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Year-round RV park Sunshine Coast: winter setup that keeps your rig dry and warm
March 18, 2026

Year-round RV park Sunshine Coast: winter setup that keeps your rig dry and warm

Year-round RV park Sunshine Coast living sounds dreamy until your first week of steady rain shows up. If you are planning a longer stay, winter setup is not a “nice extra”. It is the difference between feeling comfortable and tired.

This guide is for people looking at a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay near Halfmoon Bay, British Columbia, Canada. It focuses on the stuff that changes your comfort and your bills: damp air, heating choices, amp limits, and how you protect water gear in colder snaps.

The goal is simple: keep your rig dry, warm, and easy to live in. Not perfect. Just reliable.

Here is the big idea. Winter comfort on the Sunshine Coast is less about deep snow and more about wet air. Damp gets into cupboards, bedding, and even your clothes. If you only chase heat, you can still feel cold as moisture sits everywhere. A good setup uses three levers at the same time:

  • Heat the space you use most
  • Move air so wet spots dry out
  • Block drafts so your heat stays inside

You do not need a shopping spree to do this. Most wins come from small habits and a few smart upgrades you can do in an hour.

In the next sections, you will learn:

  • How to spot and stop condensation before it turns into mould
  • A heating plan that mixes electric and propane without tripping breakers
  • Easy ways to seal drafts around doors and windows
  • What to do with hoses and connections on colder nights
  • A move-in checklist you can use on day one

If you are already comparing options, keep these three checks in mind as you read:

  1. Is electricity included, capped, or metered?
  2. What amp service is at the pad (30, 50, or higher)?
  3. What winter rules apply (skirting, hose protection, storage limits)?

Those answers shape your winter plan fast.

If you want to see pad options at Halfmoon Bay Resort, start on Properties. For quick rules that affect winter living, check the FAQ. To ask about dates, amp service, and what is included, use Contact.

 

Condensation first (the 5-minute morning check)

If you plan a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, treat condensation like your daily weather report. It tells you if your rig is staying dry, or if damp is building up in places you cannot see yet.

Condensation is simple: warm air holds water. When that warm, wet air touches a cold surface (like a window), the water drops out and turns into beads. On the Sunshine Coast, this happens a lot because the air is often damp, and nights can cool down quickly.

The 5-minute morning check

Do this each morning for your first two weeks. After that, you will know your rig’s pattern.

  1. Check windows first

  • Look for water beads at the bottom of windows

  • Wipe them with a cloth

  • If the cloth gets properly wet, you need more airflow or drier air

  1. Check one hidden spot
    Pick one of these and check the same one every day:

  • behind the headboard

  • inside a wardrobe corner

  • under the mattress corner

  • inside the bathroom cabinet

If it feels damp, smells musty, or looks foggy, moisture is hanging around.

  1. Check bedding
    Bedding is a moisture sponge. If sheets feel cool and slightly damp, that is not “just winter”. That is moisture.

  2. Check the bathroom
    If the mirror stays wet long after a shower, your vent routine is not strong enough.

  3. Check your wet gear area
    If coats and boots are still damp the next morning, they are raising your indoor humidity all day.

What to do when you see water on windows

If you see condensation every morning during a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, do not panic. Do these steps in order. Each one is small, but together they work.

Step 1: Add airflow, even if it feels wrong
Most people try to seal every vent because it is cold. The problem is the moisture has nowhere to go.

  • Crack one roof vent slightly

  • Crack a window on the opposite side slightly

  • Run a small fan on low for 20–30 minutes

This creates gentle airflow and pushes wet air out.

Step 2: Use the bathroom fan like a tool
After showers and cooking:

  • Run the fan for 15–20 minutes after

  • Keep the door closed while it runs

Moisture spreads fast in small spaces.

Step 3: Do not dry wet gear where you sleep
If coats and towels are drying near the bed, your sleeping area will feel damp even if you heat it.

Make one “wet zone”:

  • near the door

  • in the bathroom (with the fan)

  • or near a vent with airflow

Step 4: Control moisture at the source
Cooking creates a lot of water in the air.

  • Use lids on pots

  • Crack a vent while cooking

  • Run a fan for 10 minutes after

Step 5: Add a dehumidifier if you need one
A small dehumidifier can make a big difference in coastal winters. It helps because drier air often feels warmer at the same temperature.

