If I wanted to buy a used membership so I could travel across the states over a 2 year period then, after that time sell the membership, would that be cost effective. Also, if my travel was fairly spontaneous, booking 2 weeks out, would I be out of luck?
OK we asked the Waggs as they have a used membership, they responded - Most used memberships cannot be sold again. Secondly, it depends where you're going over those two years because there really is not much TT except along the boarder of the country. So if you're using it that way then you're good. Two weeks out is a gamble. Time of year makes a huge difference. Highly sought after locations might be hard to get unless you plan far enough out. Like for example, if you're going to like the New England or far north states where the camping season is short because of their weather then winging it will be difficult.
@@BrazenBrits Thank you for your reply. will look into reselling a used membership. that would totally change my game plan if I could not sell it when I was done.
I'm confused on the Thousand Trails membership stuff. I hear people paying thousands of dollars to stay at a Thousand Trails campgrounds. The way I understand it is that if you just pay the yearly membership fees. You can book and stay at any Thousand Trails campgrounds all year long. We are full-time RVers since December of last year. When we heard that Thousand Trails cost Thousands of dollars plus the yearly membership fee. We turned it away. I'm confused on all it. Can you explain it for me???
The current annual membership fee (that’s what we have) allows you to do what you said above, But with restrictions. Things like you can only book 60 days in advance, you can only stay for a limited amount of days at one place and you have to get out of the system after a certain period. If you pay for one of the special packages, those restrictions are not so restrictive (you can book 120 days in advance, can stay at places longer and don’t have to get out of the system). For us, it isn’t worth the elite packages. The general annual fee works well for us and we are sticking with it, but I can see how it would work for others. There are some great videos out there explaining probably better than we can as we are fairly new to it all too 👍
We are considering the upgrade package at this very moment. We have the CAMPING PASS package that came with our new RV courtesy of Lazy Days. Normally, that's $615 (or so) per year. In that package, you don't have to pay any campground fees at all (except a few parks do charge a $20/night fee and some charge a $10 booking fee). If you stay away from those parks, all your stays are nearly free. BUT you can only stay up to 14 days, and you can't stay in another park for 7 days, and you can only book 60 days up. We are going full time later this year, so that won't work for us. We are looking at the upgrade package ELITE BASIC, which is a one time LIFETIME fee of $5,845 (which can be financed), and then an annual fee of $930 (which equates to the $615 plus all-zone add-on)). The ELITE package allows you to book up to 120 days, stay for up to 21 days in one park, and immediately go to another park (called Park-to-Park). Even, with the high entry fee, it makes sense, because our current budget shows us spending $6,000 in campground fees in our first 6 months of full time living.... FINANCIALLY, this makes sense. We are testing a few TT campgrounds around us in Florida... so far, not at all impressed! They are basically mobile home parks (with lots of year round residents) with a few RV spots and look crummy. Hopefully this is just the nature of Florida snow-birding, and not representative of the rest of the TT system. We would prefer to be around other RV'ers.
@@LaureanVincent5 with the camping pass, you can stay 14 days with 7 days out the system or you can stay 4 days back and forth between campgrounds and stay in the system.
@@LaureanVincent5 The current price is 630$/year for 1 zone, 70$/year for any other zone. You can also add more campgrounds (the Encore program) for 330$/year. These basic packages allow you to camp at many camp grounds, in the two programs, for 14 days, for free. (Some of the camp grounds charge a 20$/day fee). You must stay somewhere else, for 7 days, before booking into another camp ground in the program. If you only stay 4 days at a camp ground in the program, you can move immediately to another camp ground in the program, with no "out time" in between. Alternatively, you can buy an upgraded package (8,000$ or 13,000$ as a one time charge) that allows you to stay 21 or 28 days at a camp grounds in the program and then move immediately to another camp ground, in the program, with no required "out" time. Seniors get a deal. Their yearly fee is frozen at the entry price.
I have the $500 membership and so far so good but I try to book a reservation for Thanksgiving weekend and it full... I get it ...but when I try to get a reservation as a nonmember there are sites available I understand that you need to make money but I wish there would be transparent when you are getting the membership letting you know this information..
