I have a warm place to go and marshmallows topped with cocoa afterwards! But despite how miserable it can be, it is also awesome. We must be some tough buggers to stick around the Rocky Mountains in our not-so-well-insulated home. It’s a lifestyle choice, and it says something about much we want this life. We both get frustrated, but we make up for it by laughing at sharing curry right out of the pan to save on dishes, trying to figure out how to pee into a bottle (as a girl) in a onesie, and nuzzling very cold noses. We don’t have answers to everything, we are constantly learning and changing how we do things, and we certainly don’t have a fancy rig with all the perks, just like most other people out there doing the same thing. Just know that it won’t last forever, and it is making you a more resourceful and (crazy) awesome person.
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Hello friends, family, and everyone else! Welcome to this first post of the long-overdue blog of our van build, travels, and life!
For those who don’t know us personally, let us introduce ourselves. We are Jacob and Ellie (#jelliehoss on various social media), a duo from Portland, OR. We are currently living and traveling in our self-converted 1992 Chevy G20 ‘American Road’ edition camper van.
After spending a number of years dedicated to obtaining educations & credentials, building careers, and generally ‘adulting’ in the usual way, we had both arrived at an uncomfortable conclusion: we didn’t like it. We have college degrees, but you probably wouldn’t have known it by our salaries. Our combined student loan debt, an outrageous sum, was hanging over our heads and never far from our minds. After renting rooms and apartments for years in Portland’s worsening housing market, we found ourselves approaching 30 with nothing to show for our efforts. Like most of our peers, we’d never been anywhere close to buying a house, and it seemed increasingly less likely that we ever would. But something else was dawning on us too: maybe we didn’t want to own a house or the 35-year mortgage that went with it. We had never been traditional in any sense of the word, individually or as a couple. So it felt natural to both of us to start thinking creatively about our lifestyle choices and the future we wanted for ourselves.
So, in 2016, almost three years into our relationship, we decided that we wanted to get married. We wanted to create a unique life together and explore the many options available to us as a couple. We wanted to leave home, to adventure, to change all of the circumstances that were suffocating us in Portland.
Jacob had been living in his Chevy van (bought for $900 in 2013!) for about 1 ½ years already, and in a minivan for about a year before that. He had found various ways to make vanlife work around his job, friends & family, and even dating! He chose the van over renting for the sake of saving money more easily, and also for the freedom it afforded him. I had been renting a beautiful but painfully expensive studio apartment in downtown Portland for two years. It was been my first experience of living totally solo, and I loved everything about it but the price tag.
So Jacob and I were no strangers to vanlife when we decided to take this trip. Although I still had my apartment at the time, I enjoyed spending a night or two each week visiting him in the van, as well as weekends away from town. We had begun going on these mini-adventures at least once per month, over mountains, down unknown & unpaved forest roads, and along the coast all over Oregon and sometimes Washington too. In town, we had regular sleeping spots at two of Portland’s many city parks. We were always in good company: both parks were host to a burgeoning community of vandwellers of all walks of life, in vehicles ranging from sedans to fully converted school busses.
Our decision to get married took place on our way out to go camping for our birthday weekend (Jacob’s birthday is the day after mine) at the end of July. I mentioned that we’re not traditional - this was no grand proposal. We were on the floor in the back of the van, parked at a gas station after fueling up. In the middle of a sort of ‘State of Our Union’ discussion, Jacob looked at me and simply said, “Do you…want to get married?” My enthusiasm for the idea of marriage and my confident acceptance surprised even me! Until that moment, I had proudly described myself as “not the marrying type” for my entire life. Jacob had always felt the same way, until this conversation somehow changed both of our minds definitively.
We arrived in Port Townsend that evening high on life, love, and adventures to come. We strolled the sleepy town and sat together on the shore. We huddled over my phone, excitedly browsing unusual wedding bands online, knowing we were getting ahead of ourselves and not caring even a little. The next morning, my 27th birthday, we had our fingers sized in a cute little jewelry shop. Just before heading up into the mountains of Olympic National Park and out of cell phone service, we placed our order for the custom hand crafted wooden rings we had found & both loved instantly the night before. There was no going back now, the rings were paid for!
