That was the scenic rating listed in one of our campground guide books for Big Basin Redwoods State Park. All weekend, Richard kept asking me, “Do you think this is a ten?” Every time, my answer was, “Yes, this is a ten.” Still, he likes asking those kinds of questions just to verify that my opinion hasn’t suddenly changed. We’re home now and I would still rate this park a ten. You should all go.
As the days are getting shorter and we knew we’d have a long, windy drive, Richard got Bruce all packed up and I got home as soon as I could on Friday, hoping to get to the site before dark. Drive was straight forward until we hit Bear Creek Road off of Highway 17. When you drive these kinds of roads, you might be aware they are steep and windy, but your whole perspective changes when you’re towing something.
Sunday morning we began the day with chocolate croissants and a scolding by the park ranger for not having checked in the night before upon arrival.
While he was checking in, I put up our awning, more so I could send pictures to the company, Pahaque, than for practical awning use reasons. We are early adopters of the front wall piece so I promised a couple of nice shots of it up. I took …. let’s just say lots. Hopefully one of them will be online catalogue worthy for them. In fact though, this isn’t the kind of site where the awning really comes in handy.
Here’s why. Can’t really see the view. When there’s no view or there are neighbors, it’s awesome and can create privacy where there was none. But when there are towering trees to wake up to, I’d rather see that.
Saturday night we tried to conserve battery power by not running the fan, but just left the cover open. It worked fine and we didn’t have any condensation in the morning. We actually have not had issues with condensation except when it’s been raining a long time. Again, drought here, so we are usually able to run the fan on low and wake up a little crisp, but totally dry.
Sunday we wrapped up leisurely and pulled out right at noon. Long, slow drive back, trying to take the pull outs when it was safe, so others could get past me. As long as I was going slow on the curves, it was all good. “Ten” was the word for the weekend and we’ll be looking for chances to go back there.
Total miles: 93.6 miles, Engine Time: 3 hours, 57 min, 16.1 mpg
Site: Huckleberry 63. Awesome site, Huckleberry is the place to be. Most sites great, but 63 looked the best to us.
Ok, so our battery holds around 100 amp hours and it’s not great for the battery to drain it lower than 50%. Without this fancy monitor, there is no good way to get an accurate read on what’s happening with the battery. The Alto comes standard with a little thing you plug in to look at the voltage, but that’s not a very good indicator of where things are, for reasons I only partially, and fuzzily, am beginning to understand. I am providing some voltage numbers because I happened to write them down, but Richard is now going on about how, if anyone asks me, I should explain something about voltage and draw vs. voltage and solar putting things in….. My reply to anyone who asks me anything is really going to be to just ask Richard. Nevertheless, here’s some data on how much some of the battery powered items in the Alto appear to draw:
- 12v fridge: 3A when running (more on that later)
- Fan at low speed: .3A
- Fan at high speed: 3A (anything less than high drops it quickly to 1A or less)
- Water pump: 2-3A while water is running or it’s pressuring the system
- Lights: .2A each
- Propane water heater: .6-.8A when it’s heating
So all of those things have a draw, but how long they run is kind of key. We are really looking closely at the fridge. Richard sat there with a stopwatch trying to figure out its cooling cycles to see if he could make sense of it. It was so regular as to be predictable to the second. The thing is, we experimented with turning its temperature setting down from “3 1/2” on the dial, all the way down to “1” and it didn’t seem to have a major impact on how often the external fan went on, or how much of a draw there was in amps. Over time, it was the fridge that was the biggest battery user, so we’d like to keep experimenting. What we didn’t try, but might next time, is to turn it off at night when it’s cold. Everything inside was always plenty cold, even too much at 3 1/2, so we were hoping setting it lower would all but stop it. It didn’t though. More on this developing story later….
I looked at the voltage numbers occasionally, but mostly we were looking at the minute by minute draw or the percentage of the battery. For a couple of reference points, when the battery was at 69%, I noticed the voltage was 12.1. When it was down to 56%, it said 11.4. And right before hitching up, the percentage was 51%, there was about an Amp going in from solar, and the voltage said 11.8. As for overall battery usage, here are some numbers on how the percentage went down from full over two days:
- 100% on arrival
- 95% going to bed Friday (after 1 hot shower, fan on high, and fridge running)
- 81% on Sat morning (running fridge set at 2 and fan on low all night)
- 78% at 11 am Saturday (after another hot shower, with fan while showering)
- 73% at 4pm (while we were out, only the fridge was running)
- 69% at 7pm
- 67% at 9pm (after shower #3)
- 56% Sunday morning (no fan overnight, only fridge, set to “1”)
- 51% at noon before hitching up (and after shower #4)
Total amp hours used for two overnights: 49AH (yay!)
I’m going to just add that when we got home, the battery had only gotten back up to 61% after being plugged into the car and recharging during a three hour drive. That was a surprise, as we thought it would be higher. We still had to get Dory up the driveway with the caravan mover, which we know is a huge draw. We did get her up no problem, and at the top, the battery measured 56%. So that was an immediate 5% drop just to get her in the garage. Also good to know if we’re ever cutting it close.