@@BrazenBrits oh I’m so sorry to hear that. We lost our lab 4 years ago and I still find myself crying from time to time, it feels like it was yesterday.
As we found out this week - it totally depends on the location. Encore / watch out! They totally have pet restrictions and how old the camper is. For the most part the thousand trails seem to have no restrictions, but I wouldn’t trust that.
Great video. I was curious if you have a dedicated Internet service besides what is available on the cell phones or hot spots? If so what is it and what is you GPS with the service. I ask because I current work from home and require dedicated intetnet with required 10 GPS in order for my programs to run properly.
Hi LaCreisha, apologies for the late reply, we just found this comment that we didn’t reply to. We currently have an ATT hotspot, a Visible hotspot and Starlink. We have found that Starlink is the best when there are no obstructions. ATT is our backup. We have heard excellent things about T-mobile unlimited, which we might try soon
For MY type of camping (4-5 days/month) Walmart parking lots (or Indian casinos, hospitals, welcome centers, truck stops) serve my purposes. ALL FREE! But for someone who is living on the road and doesn't want to "pick up and move" every night, the 1000 Trails package, especially the 8,000$ and 13,000$ (one time fee) packages will save BIG BUCKS!
For sure, our friends, the Wayward Waggs, recently released a video on how much they saves by using one on the big packages. But as you say, they are full timers who don't want to move frequently. This zone pass worked in our favour for the 4 week we were in Florida. However, now we have a homebase here, we didn't renew. We were looking at our next travel plans and were surprised to see a huge lack of campsites within the middle states of the US via Thousand Trails.
We didn’t think it would work for us, but it’s actually pretty good and their online booking system is really easy to use. Our current trip has already paid for the membership....even if we stayed at cheaper RV parks.
We are speaking with TT soon about the new level that was released right after we posted this. They still haven’t released pricing yet, which is the missing ingredient, but otherwise it looks like a great package deal. Watch this space 👍
Great to see you Steve! It has actually already paid for itself, but we only got the basic membership. TTO is really nice, but some of the encore properties aren’t quite as nice
Well, TT is not a true campground experience, unless you like being crammed in like sardines. I’ve been a member for 3 yrs now and have used the system quite a bit. But I find myself looking for other options now, even if I have to pay or won’t have any hookups. To say their parks are rundown is a huge understatement. An example of close quarters would be Rancho Oso in Santa Barbara. Beautiful setting, but you can reach out and touch your neighbor. So I stay down the road at Paradise campground (national forest). Much nicer, more space, no hookups, but you feel like you’re actually camping. Examples of rundown parks would be San Benito, Morgan Hill, and Lake of the Springs in California. Just a few of many of their parks where they turn broken electric boxes into tent sites. There are so many it boggles the mind. If I had it to do over again I would not join. Yes their sites are free once you’re a member. Yes you can go park to park with certain memberships. The question is, why would you want to.
Some great points here @michstrito. We found that some of the Encore properties were a bit run down. Thousand Trails Orlando was very pleasant, spacious and clean. We really enjoyed our time there. We haven't seen the parks on the West coast yet though. I think TT is a great system, especially for fulltime RVers. For us part timers, it works well and has saved us money. It's especially useful when traveling long distances and need a full hookup site (For AC/Heat) for a night or two.
We feel like everybody is going to hotspots and using all the cell tower capacity! I bet the campground wireless access will be much faster than it used to be as nobody ever uses it anymore 🤣
@@BrazenBrits we are looking into becoming full timers - what have you found to be the best cellphone/internet provider? I see you mentioned ATT - do y’all use just them? I work remotely and as long as I can download my work and reply to emails and take a zoom meeting once or twice a month I should be okay.
Hi @@brittany0222. We do use solely AT&T. We had an internet contract in our Pepwave router, both our phones and a hotspot. However, no matter which provider you use, you'll always need to check coverage maps for cover. When looking for sites, we checked two things....do they allow dogs and is there AT&T coverage. Only one place we stayed at had no coverage at all even though the map showed that it did. As long as you use Verizon or ATT and check the coverage maps, you should be good to go. I hear that T-mobile are getting better now that they have teamed up with Sprint.
