Roadtrek

Roadtrek

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Living in the Roadtrek - Towels

Small things that you would ordinarily not give much thought to, in a Class B RV, because of its size, you really need to give some consideration to selecting. When you are at home you can have lots of towels and when they get wet there are usually a lot of places that are available to hang them to dry. In the Roadtrek with limited cabinet space, you have to limit the number of towels that you carry or do without something else. As to what to do with wet towels, space is even more limited. Most towels sold are not made to dry very quickly. The plusher they are the wetter they stay. Before we got the Roadtrek we started researching what type of towels to buy.

The most common answer to this question is micro-fiber camping towels. These are sold in some camping stores and online. We looked in two local large chain stores, one a camping store and the other an outdoor sports store. Everywhere we looked we saw the same small micro-fiber towels. There was certainly nothing very useful if one took a shower or went swimming. What are considered hand towels in what we saw were more the size of wash cloths.

The "Sham-Wow", as seen on TV, was suggested. We had one of these that we had purchased at a farmer's market for a dollar. I was told that to make this stiff towel feel soft to the skin, soak it in water and let it dry. We tried that and what we got was a wrinkled Sham-wow that was not really soft. I tried at home using it to dry my hair. It felt terrible to use. That idea was put aside. I should say that these are good in the Roadtrek for drying the floor after you have taken a shower in the aisle. While most of the water does goes down the drain in the floor, the floor does remain wet and these will do a good job at drying the floor - and drying the shower curtain.

Micro-fiber towels are basically the same no matter what their purpose. You can find them in the automotive departments to use to wash and dry your car. You can find them in the housewares departments to use as kitchen towels. They are all pretty much the same - and a bit heavier than the special "camping" towels that are sold for a lot more money - plus they come in a variety of sizes.

Our first purchase of towels were micro-fiber towels found in Wal-mart's auto department. There we found large bath size towels and medium sized hand towels. Of course, they were not called bath towels or hand towels. They are all purposed there for your car, but the sizes were close. These towels are soft to the touch, easy on the skin, absorb water and dry relatively quickly. The drying time is the most important part. On our first trips, these were the towels that we used.

In the Roadtrek there are three towel rods. One on the bathroom door, another on the large kitchen cabinet below the sink, and the third is on the clothes closet behind the driver's seat. As you can see none of these towel rods is very long and only the rod on the bathroom door (above) has any room for a thick towel to fit through. Micro-fiber towels tend to be thinner than the towels that you would get for your home bathroom so they don't have a problem fitting onto the rod, but there is not very much room across to put more than one or two towels depending upon their size. These three rods are all you have in the Roadtrek for drying anything on. You can hang a clothes line across the aisle, but no matter where you put this, it is going to be in the way. The best idea for this is behind the driver and passenger seat across the width of the van, but if this is there and you want to sit in the front seats to watch TV, you are not going to see anything but whatever is hanging from the line. It is a good place to dry things after you go to bed.

A short while after we had the micro-fiber towels, I read on an RV forum about quick drying, home bathroom towels that are sold in J.C. Penney. The towels have the label. "Linden Street" and the sign in the store says "Quick-dri". These are just like the towels that one uses at home, but they dry much faster. The come in the standard home towel sizes and there is a wide variety of colors including colors with stripes. The towels sell for $3 to $20 depending upon size. They are all cotton. Here is a link to the towels on J.C. Penney's website, but you can find them in your local Penney's store in the towel department. We tried a few of these first and they are great. They feel as comfortable as any home bath towel and they really do dry quickly. According to the store they dry 33% faster than regular towels. I am not paid by anyone to tell you about these, but they really are good for RV travel. We now use these for all hand and body use and the micro-fiber towels are now used for cleanup and drying dishes. Of course, we carry paper towels and when not needed, they are stored inside the microwave.




9 comments:

  1. My husband and I being prospective future RVers, I've been reading your blog with interest. Thanks for sharing your travel adventures. I really appreciate being able to see, though you and Meryl, what we may run into. And hearing about the places you visit gives me ideas as to where we might go. We live in central Pennsylvania so they're doable for us.

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  2. Just a note to say that we have been using the J.C.Penney quick-dry towels (3 bath towels & 3 washcloths) for about 3 years and they are great. Also, we were given a gift of two small chrome over-the-door hooks that we put on the bathroom door and the closet door. The towels hang on these hooks and dry overnight. They are not in the way of anything.

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    1. We just bought another set of bath size! We have those same hooks and they are great for many purposes including rigging a clothes line across the front from side to side.

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  3. I found the same type of 'fast-dry' towels at target, a lot of cool colors but they stopped carrying the striped towels.

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  4. We bought extra large travel towels at a camping supply house.
    Despite the odd fabric we found that they worked better for drying and storage than any other towels we have tried. They store small and dry fast. We found that they were worth getting used to as bath towels.

    Colors are pretty basic in blue and greens but they work!

    We use microfiber auto towels for dish drying and as hand towels.

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  5. We just got a roadtrek! I've been looking through people's blogs to get ideas! Thanks for your insight!!

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  6. Camp towels are made of rayon and act like sponges. So you can dry something off, wring the towel out, do it again and finally dry it.

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    1. We have tried camp towels - they are rough on the skin and don't dry skin well when washing hands, showering, or drying hair. We use the camp towels we have for mopping up spills - they work well for that.

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  7. We're about to be newbie trailer residents. I read your post, and was just able to score the Quik Dri towels at a massive discount: we saved $104!! Thanks so much for the invaluable information!!

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