The Holiday Format You Have Not Considered Yet
Most families with babies default to one of two holiday formats: a hotel somewhere warm, or staying at home. Both are perfectly valid. Neither is the only option, and neither quite matches what a caravan holiday delivers.
A caravan is, at its core, a home on wheels. Everything you need for a baby — a kitchen, a private bathroom, a defined sleeping space, reliable temperature control — travels with you. You are not dependent on hotel facilities or restaurant schedules. You stop where you want. You cook when the baby allows it. Your luggage is always exactly where you left it because it never goes anywhere without you.
For parents of babies, this level of control is worth more than it might initially appear. A bad night does not mean waking in a hotel room wondering where the nearest kitchen is. A sudden nappy situation does not require navigating a restaurant bathroom. A late afternoon where everyone needs to stop and reset means pulling over at a services, making a cup of tea, and waiting until the baby is ready to continue. That flexibility is genuinely valuable, and it is what keeps many families returning to caravan holidays year after year once they try it.
This guide covers everything you need to plan a caravan holiday with a baby: which type of caravan setup suits families best, how to manage sleep and feeding on the road and at the site, what to pack, how to choose the right caravan site, and the specific practical details that make the difference between a trip you enjoy and one you survive.
Table of Contents
- Types of Caravan Holiday Explained
- Best Age for a First Caravan Holiday with a Baby
- Choosing the Right Caravan Setup
- Sleep in a Caravan — Setting It Up Correctly
- Feeding on a Caravan Holiday
- Choosing the Right Caravan Site
- Driving with a Baby on a Caravan Holiday
- What to Pack
- Tips from Experienced Caravan Families
- Frequently Asked Questions
1. Types of Caravan Holiday Explained
Caravan holidays come in several distinct formats. Understanding the differences helps you choose the right setup for your baby’s age and your family’s style.
Touring Caravans
A touring caravan is a trailer unit towed behind your own car. You choose where to go, which sites to stay at, and how long to stay at each. The touring format gives you maximum flexibility: if you arrive at a site and do not like it, you simply move on. Many families with babies find this flexibility particularly valuable. If the baby has a difficult night and everyone needs a quiet, restful day, the itinerary adjusts without any cost consequence.
Touring caravans range from compact two-berth models to large family units with fixed double beds, full kitchens, wet rooms, and dedicated children’s sleeping areas. For families with babies, a larger model with a fixed bed rather than a converted dinette is strongly preferable. The fixed bed means the sleeping area is always ready without any evening setup work with a baby in your arms.
Motorhomes
A motorhome is a self-propelled vehicle with living accommodation built in. Unlike a touring caravan, it does not require a separate tow vehicle. The integration of vehicle and home creates a genuinely seamless experience: you step from the driving seat into the living area without going outside. For families with babies in unpredictable weather, this matters considerably. A motorhome also allows one parent to move between the driving cab and the living area during the journey, which is useful when a baby needs attention mid-route.
Motorhomes are available for hire across Europe through established rental companies, making them accessible without ownership. For families trying caravan holidays for the first time, motorhome hire is an excellent way to test the format before committing to a purchase.
Static Caravans
A static caravan is a residential unit permanently positioned on a caravan park or holiday site. Unlike touring caravans, statics do not move. They are typically larger than touring units and often have better insulation, more substantial furnishings, and a more house-like interior. Many families with babies choose static caravans for their first caravan holiday precisely because the static format removes the driving and towing complexity and delivers simply a well-equipped private accommodation at a holiday destination.
Static caravans are widely available to hire through park operators and holiday companies including Haven, Parkdean, and Park Holidays in the UK, and equivalent operators across Europe. The hire format means you turn up with your belongings rather than your vehicle and accommodation combined, which many families find considerably easier to manage with a baby.
Glamping Caravans and Vintage Caravans
A growing category of caravan holiday involves beautifully restored vintage caravans or purpose-fitted shepherd’s huts and Airstream-style units available through holiday rental platforms. These offer the caravan experience with considerably more aesthetic pleasure than a standard white fibreglass unit. Many are positioned on small farm sites or rural locations with outstanding natural settings. For families with babies who want a beautiful private space in a quiet setting, this format is worth exploring through platforms like Canopy and Stars, Cool Camping, and Unique Home Stays.