I was told by the Thousand Trails sales team that I can pay $499 for the basic camping pass, then pay $299 for the "encore collection" without ever having to pay any additional nightly fees (or fees in general) to stay at the Encore rv resorts. Is it true that most will not cost any extra after paying these 2 fees or will most rv resorts still ask to pay additional fees as well? Also, would it cost any extra to access their amenities? Thanks for the info.
Hi Aaron, in the 5 encore properties that we have stayed at, we did not have to pay anything other than the two thousand trails fees. We didn’t pay any extra nightly fees or fees for amenities 👍👍
Their booking system isn’t bad. We only had an issue trying to book thousand trails Orlando. I guess it’s hard to get into the more popular places, but we didn’t have an issue at the encore properties.
@@AaronEstebanSEO our pleasure! Keep us updated in what you decide and how it goes. We love to hear about different experiences about things like things like this 👍
Those advance booking windows (180 days, 120 days, 60 days), from what I understand, are the difference between getting one of those 10 sites or not. In fact, if one DOESN'T have a 180 or 120 day booking window, one can just about FORGET about getting a camp site during peak periods. Also, the 14 days in and the required 7 days out can be annoying if one likes to stay at one place for a long time. That can be avoided by staying only 4 days. THEN one can go "park to park" without any required period in between. Alternatively, one can buy an upgraded "package", (8,000$ or 13,000$) directly from TT or at a lower price, a resale, and the stay days go up to 21, or 28 and one can go "park to park' without any required "out" periods in between. But, bottom line: It's my opinion...Unless one is "on the road" 365 days a year and just RV's here and there on week ends, it probably isn't worth it.
Great info on the TT. You're very welcome for the mooch dock and thank you for dinner. But I'm not quite sure about the classy shot of me, not sure if I was eating, my dentures slipped (don't have dentures) or if I was trying to swallow a gold fish. Either way it wasn't my best slow motion appearance. Nice haircut.
I really liked that shot of you. As you know, we’ve been crazy busy, so this was a little rushed, but wanted to explain why we bought TT when we said we probably never would.
That was my question... Can you upgrade let's say 6 months later? Also... Do you have to book 2 weeks.. or can you book 10 days n return like 21 days later? Thanks for covering the "life membership" ... People normally don't-dont 😁 Sorry, couldn't resist!
"If you have any questions ... " He: thinks for a moment ... She: Without missing a beat says: "Ask someone else!" -- I love that British humor lol :DDD
Saw you on the Waggs! I bought used. I have 180 days window. 21 days and can go park to park. I agree about the customer service! You may get strange reservations. Some have been three or more parts for the same stay!
Hi Jay! Yeah, that’s exactly what happened. For 12 days in Orlando, we had 4 reservations. That’s great to hear that the customer service was good for existing customers and also for non-youtubers.
Need to start enforcing speeding of golf Carts and E-BIKES!!! Also go after SEASONAL S with UNSIGHTLY SITES and NO FULL TIME SEASONAL RESIDENCE, before it becomes the HOOD.
Hi Carlos, that's good information. We have only had to call once since signing up and the service was very good. The only other times we have had to call was around a specific booking, so we called the RV park directly. Thanks for the heads up though, we'll keep this in mind.
You have to keep calling back.... Their main call center, I was told, is in Louisiana, so they were hit with weather closings. When I was able to get somebody on the phone... they were FANTASTIC!
They need to add more Transit sites in many of their campgrounds they have too many seasonal sites it should be 50/50 also get rid of the 10-year rule on older models some Diesel's look better then some of the new RV's it doesn't make sense you're promoting to sell 190 campgrounds but then you restricting some if they're 10 years or older
Hi Carlos, we heard that was a rule in some places, and we originally had a 2004 for a very short time and we worried about this. It is a shame that they do this as we know many rigs that are spectacular, even when they are over 10 years old. I wonder if you send a picture of your rig, they might accept it?
