Hey, medically retired cop here. I have been driving a semi truck for a couples yrs now and i learned quick that its a great idea to loop your seatbelt through your door handles (not the handle that opens the door but the part that connected to the door itself) then click them in. No one can open the door even if picked. Be safe out there and good luck to u.
Just a tip. I’ve work outside in Michigan for many,many years. The trick to keeping your feet warm is making sure your socks and or boots are not too tight. Because you will cut the circulation off to your feet, and that’s the quickest way to get your feet cold. Sometimes when wearing 2 pairs of socks the outer one may now be too tight. If you wear just one pair with that full body sleeping bag and those blankets. Or get a bigger pair of socks for the outside layer. I believe you would do much better keeping your feet warm. Cold feet are miserable. I hope you see this and I hope it helps.
Legit there are cold weather quilts and sleeping bags rated as low as -60° F. Feathered friends makes great cold weather sleeping bags and Enlightened Equipment makes great cold weather quilts.
I'm a camper and hiker and I have slept outside in the northeast mountains. One thing I can tell you that will keep you warm is a wool blanket. Invest in a good wool blanket and some either wool or alpaca socks. Since I have experienced the cold, these are tips from personal experience. Good luck with your build and keeping warm
Suggestions: 1. Carry a hot water bottle with knitted cover.. and keep it in your sleeping back. 2. Neck warmer... when you get into your sleeping bag/bed.. pull the neck warmer onto your ears and head.. it will keep you much much warmer 3. Snow mittens.. wear e'm to bed. 4. wool highnecks. 5. Thermal fleece tights. 6. wool socks. 7. 1 person tent inside a camper.. smaller space to heat up. 8. Sleeping bag inside another sleeping bag.
I saw a video of ppl tying rope around sunvisor and then back to a hook in the back (minivan) and hanging a packing blanket like a tent. Then they hung something else to block off the ends. I'm going to try that. I believe it helped with condensation on windows too.
I'd skip the hot water bottle. You have to deal with carrying extra amounts of water to fill it plus breaking out the camp stove and a pot to heat water nightly. For no more than a pack of 10 Hot Hands warmers costs, a 1 month supply of using one in your bag nightly for extra warmth like a water bottle would be about 20-24 bucks a month. I'd certainly pay 60 or so bucks to get through the coldest months. Especially given all the extra hassles of preparing a hot water bottle. Activate a Hot Hands packet, throw in bottom of bag, climb in. They come in different sizes so different warmth times of 10-18 hours advertised. From looking at pricing you may as well get the larger ones. And they're biodegradable when done with them, so environmentally friendly. Win/win.
I was in a tent in Millican one night when it snowed. I was surprised to learn a propane lantern gave off enough heat keep me warm. Be careful and perhaps turn on and off as needed.
I sleep in an uninsulated aluminum step van most nights. I have access to shore power most of the time but a 1500w heater only does so much, and it's especially cold when the wind is blowing. Last year around Christmas it was around 0 degrees. I bought a tent to put over my bed and it makes a big difference. I switched from a heated blanket to a heated mattress pad. Having the heat source below you is much more comfortable. The mattress pad with a couple of blankets inside a tent is quite bearable.
according to the hosts at the Ice Hotel I stayed at in Finland, you want NO LAYERS at all when you are inside the sleeping bag. You WANT your body heat to warm the trapped air INSIDE the sleeping bag. The bag will STOP that heat escaping. I was sleeping in my tidy whities and singlet, ON a bed of ice, IN a room literally made of snow. So there's that.
Quick fix until you get your heat: make the area around you smaller. Use cardboard (corrugated) material. Tape together, multi-layer, or just a big box. Sleep inside the cardboard. Your own body will warm inside, much better than trying to retain heat inside the whole van. Also, as many have said, a 12v blanket will serve you better. Good luck!!!
I was cracking up when you said that you’re just going to sleep because your don’t feel cold when you’re asleep. I was thinking, you might not feel hypothermia set in 😂 painless way to go. Glad you survived! Always fun and entertaining.
we had elderly man and wife friends several years ago . they both died together of hypothermia . they lived in a small 1st floor masonette .both worked all their lives ,no children ,no reason to be tight with heating . so sad .
Hello Tory! I use a big buddy heater on low at night, it works really well! I 'am always warm and cozy when sleeping in winter! On low a 20lbs BBQ tank gives me 80 - 90 hours, It not that expensive! Get a heater! Stay warm!! Also, until your van is built out properly, get a 5-gal bucket with a toilet seat attachment and use bags in the bucket. It works great as a toilet! Very convenient and clean! Happy New Year! Enjoy! Cheers!
Get a 12VDC electric blanket. It will plug right into your power station. They're usually around 55 to 60 Watts, which means a 500 watt hour Jackery will run it for close to 10 hours. You might be able to pick one up at a truck stop or I got mine from E-bay. Most A/C electric blankets don't like to be run on an inverter and eventually the controller faults out. As a journeyman electrician since the early 80's, I'm not trying to BS you. Best wishes. Hope that next time, you can stay warm.
Hello Tory, in case you're interested; buy some (brand name) Hot Hands, body warmers with adhesive backing; stick 1 on to your chest, over your heart (but onto a t-shirt, etc, not bare skin); this will help keep you warm for many many hours outdoors, indoors, while sleeping, hiking, etc. You can also buy some hand warmers, put 1 or 2 in bottom of sleeping bag (very warm for feet), and stick one near your head (don't lay on it); you'll be very comfy in cold conditions. Good luck, stay warm/safe; Happy Holidays!
Hey Tory, I'm late to the party. just saw this video and would like to offer some advice. I lived in Alaska for 4 years and did winter camping without heat. Layering is great , but it can't be restrictive, separating your legs, arms, fingers etc. from the rest of your body takes away from your heat. A good Arctic rated sleeping bag. Fully undress and put your clothes inside the bag with you, use moisture barrier between the bag and the floor and add layers to the outside if needed. I have used this technique in temperatures of -87F and slept fine with warm and cozy toes. Your body will heat the air inside the bag and keep your temperature the same from nose to toes. Have fun and be safe out there!
As a girl from the south, I think heat is super hard to deal with too. Rolling up in a thousand layers can keep you alive and warm, but when it’s deadly hot, you can only get so naked! You can end up in an oven, and die quickly. So heat and a cooling method are both vital.
I always tell people that I can deal with the cold better than the heat for the reasons you just gave. Hypothermia is a thing - but so is heat stroke! Humans have survived for millenia without electricity, but I believe humans died much younger than we do today because of extremes in climate, temperatures and weather. We have become pitifully dependent on the utilities of the present and woefully unskilled in the art of survival...only the fittest will survive in a SHTF situation.
Camping or sleeping in the cold, try this. Use only one layer of wool socks. If your feet sweat your feet will get cold, from the sweat. Sweat is the number one thing not to do when camping or sleeping out in the cold, even if sleeping in a van with no heat. I like your videos, as they are informative on things. Most important, be safe out there and have fun. Edit: As for using the bathroom, you might want to keep a bucket in the van, put an empty bag in it if you have to go, that way you can tie it off when done and you're still inside your van, if you have no toilet in your van. That's what I use when I go camping and it works really well. In the morning, just throw it away with your regular trash and no muss no fuss.