After shocking both of our families with the announcement upon our return from that trip, we got down to the business of planning our life together. We had both always wanted to travel, but there just hadn’t been the time or money. We loved to spend weekends in bed, scrolling through endless Instagram pictures of people in perfectly curated ‘trendy-rugged’ outfits, draping themselves artfully across the beds in their beautifully designed and meticulously clean vans, sipping steaming coffee from a metal coffee mug and casually taking in a stunning sunrise from a dramatic vista through the opened back doors. I loved and hated these pictures and these people. They not only had exactly everything that I wanted for myself, but with every photo they also perfectly articulated the feelings I only knew from my weekend escapes with Jacob. These pictures are largely intended to sell the vanlife/freedom fantasy to people trapped in offices where they make lots of money which can be spent on whatever brand of aluminum camping coffee mug that #vanlife girl was sipping from. Perhaps they can’t fathom actually escaping that daily grind, but they can own a piece of the dream.
Our camping birthday and engagement set off the next months of our life which saw us practically consumed by furious planning, sketching, research, and note taking. We gave up whole nights of sleep in favor of exciting, animated conversations about what the future held. We were possessed with hope and passion! Our dreams were suddenly within reach, and we were grabbing for them. It’s pretty clear now looking back on it that we were taking on heroic work loads. In addition to each of our full-time jobs (with opposite schedules at that!), we had set the date of our wedding, which we planned entirely without professional guidance, a mere two months out from our engagement! As if the endless and frantic wedding planning wasn’t enough, we also decided to upgrade Jacob’s bachelor van to better accommodate the two of us. We designed, innovated, installed, and built our custom van home in between crafting DIY wedding invites, searching for the perfect dress & suit, and piecing together a ceremony entirely unique to ourselves and our lives.
These wild months may sound insane, but the enormous projects that Jacob and I spent every spare moment working on together brought us incredibly close to one another. Under these adverse conditions, we quickly honed our communication style. Our tight timelines left no room for misunderstanding or errors, and within a few weeks it felt like we were reading each other’s minds. It’s a quirk of my personality that I thrive in extreme situations- they are challenging, exciting, and they remind me that I’m alive. It’s moderation that I find truly difficult to manage. So, throughout August and September of 2016, confronting situations of our own making which easily could have broken us, we found ourselves instead having more fun than ever, laughing loud and often, and seeing our partnership evolve into something deeper.
As cliché as it sounds, our wedding day was the most incredible day of my life. It was extremely important to us that we not needlessly waste money on throwing a lavish party with our van trip immediately to follow. Fortunately, this need to be frugal corresponded quite nicely with our shared belief in simplicity and sustainability and our general opinion that “traditional” weddings often tend to be wasteful, over the top, and centered around unnecessary consumerism, all of which can too easily obscure the actual purpose for the celebration and what is truly important and sacred about a wedding day. We agreed that all savings possible must be saved for our actual life together, and to that end, we would DIY anything possible, choose less expensive options, and accept help from our families (who were so generous with their resources and time). With these rules in mind, we were able to create a ceremony with a tiny budget that was perfect for us.
Jacob had set the van up as it worked for his single life: he slept in a sleeping bag diagonally across the existing back seat, folded flat. He had removed the middle seats and set up the simplest kitchen, a large cooler for food storage whose lid served also as a food preparation surface and sometimes as a seat. Clothing and other supplies were stored under the back seat in 6" tall flat plastic bins which had to be pulled out to open. He had installed a heavy wooden bedside table with two drawers, bolted to the side of the van behind the driver’s seat for secure storage of important documents and valuables. With the addition of a padlock on one drawer, this served its purpose well and provided an additional flat surface for a small table lamp, which was the only interior light. He had a curtain on a tensile rod behind the front seats with piece of dark (but not light blocking) fabric for privacy. He was using the blinds and original curtains on the windows, with the addition of sections of reflectix insulation cut to fit each window for both privacy and warmth. This setup worked well for him alone, and was alright for us in the short term, but was not ideal as we transitioned into a shared existence and our joint vanlife.
Our next post will be dedicated to the build from start to finish, but I want to touch on the most important elements we added to the van to make it suitable as our shared home.
