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Part 3: Canadian Winter

The caption says it all, but I'll elaborate for those of you south of the 49th parallel.  Most people on earth endure a overcast day with the promise of sun in a day or more.  Canadians suspend their disbelief around September that this may still happen, informed as they are by television and pop culture artificial lighting and the general perceived cheerfulness of everyone not in this climate. But one day the sun disappears and DOESN'T COME OUT AGAIN FOR SIX MONTHS.  That, coupled with extreme temperatures and encumbering snow that reaches meters in height is enough to make anyone go crazy.  

This was the first year we had a vehicle in such weather, a vehicle very sensitive to cold and in need of constant power for the block heater when we had no such setup.  The winter was rough.  Bruiser is old, one year younger than me old, and he needs particular things to get through the season.  For financial reasons and reasons of distance, we could only give him what he needed to barely survive.  Cons, we spent the most time to date outside in the winter fixing him when he broke down which forces you to deal with winter in a zen-like way but is probably more like just barely holding onto consciousness and sanity.  Pros: We learned a lot about what he liked and didn't like and Shawn was able to save us thousands of dollars by fixing his old parts which got us and him prepared for huge distances.  

Despite the constant break-downs due mostly to not having access to block heater power, living in a van in the winter is not as bad as you might think.  In this level of cold, city dwelling and stealth camping was pretty much our only option for saving money reasons and also knowing the cafes, secret plug ins and places to go to escape the camping situation.  With the insulation and a little buddy propane heater which we ran very sparingly, it was fairly comfortable.  But aside from that, and I can't stress this enough, layering! Layering, and a duvet.  Your own body heat does so much to keep you warm and a duvet amplifies that.  Very similar to winter camping.  

We were so dependent on Bruisers state that any expectations we were ever slave to were shattered. We learned to be in the moment in a very real way through the couple months we canadian winter van-dwelled. Disappointment was no longer a thing, it's just dealing with the unexpected, which eventually becomes expected, and taking things as they come.


You leave it parked for one week and this is what happens...

bundled up for the first night!

The first fur, down and blanket filled make shift setup.

Back when Bruiser was grey....(stay tuned!!)
Shawn's weather beaten mechanic hands



First night plugged into wal-mart and an appropriate arctic BBC doc.  The blanket barrier behind the sceen had a down blanket within it and created an extra insulated bedroom and a cooler sitting room.





Crisp cozy mornings.

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