Simple rule:

  • If you wipe windows daily and they come back wet every morning, a dehumidifier is worth it.

  • If windows only fog sometimes, focus on airflow and habits first.

Where damp hides (and how to beat it)

During long stays, these spots get forgotten:

  • Under the mattress
    Lift the corner once a week. If it is damp, you need more airflow under the bed.

  • Closets and cupboards
    Leave a small gap for air to move. Do not pack them tight.

  • Behind furniture pushed against an outer wall
    Pull it forward a little if you can. Outer walls are colder.

  • Slide corners
    Check seals and watch for cold drafts.

The fast “today” checklist

If you want the quickest win for year-round RV park Sunshine Coast comfort, do this today:

  • wipe windows in the morning

  • crack one vent and one window for airflow

  • run the bathroom fan after showers and cooking

  • move wet boots and coats into one drying zone

  • check one hidden spot each day for a week

Those five habits stop most winter damp problems before they start.

 

Heat plan that works (electric + propane without tripped breakers)

For a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, heat is not just about comfort. It also helps control dampness. The trick is finding a heat routine that keeps you warm without blowing your budget or tripping breakers every other day.

Most people end up using both electric and propane, even if they start out thinking they will use only one.

  • Electric heat is great for “spot heating” the space you sit in most.
  • Propane heat (your RV furnace) can be better at warming the whole rig, and in many rigs it helps protect plumbing areas too.

A simple mix gives you steady comfort and fewer problems.

Start with this rule: run one big electric thing at a time

In an RV, tripped breakers usually happen when you stack big loads. These are the common “big” ones:

  • space heater
  • electric water heater element
  • microwave
  • kettle
  • toaster / air fryer
  • hair dryer

If you run two or three at once, you can overload a circuit even if your pad has good service.

A safe habit for year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter living is:

  • keep one heater running
  • stagger cooking appliances
  • heat water at a different time from heavy cooking

A heat routine that works for most long stays

This routine is simple and realistic. It is built for damp coastal winters.

Morning (warm up + dry out)

  • Run your main heater early for comfort
  • Run the bathroom fan after showers
  • Give the rig 10–20 minutes of airflow (crack a vent and window)

Why this works: you clear the wet air from sleep, showers, and cooking before it sits in the rig all day.

Daytime (steady, not extreme)

  • Use electric heat in the main living area
  • Keep doors closed to rooms you are not using
  • Run a dehumidifier or small fan if windows keep fogging

Why this works: steady heat is often cheaper and feels better than big blasts on and off.

Evening (comfort + simple load control)

  • If you cook a lot, lower the heater a bit while you use the microwave or kettle
  • After cooking, run the fan for 10 minutes and bring heat back up

Why this works: you avoid breaker trips and keep moisture under control.

Night (quiet and safe)

  • Set one “sleep comfort” temperature
  • Keep a small airflow path so moisture does not build up
  • If a cold snap hits, use propane heat as your base and electric as spot heat

Electric heat: the easiest way to cut costs without suffering

Electric space heaters can be cheap to run if you use them smartly. The easiest win is not a fancy heater. It is heating the room you live in most.

Try this:

  • choose one main heater location (where you sit)
  • close off the bedroom door if you are not using it
  • use blankets and good sleep gear rather than overheating the whole rig at night

This matters during a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay because coastal winters can be long and damp, and small daily savings add up.

Propane heat: when it helps most

Propane makes sense when:

  • it is very cold or windy
  • you need heat to reach more of the rig
  • you want a faster warm-up
  • you need to protect areas that electric spot heat does not reach

If you are using propane regularly, do two things:

  • track refills for the first month
  • check seals and drafts so you are not paying to heat the outdoors

The “no drama” power habits

These habits stop most winter power problems:

  1. Know your “busy hour”
    That is the time you shower, cook, and want the rig warm. Plan your loads around it.
  2. Pick one heat base
    Use propane as base during cold snaps, electric as base during milder weeks.
  3. Do a breaker-free cooking routine
    Heat water first or cook first, not both with full heat blasting.
  4. Use a fan as part of heating
    Airflow makes warmth feel more even. It also prevents cold corners where damp hides.
  5. Check your cord and plugs
    Warm plugs or a hot cord are a warning sign. If anything feels hot, stop and sort it out.