We we have a thousand Trails membership definitely worth getting. I think we've enjoyed campgrounds we've been to we have save some money for sure.
Yup. I think we are a bit late to the game and never thought it would be worth it, but we are sold now.
Nice information
Cheers Johnny 👍
Welcome to the club!
Thanks guys 🤣👍
If I wanted to buy a used membership so I could travel across the states over a 2 year period then, after that time sell the membership, would that be cost effective. Also, if my travel was fairly spontaneous, booking 2 weeks out, would I be out of luck?
OK we asked the Waggs as they have a used membership, they responded - Most used memberships cannot be sold again. Secondly, it depends where you're going over those two years because there really is not much TT except along the boarder of the country. So if you're using it that way then you're good. Two weeks out is a gamble. Time of year makes a huge difference. Highly sought after locations might be hard to get unless you plan far enough out. Like for example, if you're going to like the New England or far north states where the camping season is short because of their weather then winging it will be difficult.
@@BrazenBrits Thank you for your reply. will look into reselling a used membership. that would totally change my game plan if I could not sell it when I was done.
What about supporting state and national parks with this money?
Congratulations on busting the 6000 subscribers.
Very well deserved.
Looking forward to the 10 grand mark.
Cheers Andy! We had a toast 🥂 😄
@@BrazenBrits
Cheers.
I'm confused on the Thousand Trails membership stuff. I hear people paying thousands of dollars to stay at a Thousand Trails campgrounds. The way I understand it is that if you just pay the yearly membership fees. You can book and stay at any Thousand Trails campgrounds all year long. We are full-time RVers since December of last year. When we heard that Thousand Trails cost Thousands of dollars plus the yearly membership fee. We turned it away. I'm confused on all it. Can you explain it for me???
The current annual membership fee (that’s what we have) allows you to do what you said above, But with restrictions. Things like you can only book 60 days in advance, you can only stay for a limited amount of days at one place and you have to get out of the system after a certain period. If you pay for one of the special packages, those restrictions are not so restrictive (you can book 120 days in advance, can stay at places longer and don’t have to get out of the system). For us, it isn’t worth the elite packages. The general annual fee works well for us and we are sticking with it, but I can see how it would work for others. There are some great videos out there explaining probably better than we can as we are fairly new to it all too 👍
We are considering the upgrade package at this very moment. We have the CAMPING PASS package that came with our new RV courtesy of Lazy Days. Normally, that's $615 (or so) per year. In that package, you don't have to pay any campground fees at all (except a few parks do charge a $20/night fee and some charge a $10 booking fee). If you stay away from those parks, all your stays are nearly free. BUT you can only stay up to 14 days, and you can't stay in another park for 7 days, and you can only book 60 days up. We are going full time later this year, so that won't work for us. We are looking at the upgrade package ELITE BASIC, which is a one time LIFETIME fee of $5,845 (which can be financed), and then an annual fee of $930 (which equates to the $615 plus all-zone add-on)). The ELITE package allows you to book up to 120 days, stay for up to 21 days in one park, and immediately go to another park (called Park-to-Park). Even, with the high entry fee, it makes sense, because our current budget shows us spending $6,000 in campground fees in our first 6 months of full time living.... FINANCIALLY, this makes sense. We are testing a few TT campgrounds around us in Florida... so far, not at all impressed! They are basically mobile home parks (with lots of year round residents) with a few RV spots and look crummy. Hopefully this is just the nature of Florida snow-birding, and not representative of the rest of the TT system. We would prefer to be around other RV'ers.
@@LaureanVincent5 with the camping pass, you can stay 14 days with 7 days out the system or you can stay 4 days back and forth between campgrounds and stay in the system.