I do a lot of static hunting in cold temperatures. My recommendations for sleeping in freezing temps: Wool Army blanket Darn Tough Wool socks Sub-temperature insulated boots, like Baffin Boot blankets (Arctic Shield) Gloves with wool liners Hothands super warmers. Possum wool beanie I'd also wear merino wool base layers (Thin wool layers against your skin. This helps prevent sweating, and the sweat mixing with the cold makes you colder.) Stay away from cotton, and start looking for wool. Cotton soaks up water like a sponge. Wool helps wick it away from your body.
We don't see your breath when you talk, so it can't be too too bad. 😂 Buy some of those portable hand warmers and toe warmers. Those things saved my life in the winter. 🥶🥶
Quilted shipping blankets work pretty well for temporary insulation. I just poked some small holes in the edges, and cable tied them to the walls and roof. Had some extras left over amd just threw a couple layers on the floor. Made a pretty big difference in my 350HD Transit, especially for a quick and temporary fix.
Shipping blankets also work well for soundproofing. A lot of voice actors use them for cheap DIY recording booths, so much so that the prices on them almost tripled during Covid lockdown, when tons of people starting doing freelance work just to make an income.
If it's really cold out, hang a heavy blanket between the front and rear of the van. Stay up front. Have 2 or 3 blankets over you and a heavy plastic sheet over it to trap the body heat. I got insulated boots and wool socks. They work pretty well. You may need to run your heater every few hours to keep the temperature up. I'm in Chicago and yes, being cold sucks. Right now, I'm saving up for an 1800 w power station.
My wife and I will spend a couple weeks in our van traveling. We have a table, a Coleman propane stove and a propane tank. I went to the Goodwill and bought a pot and filled the pot up with rocks. On the very lowest setting the van will be warm at night without all the condensation of a buddy heater. Very low cost.
This is my fifth winter in Ontario Canada. The coldest I've had to endure without heat is -35C or -31F. I always hate it once it dips below -10C or 14F. I use a Mr Buddy, but I don't use it when sleeping...so I use blankets. I have two fleece blankets over a quilted heavy cotton blanket over a cotton covered duvet from Ikea. I have used canvas clamps to keep the sandwiched layers together. I sleep over a cotton sleeping bag that is opened up (when together it is rated at -35 C by itself). It is my emergency back up to also climb into if it's going to be less than -35. The heavy sandwiched blanket is amazingly comfortable. Safety first ...no flame while sleeping...don't sleep and idle. We only have one life and fire and carbon monoxide can take you quickly.
I was at that same Walmart, summer of '22. Before I could even attempt to park over-night, the security guard drove by to tell me, "No over night parking." He suggested that I park over at the bar and maybe peeps will just think I had too much to drink and passed out in my truck. Guess what? It worked! 😅
I used to hang a fleece blanket from the ceiling of my van like a tent that went over my head to create a small air pocket of slightly warmer air. Plus a sleeping bag with liner, extra blankets, and like 8-10 hand warmers
I’m feeling cold-panicked just watching! Some tips from my off grid life: Assuming you have a camp stove, I highly recommend the Fashy hot water bottles. I made a cover out of a ruined wool sweater and that keeps the heat all night long. Before I got around to cutting and sewing, I just stuck the water bottle inside and folded the sweater around. Two of them should keep you very toasty. (Bonus, you can use them with cold water when it’s too hot to sleep, too) For layering, go for many *thin* layers, concentrated on the core. Also, haramaki (Japanese belly warmer) really help maintain core warmth and you can still use your arms.
Get off the floor of the van. That was a large Walmart. Those usually have a decent selection of relatively inexpensive cots. Duck taping a survival blanket to the under side of that reflects quite a bit of your body heat back into your sleeping gear. The candle heaters work well, but you again need to be off the floor. Using your stove to heat water for a couple water bottles wrapped in a pair of socks inside your blankets also helps out for a while. PLUS gives you the heat from the stove for a bit as well.
It doesn''t actually drain them, it just slows their output rate by slowing down the chemical reactions in the cells. If you have a weak or low battery that can be enough to cause a problem unless the battery can warm up.
There Are Battery Operated Vest, Socks, Gloves And Pants, And Insoles For Shoes On Wish And Temu. Hand Warmers. I Use To Carry one In Each Pocket. I Need To Start Back. This Is A Little Too Late, But You May Need Again.
Great video on what van life is really like. I used to be a trucker and had a good Webasto heater, but it was prone to breaking down. My single most effective hack was a heavy duty winter sleeping bag from Cabellas, along with wool socks, sweat pants and hoodie. The first thing in the morning was a hot shower, followed by a good breakfast, not cheap neither 😆. All the best for your van adventures 👍
Some good ideas in the comments here. I grew up in the area in a house with no heat and found putting up curtains around my bed ( like making a little blanket fort even) and sleeping with my head covered really helped. I imagine hot water isn’t the easiest to come by but hot water bottles are so nice( maybe get a Trenta of hot water for tea at Starbucks but just use it in a bottle-even warm is better than nothing) I’d also sleep under pillows with my blankets over them lol. And we would always always have blankets over the windows/doors.
Used thoese sleeping bag thermal sheets for 3 yrs great when layered. Hikers will have a hjgh fat snack just before bed like chocolates or nuts so the slow burn helps keep you warm. Safe travels!!
Home Depot: cheap packet of foam insulation panels and bungie cords, magnets that hold things, summer windshield heat/sun reflectors turned inward surrounding your bed area. Bucket with padded edge and plastic bag for emergency toilet use. For padding, get foam pipe insulation. Sleep in a double breasted shirt with a hand warmer in each pocket. Warms your chest and circulates warm blood to your toes. Toss one or two in the bed with you. Wear wool and synthetic blends, avoid cotton in the cold. Military surplus for thermals and wool blankets.
A couple of layers of cardboard underneath you covered with a foam rubber pad will help with body heat loss and using a couple of Mylar emergency blankets they do reflect a lot of body heat
I'm a diesel mechanic here in las vegas and I gotta job offer in OWEGA NY. I'll be staying in my trailer with tool boxes and I added a roof tent. Hopefully I'll stay warm lol
look for videos on SAND HEATERS. It is a pretty simple concept. As an example you get a 5 gal bucket, line it with tin foil and fill it about 1/3 to half way with sand. Use a large tin can and fill it with sand and get some copper or aluminum sheets and cut them into strips. Say using the 12x24" sheets from homedepot and cutting them into strips and inserting those strips into the sand in the tin cans. Then using something like a propane camp burner to heat the can and then place the can in the bucket. the bucket will have holes in it that you place pvc pipe fittings into and have an opening in the top that you can place a DC or AC fan in the top to force the heated air out. Pretty simple concept. This would probably be total overkill for your situation but I am sure that this solution can be adapted to your situation.
Hi Tory. To keep your hands and fingers warm I recommend Drasry neoprene gloves that I purchased from Amazon. The gloves’ thumb tip, index tip and finger tip of finger next to index are removable, to unlock your phone with your fingerprint. To keep your feet warm I recommend neoprene socks, they are preferred by ice-fisherman and other winter sportsmen. Stay warm.
Hello Tory, you are an inspiration of inner self-strength, you dug deep and heard your inner self offer you a suggestion, and your insight was right on point. I admire how you keep your safety first and find a solution that works for you on so many levels, stay strong Tory, God Bless, you have a Gift.