What to ask before you commit

For year-round RV park Sunshine Coast planning, the heat questions you ask can save money straight away:

  • What amp service is at the pad (30, 50, or higher)?
  • Is electricity included or billed separately?
  • Are there any rules about heaters, skirting, or winter add-ons?

You can start by reading the FAQ, then confirm details through Contact.

 

Airflow basics (vents, fans, and where damp hides)

If you want a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay to feel easy, airflow is your best friend. Most winter problems in an RV are not caused by cold alone. They come from warm, wet air that has nowhere to go.

Think of your rig like a small bathroom. If you never vent it, it gets damp fast. The Sunshine Coast adds extra moisture to the air, so airflow is not optional. It is part of staying warm, because dry air usually feels warmer.

The airflow rule that works in real life

You do not need to leave everything wide open. You just need a small, steady path for air to move.

A simple setup for year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter living is:

  • crack one roof vent a tiny bit

  • crack one window on the opposite side a tiny bit

  • run one small fan on low for 20–30 minutes, once or twice a day

That gentle cross-breeze pushes wet air out without turning your rig into a fridge.

Where damp hides (the spots you should check weekly)

These are the places that turn into a problem during long stays, especially in winter:

1) Under the mattress
This is the classic one. Warm bodies + cold platform = moisture.

  • Lift the mattress corner once a week

  • If it feels damp, you need more airflow under the bed
    Quick fix: leave a small air gap, and avoid pushing bedding tight against outer walls.

2) Inside cupboards on outside walls
Cupboards on outer walls stay colder.

  • Do not pack them completely full

  • Leave space for air to move

  • If one cupboard always smells musty, add a small moisture absorber and check for cold drafts.

3) Behind furniture
A sofa or headboard pushed tight against an outer wall traps dampness.

  • Pull it forward a little if you can

  • Check the wall behind it every week or two

4) Bathroom corners
Even if you run the fan, damp can sit in corners.

  • Run the fan longer than you think after showers

  • Wipe down wet surfaces if the room stays steamy

5) Slide corners and window frames
These are cold spots.

  • Check seals

  • Watch for fogging in the same corner every morning

The fan routine that keeps things simple

For a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, use this routine:

After showers: fan on for 15–20 minutes
After cooking: fan on for 10 minutes
Once a day: 20 minutes of cross-vent airflow
On rainy weeks: add one extra airflow session in the evening

This routine sounds basic, but it stops mouldy smells and clammy bedding.

“But won’t airflow make it colder?”

A little, yes. But here is the trade-off:

  • Without airflow: damp builds up, you feel cold, and you run more heat

  • With gentle airflow: the rig stays drier, warmth feels more even, and you often use less heat overall

It is the same reason a damp hoodie feels colder than a dry one. Dry air helps comfort.

Quick upgrades that help (without turning it into a project)

You do not need to buy a pile of gear. If you want a few easy wins:

  • A small fan you can point at a damp corner

  • A window cloth routine (wipe in the morning, especially in cold snaps)

  • A moisture absorber for one stubborn cupboard

  • A door mat and boot tray so wet gear does not drip into your living space

The 2-minute damp rescue plan

If you walk in and the rig smells damp or feels clammy:

  1. Open a vent and a window slightly

  2. Run a fan for 20 minutes

  3. Turn on heat to a steady level (not a huge blast)

  4. Move wet gear into one drying zone

  5. Check windows and wipe them

You will feel the difference fast.

 

Stop drafts (doors, windows, slides, and skirting basics)

Drafts are sneaky. You can run heat all day during a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay and still feel cold if outside air is leaking in. Drafts also make condensation worse because cold air creates colder surfaces inside the rig.

This section is about the best “small effort, big comfort” fixes. You do not need a full rebuild. You just need to block the easy leak points.

The quick draft test (takes 3 minutes)

Pick a windy or rainy day. Turn your heat on to a steady level, then do this:

  • Walk slowly around the edges of doors and windows
  • Put your hand near frames and corners
  • Check slide seals and floor edges
  • If you feel cold air moving, that is a draft point

If you want to be extra clear, use a thin strip of tissue and watch it move near gaps. Do not use a flame. Keep it simple and safe.

Doors: the biggest comfort win

RV doors often leak air around the seal and at the bottom.

