A Happy Hive

The best in savings, home, food and travel

  • Savings
  • Home
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Savings
    • Grocery
    • Print Coupons
  • Your Home
    • Chicken Coops
    • Gardening
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Earn Money
  • Rise & Shine
  • About
  • Contact Us

Travel with kids :: Our favorite travel board games and card games

Shared March 2, 2016

Family-friendly-travel-size-games

Earlier this year I posted an Instagram photo of us playing Monopoly Game Star Wars and I got a great question from a soon-to-be full-time traveling family about our favorite travel size games. So I put together this list of our favorite family-friendly travel size games! We have an 8- and 5-year-old, so your list may vary depending on your kids ages and your preferences.

We find that having a variety of games in the trailer entertains the kids on rainy or quiet days, provides another option besides movies/TV, requires no extra power or electricity (great for boondocking!) and can be a great way for our kids to connect with other kids on the road when outside play isn’t an option. Shop travel-size games on Amazon.

Even if you don’t plan to travel full-time this list is great for spring break or summer road trips, camping, plane rides and just life-on-the-go!

Our TOP picks for family-friendly travel-size games ::

Travel-Sequence

Travel Sequence
Probably our FAVORITE game!

Kings-In-Corner-Game

Kings in the Corner Game

Trouble-Travel-Version

Trouble Travel Fun On The Run 

Continue Reading…

8 Comments

Filed Under: Day-to-Day Living, Travel Tagged With: our favorite games for kids, travel games for kids, travel size games, travel-size games for kids

St. Andrews State Park and Henderson Beach State Park {Florida Panhandle}

Shared March 1, 2016

St-Andrews-State-Park

Travel dates :: Jan 23 – 28, 2016

After leaving O’Leno State Park we headed north and west to the Florida panhandle.  We were really looking forward to this area of Florida. We heard the beaches were amazing and we couldn’t wait to check them out. Our first stop was St. Andrews State Park where we had a two-night reservation in spot 104. This spot was AWESOME – right on the end of a row, it was huge and shared one side with a lot of shrubbery – so it felt nice and private.

Henderson-Tracks-beach

It also had access to the lagoon (read: muddy shoreline) which the kids really loved. They had a lot of rain before we got there so it was muddier than normal. But the kids loved that. They had fun picking out the deer footprints in the sand. We saw a lot of deer while we were here!

Playing-at-St-Andrew-State-Park

And the kids spent a lot of time RUNNING around our campsite. It was big enough that I didn’t have to worry about them bothering other campers. I like it when this happens (and I think the kids do, too).

The first night we were at St. Andrews, the Bareneckers graciously had us over for dinner! We always love hanging out with the Bareneckers and their four adorable kids – and they always seem to have a delicious meal to share – we are so grateful for them and we had a great night hanging out with them.

Continue Reading…

1 Comments

Filed Under: Destinations, Florida, Travel Tagged With: Florida Panhandle camping, fulltime living Airstream, Henderson Beach State Park review, St. Andrews State Park review, where to stay on Florida Panhandle

My favorite RV-friendly appliances and products :: Instant Pot, Dehumidifier, Electric Skillet, more

Shared February 28, 2016

RV-appliances-products-recommended

My favorite RV-Friendly appliances and products

I often get asked, “What are your favorite appliances you use in your RV?” or “What items should I buy for our trailer if we plan to go full-time?” . . . 

For a long time I didn’t do a post on this because I didn’t feel much like an expert on the topic. But after traveling full-time for eight months in our Airstream trailer I feel like I have figured a few things out – so I’m sharing my favorite RV-friendly appliances and products.

When you have limited living space you want to make certain that the things you buy or store in your RV are providing some benefit. You might want to consider these things when selecting appliances and products for our RV ::

Cost savings – Does it save us money? It wasn’t long after hitting the road that we discovered that we almost always have some type of electrical hook-up, so choosing appliances that use electricity (instead of propane gas) saved us money.

Storage – How much space is required to store the appliance and does the benefit warrant the space needs?

Convenience – Does it save us time and effort?

Quality of life – Does it provide a benefit that improves our quality of life on the road? Sometimes we might sacrifice cost savings, storage needs and convenience because something improves our quality of life and it’s important to us.