We began our conversion with the bed. Even folded flat, it just wasn’t long enough for us to both sleep lengthwise. We replaced the existing cushion with plywood cut into 3 sections corresponding to the folding frame, adding length to each end. This gave us a full sized bed platform which can still fold up into a couch, and preserved the storage space underneath without having to build a heavy wooden bedframe.
We found an amazing 50% coupon at a local fabric shop and bought 5 yards of blackout fabric and replaced Jacob’s curtain separating the cab from our living space. We also removed the original curtains & blinds, and replaced them with custom black out curtains. Even with lights on at night, the van appears unoccupied, which is probably the most important element of ‘stealth’ needed for camping in town.
Our kitchen is made up of basic, prefab storage cabinets from Home Depot, one is a food pantry in which we have rearranged the shelving to allow for a small cooler on one side. Because we eat a majority plant-based diet, we don’t deal much with things that require refrigeration, so we make do with a very small cooler.
Directly behind the driver’s seat we installed a tiny 12"x15" cabinet that we made into a little pump sink with fresh water & waste water tanks.
Storage for our clothing and supplies is under the bed, accessed from both the front and back. We took meticulous measurements and managed to find plastic stackable clothing drawers. We each have 2 stacked drawers for clothing (17"x30"x6"). We have two much deeper drawers accessed from the rear of the van, for belongings we use less often. Additionally, there is a bin under the center of the bed for things we need to access only rarely.
One of the biggest challenges to address when constructing a tiny and mobile living space is power. We really don’t require much electricity on a day to day basis, but lighting the interior at night is an obvious consideration as well as keeping our devices charged. To this end, we chose the Goal Zero Yeti 400 power pack for power storage. The storage capacity of the Yeti is fairly small, but on an average day it’s enough to meet our fairly minimal power demands. We charge this battery both off of the engine while driving, or with our PowerFilm 60 watt foldable solar panel (it can be charged with a standard outlet as well, but we rarely do this on the road). The Yeti runs our two overhead lights, both highly efficient and tiny GoalZero lamps, and keeps our phones charged.
Over the course of the trip, we’ve made changes and adjustments as we learn what we really need and what we don’t. I’ve made multiple trips to clothing donation bins as the weather and our latitude have changed. I finally admitted to having brought far too many clothes. The simple adaptability is the beauty of having an easily customizable living space!
As we continue posting here, we will write about our route, places visited, and what we got up to in each place. We will also speak more broadly on subjects including: how everyday real van life differs from the glamorous social media version. We'll write posts on things we’re learning about ourselves and our evolving philosophies as well as the numerous lessons taught to us by this incredible experience.
We invite you to join us on this journey and we hope you enjoy our blog!
-EH
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mytourig · 4 years
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How roomy is the garage? Let @wherewewanderthewasteland and @mr_teargas show you as they pack all the gear they need for the perfect adventure getaway! #packthevan #adventurevan #vanlifeadventures #sprintervan #sprintervanconversion #4x4van #mercedes #thisisvanlife #weekendgetaway #weekendescape #vancouples #mytourig https://www.instagram.com/p/CAu62WaJ9Y9/?igshid=1oecjggd5tjtj