2. Best Age for a First Caravan Holiday with a Baby
Caravan holidays are among the most accessible forms of travel for babies at almost any age, primarily because the caravan provides a controlled environment that removes many of the uncertainty factors of other holiday formats.
Under Three Months
Very young babies can caravan travel with appropriate preparation. A static caravan or a well-heated motorhome with reliable climate control is more suitable at this age than a touring caravan where temperature management can be less precise. The main consideration is sleep safety: the same firm, flat sleep surface requirements apply in a caravan as at home, and some caravan beds and cushioned surfaces do not meet safe sleep standards without modification.
Three to Nine Months
This is the window that most experienced caravan families identify as the most manageable for a first trip. Babies in this range sleep a significant portion of the day. They are easily settled in a familiar sleep environment that travels with them. The caravan kitchen handles formula preparation and bottle sterilisation exactly as the home kitchen does. A baby in this age range is genuinely portable within the caravan environment, and the caravan itself provides everything they need without any of the improvisation that hotels or camping sometimes requires.
Nine to Eighteen Months
From around nine months, babies become more mobile and more interested in exploring their surroundings. Caravan interiors require some baby-proofing at this stage: sharp cupboard edges, accessible storage at floor level, and low-positioned plugs and sockets all need attention before a crawling baby has free movement of the space. On the positive side, a more active and curious baby is also a more engaged travel companion. This age group tends to thrive in the variety that caravan travel provides.
3. Choosing the Right Caravan Setup
The specific caravan setup you choose has a direct effect on how comfortable and practical the holiday turns out to be. Several features matter considerably more with a baby than without one.
Fixed Bed vs Dinette Conversion
This is the most important interior decision for families with babies. A fixed bed means the sleeping area is ready at all times and requires no evening conversion work. A dinette conversion requires removing and repositioning seat cushions to create a sleeping surface each night. Doing this with a tired baby in your arms, in a small caravan space, is unnecessarily difficult. Choose a caravan with a fixed bed wherever budget and size allow.
Additionally, consider where the baby will sleep relative to the adult bed. A caravan with a fixed island bed — positioned in the centre of the bedroom area with access from both sides — provides space for a travel cot alongside the adult sleeping area. This arrangement is far more practical for night feeds and settling than a bed positioned against one wall.
Bathroom and Washing Facilities
An en-suite wet room or bathroom within the caravan is more valuable with a baby than without one. Night-time nappy changes and early morning baby washing happen in the caravan bathroom rather than requiring a walk to the site facilities block. This matters considerably at three in the morning in October rain. A washbasin with hot water accessible in the caravan is a minimum requirement. A shower and toilet within the unit is strongly preferable.
Kitchen Specification
The caravan kitchen is one of its greatest assets for families with babies. A full hob, grill, microwave, and fridge creates the ability to prepare formula, sterilise bottles, store expressed milk, and cook fresh food exactly as you would at home. Confirm the specific kitchen equipment before booking any hire caravan. Some older or smaller units have minimal kitchen facilities that limit what you can prepare. For formula feeding families specifically, a microwave for sterilising bags is worth confirming as available.
Heating and Climate Control
Reliable heating is non-negotiable for caravan holidays with babies outside of midsummer. Most modern touring caravans and motorhomes have gas central heating systems that warm the interior efficiently. Confirm the heating system is fully operational before any trip in cool weather. Static caravans typically have electric heating. In both cases, check the thermostat is accurate and that the sleeping area reaches and maintains a temperature of between sixteen and twenty degrees Celsius — the recommended range for a baby’s sleep environment.
Summer caravan holidays present the opposite challenge. Caravans absorb heat and can become very warm inside during a hot afternoon. Ventilation — roof vents, windows, and awning shade — manages this effectively in most conditions. A battery-powered fan positioned in the sleeping area improves airflow significantly during warm nights. Never leave a baby inside a parked, closed caravan in warm weather.
4. Sleep in a Caravan — Setting It Up Correctly
Sleep is where caravan holidays either work brilliantly or create the exhaustion that colours the whole trip. Getting the setup right before the first night is worth the investment of preparation time it requires.
The Sleep Surface
Safe sleep principles apply in a caravan exactly as at home. A firm, flat surface is non-negotiable. Many caravan mattresses are adequate but slightly softer than ideal for baby sleep. A travel cot positioned beside the adult bed, with its own firm insert mattress, provides a safe, consistent sleep surface that travels identically to the one at home. Measure the available floor space beside the adult bed before departure and confirm the travel cot fits the specific space.