Easy fixes that help during a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter:

  • Add a door draft stopper or a tight door mat at the bottom
  • Check the rubber seal for flattening, cracks, or gaps
  • Clean the seal and make sure it seats properly when closed
  • If the door latch feels loose, adjust it so the door closes snugly (no wobble)

A well-sealed door also helps with moisture. Less outside damp air sneaking in means less fogging inside.

Windows: focus on the worst two, not all of them

You do not need to fight every window at once. Find your two worst windows (the ones that fog up first or feel coldest).

Simple upgrades:

  • Thermal curtains or thicker curtains at night
  • Reflective insulation panels for windows you do not need to see through
  • Clear window film in colder months (it reduces drafts and cold glass)

If you still want daylight, do film on just the worst windows and keep the rest normal.

Slides: the draft monster in many rigs

Slides are great for space, but they are also common draft points.

What to check:

  • corners where the seal folds
  • lower edge near the floor
  • any spot that always feels cold

Easy habits that help:

  • keep slide seals clean so they sit right
  • do a quick seal check after heavy rain
  • if you notice a cold corner, add a small fan to move warm air into that zone

During a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, a cold slide corner is often where condensation starts first.

Floors: why your feet feel cold even when the rig is warm

Cold floors make your whole body feel colder. You then turn the heat up, even though the air temperature is already fine.

Easy fixes:

  • lay rugs or runners in the spots you stand most (kitchen, near the bed)
  • keep a boot tray near the door so wet boots do not soak your rugs
  • wear indoor slippers and treat it as part of winter comfort

This is one of the cheapest ways to feel warmer without spending more on heat.

Skirting basics (the simple version)

Skirting can help winter comfort, but it depends on your rig, your pad setup, and what rules apply. Skirting works by reducing cold air moving under the rig, which helps keep floors warmer and can protect plumbing areas in some setups.

If skirting is allowed where you stay, it can help a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast setup feel steadier in cold snaps.

Basic skirting tips:

  • keep it snug so wind cannot flap it open
  • leave a safe path for airflow where needed (you do not want trapped moisture under the rig)
  • check it after heavy rain and wind
  • do not block any vents or safety areas

If you are unsure what is allowed, check the FAQ and ask through Contact.

The “two fixes first” plan

If you only do two things this week, do these:

  1. Fix the door draft (seal + bottom gap)
  2. Add window control to your two worst windows (curtains or film)

Most people feel a big comfort jump straight away. That matters during a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter because comfort stops you from blasting heat just to feel okay.

 

Water and sewer in cold snaps (hoses, wraps, and simple habits)

A year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay is usually more wet than icy, but cold snaps still happen. When they do, the problems are almost always the same: a hose freezes, a connection leaks, or something gets stiff and cracks because it is cold and under pressure.

The goal is not to build a complicated winter system. It is to use a few simple habits that stop the most common messes.

First, know what “cold snap” means for your routine

On the Sunshine Coast in Canada, many winter days are above freezing. Then you get a short stretch where nights dip low enough to cause trouble.

That means you can run a normal setup most of the time, then switch into “cold snap mode” for a few nights.

Cold snap mode is:

  • protect hoses and connections
  • reduce standing water where it can freeze
  • keep heat steady instead of blasting on and off
  • do quick daily checks

Water hose basics (what matters most)

If you want fewer surprises during a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter, focus on these points:

1) Keep hose runs as short as possible
Long hoses have more surface area to freeze and more places to sag.

2) Avoid dips and loops
A sag creates a low point where water sits. That standing water freezes first.

3) Protect the connection points
Even if the hose is fine, the ends can freeze:

  • at the spigot
  • where the hose meets your rig
  • at any splitters

If you only add protection in one place, do it at the ends.

4) Use a good hose washer and check for slow leaks
A tiny leak becomes a big ice build-up overnight in a cold snap.

Heated hose or wrap: when you actually need it

A heated hose can be helpful, but you do not always need one for every winter day. It depends on:

  • how often nights drop below freezing
  • how exposed your hose run is to wind
  • how long your hose run is
  • how much you want “set and forget” comfort

If you do not have a heated hose, you can still get through cold snaps with smart habits:

  • insulate key sections
  • reduce dips
  • check ends daily
  • keep cabinet areas warm if your plumbing runs through them

If you are unsure what winter setup is best for your stay, check the FAQ and ask through Contact.