@@LaureanVincent5 The current price is 630$/year for 1 zone, 70$/year for any other zone. You can also add more campgrounds (the Encore program) for 330$/year. These basic packages allow you to camp at many camp grounds, in the two programs, for 14 days, for free. (Some of the camp grounds charge a 20$/day fee). You must stay somewhere else, for 7 days, before booking into another camp ground in the program. If you only stay 4 days at a camp ground in the program, you can move immediately to another camp ground in the program, with no "out time" in between. Alternatively, you can buy an upgraded package (8,000$ or 13,000$ as a one time charge) that allows you to stay 21 or 28 days at a camp grounds in the program and then move immediately to another camp ground, in the program, with no required "out" time. Seniors get a deal. Their yearly fee is frozen at the entry price.
I have the $500 membership and so far so good but I try to book a reservation for Thanksgiving weekend and it full... I get it ...but when I try to get a reservation as a nonmember there are sites available I understand that you need to make money but I wish there would be transparent when you are getting the membership letting you know this information..
Completely agree Francisco! Well said! 👍
I LOVE your fur babies!
Thank you. We lost Roxy 2 days after this, so that clip is quite hard to watch. She was 15 though and had a great life ❤️👍
@@BrazenBrits oh I’m so sorry to hear that. We lost our lab 4 years ago and I still find myself crying from time to time, it feels like it was yesterday.
Do they allow camper vans? Do they allow cats?
As we found out this week - it totally depends on the location. Encore / watch out! They totally have pet restrictions and how old the camper is. For the most part the thousand trails seem to have no restrictions, but I wouldn’t trust that.
Thank you.
Interesting, very informative, thanks for sharing
Not the most detailed, but we thought we would explain why we signed up when we always said we wouldn’t 🤣👍
So glad you guys got the TT membership. It was awesome being so close to you guys at TTO for a few days.
Thanks for all the help arranging it. See you next time 👍
Great video. I was curious if you have a dedicated Internet service besides what is available on the cell phones or hot spots? If so what is it and what is you GPS with the service. I ask because I current work from home and require dedicated intetnet with required 10 GPS in order for my programs to run properly.
Hi LaCreisha, apologies for the late reply, we just found this comment that we didn’t reply to.
We currently have an ATT hotspot, a Visible hotspot and Starlink. We have found that Starlink is the best when there are no obstructions. ATT is our backup. We have heard excellent things about T-mobile unlimited, which we might try soon
Florida looks so great!! Great video! Can't wait for the next dodo video!
Oh, I'm sure it won't be long before I say 'do-do' again 😂 Florida is great. We could totally do that constant 20c all winter.
@@BrazenBrits totally.. it’s -27C with wind today... ughhh
@@deanwebster nope nope nope nope nope nope
@@deanwebster although I do enjoy throwing a cup of boiling water up and making it snow. That never gets boring
For MY type of camping (4-5 days/month) Walmart parking lots (or Indian casinos, hospitals, welcome centers, truck stops) serve my purposes. ALL FREE! But for someone who is living on the road and doesn't want to "pick up and move" every night, the 1000 Trails package, especially the 8,000$ and 13,000$ (one time fee) packages will save BIG BUCKS!
For sure, our friends, the Wayward Waggs, recently released a video on how much they saves by using one on the big packages. But as you say, they are full timers who don't want to move frequently. This zone pass worked in our favour for the 4 week we were in Florida. However, now we have a homebase here, we didn't renew. We were looking at our next travel plans and were surprised to see a huge lack of campsites within the middle states of the US via Thousand Trails.
“Do-do” 🤣 I had to chuckle when I heard you say that. It was really nice meeting you at TTO. Very good video explaining Thousand Trails.
Hey guys 👋 it was great to meet you too! Hopefully meet up again soon! Summer is just around the corner 👍👍👍👍
I see ‘do do’ still gets you both laughing! 😂👍🏻
💩💩💩💩💩
There's some great information here. Thanks for sharing. We are a long way away from even considering Thousand Trails, but it's good to know.
We didn’t think it would work for us, but it’s actually pretty good and their online booking system is really easy to use. Our current trip has already paid for the membership....even if we stayed at cheaper RV parks.
What about adventure tier? Any news?
