(The RV Water Saga Nobody Warned You About)
There it is.
Your shiny blue hose.
Drinking-safe. Kink-resistant. Glowing like the holy grail of hydration.
All you need to do is connect it to your rig, maybe throw on a pressure regulator, and voilà—liquid life.
But no.
Because what follows is a plumbing puzzle that ends in confusion, damp socks, and a vow to “just use bottled water next time.”
🚿 1. The Setup That Should Be Simple
You’ve got:
-
One hose
-
Two attachments
-
And a dream of running water
It should go like this:
-
Screw on the regulator
-
Add the 90° elbow
-
Connect the hose
-
Feel proud
But in real life?
It’s more like:
-
“Why doesn’t this thread match?”
-
“Was I supposed to put the filter before or after the elbow?”
-
“Why is this leaking directly onto my foot?”
💧 2. The Leak That Comes From Nowhere
Everything’s hand-tightened.
You even used plumber’s tape.
And yet…
Drip.
Drip.
Shoe-soaking splash.
You adjust one fitting, and another loosens.
You remove the elbow, the pressure regulator goes rogue.
You tighten the regulator… and now the hose twists like it’s in a yoga class.
🧠 3. The Logical Breakdown
You try to be scientific:
-
“If I take this off…”
-
“Maybe this attachment is defective…”
-
“Why are there YouTube tutorials on JUST THIS?”
Eventually, you accept that you’ve:
-
Cross-threaded something
-
Cracked a fitting
-
And possibly committed hose-based war crimes
🔧 4. The Temporary Fix That’s Definitely Not
You do what any seasoned camper does:
-
Wipe it down
-
Wrap it in duct tape
-
Angle the spray away from your door
-
Say, “It’s fine, it’s just condensation”
💬 Final Thoughts
All you wanted was water.
What you got was:
-
A pressure crisis
-
Two wet shoes
-
And a hose that’s now fused to the campground spigot by pure rage
Let this be your reminder:
One hose. Two attachments. Endless regret.
Next time?
Pack spares. Bring towels. And never trust plastic threads again.
🐟 Want to make sure your site has a working water hookup before this tragic hose opera begins?
Use Campground Views to preview the connections, angles, and spigot positioning—so at least your hose disaster will be intentional.
🔗 Follow us for more honest RV truths, hookup mishaps, and survival tips for life on wheels (and sometimes on puddles).