Instant-Pot-RV-friendly-appliance

Instant Pot – I had so many kitchen appliances in our house that this was a tough department for me to downsize. The Instant Pot IP-DUO60 7-in-1 Multi-Functional Pressure Cooker, 6Qt/1000W rocks my RV world. It wears many chef hats – it’s a rice cooker, a slow cooker, a pressure cooker and so much more. I’ve cooked a spiral ham in under 2 hours, 8 pounds of pulled pork in 75 minutes, frozen chicken in under 30 minutes and so much more. . .if you only have room for one RV appliance – I recommend this one! This is our biggest appliance in terms of storage needs but it fits in the wardrobe/closet in our kitchen just fine. I will often cook outside with this – running an extension cord directly from our RV site hook-ups to the picnic table or we also have a folding tray table that works great for this.

Rival-small-electric-skillet-RV-friendly

Electric Skillet – This is one appliance I wish we would have started our journey with, but only recently purchased. The Rival CKRVSK11 11-Inch Square Electric Skillet, Black is a small electric skillet that allows us to cook using electricity without using propane. It also comes in handy when we need more cooking space – as our 3-burner stove top is small when it comes to multiple pots/pans. This skillet is great for stir fries, eggs (non-stick), pancakes and more.

Electric-Dehumidifier-small-RV-size

Dehumidifier – We just got this small dehumidifier, Eva-dry Edv-1100 Electric Petite Dehumidifier, White, a couple months ago. I wish we would have purchased sooner. It’s small but packs a serious punch when it comes to pulling the moisture out of the trailer. Moisture is NOT your friend when it comes to RV life and especially in the winter months when you’re sleeping with windows closed – moisture and condensation on the windows is expected. Since getting this dehumidifier we’ve seen a big improvement in overnight window condensation and our towels dry faster in our bathroom! We use this daily so it usually lives in the bathroom or the kitchen – but is stored in the closet when we travel.

Continue Reading…

14 Comments

Filed Under: Day-to-Day Living, Travel Tagged With: Appliances to use in RV, Ceramic coffee filter RV, Dehumidifier RV, Electric Skillet RV, Electric water kettle RV, Instant Pot RV, RV appliances, Space heater RV

O’Leno State Park – Florida Museum of Natural History and Trader Joe’s {Gainesville, Florida}

Shared February 26, 2016

OLeno-State_Park_Florida

Travel dates : January 19 – 23, 2016

After a few days at Myakka State Park we said, “later gator” and continued north. We had our eyes set on getting to Montgomery, Alabama by January 29, so that’s where we were headed. The next reasonable stop without driving too far was O’Leno State Park about 30 miles North of Gainesville, Florida.

OLeno-State-Park-campground

Unlike Myakka State Park we didn’t do much at O’Leno. It’s a very small state park and even the park rangers office/visitor’s center is only open on the weekends. Plus, it was cold while we were here – so we did a LOT of just hanging out in the Airstream, doing homeschool, and catching up on work and sleep.

This park has a LOT of deer. I didn’t get any photos – but we saw them often in the trees and in the empty campground spots.

We were originally only going to stay at O’Leno State Park two nights, but ended up extending our stay two extra days after the place we were headed (St. Andrews State Park) was expecting severe storms. St. Andrews State Park ended up having tornado warnings the night we were supposed to be there, so I’m glad we changed our plans to stay put until after the storm. Read my post about severe storms and what apps we use for planning.

Continue Reading…

1 Comments

Filed Under: Destinations, Florida, Travel

Myakka River State Park – Airboat lake cruise (alligators!) and walking in the tree canopy {Sarasota, Florida}

Shared February 25, 2016

Myakka-River-State-Park-Florida

Travel dates :: January 17-19, 2016

After our stressful time in Fort Myers, Florida we made our way north to Myakka River State Park for a few days of rest before we would continue north. This place was JUST what we needed!

Myakka-River-State-Park-check-in

Myakka is a beautiful place. It’s one of Florida’s oldest and largest state parks and it has some of the most beautiful landscapes.

We had very little phone reception and virtually no internet while we were here – which was actually a welcome break from things. We DID have a lot of sunshine and lots of time enjoying the nature here.

Myakka-Boat-Tour-Airboat

If you visit the park, I highly recommend the airboat tour onto Upper Myakka Lake. The hour-long tour cost our family about $35 and was a blast – the kids especially loved it.

Continue Reading…

7 Comments

Filed Under: Destinations, Florida, Travel Tagged With: Myakka State Park

Early January in Florida – An exhausting water pump repair, flooded campgrounds and a very stressful day on the road

Shared February 24, 2016

Airstream-water-pump-repair-stress

Travel dates :: January 7 – 16, 2016

After leaving the Florida Keys (see our Christmas in the Keys post here) we spent most of January jumping around the western coast of Florida – it feels like a blur and was honestly a bit of stressful time. Our water pump was on the fritz (suddenly no water pressure and it sounded horrible) so we had a repair appointment January 8 in Fort Myers, Florida.