The simple “cold night” routine (takes 5 minutes)

This routine prevents most hose and connection problems during year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter living:

  1. Check the spigot and both hose ends
    Feel for drips or wetness. Fix leaks right away.
  2. Check for sags
    Lift and support any low point so water does not pool.
  3. Run water briefly
    A quick flow check tells you if something is starting to freeze.
  4. Protect the wet zone
    Keep a towel or boot tray so you do not track water everywhere when it is freezing outside.
  5. Keep heat steady
    Big temperature swings make condensation and freezing problems worse.

Sewer basics (what to do, and what not to do)

Sewer problems in winter usually come from leaving a valve open and letting liquid sit in the hose.

For long stays, the safe habit is:

  • keep the sewer hose set up properly
  • keep valves closed most of the time
  • dump when you have enough flow to push everything through

This matters during a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay because slow drips and thin flow can freeze in cold snaps or leave build-up in the hose.

Simple sewer habits:

  • keep the hose sloped so it drains fully
  • avoid sharp bends
  • check connections for slow leaks
  • do not let the hose sit half-full

Protect the places people forget

During cold snaps, these are common weak points:

  • the outside shower connection (if your rig has one)
  • the water filter housing (it can crack if it freezes)
  • the compartment where the pump and lines sit
  • any exposed fittings under the rig

If you know one compartment gets cold, give it a little extra warmth during the coldest nights. Keep airflow sensible so you do not trap moisture.

What to ask before you arrive

Every site handles winter living slightly differently. Before you commit to a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, ask:

  • Are there any winter rules for hoses, wraps, or skirting?
  • Are there any pad-specific notes for water access in winter?
  • What do most long-stay guests do during cold snaps?

You can start with the FAQ and confirm details through Contact.

The wet gear zone (boots, coats, towels, and where they go)

A year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay gets much easier when you stop fighting the same problem every day: wet stuff.

Rain jackets, muddy shoes, dog towels, and dripping umbrellas sound small, but they quietly push moisture into every corner of your rig. Then you get foggy windows, damp bedding, and that cold, clammy feeling that makes you crank the heat.

The fix is not complicated. You just need one clear “wet gear zone” so water stays in one place, dries faster, and does not spread through the living space.

Why a wet gear zone matters in winter

During a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter, wet air is already part of life. When you add wet gear inside a small space, humidity jumps fast.

A wet gear zone helps you:

  • keep floors drier (less slippery, less cold feet)

  • cut down condensation on windows

  • reduce musty smells in cupboards and bedding

  • dry things faster without blasting heat

If you only set up one “winter system” in your rig, make it this one.

Pick the right spot (three options that work)

Choose the simplest spot that fits your rig layout.

Option A: Near the door
This is the most natural spot because wet items come in right there.

  • Put down a boot tray or a plastic mat

  • Add strong hooks for coats

  • Keep one towel just for wiping paws and boots

Option B: The bathroom (best for fast drying)
Bathrooms usually have a vent fan, which makes drying easier.

  • Hang wet jackets on a hook

  • Lay towels in a way that air can reach them

  • Run the fan for 15–20 minutes after you hang things up

Option C: A corner by a vent or window
If your entry is tight, use a corner that can handle airflow.

  • Add a small fan pointed at the wet zone

  • Crack a vent slightly during drying sessions

  • Keep wet gear away from beds and sofas

The simple rules that keep it working

Wet gear zones fail when they become a pile. These rules keep it easy.

Rule 1: Wet stuff stays in the wet zone
Do not let jackets migrate to the sofa or bed “just for a minute”. That is how moisture spreads.

Rule 2: Air must reach both sides
If a coat is folded over a chair, it stays damp. Hang it properly so air can move around it.

Rule 3: Boots do not dry on carpet
Boots drip, then the carpet holds water for hours. A tray or mat is the difference between “fine” and “why does it smell damp?”

Rule 4: Drying sessions beat constant damp
Instead of leaving wet gear around all day, do one or two drying sessions:

  • morning: 20–30 minutes of airflow

  • evening: 20–30 minutes of airflow

This keeps your rig from feeling like a drying room all day long.