We are speaking with TT soon about the new level that was released right after we posted this. They still haven’t released pricing yet, which is the missing ingredient, but otherwise it looks like a great package deal. Watch this space 👍
I have been thinking about getting a membership. If we were full time I would get it in a heartbeat. Great seeing you again! Thanks for sharing! Steve
Great to see you Steve! It has actually already paid for itself, but we only got the basic membership. TTO is really nice, but some of the encore properties aren’t quite as nice
That’s nice that they did full concrete pads. Looks like a very nice site
Really nice place!!
Well, TT is not a true campground experience, unless you like being crammed in like sardines. I’ve been a member for 3 yrs now and have used the system quite a bit. But I find myself looking for other options now, even if I have to pay or won’t have any hookups. To say their parks are rundown is a huge understatement. An example of close quarters would be Rancho Oso in Santa Barbara. Beautiful setting, but you can reach out and touch your neighbor. So I stay down the road at Paradise campground (national forest). Much nicer, more space, no hookups, but you feel like you’re actually camping. Examples of rundown parks would be San Benito, Morgan Hill, and Lake of the Springs in California. Just a few of many of their parks where they turn broken electric boxes into tent sites. There are so many it boggles the mind. If I had it to do over again I would not join. Yes their sites are free once you’re a member. Yes you can go park to park with certain memberships. The question is, why would you want to.
Some great points here @michstrito. We found that some of the Encore properties were a bit run down. Thousand Trails Orlando was very pleasant, spacious and clean. We really enjoyed our time there. We haven't seen the parks on the West coast yet though. I think TT is a great system, especially for fulltime RVers. For us part timers, it works well and has saved us money. It's especially useful when traveling long distances and need a full hookup site (For AC/Heat) for a night or two.
Add Ft. Myers Beach in Florida to that list. Just stayed there last weekend, and couldn't wait to leave!
It's funny that internet connection seems to be the common struggle across all campsites. Informative episode! Thanks!
We feel like everybody is going to hotspots and using all the cell tower capacity! I bet the campground wireless access will be much faster than it used to be as nobody ever uses it anymore 🤣
@@BrazenBrits we are looking into becoming full timers - what have you found to be the best cellphone/internet provider? I see you mentioned ATT - do y’all use just them? I work remotely and as long as I can download my work and reply to emails and take a zoom meeting once or twice a month I should be okay.
Hi @@brittany0222. We do use solely AT&T. We had an internet contract in our Pepwave router, both our phones and a hotspot. However, no matter which provider you use, you'll always need to check coverage maps for cover. When looking for sites, we checked two things....do they allow dogs and is there AT&T coverage. Only one place we stayed at had no coverage at all even though the map showed that it did. As long as you use Verizon or ATT and check the coverage maps, you should be good to go. I hear that T-mobile are getting better now that they have teamed up with Sprint.
@@BrazenBrits Thank you! T-mobile is who I currently have but we don't travel that much or that far so it has never been an issue with us.
I was told by the Thousand Trails sales team that I can pay $499 for the basic camping pass, then pay $299 for the "encore collection" without ever having to pay any additional nightly fees (or fees in general) to stay at the Encore rv resorts. Is it true that most will not cost any extra after paying these 2 fees or will most rv resorts still ask to pay additional fees as well? Also, would it cost any extra to access their amenities? Thanks for the info.
Hi Aaron, in the 5 encore properties that we have stayed at, we did not have to pay anything other than the two thousand trails fees. We didn’t pay any extra nightly fees or fees for amenities 👍👍
@@BrazenBrits Awesome! Also, is it pretty easy to book reservations or do they far often make it difficult to get in? Thanks again.👍
Their booking system isn’t bad. We only had an issue trying to book thousand trails Orlando. I guess it’s hard to get into the more popular places, but we didn’t have an issue at the encore properties.
@@BrazenBrits awesome and thanks for the info!
