The Province

High gas prices may keep RVs close to home

- BY COLETTE DERWORIZ

With gasoline prices hitting all-time highs, Jeff Redmond says he's planning to stay closer to home when RV camping this summer.

The owner and general manager of Bucars RV Centre in Balzac, Alta., says recreation­al vehicles are still one of the most affordable ways to travel as a couple or with a family once hotels, gasoline prices or airline costs are factored in.

“We laugh that RVers are the ones that are winning,” Redmond said in an interview this week.

The cost of gasoline declined slightly before this May long weekend, the unofficial kickoff to summer camping season, but analysts say summer demand in coming weeks has the potential to send prices even higher.

Redmond said that could influence where he travels this year.

“The Okanagan Valley is a place I like to go ... and that's a seven-hour drive, so maybe I am going to go to Pigeon Lake or Gull Lake (Alberta), which is an hour-and-a-half drive,” he said. “The good news is that I am still going.

“We're able to alter our plans and to work within our budget.”

Redmond said he has heard a similar sentiment from customers. Some are staying closer to home. Others are planning to stay longer at one campsite.

“You park the larger trailer at a permanent campsite, or at your friend's cottage, or at the old family farm, or at a winery in the Okanagan — and you don't tow it,” he said. “You hop in your family car and you go back and forth. You have a built-in, very affordable ... off-the-grid cabin that is extremely efficient once you get there.

“Lots of people are no longer towing.”

Rob Minarchi is vice-president of sales at ArrKann Trailer & R.V. Centre with outlets across Alberta. He said there's been a lot of demand for RVs since the start of the pandemic and it hasn't slowed down this year.

“Most (people) are upgrading, as crazy as that sounds,” he said from Edmonton. “Some people are selling ... because circumstan­ces have changed but, for the most part, they are just trading in for different units.

“There's a lot of new RVers who came to the market when COVID first hit ... but they didn't know exactly what they wanted.”

Those customers, he said, are trading in for units that better suit their needs.

Minarchi said he hasn't heard about anyone getting rid of an RV due to high gas prices.

“What we're seeing is a lot of people are just camping a little closer,” he said. “If they were going to do a five-hour trip, now they are going to do a one-hour trip.”

Some campground­s are starting to notice some changes.

A campground manager told CKPG radio station in Prince George, B.C., that some people travelling from farther away have cancelled.

“A lot of people are wanting to stay local,” said Bobbie Carpino, who runs the Salmon Valley campground.

“We've seen cancellati­ons from folks coming in from the States heading up to Alaska, as well as folks coming in from the Lower Mainland.”

 ?? TODD KOROL/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bucars RV Centre general manager Jeff Redmond, of Balzac, Alta., says recreation­al vehicles can provide affordable holidays.
TODD KOROL/THE CANADIAN PRESS Bucars RV Centre general manager Jeff Redmond, of Balzac, Alta., says recreation­al vehicles can provide affordable holidays.

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