Some families use a co-sleeping setup in a caravan. If this is your approach at home and you apply the same safety guidelines, it is workable in the caravan context. The island bed format makes safe co-sleeping more manageable than a wall-mounted single bed where one side is inaccessible. Apply the same informed safe sleep guidelines you use at home rather than improvising differently in a new environment.
Blackout and Light Management
Caravan windows are typically covered by blinds and thermal curtains rather than blackout fabric. In summer, these are often insufficient to create the darkness that a light-sensitive baby needs for daytime naps and early morning sleep. Pack a portable blackout blind that attaches to caravan windows using suction cups or Velcro strips. Several products specifically designed for caravans and motorhomes are available, and they make a measurable difference to the quality and length of daytime naps in bright summer conditions.
Sound Management
Caravan sites are not silent environments. Other units, site vehicles, families in neighbouring pitches, and the general ambient noise of a busy holiday park all contribute to a soundscape that differs from home. A portable white noise device positioned near the baby’s sleep area provides a consistent, familiar sound that masks the variable background noise of the site. Many babies who struggle with site noise settle immediately when familiar white noise is introduced. Bring the device you use at home rather than improvising with a phone app that drains the battery overnight.
Maintaining the Sleep Routine
The caravan’s greatest advantage for baby sleep is the ability to maintain the home routine almost exactly. The same kitchen produces the same pre-sleep bottle. The same familiar sleep sack goes on in the same sequence. The same song plays in the same order. Caravanning families consistently report better holiday sleep outcomes than hotel-staying families precisely because the environment, though new, contains all the familiar cues of the home routine. Pack specifically for this: the sleep sack, the comfort toy or comforter, the white noise device, the nightlight if used at home. These small items carry more value than their size suggests.
5. Feeding on a Caravan Holiday
Feeding a baby on a caravan holiday is the area where the format most clearly outperforms hotels and camping. The caravan kitchen provides everything needed for any feeding approach without compromise.
Breastfeeding
Breastfeeding in a caravan is straightforward and private. The enclosed space provides complete privacy for feeding without nursing covers or public space management. A comfortable chair or the caravan sofa with good back support, a feeding pillow if used at home, and reliable access to water and snacks for the breastfeeding mother are the practical considerations. During driving days, plan feeding stops into the route rather than trying to feed in a moving vehicle. Many motorway services, rest areas, and lay-bys provide quiet spaces for feeding, and the motorhome or caravan interior is of course available at any stop.
Formula Preparation
The caravan kitchen handles formula preparation identically to the home kitchen. The hob heats water. The microwave sterilises bags. The fridge stores made-up bottles safely. Ready-to-feed cartons are a practical supplement for driving days when accessing the kitchen mid-journey is not straightforward. At the caravan site, the full kitchen capability means formula preparation presents no additional complexity compared to home. This is a meaningful advantage over hotel stays, where hot water access for formula and sterilisation facilities can be inconsistent.
Solid Food
Caravan cooking for a baby on solids is genuinely enjoyable. The full hob and oven provide the same cooking capability as a home kitchen. Fresh vegetables, eggs, pasta, fish, and fruit all cook simply and well in a caravan kitchen. A portable high chair that clips to the caravan’s dining area or attaches to a picnic table outside keeps a baby safely seated during meals. Commercially prepared food pouches remain useful for driving days and for meals when cooking is inconvenient. In general, though, the caravan kitchen supports a more ambitious and more varied baby feeding approach than most other holiday formats allow.
6. Choosing the Right Caravan Site
The caravan site you choose shapes the daily experience of the holiday as significantly as the caravan itself. Some sites are ideally suited to families with babies. Others are technically family-friendly but practically less useful for the specific needs of very young children.
Facilities That Matter for Families with Babies
Clean, accessible washing and toilet facilities matter more with a baby than without one. If the caravan does not have its own bathroom, the site facilities block becomes a critical daily resource. Confirm that the site has modern, regularly cleaned facilities before arrival. Baby-changing tables in the facilities block are useful. Laundry facilities — washing machines and tumble dryers — make a significant difference on longer trips. Baby clothes, muslin cloths, sleep sacks, and feeding bibs accumulate laundry quickly, and the ability to wash mid-trip removes the need to pack for the entire duration.