The powerbank will lose power quicker because of the cold. Also a proper sleeping bag will be better than the one you have now. With a proper sleeping bag your legs/ arms etc will keep each other warm. At the moment your body is trying to keep separate parts warm, rather than one whole body. Think of it this way a mitten keeps your hand / fingers warmer than gloves, a proper sleeping is the mitten, you currently have a glove. 🙂
I live in Bend. The issue is less about many van lifers, but more of a homeless problem. You are relatively sheltered, but a lot of the homeless here are not and they cause a lot of social inconveniences to the general public. They enjoy beautiful summers here buy create a real social burden, then they want to be bailed out during the winter.
Get yourself a woodstove!! They make small portable woodstoves for tents You can cut a 4-5 inch hole in the side of the van for the pipe and put 2-3 small 1 1/2 inch small holes for air draw across from it about 6 inches up from the floor and 5-6 inches apart. Also build your bed platform up higher with hinges so you can store wood under it, Its also great for cooking. Heating water you can even bake with a cake pan and a clay salad bowl for a cover. If you had a portable toilet you could avoid being so reliant on public washrooms. You can pick up a woodstove for 100-300 or so online. They even make portable fold up ones you can carry on a tote. Also for Added warmth you can line your walls with 2 dollar emergency blankets you can get at the dollar store they will reflect heat and keep you warmer :)
A foil blanket on top of all the layers of clothing really works well to lock in heat if you have no electricity. Bty, you are so brave to camp in such cold weather!! I get cold in even 70 degree weather being from such a hot climate! Bty your Blockbuster T shirt looks great on you matching your beautiful blue eyes!!
REVISIONS: I also want to add something else I do is keep my phone, laptop and electronics in my blankets at night so that they don't get too cold at night (which is not healthy for them and my laptop and headphones lose charge when cold easily). But keeping them in my blankets keeps them warm at night. (After writing this I am realizing it may be a fire hazard... but also... idk I'm still going to do it... haha)
Living in vehicles in Canada durning winters I can absolutely say so many people underestimate how it feeling living in that environment full time with no breaks sleeping isn’t so much the issue yes we all know sleeping bags blankets and all that obviously But It’s living in that cold and dealing with it durning the days while trying to go about life that not many people fully understand You have done an amazing job showing exactly what it’s like to live in this environment and I greatly appreciate that 🙏🏼😁 Here in Canada we see -40c and -50c for weeks at a time and few people truly understand how painful it really is Batteries die Feet and fingers loose feeling And at times we loose our minds 😆 Or at least it feels like it 😅 Thank you for sharing your experiences !! New subscriber here Keep up the great work 😎🚐💨
In terms of motivation, summer heat in Florida is no better. Sweat, soaking wet cloths, everything you touch get wet, varying degrees of body odor, air so thick with humidity it's hard to breath, etc., etc. Try sleeping, when you're so hot, it's miserable. Cold is definitely worse, because hypothermia is a real thing. On the other hand, heat exhaustion and complete discomfort, is a close second. Stay warm! First visit to your channel. 👍
Army ECWS sleeping bag system, you can sleep,outside in skivvies and wake up warm and toasty while brushing the snow off. Used in mountains, above snow line , 2 feet of snow, warm as heck, no fire. Usually can find in surplus stores or in military towns for cheap. It’s actually 3 bag system, light bag, heavy bag and gore Tex outer shell. You think you living on edge, every infantry man would consider the back of that van a palace compared to being out on ground , just sitting there parked with no heat 😂. Use truck stop showers if on interstate, very nice and safe, warm and open 24 hrs
wool blankets are your friend three work well one folded in half put it on the bed between you and the mattress the second fold in half and put it inside between your sleeping bag and the liner and the third fold in half and wrap it over the top of your feet
I was too tired to come comment but you gave me such a great idea on getting the movie monthly pass, that I came to give you a tip back. The heated blanket deal: I am building out my car. I am trying to figure out how to set up my electrical system. I bought an electric blanket and read the instructions. It said don't hook it up to that type of thing (an inverter, maybe?) I'd recommend reading the insert that comes with the product, it should tell you. Thanks so much for the awesome movie theatre hack. There's one in my area and I don't have my electrical system figured out yet, this was a much needed tip for me. Love your van, have a blast.
My suggestion because it's helped me out during my unfinished Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van build. emergency blankets with a silver and orange lining, put one of those or a couple of those under rubber mats that you get from tractor supply or harbor freight. It really helps keeping the floors from getting super cold. Get that cheap , insulation from Lowe's or home Depot and the bubble insulation and temporarily put it up. It helps a lot. Insulation tape.
Box truck life - I have a ecoflow Delta portable solar charger. I run a heating blanket all night long and into the morning and only use half the power thats with the tv on. When there is no sun out I can charger the eco flow with a power cord to any outlet. i once charged it in a 24 hour Landry mat
Ahh, I have 600 amp battery bank and was wondering if an electric mattress pad would drain my batteries 🪫 overnight. I don’t have a heat source other than running the van. I do have 400 watts of solar, 600 amp hours, 3000W inverter. Builder said no heating elements but I’ve been so curious about electric blankets and such.
USB Throw sold on Ebay,Amazon.Campers on UA-cam use...and just charge a battery bank during the day and use during the night!I use a layered approach...2 blankets and a 20 degree Coleman sleeping bag on top!Almost sweating'
I’m from Buffalo….what we do when the power goes out is use a candle in a jar and then get two glasses higher than the jar and place a flower pot over the candle on the glasses on either side….also use a quarter to cover the flower pot hole in the middle.
So for a heated blanket, you can get a 12v blanket for about 20 bucks, and they're on a timer, so they don't run all night. I used one in below zero weather to preheat my bed. combine that with a thick layer of blankets and a memory foam pad under me, and even -30 was doable.
I had a van in the 70's and the most valuable thing I had in the van was a roof vent with and adjustable speed fan and with that I had fresh air and temperature regulation in winter and summer!!! Even though the van was well insulated, it was hot as hell in the summer when the AC was not in use and that roof vent with fan would pull that heat outta there in a minute or two!! It was a 12 blade fan and it gad a HIGH or fast speed and really moved air when it had to, a slow spinning fan or a fan with few blades may be worthless!!! Must be speed control on it if you get one and once you get one if you do, you will never have another van without it - its that good!!! Crack the front door windows, adjust the vent opening and fan speed and you can regulate the temperature in that van perfectly winter or summer !!!! And with that fresh air, no moisture problems and no carbon monoxide problems but it sounds like you heating system may not be producing that..... NOTE that MOX is heavier than air and detectors must be at the floor to detect it immediately if its accumulating !!!!!!!! This is especially important at night when all is still, it will build on the floor,,,, during the day when you are moving around in the van the MOX will be stirred up and a detector on the ceiling will detect it, but at night when all is still,,, it goes to the floor and if you have a pet that sleeps on the floor,,, well you know how that will end ..... Hope this helps !!!!! Be Save MOX is deadly even the 1st time can get you !!!!!! And one more thing,,, if you install MOX detectors remember on the floor and you should have 2 or more,,, this is nothing to play with or take a chance with - if the one fails and you only have one...... you know what will most likely happen ... .. .
I have to do everything before the winter. Have a lot of blankets/comforters, and BIG pillows. When it is cold. Always have a full tank of gas. Cover your windows. I usually don't cover my windshield. Make it real hot. Wap up then cut it off and go to 😴
I sleep in a sedan and the way I keep warm is a furry hat with face cover, fuzzy thermal socks, a sleeping bag, and a power bank I use to power my heated blanket. Gets me about 5 hours before it dies.
