"Four hundred ... sixty-nine dollars ... and seventy-two cents."
Slowly, with equal parts pump shock and Texas drawl, Mary Walker recounted the cost of filling up her recreational vehicle's gas tank. "And it wasn't even that close to empty."
Walker grinned gamely as she and two fellow Texans on lawn chairs chatted about RV-ing at the Minnesota State Fairgrounds, where this week's Family Motor Coach Association (FMCA) convention has brought vehicles of every shape and size to town. The 80th rendition of the semiannual event, which ends today, finds RVers chatting, chowing down and checking out 300 booths featuring supplies, campground info and equipment for their beloved outsized vehicles.
Throughout the fairgrounds, there were no signs that the soaring cost of gasoline was dampening the enthusiasm of the 10,000-plus attendees. But there's little question that the industry itself is suffering a downturn in this sputtering economy.
Last summer's FMCA convention in Redmond, Ore., drew 3,474 RVs, about 1,000 more than are expected this year, and FMCA membership is "down a bit," said communications director Pamela Kay.
After five years of record growth, RV shipments declined 9.5 percent in 2007 amid rising unemployment and interest rates, more restrictive loan underwriting and a faltering stock market.
Then, with gas prices rolling steadily upward, purchases fell 26 percent nationally in the first four months of this year, according to Statistical Surveys Inc. of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Crossing the border on fumes