WP_Franklin-campground

We stayed at WP Franklin campground the night before and we loved it. It’s a Corp of Engineers campground and we found it to be clean, affordable and close to Fort Myers.

North-Trail-RV-Airstream-repair

We brought the trailer into the repair shop at North Trail RV for what we were told would be a one-day appointment. Worst case scenario they’d just replace the water pump which would only take a couple hours – and they said they had the water pump in stock.

Ding-Wildlife-Refuge-Visitor-Center

While the trailer was in the shop we spent the day exploring Sanibel Island. Our first stop was the J.N. Ding Darling National Wildlife Refuge Visitor’s Center – which was a fantastic place – don’t miss it if you are in the area.

JN-Ding-Jr-Ranger-badge

Great educational exhibits – especially for children and the kids did the Junior Ranger badge program here. This was our first blue and gold badge and I think it’s still one of the kid’s favorites!

Continue Reading…

21 Comments

Filed Under: Destinations, Florida, Travel

Christmas in the Florida Keys. . .

Shared February 18, 2016

Christmas-In-Florida-Keys

We spent December 19, 2015 to January 6, 2016 in the Florida Keys – nearly 20 days of hopping between state parks and playing in the sun, sand and surf. We even celebrated Christmas here – and it was unlike any Christmas holiday we’ve ever had before. Balmy temperatures, endless sunshine, a tiny Christmas tree, minimal decorations – it was honestly one of the most magical Christmas celebrations we’ve ever had. Let me tell you about it. . .

Because we waited until the last minute to book our Florida Key State Park reservations, we didn’t have any reservation longer than 6 days. This meant we did a lot of hopping from park to park . Our first stop was Curry Hammock State Park (read our blog post about it here) and we were there only a few days before heading to Bahia Honda State Park.

Bahia-Honda-Campground-blue-skies

Bahia Honda State Park is one of the most popular of the Florida Key state parks and has some of the most amazing views and an incredible beach for swimming. We had three nights in spot 15 – and I declared it the best camping spot in the park and probably one of my favorite campsites since we hit the road.

Bahia-Honda-Sunset-campground

Located right on a corner of the campground it’s a large spot with breathtaking sunsets nearly every night. It’s crazy to me that this is a state park campsite for under $40/night. If you stay in a private campground in the Florida Keys you’re going to be crammed in with a bazillion other RVs and fork over $100 – $160/night. The state parks are the way to do the Florida Keys. . .

Wrapping-Presents-view-Bahia-Honda

On the morning of December 23, Jeremy took the kids to a Bahia Honda Nature Center program (making seashell necklaces!) while I wrapped Christmas presents. Hiding, wrapping and storing presents is a lot trickier in 180 square feet than it was in our house. There is no big garage or closet to store gifts – so this was a delicate dance we did. And I have to admit, I’ve never wrapped presents with a more beautiful view (usually it’s on the cold concrete garage floor!).

Continue Reading…

8 Comments

Filed Under: Destinations, Florida

Tour our Airstream :: Kids bunks, back bedroom area {Flying Cloud Bunk Model}

Shared February 11, 2016

Airstream-Flying-Cloud-Bunk-Model-2015-tour-back-room

We started with a tour of our Airstream bathroom last month and I’ve finally rounded up photos of the kid’s bunk area to share with you. When we started looking at Airstreams we knew we wanted to pick a model that allowed us each our own permanent sleeping area. I really didn’t want to have to turn a table or a couch into a bed every night and I felt it was important for us to each have a space we could call our own.

Airstream-Flying-Cloud-30-bunk-model-floorplan-bunks

That’s why when we spotted the 2015 Airstream Flying Cloud BUNK model we knew it was the one. With a set of bunks in the back of the trailer there would be plenty of space for two small kids to both play and sleep. The bottom bunk measures 54″ x 76″ – which is *almost* as big as the queen we have up front – allowing for lots of room to play on the bed. And the top bunk measures 29″ x 78″ which is essentially a small twin – not a lot of room to play but a really cool place to sleep.

The beds share a wall with the bathrooms (see our Airstream bathroom here) and when you step off the bottom bed you are standing in front of the bathroom door, the clothing wardrobe and pantry (essentially the kitchen).