Pitch Type and Position
A hardstanding pitch — a concrete or gravel base — provides a level, stable, mud-free environment that is easier to manage with a baby than a grass pitch in wet weather. Grass pitches become very muddy in rain, which creates a constant in-and-out footwear management challenge when a baby is crawling or beginning to walk. Request a hardstanding pitch at booking. Additionally, request a pitch away from the main site roads and entertainment facilities. Proximity to the site bar, entertainment venue, or main road brings noise that is incompatible with a baby’s sleep schedule.
Site Character and Culture
Caravan sites range from quiet, adults-oriented sites to busy family holiday parks with entertainment programmes, swimming pools, and organised activities. For families with babies, the busy holiday park format offers more daytime options but also more noise and more crowds. A quieter, smaller site may suit a first caravan holiday with a baby better. The pace and atmosphere of a quiet site aligns more naturally with the reality of travelling with a baby than a large entertainment-focused park where the evening programme runs until eleven.
Certificated locations — small private sites of typically five pitches on farms and private land, licensed through organisations like the Caravan and Motorhome Club — are a specifically excellent option for families with babies. They are quiet, often beautiful, and completely private in a way that large commercial sites are not. Many have excellent facilities. The peace and simplicity of a certificated location suits a baby’s need for calm and routine in ways that busy parks rarely deliver.
Proximity to What You Need
Before booking any caravan site, consider what is within a practical driving distance. A pharmacy, a supermarket, a GP or minor injuries unit, and ideally a children’s play area within fifteen to twenty minutes matters considerably when a baby is involved. The caravan provides self-sufficiency for most needs. However, the confidence of knowing that medical facilities and supply replenishment are accessible makes the holiday experience less anxious, particularly on a first trip with a baby.
7. Driving with a Baby on a Caravan Holiday
The driving element of a touring caravan or motorhome holiday requires specific thought when a baby is on board. Several considerations apply that do not arise for caravan holidaymakers without young children.
Car Seat Safety
In a tow car, the baby travels in an approved rear-facing car seat in the rear of the towing vehicle, exactly as on any other car journey. The car seat specification, installation method, and safety guidelines are unchanged by the fact that a caravan is attached to the rear of the car. In a motorhome, the baby must travel in an approved car seat in the living area or cab area, secured according to the motorhome’s specific seat mounting points. Never allow a baby to travel in the unoccupied living area of a moving motorhome, even if there appears to be a secure surface available.
Journey Length and Stops
Apply the same two-hour maximum rule for car journeys with a baby to caravan driving. Get the baby out of the car seat every two hours for at least fifteen minutes. This is both a comfort requirement and a current paediatric guideline for babies under six months, whose breathing can be restricted by extended periods in a semi-reclined car seat position. Plan the journey with these stops built in as deliberate breaks rather than fitting them around the driving plan.
Towing a caravan or driving a motorhome is inherently slower than ordinary car travel. Average speeds on most routes are lower, overtaking requires more planning, and the overall driving day takes longer than the same distance in a regular car. Factor this into the journey plan and avoid over-ambitious daily driving targets with a baby in the vehicle. A well-timed journey that arrives at the site with enough daylight to set up comfortably is considerably better than an optimistic route that runs late and arrives in darkness.
The Motorhome Advantage Mid-Journey
One specific advantage of motorhome travel over towing is the ability to stop anywhere and immediately access the living area. A baby who needs feeding, changing, or settling mid-journey can be attended to in the motorhome’s own kitchen and living space rather than in a service station. This removes significant logistical complexity from long driving days with a baby. Many motorhome-travelling families with babies specifically cite this as the feature that makes motorhome holidays work better for them than towing.
8. What to Pack
Packing for a caravan holiday with a baby is more generous than for a flight holiday because space and weight are not constrained by airline limits. The caravan boot, tow vehicle, and storage spaces absorb significantly more than any aircraft overhead locker. However, packing without a plan still creates the chaos of too much gear and no clear organisation. These are the categories that matter.
Sleep Essentials
Travel cot with firm insert mattress. Fitted sheet in the correct size. Sleep sack in the appropriate tog for expected overnight temperatures — bring one lighter and one warmer as a buffer. Portable blackout blind with suction cups or clips compatible with caravan windows. White noise device. Baby monitor if staying on a larger site where the caravan and your location during an evening might be separated by any meaningful distance. The familiar comfort toy or comforter that your baby uses at home.