What to keep in your wet gear kit (cheap and useful)

You do not need fancy gear. These basics cover most winter days in a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay:

  • boot tray or waterproof mat

  • 4–6 strong hooks (coats, dog leads, towels)

  • 2 microfibre cloths (windows and quick wipe-downs)

  • one “dirty towel” for paws and boots

  • a small fan (helps drying and stops musty corners)

If you have pets, add one extra towel that lives at the door. It saves your floors and your mood.

Quick routine for rainy days (takes 2 minutes)

When you come back in:

  1. Boots go on the tray

  2. Coats go on hooks (not the sofa)

  3. One towel wipe for wet surfaces

  4. Fan on low for 20 minutes if things are soaked

That’s it. The rest of your winter setup works better when the wet gear is contained.

The small comfort win people notice first

Once your wet gear zone is working, your rig feels warmer at the same temperature. That is because you are not constantly adding damp into the air. You may even find you run heat and dehumidifying less often, which helps the monthly costs of a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay.

 

Power and amp checks (what to run together, what to stagger)

On a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, power problems usually show up at the worst time: a cold, wet evening when you want heat, a hot shower, and a quick meal. The fix is not “use less power”. It is knowing which loads clash, and building a simple routine that keeps everything steady.

The most common winter breaker trip

This is the classic combo:

  • space heater running
  • kettle or microwave turns on
  • water heater element kicks in
  • breaker trips
  • rig cools down fast
  • damp feels worse

If you remember only one thing for year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter living, remember this: stacking big loads is what trips breakers, not normal day-to-day living.

Know your “big loads”

These are the items that often cause trouble when they overlap:

  • space heater
  • electric water heater element
  • microwave
  • kettle
  • toaster / air fryer
  • hair dryer
  • portable induction cooktop
  • dehumidifier (smaller, but still adds load)

You do not need to avoid them. You just need to stagger them.

A simple “stagger plan” that works

Use this routine and your power stays calm:

Morning

  • Run heat as normal
  • If you want a hot shower, avoid running the kettle and microwave at the same time
  • After showering, run the bathroom fan (it uses little power but helps a lot)

Cooking time

  • If you are using the microwave or kettle, turn the heater down for 10 minutes
  • If you run an air fryer, do not run a second heater on full at the same time
  • After cooking, bring heat back to your normal level

Evening

  • Pick one “comfort base” heat source (propane furnace or electric heater)
  • Use the other as support, not as a second full-time heavy load

This is how people keep a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast setup comfortable without constant power drama.

The easiest way to avoid surprise loads: check your water heater setting

Many rigs have the water heater set to electric, propane, or both. If it is set to electric (or both), it can switch on at the same time as your heater.

If you keep tripping breakers, this is one of the first things to check:

  • If you need electric capacity for heat, consider running the water heater on propane during cold snaps (if your rig supports it)
  • If you prefer electric water heating, stagger showers and heavy cooking with your heater loads

This one change can make winter life feel much steadier.

What “30 vs 50 amp” really feels like day to day

People hear “30 amp” and “50 amp” and think it is only a number. In real life, it changes what you can run together.

  • 30 amp: you usually need to be more careful about running heat + cooking + hot water at the same time
  • 50 amp: you usually get more flexibility for winter comfort, especially if you work from the rig and use more appliances

For long stays, that flexibility matters. It is not about luxury. It is about being able to live normally in winter rain without treating your power like a puzzle every day.

If you want to see pad options and compare what might fit your rig, start on Properties.

A quick safety check (do not skip this)

If anything in your power chain feels wrong, stop and sort it out. Watch for:

  • warm plugs or a warm extension cord
  • flickering power when a heater turns on
  • a burning smell
  • breakers that trip often without a clear reason

Those are signs something needs attention. Winter is when weak connections show up.

If you are coming over with an RV, trailer, or tiny home on wheels, this guide helps you plan the crossing and reduce stress before you arrive:

And if you want a stronger local feel for day-to-day living, the blog has practical posts that pair well with a winter setup plan:

 

Winter move-in checklist for a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay

Moving in for a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay is easiest when you treat day one like a quick setup day, not a “we’ll figure it out later” day. Most winter issues come from tiny gaps, damp routines, or power habits that only show up after a week of rain.

Use this checklist in your first 24–48 hours. It will help you lock in comfort fast and avoid the annoying problems that slowly build up.