Hi I live in Maine, work in NH travel often around the country and sleep a live mostly in my Pruis, in the COLD, I use my 20° backpack quilt and a 12 volt heated blanket I got at Walmart, which runs good off my Jackery 1000, 1 st I overheat the car and put the electric pad inside my quilt, on my 6" memoryform mattress let it get all toasty, make an adult hot coco. Crawl in warm and stay warm most of the night
Well Tory welcome to the West Coast and got to say your a trooper handling the cold like a champ, stay warm keep dry and your head on a swivel be SAFE!
When I've slept in my car in winter, I just crank up the car heater to max, and open up all the bedding, down comforter, put pillows by the floor vents, etc. Get everything really warm for maybe 10-15 min...then cut the car engine off (don't lie down thinking you'll turn if off later in you're sleepy: Dangerous if you fall asleep), then put all the pillows and bedding back into place and crawl into all that warmth. Just getting ahead of the game on not losing heat and warming up instead of getting into a cold bed makes the whole night better. Also envious of your beautiful long hair...I would so wrap that around my neck for a warm scarf, too! haha Keep being you! :)
So, I'm from South Africa. We don't have harsh winters but we do see Temps as low as -10 c during the night and early morning. I have been thinking of wrapping 1/4" copper pipe around the exhaust and insulating it with exhaust wrap. Then running the pipe through the floor, through an expansion tank and back to the exhaust. This way it heats up water, heats up the floor and if insulated properly, can provide a good amount of preheat for a reasonably warm habitat, even if it's for some of the evening...
If you have to run the engine, why not just use the vehicle heater? If all of the interior, seats, belongings were heated, that would radiate heat into the inside air as well.
I live in norther Canada and I keep my window open at night. We have a heater in our core of our body. All I do is go to value village and buy knitted blankets from the 70's. When you get it right your body is cozy and warm all night.
Tory, When I go squatching in the Sierras I sleep on a sheepskin that has 5 hides sewn together from Costco, $90. These reflect all your heat right back to you.
Layering socks can compress them which removes some of their insulator properties. Better to have one pair of socks. Also being in the sleeping bag it might be better to not have any socks because it will heat the air in the sleeping bag.
If you can only have 1 pr of socks i recommend angora goat (from South Africa). They are the best second only to muskox which are prohibitively expensive. Also my foot is 8.5 but i buy size 11.5 slippers and put in double thick sheepskin inserts from Australia. The air around the toes helps keep feet warm.
I use me heater, it takes a week to go through a 15 pound tank on high, low nearly two weeks. The moisture is not bad, just the windows which takes me 30 seconds to wipe off with a towel.
Indoor out door carpet is good . Foam is good cold air doesn't go thru Foam. Cover the windows with foam put the carpet on the floor and walls. You can get Velcro to keep it on the windows.
When it comes to heated blankets, get the low-voltage DC versions. Start hard to find in stores, but you can definitely get them online. They pull a fraction of the electricity.
Thanks for the great video. Love the sleeping bag pajamas. Had to spend the night outside the emergency room (in vehicle)when COVID allowed only granny in there with my grandson. Glad I had a regular *winter* sleeping bag in there for the winter, JIC, but what if I needed three? Plus, had to remove it to get out for anything. Chemical toe warmers, foot warmers, hand warmers in hunting dept. Never went to his cold football games without them.
The base is where most of your heat goes as you compress the insulation, a high thermal insulation self inflating mattress on top of a camping mat will help enormously.
If you live in bend mcmenemins usually offers hostels for cheaper than a hotel room you can use those to stay warm on colder nights if you still have no heater. I also have no clue if the bend Oregon mcMenamins has hostels at all but some of the locations do
Single candle lantern, "Good Year" DC electric blanket. rated to use on battery. A couple pks of one use hand and butt warmers. could also foam insulate your Van interior.. also a pet cat or a dog for shared heat. enjoy
Someone mentioned this, but when I was staying in a popup tent trailer with snow on the ground, I boiled water and put it into a large stainless steel bottle, then wrapped it in a full sized towel. Kept me warm all night. (You put the bottle next to you while sleeping, or at the near foot of your blankets.)
Also, cold gets to your battery and lessens how long it lasts. Next, get a plastic flexible plastic tube that you can put in your mouth and thebotger end outside of your bag (not too long, maybe 2 feet). That way you can sleep fully inside your bag, with it over your head. Breathe in thru the tube, out thru your nose. Wooly socks make good mittens.
There's some hunting coveralls that actually have the bottom like a sleeping bag there for sitting in tree stands. Probably good to sleep in those too.
You'd think that keeping your legs and arms together will keep you warm, not separating them. That suit sleeping bag is completely useless. You'd be warmer bundled up under a non heating fuzzy blanket.
I was tent camping in 15 degree weather. Is kinda chilly. I made a thing that’s basically a steel rod about a foot above my sleeping bag and then put two moving blankets over the top. Kinda like a fluffy pup tent. It works really well.
Hey, medically retired cop here. I have been driving a semi truck for a couples yrs now and i learned quick that its a great idea to loop your seatbelt through your door handles (not the handle that opens the door but the part that connected to the door itself) then click them in. No one can open the door even if picked.
Be safe out there and good luck to u.
That is a very good tip.
love this idea, never thought of it! thanks!
Great tip thanks.👍🏽👍🏽😁🤗
Yea, I wish my minivan doors would have that option. My doors have only cup-like openings for your fingers.
Every time I go into a police officer station, I say "This place is lousy with coppers!"
Just a tip. I’ve work outside in Michigan for many,many years. The trick to keeping your feet warm is making sure your socks and or boots are not too tight. Because you will cut the circulation off to your feet, and that’s the quickest way to get your feet cold. Sometimes when wearing 2 pairs of socks the outer one may now be too tight. If you wear just one pair with that full body sleeping bag and those blankets. Or get a bigger pair of socks for the outside layer. I believe you would do much better keeping your feet warm. Cold feet are miserable. I hope you see this and I hope it helps.
I bought some warm thermal socks and a cheap electrical power bank for a heated blanket.. works great
I'm😅@@SoSlow252
Wool socks too, wool anything is the best for staying warm. Down comforter too
Are you really that big a fool?
I think a zero degree sleeping is a good option. As for socks need to be careful not to sweat to much because wet socks can cause hyperthermia
Legit there are cold weather quilts and sleeping bags rated as low as -60° F. Feathered friends makes great cold weather sleeping bags and Enlightened Equipment makes great cold weather quilts.
I'm a camper and hiker and I have slept outside in the northeast mountains. One thing I can tell you that will keep you warm is a wool blanket. Invest in a good wool blanket and some either wool or alpaca socks. Since I have experienced the cold, these are tips from personal experience. Good luck with your build and keeping warm
Suggestions:
1. Carry a hot water bottle with knitted cover.. and keep it in your sleeping back.
2. Neck warmer... when you get into your sleeping bag/bed.. pull the neck warmer onto your ears and head.. it will keep you much much warmer
3. Snow mittens.. wear e'm to bed.
4. wool highnecks.
5. Thermal fleece tights.
6. wool socks.
7. 1 person tent inside a camper.. smaller space to heat up.
8. Sleeping bag inside another sleeping bag.
Gonna do an a-frame tarp tent thru the middle of my van lol
I saw a video of ppl tying rope around sunvisor and then back to a hook in the back (minivan) and hanging a packing blanket like a tent. Then they hung something else to block off the ends. I'm going to try that.
I believe it helped with condensation on windows too.