Feeding Equipment
For breastfeeding: nursing bra, breast pads, nipple cream, a large insulated water bottle for continuous hydration, and a comfortable feeding cushion if used at home. For formula: sufficient formula for the trip plus twenty percent extra, bottles, a microwave steriliser bag or cold-water sterilising tablets as a backup, and ready-to-feed cartons specifically for driving days. For babies on solids: a clip-on portable high chair for the caravan dining area and for outdoor picnic tables, a silicone pocket bib, soft spoons, a selection of food pouches and finger foods appropriate to your baby’s stage, and the equipment you need to prepare fresh food on the caravan hob.
Nappies and Hygiene
Calculate nappy use for the full trip and add twenty-five percent. Caravan holidays do not strand you from supply in the way that remote sailing or wilderness camping might, but running low mid-trip is still inconvenient. Wet wipes in generous quantity serve dozens of purposes beyond nappy changes. A portable changing mat for outdoor changes or for pitches where the caravan steps are high. Nappy bags. Baby wash, flannel, and bath equipment compatible with the caravan bathroom’s size and configuration.
Outdoor Equipment
A caravan awning or a separate gazebo creates essential additional living space outside the caravan during good weather. For a family with a baby, outdoor space means a shaded area for sitting, feeding, and playing that is separate from the sleeping and cooking interior. A playmat or blanket on the groundsheet outside the awning gives a safe, clean crawling and sitting surface. A portable paddling pool in summer — small, quick to fill from a site tap — is a specific joy for babies who are beginning to enjoy water play. Bring the baby carrier for walks from the site where the pushchair is impractical.
Medical and Safety Kit
Infant paracetamol and ibuprofen in age-appropriate forms and doses. Digital thermometer. Saline nasal drops. Nappy rash cream. Antihistamine cream for insect bites. Antiseptic wipes. Plasters and sterile dressings. Tweezers. Any prescription medication your baby uses. A printed note with your baby’s weight and GP contact details. For caravan holidays in Europe, ensure GHIC or EHIC cards are valid for your baby as well as for the adults in the party.
9. Tips from Experienced Caravan Families
These are the practical details that experienced caravan families with babies have learned from doing it, often more than once. None of them appear in the caravan brochure.
Book a Larger Caravan Than You Think You Need
The most consistent advice from families with babies is to book up in caravan size. A caravan that is comfortable for two adults becomes cramped when a baby’s travel cot, feeding equipment, changing area, and play space are added to it. What felt like a reasonable size on paper often feels tight in practice with a baby in residence. If budget allows, going one size up typically delivers a much more comfortable daily living experience.
Set Up the Baby’s Space First on Arrival
When you arrive at the site, set up the baby’s sleep area before unpacking anything else. Travel cot erected and made up, blackout blind fitted, white noise device plugged in and tested. Having the sleep space ready immediately means that if the baby needs a nap within the first hour of arrival — which is common after a driving day — you can put them down without delay. Everything else can wait. The baby’s sleep setup cannot.
Use the Caravan’s Full Kitchen from Day One
Many families on their first caravan holiday underuse the kitchen and over-rely on site restaurants or takeaways for the first day or two. The kitchen is one of the caravan’s greatest assets with a baby. Using it from the first evening — even for something simple like pasta and vegetables — establishes the rhythm of caravan cooking and removes the uncertainty of whether the local restaurant will accommodate a baby’s timing and needs. Confidence in the kitchen comes quickly. Starting it early pays dividends throughout the trip.
Establish Quiet Hours Discipline Around Neighbours
Caravan sites have designated quiet hours, typically from eleven at night until seven or eight in the morning. These exist partly for your benefit. They also mean that your baby’s early morning sounds — which feel catastrophically loud inside a caravan — are happening within a context where neighbouring families are also awake and similarly occupied. The solidarity of a family caravan site during early morning baby wake-ups is a specific and underrated comfort.
Baby-Proof the Caravan Interior on Arrival
Spend fifteen minutes walking the caravan interior from a baby’s perspective before you put them down. Low-level cupboards that open easily. Exposed plug sockets at floor level. Sharp metal edges on steps and furniture. Lightweight items at baby-reach height that could be pulled down. A small roll of gaffer tape covers many of these issues temporarily and packs in negligible space. Baby socket covers and cupboard latches that travel in the baby bag address the rest. Doing this once, thoroughly, on arrival prevents the reactive safety management of discovering hazards at the worst moments.
