RVing has transformed the way my family experiences fishing. Gone are the days of booking mediocre hotel rooms so that we can be near our fishing spot when we wake up. And when hotels weren’t an option, I certainly haven’t missed the body aches from sleeping on a hard surface while tent camping.
Instead, we can park our camper just steps from our fishing hole for days or even weeks at a time. We can fish the early morning bite, have lunch, take a cat nap and head back out for the evening bite. We can clean our catch in the kitchen and store fresh walleye fillets in the fridge or freezer or better yet, cook it on the spot. RVing has allowed us to make fishing a family activity because our 2-year-old and 6-month-old now have a place to nap and play comfortably.
Our family fishes year-round and we have a few different pull-behind campers to make that possible. One is a retro camper from the 1970s that we primarily use for ice fishing and the second is a newer camper we use for regular camping. I’m actually in the middle of researching how to convert our newest camper into an ice fish house too. What can I say? We love fishing.
While neither camper has all the things I like, they’ve given me the opportunity to figure out what features could potentially make the perfect fishing RV. I’ll break down the features below.
Off-Grid Living
Most RVs these days come with battery and propane hookups. But if you bought an old converted camper like us, you’ll want to know the basic sources of power for off-grid living.
If you’re able to boondock or disperse camp near your fishing spot, make sure you have a big deep cycle battery with an inverter. If you’re going to run anything other LED lights, you’ll want at least a 100 amp hour battery and an 1800 watt inverter. We usually run lights and the water pump/toilet when we need to.
When it starts to cool off in the evening, you may want to run the furnace so make sure you have a full 20-pound propane tank as well as a backup tank. If propane isn’t an option, a generator can also be used to power an electric heater.
Washburn County Long Lake Camping in a retro vintage camper.
Higher Clearance
If your secret fishing spot is off the beaten track, you’ll probably be dodging potholes, winding through dirt and gravel roads, or maybe even snow and ice-covered paths. Look for an RV with raised suspensions, offset wheels, and off-road tires. There are camping trailers that are specifically designed for off-roading like the Forest River No Boundaries 10.6 – a durable off-road trailer meant for rougher terrain that can withstand all four seasons. There’s also the InTech Luna Rover which comes with offset wheels, off-road tires, and a roof rack for your next canoe or kayak adventure.
Truck campers also offer higher clearance since it’s an RV that sits in the bed of a pickup truck so the clearance depends on what truck you drive. Truck campers can have all the features of a typical travel trailer or fifth wheel but are often designed for one to two people. It’s compact, self-contained, and can have pop-tops or hard sides.
Some RV manufacturers, like A-Liner, will offer greater off-road capability through an off-road package option.
The Kitchen Sink
A kitchen sink makes all the difference in determining whether we eat freshly caught fish for dinner or not. Most campgrounds and boat launches don’t offer fish cleaning stations so I usually clean our catch in the RV sink. Cleaning fish can get messy so having an area where you can fillet and rinse fish with clean water is convenient. Most modern campers have a sink attached to an electric pump with a pressurized water tank, but a sink can be as basic as a manual foot pump that pumps water out of a five-gallon freshwater jug through a spigot, into a sink, draining into a five-gallon grey water jug.
Pass-Through Storage
Surprisingly, a lot of RVing anglers store their fishing rods in the shower or on top of their beds. But with bumpy roads, that can be risky – especially if you like to travel with hooks already tied to your rods. Pass-through storage is the safest and most convenient place for rods. You can mount PVC pipes or a fishing rod storage system to the ceiling of the pass-through storage to secure rods in rough road conditions. It’s also a place that’s easily accessible when you’re headed out the door to your next fishing spot.
Toy Hauler
I’ve only recently discovered the convenience of having a toy hauler. It doubles as a camper as well as a trailer for carrying large items. If getting on the water is important to you, consider a toy hauler for transporting kayaks, canoes, small boats, and other water sports equipment. It’s an enclosed area that’ll keep watercraft from getting damaged or dirty while on the road.
The Anderson family enjoying the view from the back of their toy hauler.
Ice House
If you like to fish year-round like our family, an ice house or a fish house is designed for that exact purpose. It’s an RV that also serves as an ice fishing house, complete with holes in the floor with removable covers, winter-rated insulation, a hydraulic or winch cranks to bring the frame down to the ice, a more powerful heater for those bitter cold days, and all of the amenities you’d find in a typical RV. It’s luxury on ice but can also serve as a camper for spring, summer, and fall.
There are other add-on components to convert a fishing RV to ice house, including rattle reels which are fishing reels that attach to the walls so that the fishing line goes directly into an ice hole. Our fish house will have a fish camera and monitor this year – a fun addition for the kids (and adults) to watch what’s happening below the ice in real-time. We also leave our ice fishing fish finders in one of the cabinets so that we can grab it as soon as our first hole is augered and see if there are fish in that particular location.
An icehouse is sometimes called a fish house, ice shack, ice fishing shack, wheelhouse, darkhouse, or permanent house.
At the end of the day, the perfect fishing RV is one that fits your lifestyle. The only non-negotiables for successful fishing while camping is your rod and reel, line, tackle, bait, and at times, a bit of luck. Happy camping and happy fishing!