@@AaronEstebanSEO our pleasure! Keep us updated in what you decide and how it goes. We love to hear about different experiences about things like things like this 👍
Those advance booking windows (180 days, 120 days, 60 days), from what I understand, are the difference between getting one of those 10 sites or not. In fact, if one DOESN'T have a 180 or 120 day booking window, one can just about FORGET about getting a camp site during peak periods. Also, the 14 days in and the required 7 days out can be annoying if one likes to stay at one place for a long time. That can be avoided by staying only 4 days. THEN one can go "park to park" without any required period in between. Alternatively, one can buy an upgraded "package", (8,000$ or 13,000$) directly from TT or at a lower price, a resale, and the stay days go up to 21, or 28 and one can go "park to park' without any required "out" periods in between. But, bottom line: It's my opinion...Unless one is "on the road" 365 days a year and just RV's here and there on week ends, it probably isn't worth it.
I think you are spot on.
Great info on the TT. You're very welcome for the mooch dock and thank you for dinner. But I'm not quite sure about the classy shot of me, not sure if I was eating, my dentures slipped (don't have dentures) or if I was trying to swallow a gold fish. Either way it wasn't my best slow motion appearance. Nice haircut.
I really liked that shot of you. As you know, we’ve been crazy busy, so this was a little rushed, but wanted to explain why we bought TT when we said we probably never would.
Cause the Waggs are influencers!! Congratulations? Have fun and safe travels friends
🤣🤣🤣 they influenced us!
We used our TT camping pass quite a bit before buying into the larger package. Great programs for full or part time RVers.
Agreed. We didn’t think it would work for us, but actually, just that one trip was worth the annual membership
That was my question... Can you upgrade let's say 6 months later? Also... Do you have to book 2 weeks.. or can you book 10 days n return like 21 days later? Thanks for covering the "life membership" ... People normally don't-dont 😁
Sorry, couldn't resist!
love the TT :-)
🤣🤣🤣👍
I SEE A CLASS ACTION SUIT WITH THEM SELLING PROGRAM THAT YOU CAN BOOK UP TO 6 MONTHS IN ADVANCE. FOR MORE MONEY
Yup. Very possible. But they’ve been around for a long time with this sales structure.
@@BrazenBrits they settled before with people who brought back then outdoor world
"If you have any questions ... " He: thinks for a moment ... She: Without missing a beat says: "Ask someone else!" -- I love that British humor lol :DDD
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Do Do
Do do 🤣🤣🤣
Saw you on the Waggs! I bought used. I have 180 days window. 21 days and can go park to park.
I agree about the customer service! You may get strange reservations. Some have been three or more parts for the same stay!
Hi Jay! Yeah, that’s exactly what happened. For 12 days in Orlando, we had 4 reservations. That’s great to hear that the customer service was good for existing customers and also for non-youtubers.
stop saying do do...
🤣🤣 we’re trying to stop saying it 🤣🤣
Need to start enforcing speeding of golf Carts and E-BIKES!!! Also go after SEASONAL S with UNSIGHTLY SITES and NO FULL TIME SEASONAL RESIDENCE, before it becomes the HOOD.
We saw an ebike this weekend that goes 70mph - insane!
DO DO 😂
You said it twice 🤣
Do do 🤣🤣🤣
We are children
He's so handsome.
🤣 thanks ECKankar ❤️👍
BUYERS BEWARE CUSTOMER SERVICE SUCKS, IF YOU CALL THEY DONT TAKE YOUR CALL AT ALL.
Hi Carlos, that's good information. We have only had to call once since signing up and the service was very good. The only other times we have had to call was around a specific booking, so we called the RV park directly. Thanks for the heads up though, we'll keep this in mind.
You have to keep calling back.... Their main call center, I was told, is in Louisiana, so they were hit with weather closings. When I was able to get somebody on the phone... they were FANTASTIC!
They need to add more Transit sites in many of their campgrounds they have too many seasonal sites it should be 50/50 also get rid of the 10-year rule on older models some Diesel's look better then some of the new RV's it doesn't make sense you're promoting to sell 190 campgrounds but then you restricting some if they're 10 years or older
Hi Carlos, we heard that was a rule in some places, and we originally had a 2004 for a very short time and we worried about this. It is a shame that they do this as we know many rigs that are spectacular, even when they are over 10 years old. I wonder if you send a picture of your rig, they might accept it?
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Thanks? 😁
Do Do 💩
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