Calm, practical caravanning guides, without the noise

If you’re feeling overwhelmed by advice, opinions, and confident-sounding rules that don’t quite add up, these short eBooks are designed to help you slow things down, understand what actually matters, and enjoy caravanning more.

They’re written in the same calm, real-world style as CaravanVlogger — no hype, no judgement, and no pressure to do things “the right way”.

New to caravanning - Start Here

If you only read one guide, start with Caravan Myths Busted.
It tackles the most common pieces of advice that cause unnecessary worry — and explains what’s actually true, what isn’t, and what you can safely ignore.

👉 View Caravan Myths Busted

Caravan Myths - Busted

A calm, confidence-building guide that challenges the advice many caravanners hear — often delivered loudly, confidently, and incorrectly.

Inside, you’ll find:

  • Why some myths exist

  • Why they persist

  • What the reality usually looks like

  • How to make sensible decisions without fear

See What's Inside

This book is for anyone who has ever arrived on a pitch wondering if they’re doing it right, listened to unfamiliar noises at night, or quietly compared themselves to everyone else on site.

  • First-time caravan owners

  • People in their first season (not just their first trip)

  • Anyone who wants to feel more confident without being overwhelmed

  • Couples learning caravanning together

MTPLM Explained (Without the Panic) is a calm, plain-English guide to what MTPLM really is, how it fits into real-world caravanning, and why it doesn’t deserve the level of fear it often attracts.

  • Why MTPLM causes so much stress in the first place

  • What MTPLM actually represents in real use

  • Why the internet makes this subject feel worse than it is

Caravan Myths Busted exists to calmly separate fact from folklore — without drama, panic, or finger-wagging.

  • What stabilisers and ATC actually do (and what they don’t)

  • Why twin axles still need proper loading

  • Why “I’ll feel it if it’s wrong” isn’t a safety strategy

  • …and more…