Let’s take a look at the beds. . .

Kids-Airstream-bedphoto credit: The News Tribune (June 2015)

The kid’s bunk area has had many different “looks” over the last 7 months. Different bedding, different pillows, different decorations – it seems to cycle through as I try to find just the right set up. When we first started the bed had a vintage-looking “heart” quilt on it that I had made in high school – and the top bed had a Seahawks quilt I made a few years ago. I LOVED it, I really did, but as time went on the patterns and designs were a bit too much for the small space. Imagine that bed with a ton of toys on top of it. I needed something more simple because essentially it’s like having a kid’s room in your main living room.

I bought some navy blue bedding from IKEA back in Virginia (October) but as we headed into winter the dark bedding made the space seem closed in and darker than I wanted. Most recently I switched to a white comforter – and it’s brightened the whole area up so much – making the space more welcoming and making the most of the limited light.

Airstream-Bunk-Model-view-button

Let’s talk about a few things I’ve discovered about this back bottom bed. . . 

You have to learn how to LEVITATE if you want to make it easily. Yes, it’s one of those. You can’t stand on the side and make it. You have to start at the back (near the window) and tuck corners and ultimately end up in the front corner to finish it off. A serious pain in the butt. Since my kids have never been big under-the-sheet-sleepers, we leave the white comforter tucked in and use our lovies and fleece blankets for sleeping on top (they did the same thing in our house). This saves a lot of headache over making an impossible bed every day.

You cannot have a fluffy comforter on this bed if you want to “make” the bed by tucking the comforter along the sides. There is no room for that nonsense because the space between the mattress and the wall is so limited. The best you will do is a quilt-style blanket.

It can get very dark under the bunk, so we installed battery-powered tap lights (found at Costco, with adhesive backing). This has helped tremendously with light when the kids are playing or reading on the bottom bed (see photo above).

Airstream-Flying-Cloud-Back-Window

Other things you might want to know about the back bottom bed are : 

The very back window is an emergency exit window. This is of course a GOOD thing to have. . .but if you have a toddler who is tempted to pull a red cord right next to sign that says EMERGENCY this bed might not be a good fit for you. 🙂 My kids have been taught how to use the Emergency exit if they need and NOT to play with it – we haven’t had any issues in this department. There is also an electrical outlet at the head of the bed (right under the emergency escape window) – thankfully our kids don’t mess with those. If you have younger kids this is definitely something to consider.

The back window does open up and gives a nice cross breeze across the trailer. My kids have been so lucky to fall asleep to so many sounds and sights out this back window – ocean waves, birds chirping, frogs croaking. . .I love that the view and sounds change as we head around the country.

Continue Reading…

17 Comments

Filed Under: The Airstream, Tour the Airstream Tagged With: Airstream, bunk model, Flying Cloud

Severe Weather RV Safety Tips {we seek shelter from a tornado in Florida}

Shared January 20, 2016

Severe-Weather-RV-tips

Severe weather RV safety tips

Weather (and severe weather) is a part of life. When we lived in a regular ole house I paid little attention to the weather – being near Seattle, Washington it was almost always rain of some kind in the fall/winter and moderate temps in the spring/summer. It was nearly always manageable and all we really needed was a lot of layers and a decent rain jacket and umbrella.

Being on the road weather is a different story. Knowing the local weather is part of our daily routine – because severe weather could have severe impacts when you live in a house on wheels. We planned our route around the country primarily because of weather – the northern areas in the summer, the east coast in the fall and Florida/South in the winter. So far, this plan has worked in our favor and we’ve experience very little inclement weather.

Gettysburg-in-the-rain

We did change our plans last October to avoid Hurricane Joaquin which was slated to hit the east coast. Instead of being in New Jersey like we had originally planned, we headed inland to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania to avoid the storm. We ended up with only a rainy weekend – and enjoyed an awesome tour of Gettysburg. And South Dakota last summer was frustrating because the tornado and hail alerts seemed like a daily occurrence – but we avoided them by racing across the state and setting up camp in Minnesota.

Lately central Florida (thanks to El Nino) has been throwing us some strange and unpredictable weather – like tornados. For example, last week while we were in the Fort Myers area we knew severe thunderstorms were expected to hit Saturday night. We would have probably rerouted to be farther north for the storm, but we had a repair appointment in the area all day Saturday. We couldn’t reschedule the repair appointment – we needed our water pump replaced – and RV repair appointments are tough to find in Florida in January.