@@drivinfool9902 yass
I'd skip the hot water bottle. You have to deal with carrying extra amounts of water to fill it plus breaking out the camp stove and a pot to heat water nightly. For no more than a pack of 10 Hot Hands warmers costs, a 1 month supply of using one in your bag nightly for extra warmth like a water bottle would be about 20-24 bucks a month. I'd certainly pay 60 or so bucks to get through the coldest months. Especially given all the extra hassles of preparing a hot water bottle. Activate a Hot Hands packet, throw in bottom of bag, climb in. They come in different sizes so different warmth times of 10-18 hours advertised. From looking at pricing you may as well get the larger ones. And they're biodegradable when done with them, so environmentally friendly. Win/win.
I was in a tent in Millican one night when it snowed. I was surprised to learn a propane lantern gave off enough heat keep me warm. Be careful and perhaps turn on and off as needed.
I sleep in an uninsulated aluminum step van most nights. I have access to shore power most of the time but a 1500w heater only does so much, and it's especially cold when the wind is blowing. Last year around Christmas it was around 0 degrees. I bought a tent to put over my bed and it makes a big difference. I switched from a heated blanket to a heated mattress pad. Having the heat source below you is much more comfortable. The mattress pad with a couple of blankets inside a tent is quite bearable.
Great tip !
according to the hosts at the Ice Hotel I stayed at in Finland, you want NO LAYERS at all when you are inside the sleeping bag. You WANT your body heat to warm the trapped air INSIDE the sleeping bag. The bag will STOP that heat escaping.
I was sleeping in my tidy whities and singlet, ON a bed of ice, IN a room literally made of snow. So there's that.
Snow actually is good insulation lol
Wow, can't imagine it. 😮
I don't care what Finland says. If its really cold you need wool longs johns and wool socks and a cap.
i've heard of this too. naked or bare minimum clothing to survive the cold in a sleeping bag. weird how that works.
Vokka?
Quick fix until you get your heat: make the area around you smaller. Use cardboard (corrugated) material. Tape together, multi-layer, or just a big box. Sleep inside the cardboard. Your own body will warm inside, much better than trying to retain heat inside the whole van. Also, as many have said, a 12v blanket will serve you better. Good luck!!!
Naked in a sleeping bag. It heats up the fastest, no matter how cold it's outside.
Thanks for sharing. 😊❤
@@Bergerons_Review Just hope and pray that you don't get "the knock". Unless you are a "speed dresser".
@@nicole-uo9cd I'm used to it. Clothes are next to me and I can dress in 5 second.
I was cracking up when you said that you’re just going to sleep because your don’t feel cold when you’re asleep. I was thinking, you might not feel hypothermia set in 😂 painless way to go. Glad you survived! Always fun and entertaining.
we had elderly man and wife friends several years ago . they both died together of hypothermia . they lived in a small 1st floor masonette .both worked all their lives ,no children ,no reason to be tight with heating . so sad .
Yeah I was thinking well your heart slows way down so u probably won’t feel it while ur sleep. Goodness
How is this peabrain still alive?
Hello Tory! I use a big buddy heater on low at night, it works really well! I 'am always warm and cozy when sleeping in winter! On low a 20lbs BBQ tank gives me 80 - 90 hours, It not that expensive! Get a heater! Stay warm!! Also, until your van is built out properly, get a 5-gal bucket with a toilet seat attachment and use bags in the bucket. It works great as a toilet! Very convenient and clean! Happy New Year! Enjoy! Cheers!
Get a 12VDC electric blanket. It will plug right into your power station. They're usually around 55 to 60 Watts, which means a 500 watt hour Jackery will run it for close to 10 hours. You might be able to pick one up at a truck stop or I got mine from E-bay. Most A/C electric blankets don't like to be run on an inverter and eventually the controller faults out. As a journeyman electrician since the early 80's, I'm not trying to BS you. Best wishes. Hope that next time, you can stay warm.
You did well. I slept in a tent in Korea mid-winter. The stories I could tell you. I'm proud of you rising up to meet the challenge.
Hello Tory, in case you're interested; buy some (brand name) Hot Hands, body warmers with adhesive backing; stick 1 on to your chest, over your heart (but onto a t-shirt, etc, not bare skin); this will help keep you warm for many many hours outdoors, indoors, while sleeping, hiking, etc. You can also buy some hand warmers, put 1 or 2 in bottom of sleeping bag (very warm for feet), and stick one near your head (don't lay on it); you'll be very comfy in cold conditions. Good luck, stay warm/safe; Happy Holidays!
Hey Tory, I'm late to the party. just saw this video and would like to offer some advice. I lived in Alaska for 4 years and did winter camping without heat. Layering is great , but it can't be restrictive, separating your legs, arms, fingers etc. from the rest of your body takes away from your heat. A good Arctic rated sleeping bag. Fully undress and put your clothes inside the bag with you, use moisture barrier between the bag and the floor and add layers to the outside if needed. I have used this technique in temperatures of -87F and slept fine with warm and cozy toes. Your body will heat the air inside the bag and keep your temperature the same from nose to toes. Have fun and be safe out there!
It works. One time was so sleepy getting set that I forgot my clothes outside the bag. You only do that once!
As a girl from the south, I think heat is super hard to deal with too. Rolling up in a thousand layers can keep you alive and warm, but when it’s deadly hot, you can only get so naked! You can end up in an oven, and die quickly. So heat and a cooling method are both vital.
I always tell people that I can deal with the cold better than the heat for the reasons you just gave. Hypothermia is a thing - but so is heat stroke! Humans have survived for millenia without electricity, but I believe humans died much younger than we do today because of extremes in climate, temperatures and weather. We have become pitifully dependent on the utilities of the present and woefully unskilled in the art of survival...only the fittest will survive in a SHTF situation.
Camping or sleeping in the cold, try this. Use only one layer of wool socks. If your feet sweat your feet will get cold, from the sweat. Sweat is the number one thing not to do when camping or sleeping out in the cold, even if sleeping in a van with no heat.
I like your videos, as they are informative on things.
Most important, be safe out there and have fun.
Edit: As for using the bathroom, you might want to keep a bucket in the van, put an empty bag in it if you have to go, that way you can tie it off when done and you're still inside your van, if you have no toilet in your van. That's what I use when I go camping and it works really well. In the morning, just throw it away with your regular trash and no muss no fuss.
I do a lot of static hunting in cold temperatures.
My recommendations for sleeping in freezing temps:
Wool Army blanket
Darn Tough Wool socks
Sub-temperature insulated boots, like Baffin
Boot blankets (Arctic Shield)
Gloves with wool liners
Hothands super warmers.
Possum wool beanie
I'd also wear merino wool base layers (Thin wool layers against your skin. This helps prevent sweating, and the sweat mixing with the cold makes you colder.)
Stay away from cotton, and start looking for wool. Cotton soaks up water like a sponge. Wool helps wick it away from your body.
sounds fun!!!
We don't see your breath when you talk, so it can't be too too bad. 😂
Buy some of those portable hand warmers and toe warmers. Those things saved my life in the winter. 🥶🥶
Quilted shipping blankets work pretty well for temporary insulation. I just poked some small holes in the edges, and cable tied them to the walls and roof. Had some extras left over amd just threw a couple layers on the floor. Made a pretty big difference in my 350HD Transit, especially for a quick and temporary fix.
Shipping blankets also work well for soundproofing. A lot of voice actors use them for cheap DIY recording booths, so much so that the prices on them almost tripled during Covid lockdown, when tons of people starting doing freelance work just to make an income.