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When we told people we were going to be moving into an RV full time, we heard one resounding question in return- “Why?” ⁣ It wasn’t always negative, people just didn’t understand why we would give up our old lives. We had good jobs, lived in a pretty decent house in the Bay Area. We were doing everything 20-something’s were supposed to do. ⁣ People wondered why we would give up that comfort, for the stress of the unknown that we were sure to find on the open road. ⁣ I get it. If you’d told us 2 years ago that we’d be here today, we never would have believed it. But at some point last year, a restlessness grew inside us. A need to do more than just exist. A need to see the stars without the smog. A need to be more wild.⁣ Why?⁣ Because from the depths of our souls rose a tiny little ‘fu ck you’ to “supposed to”.⁣ •••⁣ 📸: @sarahlotusphoto ⁣ •⁣ •⁣ •⁣ •⁣ •⁣ •⁣ •⁣ #homeiswhereyouparkit #homeonwheels #houselessnothomeless #tinyhomeonwheels #tinyhouseonwheels #rvlife #rvlifestyle #camperlifestyle #tinyhousetinyfootprint #camperremodel #fulltimeRV #fulltimeRVlife #stayandwander #adventuremobile #camperlife #rvers #rvcouple #boondocking #rvrenovation #rvremodel #vanlifeexplorers #vandwellinglife #thisisvanlife #vanlife #breakawaytribe #lifeontheroad #notallthosewhowanderarelost #liveoutsidethebox #vancouple #roadtripping https://www.instagram.com/p/BzjVZK8Bs8g/?igshid=1dg8s4epati6m
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makesh7thappen · 2 years
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Schönen Montag euch allen 🥰 Und ein Frohen Valentinstag an alle die den Tag feiern. Was seid ihr: Team Valentinstag 🌹 oder ist nur Montag 🤷 ? #vantrouble #vanlifemovement #vancouple #vancouples #campervanculture #campervan #campervanconversion #coupleinlove #romanticvanlife #vanlife #camperslife #campers #travelcouple #valentinstag #camperbuild (hier: VanLife) https://www.instagram.com/p/CZ93e26ITEm/?utm_medium=tumblr
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vanlifia · 3 years
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What as lively color combo, and that sunset pic 😍 its new owners are hella lucky people! . 📸@vanmonkeys . 🚐 Follow @vanlifia for daily vanlife inspiration 🥰 🎥 TouYube, Bacefook, TakTik in bio 🗣️ Quality comments get featured . #vanlifia #sprintercampervans #sprintercampervan #vanlife #vanlifeideas #sprintervanconversion #vanlifers #homeiswhereyouparkit #vanliving #vanconversion #camperconversion #diycamper #sprintervanlife #homeonwheels #thisisvanlifeing #diycampervan #vandesign #vanlifemovement #vanlifejournal #vanlifedistrict #livingvanlife #vanlifecalendar #vanlifevirals #thatsvangasmic #vanclans #breakawaytoday #outboundliving #vanlifecaptain #vancouple #selfbuildcamper (at Vanlife) https://www.instagram.com/p/CM_okM4hPxt/?igshid=6g15o06yhgaw
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travel-every-day · 5 years
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We are planing to see the Tulip Paradise next month. 🌷 🌷 🌷 Have you been to the Netherlands during Springtime? Any suggestions of beautiful spots filled with tulips? 😊 . L E N I - H I P P I E - B U S - music by Kazura -My Hollidays #t4syncro #vwcamperlife #campervanculture #campervantrip #campervanster #vwbuslove #vanlifetravels #campervanlifediaries #wondermore #vanlifedistrict #vwt4syncro #vwt4transporter #vwt4life #vanlifejournal #camperlife #bfgoodrich #govanmoment #vanhome #vwbulli #vwausbau #syncrolove #syncro #vanlove #highuptransporters #selfmadecampervan #openroadlife #vanclan #vancouple (at Personico, Switzerland) https://www.instagram.com/p/BvhfFhih8oW/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=v78qq3o7tr6s
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vanlifers · 7 years
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From @thevanchapter "All three of us had long smiles on our faces, overwhelmed by joy, freedom and excitement. It was marvelous to ride our bikes along the lake, admire the mountains and go back to our #homeonwheels for a warm meal" #vanlifers #bioelvibulli #thevanchapter #romanticnomads • #vanlifeeurope #vanlife #vancouple #couplegoals #vandog #alexwonderdog #vanlifestyle #projectvanlife #campervanlife #vancrush #vanlifemagazine #exploreeverywhere #travelcouple #travelwithdog #dogsonadventures #campervan #travelingwithhim #slowtravelling #mobilehome #freedom #rollinghome #vanlifecouple @vanlifers #couplewhotravel #lessismore (em Switzerland)
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whatabus · 6 years
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#Deutschland 🇩🇪 Wir sind tatsächlich zurück und füllen erstmal unseren #Gastank auf. Der #Winter kann weitergehen, wir sind #bereit 🤙 . #WHATABUS #vanlove #vanlife #vanlifeexplorers #vanlifediaries #vanlifers #projectvanlife #camping #bestoftravel #bestofeurope #photooftheday #instatravel #fun #vangirls #vancouple #tinyhouse #onwheels #houselessnothomeless #lifeontheroad #vanliving #vanstyles #travelblogger #homeiswhereyouparkit #vanlifeexplorers #vanstyles #vans #wintertour
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