We left our repair appointment in Fort Myers around 3 p.m. and started heading north to our reserved campsite, which turned out to be a disaster. It’s a long story – but the private campground where we planned to stay at was crowded, flooded, muddy and was too small for our trailer. It wouldn’t have worked – not even a little. So we scrambled to find another spot and thankfully ended up finding an opening at Sun-n-Fun RV resort up near Sarasota. More expensive than we usually pay for a spot, it was a gravel spot (no mud or flooding potential) and I knew it was a well populated park with lots of services and buildings. We ended up setting up camp in the dark (something we never do) and spent the night playing in the heated pool and relaxing in the family hot tub knowing the rain/storm would start around 2 a.m.

Tornado-Watch-Sarasota-Florida

I went to bed earlier than usual because I was expecting the storm. At around 1 a.m. I was woken up by a Tornado Watch alert on my phone. A tornado watch means there is a strong probability of a tornado but one hasn’t formed yet – I stayed up and monitored the storm after that. Around 2:40 a.m. the wind had picked up and I pulled the kids into bed with me.

Continue Reading…

10 Comments

Filed Under: Travel Tips Tagged With: RV safety, RV weather safety, Severe weather RV safety tips, severe weather RV tips

Tour our Airstream :: The Bathroom {Flying Cloud Bunk Model}

Shared January 12, 2016

Airstream-Flying-Cloud-Bathroom-Bunk-model-2015

Airstream 2015 Flying Cloud 30-ft bunk trailer :: Bathroom tour

It’s been about six months since we hit the road and I’ve been putting off a tour of the inside of our trailer. I’m not entirely sure why. Perhaps I kept thinking that after a few months I’d have it all organized and styled just the way I like it. I was procrastinating thinking it wasn’t quite perfect and that I needed to make it better. I decided that this is just silly – because it’s one of our most common questions – what does the inside of your trailer look like? I think it’s helpful for other full-time families who are considering an Airstream for them to see what real-life inside our trailer looks like.

So we’re opening up our home – using photos and descriptions – so you can see just how we live and organize ourselves in our 2015 30-foot Airstream Flying Cloud bunk model – with two kids who make messes and have stuff. I’m going to start from the back and work my way forward – featuring specific areas one at a time.

Airstream-Flying-Cloud-30-bunk-model-floorplan-bathroom

So let’s start with the bathroom. There is only one bathroom in the Airstream (some big fifth wheels come with two, so I think it’s good to clarify!). To think we had THREE bathrooms in our old house. To think I would have previously scoffed at having to share one bathroom with the whole family. Really, it’s not a big thing. Both figuratively. . .and literally. . . ha!

Continue Reading…

15 Comments

Filed Under: Day-to-Day Living, The Airstream, Tour the Airstream Tagged With: 2015 Flying Cloud Bunk Model, 30-foot Airstream Flying Cloud Bunk Model, Airstream Flying Cloud Bunk Model

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • …
  • 11
  • Next Page »
Happy-Hive-About

Recent Posts

  • How to Clean Stained Cutting Board {Naturally}
  • Homemade play dough using Kool-Aid or Jell-O (preschool teacher and kid approved!)
  • Homemade Hummingbird Food (Nectar)
  • Peanut Butter and Jelly Gelato {Kid-friendly recipe}
  • Spring Cupcake Designs – 6 Easy Spring and Easter Cupcake Designs

Recent Comments

  • Jana Miller on Cottonwood, Jerome, Sedona, Prescott, more {Arizona}
  • Sue Eichler on Cottonwood, Jerome, Sedona, Prescott, more {Arizona}
  • Paris Jeske on Earning a living on the road – How we (and others) are making money while we travel full-time
  • Paris Jeske on Earning a living on the road – How we (and others) are making money while we travel full-time
  • Karen on Healthcare benefits on the road – We break an arm and end up in emergency room!

Recent Posts

  • How to Clean Stained Cutting Board {Naturally}
  • Homemade play dough using Kool-Aid or Jell-O (preschool teacher and kid approved!)
  • Homemade Hummingbird Food (Nectar)
  • Peanut Butter and Jelly Gelato {Kid-friendly recipe}
  • Spring Cupcake Designs – 6 Easy Spring and Easter Cupcake Designs
This error message is only visible to WordPress admins

Error: No feed found.

Please go to the Instagram Feed settings page to create a feed.

Copyright ©2025, A Happy Hive. All Rights Reserved. Custom design by Pixel Me Designs