Good to know I just started recording music and need a little booth.thank you🤟
If it's really cold out, hang a heavy blanket between the front and rear of the van. Stay up front. Have 2 or 3 blankets over you and a heavy plastic sheet over it to trap the body heat. I got insulated boots and wool socks. They work pretty well. You may need to run your heater every few hours to keep the temperature up. I'm in Chicago and yes, being cold sucks. Right now, I'm saving up for an 1800 w power station.
My wife and I will spend a couple weeks in our van traveling. We have a table, a Coleman propane stove and a propane tank. I went to the Goodwill and bought a pot and filled the pot up with rocks. On the very lowest setting the van will be warm at night without all the condensation of a buddy heater. Very low cost.
Haven’t heard that one before.great idea
This is my fifth winter in Ontario Canada. The coldest I've had to endure without heat is -35C or -31F. I always hate it once it dips below -10C or 14F.
I use a Mr Buddy, but I don't use it when sleeping...so I use blankets. I have two fleece blankets over a quilted heavy cotton blanket over a cotton covered duvet from Ikea. I have used canvas clamps to keep the sandwiched layers together. I sleep over a cotton sleeping bag that is opened up (when together it is rated at -35 C by itself). It is my emergency back up to also climb into if it's going to be less than -35. The heavy sandwiched blanket is amazingly comfortable.
Safety first ...no flame while sleeping...don't sleep and idle. We only have one life and fire and carbon monoxide can take you quickly.
Doing my first snowy van life winter 🥶🥶
I have a sub zero bag and am planninh on making a tent over the bed area lol
I was at that same Walmart, summer of '22. Before I could even attempt to park over-night, the security guard drove by to tell me, "No over night parking."
He suggested that I park over at the bar and maybe peeps will just think I had too much to drink and passed out in my truck.
Guess what? It worked! 😅
I used to hang a fleece blanket from the ceiling of my van like a tent that went over my head to create a small air pocket of slightly warmer air. Plus a sleeping bag with liner, extra blankets, and like 8-10 hand warmers
I’m feeling cold-panicked just watching! Some tips from my off grid life:
Assuming you have a camp stove, I highly recommend the Fashy hot water bottles. I made a cover out of a ruined wool sweater and that keeps the heat all night long. Before I got around to cutting and sewing, I just stuck the water bottle inside and folded the sweater around. Two of them should keep you very toasty. (Bonus, you can use them with cold water when it’s too hot to sleep, too)
For layering, go for many *thin* layers, concentrated on the core. Also, haramaki (Japanese belly warmer) really help maintain core warmth and you can still use your arms.
Never heard of belly warmers. Will look into it. 😊
Get off the floor of the van. That was a large Walmart. Those usually have a decent selection of relatively inexpensive cots. Duck taping a survival blanket to the under side of that reflects quite a bit of your body heat back into your sleeping gear. The candle heaters work well, but you again need to be off the floor.
Using your stove to heat water for a couple water bottles wrapped in a pair of socks inside your blankets also helps out for a while. PLUS gives you the heat from the stove for a bit as well.
Thanks for the video. Most van life vids are about all the build out features and how it easy it makes things. It's good to see the other side.
Insulate your power bank. Get it off the cold floor. Coldness helps drain batteries and power banks
It doesn''t actually drain them, it just slows their output rate by slowing down the chemical reactions in the cells. If you have a weak or low battery that can be enough to cause a problem unless the battery can warm up.
There Are Battery Operated Vest, Socks, Gloves And Pants, And Insoles For Shoes On Wish And Temu. Hand Warmers. I Use To Carry one In Each Pocket. I Need To Start Back. This Is A Little Too Late, But You May Need Again.
Great video on what van life is really like. I used to be a trucker and had a good Webasto heater, but it was prone to breaking down. My single most effective hack was a heavy duty winter sleeping bag from Cabellas, along with wool socks, sweat pants and hoodie. The first thing in the morning was a hot shower, followed by a good breakfast, not cheap neither 😆. All the best for your van adventures 👍
Some good ideas in the comments here. I grew up in the area in a house with no heat and found putting up curtains around my bed ( like making a little blanket fort even) and sleeping with my head covered really helped. I imagine hot water isn’t the easiest to come by but hot water bottles are so nice( maybe get a Trenta of hot water for tea at Starbucks but just use it in a bottle-even warm is better than nothing) I’d also sleep under pillows with my blankets over them lol. And we would always always have blankets over the windows/doors.
Come to Arizona, gets chilly at night but still high 70s during the day, lot less struggle and nice folks in the desert here in Quartzite
Thank you for the Blockbuster trip down memory lane! I also love the t-shirt. I hope your heating system gets installed smoothly and quickly!
The vibes are immaculate with the cat blanket
How about a luggable Loo or something temporary so it’s with you at all times? They have biodegradable bags, and they have biodegradable pellets.
Hi Tori, can't wait to see how the floor heat works out!
Used thoese sleeping bag thermal sheets for 3 yrs great when layered. Hikers will have a hjgh fat snack just before bed like chocolates or nuts so the slow burn helps keep you warm. Safe travels!!
Home Depot: cheap packet of foam insulation panels and bungie cords, magnets that hold things, summer windshield heat/sun reflectors turned inward surrounding your bed area. Bucket with padded edge and plastic bag for emergency toilet use. For padding, get foam pipe insulation.
Sleep in a double breasted shirt with a hand warmer in each pocket. Warms your chest and circulates warm blood to your toes. Toss one or two in the bed with you. Wear wool and synthetic blends, avoid cotton in the cold. Military surplus for thermals and wool blankets.
A couple of layers of cardboard underneath you covered with a foam rubber pad will help with body heat loss and using a couple of Mylar emergency blankets they do reflect a lot of body heat
I'm a diesel mechanic here in las vegas and I gotta job offer in OWEGA NY. I'll be staying in my trailer with tool boxes and I added a roof tent. Hopefully I'll stay warm lol
look for videos on SAND HEATERS. It is a pretty simple concept. As an example you get a 5 gal bucket, line it with tin foil and fill it about 1/3 to half way with sand. Use a large tin can and fill it with sand and get some copper or aluminum sheets and cut them into strips. Say using the 12x24" sheets from homedepot and cutting them into strips and inserting those strips into the sand in the tin cans. Then using something like a propane camp burner to heat the can and then place the can in the bucket. the bucket will have holes in it that you place pvc pipe fittings into and have an opening in the top that you can place a DC or AC fan in the top to force the heated air out. Pretty simple concept. This would probably be total overkill for your situation but I am sure that this solution can be adapted to your situation.
Diesel heater = $ 130.00 ,also they make 12 volt electric blankets. Bend is one of the coldest places I've ever spent the night in my car.
Slept just a few hours in a freezing van and woke up and still absolutely beautiful
Hi Tory. To keep your hands and fingers warm I recommend Drasry neoprene gloves that I purchased from Amazon. The gloves’ thumb tip, index tip and finger tip of finger next to index are removable, to unlock your phone with your fingerprint. To keep your feet warm I recommend neoprene socks, they are preferred by ice-fisherman and other winter sportsmen. Stay warm.
Hello Tory, you are an inspiration of inner self-strength, you dug deep and heard your inner self offer you a suggestion, and your insight was right on point. I admire how you keep your safety first and find a solution that works for you on so many levels, stay strong Tory, God Bless, you have a Gift.
