(Because every RVer has said “It’ll be fine” right before it absolutely wasn’t.)

There’s a specific kind of panic that only RVers understand.
It starts with a breeze. Then the trees start clapping. Then the sky turns that suspicious shade of “you’re about to learn something.”

And suddenly you realise: your awning is still out.

Not a big deal… unless you’ve owned an RV for more than 12 minutes. Because at that point you know the truth:

A storm warning isn’t about rain. It’s about whether your awning survives the night.

1) The Forecast Starts With Lies

The weather app says:

  • “light showers”

  • “breezy”

  • “passing storm”

In RV translation, that means:
“Secure everything you love.”

You’ve been fooled before. You know what’s coming. And yet… you still hesitate, staring at your awning like it’s a loyal friend you forgot to protect.

2) The Wind Doesn’t Blow — It Negotiates

It starts gently. Almost polite.
Then it ramps up into full intimidation tactics.

Your awning begins doing that little flap…
the one that says, “I’m not okay.”

You stand there thinking:
“Should I bring it in?”
The wind answers:
“Yes. Immediately. Preferably yesterday.”

3) Awnings Have One Weakness: Being Out

An awning looks tough. It’s big, it’s sturdy, it’s heroic.

But in a storm, it becomes:

  • a sail

  • a drum

  • a high-speed stress test

  • a very expensive mistake

Awnings do not lose slowly. They lose suddenly, with drama, noise, and an audience.

4) The Battle Plan Is Always Chaotic

This is when you enter storm mode, which includes:

  • running outside in socks

  • grabbing poles you don’t fully understand

  • trying to defy physics with straps and hope

  • yelling “HOLD IT!” to someone who cannot possibly hold it

You become a tactical commander with zero training.
The mission: save the awning.
The budget: panic.

5) The Neighbours Become a Support Group

Storms turn campgrounds into instant community.

You’ll see people:

  • sprinting to secure chairs like they’re rescuing civilians

  • bringing in rugs mid-gust

  • chasing a floating pool noodle like it owes them money

  • shouting warnings across sites like it’s a coordinated evacuation

And somehow, it bonds everyone. Trauma does that.

6) The Worst Moment: When You Think It’s Fine Again

The storm pauses.
The wind calms.
The rain slows.

You exhale and think:
“Okay, we’re good.”

Then the wind returns for a surprise encore like:
“YOU THOUGHT.”

This is why experienced RVers don’t trust calm. Calm is just the storm reloading.

7) Victory Is When You Get It In Without Breaking Anything

If you successfully retract the awning in rising wind without snapping an arm, stripping a motor, or sacrificing your dignity… congratulations.

You’ve reached a high level of RV mastery.

Also: your muscles will be sore tomorrow in places you didn’t know existed.

Final Thoughts

Storm warning days aren’t about weather.
They’re about whether you respond fast enough to protect the awning, the chairs, the rug, the lights, the anything that can fly.

So the next time the sky turns moody and the wind starts acting bold, remember:

Storm Warning: Awnings, Prepare for Battle.
And may your setup survive with minimal emotional damage.

🐟 Want to avoid the most wind-exposed sites in the first place?
Use Campground Views to preview tree cover, site orientation, and open exposure before you book — because the best awning battle is the one you never have to fight.