Step 1: Do a five-minute outside setup check

  1. A) Power
  • Make sure your power cord run is neat, not stretched tight

  • Keep connections off the ground if possible (wet ground is not your friend)

  • Check that plugs feel normal after an hour of heating (not warm)

  1. B) Water
  • Keep the hose run short and tidy

  • Remove dips where water can sit

  • Check both ends for slow drips

  1. C) Sewer
  • Keep a steady slope so it drains properly

  • Avoid sharp bends

  • Check for small leaks at connections

This step matters because winter problems are often “small leaks + cold nights = big mess”.

Step 2: Do the “busy hour” test inside (power + comfort)

Pick a time when you normally want everything working, like early evening.

Run your normal routine for 15 minutes:

  • heater on

  • lights on

  • kettle or microwave once

  • hot water setup as you normally use it

  • phone charging, laptop charging

If anything trips, do not treat it like a disaster. It is useful info. You just learned what needs staggering in your routine.

Tip: if your breaker trips most often when you want heat, check whether your water heater is also set to electric at the same time.

Step 3: Set up your damp control routine on day one

For a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast winter, damp control is part of normal living. Make it automatic.

  • Choose one roof vent to crack slightly

  • Choose one window to crack slightly (opposite side if you can)

  • Decide when you run airflow (morning and evening works well)

  • Put a cloth near the window for quick wipe-downs

If you wait until the rig smells damp, you end up fighting it. If you do it from day one, it stays easy.

Step 4: Make your wet gear zone before you unpack fully

Do not unpack and then try to “find a spot” for wet gear. Pick it first.

  • boot tray by the door

  • hooks for coats

  • one towel for paws and boots

  • a fan nearby if you can

This prevents the whole rig turning into a drying room on rainy weeks.

Step 5: Lock in your heat plan (so you sleep well)

For year-round RV park Sunshine Coast comfort, your heat plan should be boring.

  • Pick your “base heat” (propane furnace or electric heater)

  • Use the other as support, not a second heavy load

  • Choose a night temperature you can actually sleep in

  • Keep a small airflow path so moisture does not build up while you sleep

If you are waking up to wet windows every morning, add more airflow and consider moisture control earlier in the day.

Step 6: Do the “hidden damp” check (takes 2 minutes)

Check one hidden spot on day one and again on day three:

  • under a mattress corner

  • inside a wardrobe corner

  • behind a headboard

  • bathroom cabinet corner

If it is damp already, change your airflow routine immediately. Do not wait.

Step 7: Make a tiny tracking note for your first week

This is the easiest way to understand your real monthly costs and comfort needs.

Track:

  • heater hours (roughly)

  • propane refill dates (if you use it)

  • days you ran a dehumidifier or extra fan

  • any breaker trips and what you were running

  • any small purchases (hoses, seals, moisture stuff)

After a week, you will know what “normal” looks like for your rig in coastal winter.

Helpful reading that supports winter move-in

If your move-in includes the ferry with an RV, trailer, or tiny home on wheels, this guide helps you plan the crossing:

If you are planning a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay, winter gets easier when you focus on the few things that matter most: moisture, airflow, and a calm power routine. You do not need a perfect setup. You need one that keeps your rig dry and comfortable through rainy weeks.

Quick winter setup summary

Here are the key points to remember:

  • Condensation is your early warning sign.
    If you wake up to wet windows, you need more airflow and better moisture control.
  • Airflow is not optional on the Coast.
    A small cracked vent and window, plus a short fan session, pushes wet air out.
  • Heat works best as a mix.
    Use electric for spot heat where you live most, and propane as a base during colder snaps, so comfort stays steady.
  • Drafts waste heat and make damp worse.
    Fix the door gap and your two worst windows first.
  • Cold snaps need simple water habits.
    Keep hose runs short, remove dips, protect connections, and check for drips.
  • A wet gear zone changes everything.
    Boots and coats belong in one place, not spread through the rig.
  • Power stays stable when you stagger large loads.
    Do not run heater + kettle + microwave + electric water heating at the same time.

If you want more practical planning help before you arrive, this guide is useful for RVs, trailers, and tiny homes on wheels:

The practical next step

If you’re thinking seriously about a year-round RV park Sunshine Coast stay near Halfmoon Bay, don’t guess. Pick a pad option, read the rules, and ask the winter questions in one go.

Browse pads and options: Properties

Read the practical details: FAQ

Ask about availability and what’s included: Contact

Long Term RV