The powerbank will lose power quicker because of the cold. Also a proper sleeping bag will be better than the one you have now. With a proper sleeping bag your legs/ arms etc will keep each other warm. At the moment your body is trying to keep separate parts warm, rather than one whole body. Think of it this way a mitten keeps your hand / fingers warmer than gloves, a proper sleeping is the mitten, you currently have a glove. 🙂
No it won't
@@mrmotofy Sleep in underwear, no layers in sleeping bag.
ive used big buddy heaters for years, and have only had a small gap in the window for circulation of clean air. never had a problem whatsoever.
I live in Bend. The issue is less about many van lifers, but more of a homeless problem. You are relatively sheltered, but a lot of the homeless here are not and they cause a lot of social inconveniences to the general public. They enjoy beautiful summers here buy create a real social burden, then they want to be bailed out during the winter.
Get yourself a woodstove!! They make small portable woodstoves for tents You can cut a 4-5 inch hole in the side of the van for the pipe and put 2-3 small 1 1/2 inch small holes for air draw across from it about 6 inches up from the floor and 5-6 inches apart. Also build your bed platform up higher with hinges so you can store wood under it, Its also great for cooking. Heating water you can even bake with a cake pan and a clay salad bowl for a cover. If you had a portable toilet you could avoid being so reliant on public washrooms. You can pick up a woodstove for 100-300 or so online. They even make portable fold up ones you can carry on a tote. Also for Added warmth you can line your walls with 2 dollar emergency blankets you can get at the dollar store they will reflect heat and keep you warmer :)
A foil blanket on top of all the layers of clothing really works well to lock in heat if you have no electricity. Bty, you are so brave to camp in such cold weather!! I get cold in even 70 degree weather being from such a hot climate! Bty your Blockbuster T shirt looks great on you matching your beautiful blue eyes!!
The lights on reveal of the cat blanket 😂 made me lol. Love the t shirt! Gotta try the 12v car blankets they don't draw as much wattage.
REVISIONS:
I also want to add something else I do is keep my phone, laptop and electronics in my blankets at night so that they don't get too cold at night (which is not healthy for them and my laptop and headphones lose charge when cold easily). But keeping them in my blankets keeps them warm at night. (After writing this I am realizing it may be a fire hazard... but also... idk I'm still going to do it... haha)
Me to, I thought I would probably not tell anyone, well bit strange but I guess not 😂😂😂.
Please keep as hot as you are ❤
Living in vehicles in Canada durning winters I can absolutely say so many people underestimate how it feeling living in that environment full time with no breaks
sleeping isn’t so much the issue yes we all know sleeping bags blankets and all that obviously
But It’s living in that cold and dealing with it durning the days while trying to go about life that not many people fully understand
You have done an amazing job showing exactly what it’s like to live in this environment and I greatly appreciate that 🙏🏼😁
Here in Canada we see -40c and -50c for weeks at a time and few people truly understand how painful it really is
Batteries die
Feet and fingers loose feeling
And at times we loose our minds 😆
Or at least it feels like it 😅
Thank you for sharing your experiences !!
New subscriber here
Keep up the great work 😎🚐💨
In terms of motivation, summer heat in Florida is no better. Sweat, soaking wet cloths, everything you touch get wet, varying degrees of body odor, air so thick with humidity it's hard to breath, etc., etc. Try sleeping, when you're so hot, it's miserable. Cold is definitely worse, because hypothermia is a real thing. On the other hand, heat exhaustion and complete discomfort, is a close second. Stay warm!
First visit to your channel. 👍
Army ECWS sleeping bag system, you can sleep,outside in skivvies and wake up warm and toasty while brushing the snow off. Used in mountains, above snow line , 2 feet of snow, warm as heck, no fire. Usually can find in surplus stores or in military towns for cheap. It’s actually 3 bag system, light bag, heavy bag and gore Tex outer shell. You think you living on edge, every infantry man would consider the back of that van a palace compared to being out on ground , just sitting there parked with no heat 😂. Use truck stop showers if on interstate, very nice and safe, warm and open 24 hrs
wool blankets are your friend three work well one folded in half put it on the bed between you and the mattress the second fold in half and put it inside between your sleeping bag and the liner and the third fold in half and wrap it over the top of your feet
I was too tired to come comment but you gave me such a great idea on getting the movie monthly pass, that I came to give you a tip back. The heated blanket deal: I am building out my car. I am trying to figure out how to set up my electrical system. I bought an electric blanket and read the instructions. It said don't hook it up to that type of thing (an inverter, maybe?) I'd recommend reading the insert that comes with the product, it should tell you.
Thanks so much for the awesome movie theatre hack. There's one in my area and I don't have my electrical system figured out yet, this was a much needed tip for me. Love your van, have a blast.
Sending all those warm vibes for an electrical system and that heated floor. Stay warm Tory 😃
So impressed. Keep following your dream. Be safe. The steel van is a heatsink. Do what you can to insulate.
My suggestion because it's helped me out during my unfinished Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van build. emergency blankets with a silver and orange lining, put one of those or a couple of those under rubber mats that you get from tractor supply or harbor freight. It really helps keeping the floors from getting super cold. Get that cheap
, insulation from Lowe's or home Depot and the bubble insulation and temporarily put it up. It helps a lot. Insulation tape.
Box truck life - I have a ecoflow Delta portable solar charger. I run a heating blanket all night long and into the morning and only use half the power thats with the tv on. When there is no sun out I can charger the eco flow with a power cord to any outlet. i once charged it in a 24 hour Landry mat
BTW Mr Budy is a good option. I wouldn't pass on it.
Ahh, I have 600 amp battery bank and was wondering if an electric mattress pad would drain my batteries 🪫 overnight. I don’t have a heat source other than running the van. I do have 400 watts of solar, 600 amp hours, 3000W inverter. Builder said no heating elements but I’ve been so curious about electric blankets and such.
@@healingjourneys4241 Only one way to find out right? Share the info of your results
USB Throw sold on Ebay,Amazon.Campers on UA-cam use...and just charge a battery bank during the day and use during the night!I use a layered approach...2 blankets and a 20 degree Coleman sleeping bag on top!Almost sweating'
I’m from Buffalo….what we do when the power goes out is use a candle in a jar and then get two glasses higher than the jar and place a flower pot over the candle on the glasses on either side….also use a quarter to cover the flower pot hole in the middle.
So for a heated blanket, you can get a 12v blanket for about 20 bucks, and they're on a timer, so they don't run all night. I used one in below zero weather to preheat my bed. combine that with a thick layer of blankets and a memory foam pad under me, and even -30 was doable.
Glad to see you're feeling better than last time we saw you.
Agh Blockbuster brings back memories.
I had a van in the 70's and the most valuable thing I had in the van was a roof vent with and adjustable speed fan and with that I had fresh air and temperature regulation in winter and summer!!! Even though the van was well insulated, it was hot as hell in the summer when the AC was not in use and that roof vent with fan would pull that heat outta there in a minute or two!! It was a 12 blade fan and it gad a HIGH or fast speed and really moved air when it had to, a slow spinning fan or a fan with few blades may be worthless!!! Must be speed control on it if you get one and once you get one if you do, you will never have another van without it - its that good!!! Crack the front door windows, adjust the vent opening and fan speed and you can regulate the temperature in that van perfectly winter or summer !!!! And with that fresh air, no moisture problems and no carbon monoxide problems but it sounds like you heating system may not be producing that..... NOTE that MOX is heavier than air and detectors must be at the floor to detect it immediately if its accumulating !!!!!!!! This is especially important at night when all is still, it will build on the floor,,,, during the day when you are moving around in the van the MOX will be stirred up and a detector on the ceiling will detect it, but at night when all is still,,, it goes to the floor and if you have a pet that sleeps on the floor,,, well you know how that will end ..... Hope this helps !!!!! Be Save MOX is deadly even the 1st time can get you !!!!!! And one more thing,,, if you install MOX detectors remember on the floor and you should have 2 or more,,, this is nothing to play with or take a chance with - if the one fails and you only have one...... you know what will most likely happen ... .. .
