Modern explorer Brian Brawdy shares his passion at Ohio RV Supershow,
By Chuck Yarborough,
The Plain Dealer January 02, 2010, 2:01PM
Courtesy of Brian Brawdy,
Brian Brawdy’s “Green RV,” which will be on view
at the 34th annual Ohio RV Supershow this week at the International
Exposition Center in Cleveland, helps redefine the image of RVers
as pioneers who can help preserve the land they roam.
Brian Brawdy insists that he's not an extremist, and maybe he's right.
"I don't bungee jump," said the former New York City
police officer. And according to his press materials, his home features
"a complete kitchen, a queen-sized bed, a full bath, an entertainment
center and button-controlled sliding walls."
Hey, just because you like to set up temporary housekeeping at
Yosemite National Park when the temperature is minus 40 degrees,
or like to trek across Death Valley in the dead of summer right
after you've had skin-cancer surgery, doesn't mean you're an extremist,
at least in Brawdy's world. Neither does it mean you have to be
uncomfortable doing those things.
Brawdy considers himself a modern-day explorer. Lewis and Clark
had their canoes, Columbus had those three ships, and the Donner
Party had those Conestoga wagons.
Well, let's leave the doomed Donners out of this, shall we?
Environmentalist Brian Brawdy has put more than 100,000 miles on
the “Green RV,” a recreational vehicle fitted with solar
panels and wind turbines. He shares his expertise at a se´ries
of seminars at the 34th annual Ohio RV Supershow.
When: 1-10 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Saturday; 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 10.
Tickets: $11.50 for those older than 12; parking is $8 per car.
Where: International Exposition Center, 6200 Riverside Drive, Cleveland.
Go to ixcenter.com or ohiorvshow.com
Brawdy's Conestoga wagon is something billed as the "Green
RV." He'll bring it and his advice on how to see the world
while remaining green to the Ohio RV Supershow, which opens Wednesday
at the International Exposition Center in Cleveland. 
The Ford F350 4x4, which is powered by a V-8 diesel engine, also
has 11 solar panels and three wind turbines, Brawdy said when reached
by cell phone in Elkhart, Ind., the so-called home of the recreational
vehicle. He was having some adjustments made to his rig, which also
includes a trailer, and had to return to Elkhart, which is a sort
of Mecca for RVers.
The decision to hit the road wasn't actually a decision; it was
a mandate from a voice inside.
His father had committed suicide, and Brawdy had to deal with the
guilt of that on top of his confrontation with mortality after he
was diagnosed with skin cancer. After successful surgery, he basically
ran from the world.
"The only solace that came was out in the middle of nowhere,"
said Brawdy, an upbeat man despite the subject matter.
"I loved being a cop," Brawdy said. "I felt like
I was making a difference, and it was so hard to walk away from
it. But I couldn't carry a gun anymore."
But Brawdy still wants to make a difference. And it came to him
that he could do that by being what the New York Times called "an
environmental pioneer."
His travels, which segued from backpacking to bicycling to the
RV he now calls home, have taken Brawdy to 48 states, logging more
than 100,000 miles on the RV. And in the meantime, he learned how
to survive, much like those guys on reality TV.
He also developed a love for the country that you can't get just
flying over the Tetons or driving the Interstate.
Brawdy will share his experiences via a pair of seminars offered
during the RV show.
"Today's Explorer" will deal with his belief that today's
RVers are modern-day explorers. "Conservation through Exploration"
will focus on the lessons he's learned in his travels about how
RV enthusiasts can help preserve and protect the land they explore.
Seminars will be at 2, 4 and 6 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday; 1,
4 and 7 p.m. Friday; noon, 3, 6 and 8 p.m. Saturday; and 1, 3 and
4 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 10.
Brawdy will be the first to admit that the lifestyle he's chosen
has its drawbacks.
"It's cost me some stuff," he acknowledged, laughing.
"Friends and family are mad because I'm never around when they
want me, and you're never home for the holidays."
"But when you hear that voice, it's an intuitive feeling that
you're doing what you were put here on this planet to do,"
he said.
Yes, he's exploring the country, but RVing is also a way "to
explore what's inside each and every one of us," Brawdy said.
"There's nothing terribly special about me. I just keep moving."
But not bungee jumping.
Family RV Inc, located in Northern
California
2828 Monterey Hwy, San Jose, CA 95111
(50 miles south of San Francisco)
Tel: (408) 365-1991
|