
When you deploy an RV awning, it creates more space for you and everyone camping with you to sleep and do other things while ensuring privacy regardless of the weather condition.
When setting up your caravan awning, lay a groundsheet and carpet on the ground before laying your sleeping bag or mattress on it because the groundsheet prevents the sleeping bag from getting muddy, especially when the ground is wet. You can sleep in a caravan awning as long as you have the right equipment with you. It can get freezing at night though, so you should prepare for that and set up the awning appropriately.
What Equipment Would You Need to Sleep in A Caravan Awning?
To sleep comfortably in a caravan awning, you should equip it with the right accessories because the interior is equally as crucial as the caravan awning itself. Get proper lights that would help to set the mood, an annexe to create more room to accommodate more people, a good floor covering to make everywhere cosy and warm.
The floor coverings – carpets, mats and groundsheets – not only gives you comfort, but it protects your sleeping bags and other pieces of equipment from touching the ground directly. For maximum comfort, campers use breathable mats that do not pose a significant risk to the grass and insects on the site where they set up the awning. Also, they opt for products that reduce the discomfort they might feel from pebbles underneath the groundsheet, especially if they camp on hard ground.
The carpet is the piece of equipment that gives the caravan awning that homey feeling that makes the owner relax every time they step into it. Campers should get carpets with non-slip surfaces and proper insulation. Although they would add more money to your camping expenses, rugs are worth having if you want to use the caravan awning as a bedroom.
Nobody likes sleeping in a cooped-up space so you should consider getting an awning annexe to expand the room you initially have in the caravan awning. If you usually camp with family, with time, children would outgrow their regular sleeping bags and start occupying more space, or you might have an addition to the family.
To create adequate space for everyone, you could buy a new, much bigger awning but this would be expensive and would mean you have to dispose of your current one despite the fact it is still in good condition. However, you can cut cost by purchasing an awning annexe and zip it unto the side of your existing caravan awning. Also, there are free-standing awnings that you can use if it is not possible to zip your awning annexe unto the caravan awning itself. This works best if you are camping with a guest and you want to give them their free space.
Would It Be Cold to Sleep in A Caravan Awning?
It gets cold at night in the caravan awning, especially during winter and it will take more than a cup of coffee to keep you warm. Getting ready for situations like this would save you from nights that would make you feel like you are on Mt. Everest and would rather be in the comfort of your bed at home. That being said, you do not have to overpack items you feel would help you instead, be strategic and pick the right pieces of clothing.
It would help to get thick and high-quality self-inflating mattresses which would provide sufficient insulation and padding that would let you sleep well in any weather. Put this self-insulating mattress on top of your regular camp bed to give you some elevation from ground level, thereby avoiding the cold that might come from beneath you.
Also, get a quilt instead of a blanket because its extra layers would offer more protection against the cold. Wear gloves, wool socks and thick clothes – like zip-up hoodies – when going to bed. The cloth combination might seem funny but looking like a model is not the goal here, staying warm is.