Keep warm Tory, and I definitely need to get me one of those Blockbuster T-Shirts! Have a great week, good to have you back ❤
I have to do everything before the winter. Have a lot of blankets/comforters, and BIG pillows. When it is cold. Always have a full tank of gas. Cover your windows. I usually don't cover my windshield. Make it real hot. Wap up then cut it off and go to 😴
I sleep in a sedan and the way I keep warm is a furry hat with face cover, fuzzy thermal socks, a sleeping bag, and a power bank I use to power my heated blanket. Gets me about 5 hours before it dies.
Hi I live in Maine, work in NH travel often around the country and sleep a live mostly in my Pruis, in the COLD, I use my 20° backpack quilt and a 12 volt heated blanket I got at Walmart, which runs good off my Jackery 1000, 1 st I overheat the car and put the electric pad inside my quilt, on my 6" memoryform mattress let it get all toasty, make an adult hot coco. Crawl in warm and stay warm most of the night
Well Tory welcome to the West Coast and got to say your a trooper handling the cold like a champ, stay warm keep dry and your head on a swivel be SAFE!
When I've slept in my car in winter, I just crank up the car heater to max, and open up all the bedding, down comforter, put pillows by the floor vents, etc. Get everything really warm for maybe 10-15 min...then cut the car engine off (don't lie down thinking you'll turn if off later in you're sleepy: Dangerous if you fall asleep), then put all the pillows and bedding back into place and crawl into all that warmth. Just getting ahead of the game on not losing heat and warming up instead of getting into a cold bed makes the whole night better. Also envious of your beautiful long hair...I would so wrap that around my neck for a warm scarf, too! haha Keep being you! :)
So, I'm from South Africa. We don't have harsh winters but we do see Temps as low as -10 c during the night and early morning.
I have been thinking of wrapping 1/4" copper pipe around the exhaust and insulating it with exhaust wrap. Then running the pipe through the floor, through an expansion tank and back to the exhaust. This way it heats up water, heats up the floor and if insulated properly, can provide a good amount of preheat for a reasonably warm habitat, even if it's for some of the evening...
If you have to run the engine, why not just use the vehicle heater? If all of the interior, seats, belongings were heated, that would radiate heat into the inside air as well.
I live in norther Canada and I keep my window open at night. We have a heater in our core of our body. All I do is go to value village and buy knitted blankets from the 70's. When you get it right your body is cozy and warm all night.
You’re the coolest Tory. Thank you for this. It’s making me ready to get a van unbuilt out.
Tory, When I go squatching in the Sierras I sleep on a sheepskin that has 5 hides sewn together from Costco, $90. These reflect all your heat right back to you.
Do they have real sheepskins now? I've seen the faux fur ones they carry...they are soft but probably not as warm as natural fiber sheepskins.
Layering socks can compress them which removes some of their insulator properties. Better to have one pair of socks. Also being in the sleeping bag it might be better to not have any socks because it will heat the air in the sleeping bag.
If you can only have 1 pr of socks i recommend angora goat (from South Africa). They are the best second only to muskox which are prohibitively expensive.
Also my foot is 8.5 but i buy size 11.5 slippers and put in double thick sheepskin inserts from Australia. The air around the toes helps keep feet warm.
Moisture when you sweat can cool down and make you colder, even in winter.
I use me heater, it takes a week to go through a 15 pound tank on high, low nearly two weeks. The moisture is not bad, just the windows which takes me 30 seconds to wipe off with a towel.
Put a small tent up in the van. Cardboard or blanket underneath for insulation from bottom of van. Tent traps heat.
I put a tent over my bed last winter. It definitely makes a big difference.
I have some tealight lamps. I load them with 8 hour tealights at bedtime, nice light and believe it or not, they take the bite out of the cold air
Put a small tent in the van.
I loved the cardboard idea too.
Indoor out door carpet is good . Foam is good cold air doesn't go thru Foam. Cover the windows with foam put the carpet on the floor and walls. You can get Velcro to keep it on the windows.
Yes ma’am I love me some Block Buster videos .. stay safe and stay warm .. thanks for sharing ❤
Love the movie theater idea !
When it comes to heated blankets, get the low-voltage DC versions. Start hard to find in stores, but you can definitely get them online. They pull a fraction of the electricity.
they also have 5-9v usb ones that actually work great and for an extremely long time.
The Mr buddy is the best thing ever made..we’ve been off grid for a cpl yrs and we always have a use for ours and they never fail
Thanks for the great video. Love the sleeping bag pajamas. Had to spend the night outside the emergency room (in vehicle)when COVID allowed only granny in there with my grandson. Glad I had a regular *winter* sleeping bag in there for the winter, JIC, but what if I needed three? Plus, had to remove it to get out for anything. Chemical toe warmers, foot warmers, hand warmers in hunting dept. Never went to his cold football games without them.
You’re doing great. Could make a small tarp tent inside the van. Run a line front to back, and drape the blanket over it.
The base is where most of your heat goes as you compress the insulation, a high thermal insulation self inflating mattress on top of a camping mat will help enormously.
If you live in bend mcmenemins usually offers hostels for cheaper than a hotel room you can use those to stay warm on colder nights if you still have no heater. I also have no clue if the bend Oregon mcMenamins has hostels at all but some of the locations do
Single candle lantern, "Good Year" DC electric blanket. rated to use on battery. A couple pks of one use hand and butt warmers. could also foam insulate your Van interior.. also a pet cat or a dog for shared heat. enjoy
Someone mentioned this, but when I was staying in a popup tent trailer with snow on the ground, I boiled water and put it into a large stainless steel bottle, then wrapped it in a full sized towel. Kept me warm all night. (You put the bottle next to you while sleeping, or at the near foot of your blankets.)
The Mr Buddy really works which you can put some water on a metal coffee cup and moisture back into the atmosphere it don't take much
Also, cold gets to your battery and lessens how long it lasts. Next, get a plastic flexible plastic tube that you can put in your mouth and thebotger end outside of your bag (not too long, maybe 2 feet). That way you can sleep fully inside your bag, with it over your head. Breathe in thru the tube, out thru your nose. Wooly socks make good mittens.
There's some hunting coveralls that actually have the bottom like a sleeping bag there for sitting in tree stands. Probably good to sleep in those too.
You'd think that keeping your legs and arms together will keep you warm, not separating them. That suit sleeping bag is completely useless. You'd be warmer bundled up under a non heating fuzzy blanket.
I was tent camping in 15 degree weather. Is kinda chilly. I made a thing that’s basically a steel rod about a foot above my sleeping bag and then put two moving blankets over the top. Kinda like a fluffy pup tent. It works really well.
... just outside of Bend is the Deschutes Nat For - plenty of free spots ... safe travels ...
I bought a 20 degree Coleman sleeping bag at walnart for like $20. Someone gave me a second one so I can use both at the same time.
G'day. Thx for another entertaining video. It's funny because it's 30 degrees Celsius in Sydney Australia at night. Stay warm & safe 😊