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The RV Atlas Podcast

Adding a Dog to Your RVing Family: How to Find the Right Match

The RV Atlas Podcast

RVFTA Podcast Network

Places & Travel, Parenting, Society & Culture, Wilderness, Kids & Family, Sports

4.6 • 584 Ratings

🗓️ 17 November 2025

⏱️ 73 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this week’s episode of The RV Atlas Podcast, we turned our attention to a topic that so many RVers eventually face: how to thoughtfully add a dog to an RVing and camping lifestyle. This episode was born from two things, questions we've seen time and time again in the RV Atlas Facebook group, and our own family’s emotional journey after losing our beloved Maggie in September.

Maggie camped with us for well over a decade. She was the dog who lived for the campground—she’d leap into the truck long before we were ready to leave and lived her happiest life on the road. We dedicated one of our books to her, and it felt right to dedicate this conversation to her, too.

This isn’t just an episode about how to camp with a dog—there are tons of resources for that. This is about something deeper and more foundational:


How do you choose the right dog for an RVing family?


How do you find a match that fits your lifestyle, protects the dog’s well-being, and sets both your family and your future furry friend up for success?

Here are some of our own tips for this journey, shaped by our own experiences and the insightful comments shared by members of our Facebook community.
Understanding What Kind of Dog Fits Your Camping Lifestyle


A common question that pops up in RV groups is:


“What kind of dog should we get?”

And a very common answer online is usually: “Rescue is the best breed.”

And while we strongly believe in rescuing (we’ve been involved in animal rescue our entire lives), simply “getting any rescue dog” is not the full story. It’s okay—and important—to think carefully about breed, size, temperament, and energy level, especially when you’re an RVing family.
Breed Characteristics Matter


When we adopted Maggie, we intentionally looked for a working dog breed because:

We wanted a dog who would stay close and not wander (no hounds catching scents and disappearing).


We wanted a dog that could handle a solid range of temperatures.


We wanted a dog with stamina to hike miles with us.


We wanted a dog that wouldn’t be anxious in new environments.



All of that lined up beautifully with who Maggie became in our family.
Size Matters Too


Not every dog fits every RV. A big dog in a tiny Class B can be stressful. A small dog in a fifth wheel might be perfect. Think about:

Where the dog will sit in the tow vehicle


Whether you have kids sharing the backseat


Where a crate will fit inside your RV


Whether you have space for multiple pets if you ever expand your fur family



Reactivity and Temperament


Campgrounds are full of:

Kids


Bikes


Wildlife


Golf carts


Other dogs (over 50% of RVers camp with one)



If you choose a dog who struggles with constant stimulation or new environments, every trip can become challenging.
Why Foster-Based Rescues Are Ideal for RVers


This is the part of the conversation we felt most passionate about. Rescue doesn’t mean adopting blindly.

It means adopting thoughtfully.

Rescue dogs in shelters can be overwhelmed, anxious, or shut down—making it hard to see their true personalities. Foster dogs, by contrast, have already lived in a home, so you can ask very specific questions, like:

How do they ride in the car?


Are they crate trained?


How do they behave with kids?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Yeah. So where should we camp next? Budget camping. I'm opening it up right now. We dedicated to Maggie the camping dog. And this is what we wrote. You are the guardian and protector of our family and our constant travel companion. You were born to live your best life at the campground and out on the trail. And you were born to be ours.

0:22.3

We love you very much.

0:26.7

Hi, everyone.

0:27.6

I'm Stephanie.

0:28.6

And I'm Jeremy.

0:34.1

And we are the authors of the best-selling where-shuee camp next series of guidebooks and camping journals. And of the brand new children's books, Tara Babies on the go, my first book of hiking,

0:38.3

and Tara Babies on the go, my first book of camping.

0:41.3

Last year we celebrated season 10 of the RV Atlas,

0:44.3

and now we're back for brand new RV and camping adventures in 2025.

0:49.3

Join us now as we cover the best campgrounds,

0:52.3

the best RVs, the best food, and the best gear and gadgets to bring with you when you go.

0:57.2

So pull up a chair and join us around the digital campfire.

1:00.4

This is Season 11 of the RV Atlas.

1:07.9

Hello everybody and welcome to today's episode of the RV Atlas.

1:12.9

And welcome to the show, Stephanie.

1:14.2

How are you doing today?

1:16.4

I'm doing okay.

1:17.7

We're getting through the shorter days, the colder days.

1:21.0

It's dark.

1:22.0

So I was at the campground yesterday, and it's like 4.30, and it was dark.

1:26.9

It's a transition time. It's okay. Trying to be cozy, not depressed, right?

1:31.1

I was going for a little walk around the campground. All of a sudden, it's dark.

...

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