Embrace the Slow Pace
Caravan holidays with babies are slow holidays. The morning routine takes longer. Getting from the caravan to anywhere worth visiting takes longer. Every outing requires more planning than it would without a baby. Fighting this reality makes the holiday harder. Embracing it makes it genuinely restful in a way that faster-paced travel with a baby rarely achieves. The caravan format rewards the families who are willing to spend a morning doing very little, to turn back early if the baby needs it, and to measure the success of a day by wellbeing rather than by distance covered or sights seen.
10. Frequently Asked Questions
Is a static caravan or a touring caravan better for a baby?
Both work well for different reasons. A static caravan is generally larger, better insulated, more house-like in its layout, and requires no driving with a caravan attached. It suits families who want to stay in one location and use the caravan primarily as accommodation rather than as transport. A touring caravan gives you flexibility to move between locations, which suits families who want variety and the freedom to change plans. For a first caravan holiday with a baby, a static caravan removes several complexities — towing, site selection, hitching and unhitching — and delivers the core caravan experience in a more straightforward way.
What is the safest sleep setup for a baby in a caravan?
A travel cot with an approved firm insert mattress, positioned on a level surface away from caravan walls and the heating unit, is the safest and most practical sleep setup for a baby in a caravan. The travel cot provides a consistent, familiar sleep surface that meets safe sleep guidelines wherever it is placed. The caravan’s own mattresses and soft furnishings are not suitable as primary baby sleep surfaces. Apply the same safe sleep principles — firm surface, no loose bedding, correct room temperature — that you use at home.
Can I use the caravan’s gas heating overnight with a baby?
Yes, with one important precaution. Ensure the caravan’s carbon monoxide detector is functioning correctly before using any gas appliance overnight. Carbon monoxide is odourless and colourless, and gas heating systems in poorly maintained caravans can produce it. Test the detector at the start of every trip. Replace it if it is more than five years old. Do not block ventilation points in the caravan in an attempt to retain heat — adequate ventilation is essential for safe gas heating use. With these precautions in place, gas heating is safe and reliable for overnight use with a baby.
How do I handle nappy changes in a touring caravan on a driving day?
Stop at a rest area or services every two hours regardless of nappy status, and use the stop to check and change if needed. In a motorhome, nappy changes can happen in the living area at any stop without needing a service station facility. In a tow car, the change happens at the stop using your portable changing mat on any available flat surface. Plan driving days with this rhythm built in from the start rather than aiming for long unbroken stretches that are incompatible with a baby’s two-hour comfort window.
What are the best caravan sites in Europe for families with babies?
France consistently produces the finest family caravan sites in Europe. The Huttopia network specifically focuses on quiet, nature-oriented sites that suit families with very young children exceptionally well. Siblu and Yelloh Village both operate large, well-equipped family parks with excellent facilities. In the UK, the Caravan and Motorhome Club’s network of sites maintains reliable standards across hundreds of locations. In Germany and Austria, municipal Campingplatz sites are generally excellent. For quiet, small sites specifically suitable for babies, Certificated Locations in the UK and equivalent small private sites in France (camping à la ferme) offer a peace and simplicity that large commercial parks cannot replicate.
What should I do if my baby is unsettled on the first night in a caravan?
A disrupted first night in any new environment is normal and common. Your baby is processing new sounds, new smells, and a new visual environment. The second night is almost always better as the nervous system adjusts. Focus on maintaining the familiar sleep sequence — the same order of events that leads to sleep at home — rather than on replicating the exact conditions of the home bedroom. Produce the familiar sleep sack, the familiar sound, the familiar comfort item, and give the sequence time to work. Intervene calmly if the baby wakes but resist making significant changes to the approach based on one difficult night. By the third night, most babies have settled into the caravan sleep environment well.
A caravan holiday with a baby is not the path of least resistance. Setting up a travel cot in a new space on a Friday evening after a long driving day, while a tired baby communicates their views, takes patience. However, the reward is disproportionate to the effort. The freedom of a self-contained travelling home, the ability to cook and sleep and live on your own schedule, the quiet of a good caravan site in the early morning with a baby who has just discovered that the world looks different from a caravan window — these are things worth finding your way to.
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