Practical Motorhome

My wild life A ’van is your basecamp, says Monty Halls

Adventurer and TV presenter Monty Halls took delivery of a campervan before the lockdown – and learned the magic of simply staying in one place

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‘The cure for anything is salt water – sweat, tears, or the sea’

So said writer Isak Dinesen in the 1930s, and I’m not sure a great deal has altered since. It’s something of a universal truth; although my ability to combine all three every time I go surfing is, I suspect, entirely unique.

There hasn’t been a day of the interminab­le lockdown we’ve all endured when I haven’t reflected my dumb luck in living on the coast, although it has to be said that all of us, regardless of location in the UK, are never more than 70 miles away from the sea. As such, a whiff of salt is a defining feature for everyone – we are all islanders in some shape or form.

But my genuine proximity to the coast, a mere hermit-crab scuttle away, has meant that I’ve been able to explore the cliff paths, the woods in the valleys, and of course, the many coves and beaches here in South Devon.

I’ve long said it, but the UK has some of the most bucolic, wondrous landscapes on Earth, it really does, and sometimes it takes a spell of enforced nearness to our surroundin­gs to bring that home. “Britain has some of the most reliably beautiful countrysid­e anywhere in the world,” says none other than Bill Bryson, and there’s a chap who knows a thing or two about travel.

Anchored to our homes

But the irony is, of course, that we haven’t been able to travel, we’ve been anchored in place, moored to the earth, shackled to our homes.

We’ve been forced to sit and stare at our near surroundin­gs, to gaze at our environmen­tal navels if you will, for a very long time indeed.

This has been doubly frustratin­g in the Halls household, because at the start of 2020, we took delivery of our shiny new campervan, resulting in a frenzy of maps (remember them?) being laid out on the kitchen table, itinerarie­s created, and ambition forged into reality in the white heat of family energy and excitement. All swept away in a series of ominous public announceme­nts.

So our new motorhome was transforme­d in an instant from magic carpet to driveway shed, albeit a shiny and well-equipped one. This latter

1 Monty braves the waves in his kayak – the campervan makes an ideal base for watersport­s fans

2 The kids can really enjoy the surf and you can transport all of their kit so easily

3 The local beaches in South Devon are perfect for a family day out in the ’van

characteri­stic saw a new phase to our relationsh­ip with the ’van, one worthy of note today as we are being urged to oil our front door hinges and rev our engines for the year ahead. And that is the merit of the camper as basecamp and hide.

The first manifestat­ion of this occurred when I was sitting in the camper on my drive, making ‘vroom vroom’ noises as I turned the steering wheel from side to side, only to glance up and see a greater spotted woodpecker dangling rather acrobatica­lly from the bird-feeder in front of me.

This was a terrific scene, and got even better when a grey squirrel bounced into view, chased off the woodpecker and then hung upside down off one toe to pilfer some peanuts.

‘I had a bit of a lightbulb moment, the sudden realisatio­n that the campervan makes a pretty good hide when you’re trying to photograph things’

Perfect for wildlife-watching

I had a bit of a lightbulb moment, the sudden realisatio­n that a campervan makes a pretty good hide when you’re trying to photograph things. The one object our local wildlife is used to seeing is a car, and if that car happens to be parked, then all the better. It represents no threat whatsoever.

I’d long admired the stories of those doughty photograph­ers living in a hide in the Himalayas for months on end, being kept warm only by their long johns and unshakeabl­e optimism, eventually rewarded by capturing a fleeting glimpse of a snow leopard. But I rapidly came to realise I preferred my version. I had a) a comfy sofa, b) endless coffee, c) heating, and d) Classic FM.

So, over the next few months, I could at times be found in the camper, long lens at the ready, eyeing the bird-feeder and the valley beyond. It was, quite simply, bliss.

The easing of the restrictio­ns meant we could begin to explore, albeit only within our postcode. I swiftly resolved that the ’van would become our kit store on wheels, a way to sample the coastal ecosystem, reveal its inhabitant­s, and marinade the kids in the wider world beyond our garden.

Thus it became a basecamp – where we return to restock and refresh, a store for our surfboards, frisbees and climbing gear, and a haven amid the bedlam of two newly released, hyperactiv­e kids.

What does all this tell me? The simple lesson is, there can be an urge to voyage relentless­ly in a ’van, to define a trip’s success by miles covered. But sometimes the greatest journeys – those of discovery, adventure and exploratio­n – are made simply by staying in the same place.■ 4 Parked on the drive, Monty’s new camper was put to good use despite the lockdowns, making a great office space and basecamp…

… with really good coffee always on hand! 6 Sitting hidden away in the camper, Monty also enjoyed watching the local birdlife, such as this greater spotted woodpecker, until it was chased from the feeder by a marauder… 7 … you couldn’t really begrudge the acrobatic grey squirrel its reward when it plundered the peanuts so neatly!

The Halls children have also made themselves at home in the new camper

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