Adventure campers to inspire you to hit the open road

The Vanlife playlist — Catching up with our favourite and most inspiring vanlifers, including artist Jay Nelson, photographer Foster Huntington, surfer Rob Machado and filmmaker Cyrus Sutton.

People have been jumping in campers and heading out on adventures for decades, but nobody does it with quite as much style as artist Jay Nelson. Long before social media and before photographer Foster Huntington coined the #Vanlife hashtag, Jay was modding battered old vehicles, attaching marvellous, wooden living quarters and creating his own ‘temporary autonomous zones’ to hit the road and explore the world.

In Huck 51 – The Adventure Issue, we caught up with Jay at his home in Ocean Beach, San Francisco to find out more about what inspires his whacky, wanderlust creations; from his very first treehouse, through boats, cycle-campers, scooters and vans, to his new Suzuki jeep camper for Foster.

Foster Huntington 2

From @FosterHunting on Instagram

We learned how Jay designed and built the interior of San Francisco’s Mollusk Surf Store, how anarchist writer and poet Hakim Bey’s theory of ‘temporary autonomous zones’ inspired his early adventures, and above all, for Jay, how adventures only really kick off when things begin to go wrong.

Jay Nelson Tumblr 2

Huck’s vanlife playlists celebrates all those who have packed up their lives and hit the road in search of new frontiers.

The Wanderlust of #Vanlife

When photographer Foster Huntington created the #vanlife Instagram hashtag in 2011, he helped bring a disparate, nomadic community together to share their experiences and inspire others to embark on similar journeys. In this beautiful short, The Atlantic catches up with Foster and other #Vanlife practitioners to find out why they chose to jump in clunky old vans and leave their regular lives behind.

Rob Machado

If you need a whacky adventure vehicle, whether that be a bike, a boat or a van, Jay is the man to call. Friend and professional surfer Rob Machado hit him up to create a customised pick-up truck, complete with wooden sleeping pod, for his wave-chasing adventures. To return the favour, Rob featured Jay in his awesome Through the Lens film series.

Foster Huntington

From @FosterHunting on Instagram

From @FosterHunting on Instagram

Photographer Foster Huntington didn’t create vanlife, but he lived it for years before creating an Instagram hashtag that brought the community together and helped it grow. He’s now the unofficial poster-boy-come-cheerleader for the movement, thanks to photobooks like Home Is Where You Park It and his awesome Instagram, which is the place to go for all things #Vanlife. After being on the move all the time, Foster now has an incredible home base: a treehouse with a hot tub and concrete skate bowl below. He documented the whole build process in his book The Cinder Cone, with an accompanying short film of the same name.

Cyrus Sutton

Surfer and filmmaker Cyrus Sutton translates the beauty and freedom of vanlife to film like nobody else. Compassing documents Cyrus’ two-month-long journey through Baja and mainland Mexico in a converted van, surfing, getting tubed, eating peanut butter and hanging with fellow wanderers Rob Machado and Kepa Acero. A shorter trip along the West Coast to drop in on friends like Eric Ethans, Lee Leatherman and Foster Huntington became the awesome short Friends in High Places (below).

#Vanlife mockumentary

Ferguson hit the Manchester party scene hard in the early ‘90s, then found a van, surfing and never looked back. This hilarious mockumentary from Crayfish films affectionately skewers all of #vanlife’s clichés, which helped it win the ‘Spirit Of The Festival’ award at London Surf Film Festival in 2013.

Check out our interview with Jay Nelson.

Read the full article from Huck 51 – The Adventure Issue. Grab a copy in the Huck Shop  or subscribe today to make sure you don’t miss another issue.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.


Ad

Latest on Huck

Sport

From his skating past to sculpting present, Arran Gregory revels in the organic

Sensing Earth Space — Having risen to prominence as an affiliate of Wayward Gallery and Slam City Skates, the shredder turned artist creates unique, temporal pieces out of earthly materials. Dorrell Merritt caught up with him to find out more about his creative process.

Written by: Dorrell Merritt

Music

In Bristol, pub singers are keeping an age-old tradition alive

Ballads, backing tracks, beers — Bar closures, karaoke and jukeboxes have eroded a form of live music that was once an evening staple, but on the fringes of the southwest’s biggest city, a committed circuit remains.

Written by: Fred Dodgson

© Nan Goldin
Culture

This new photobook celebrates the long history of queer photography

Calling the Shots — Curated by Zorian Clayton, it features the work of several groundbreaking artists including Robert Mapplethorpe, Sunil Gupta, Zanele Muholi and more.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Music

Krept & Konan: “Being tough is indoctrinated into us”

Daddy Issues — In the latest from our interview column exploring fatherhood and masculinity, UK rap’s most successful double act reflect on loss, being vulnerable in their music, and how having a daughter has got Krept doing things he’d never have imagined.

Written by: Robert Kazandjian

© Sharon Smith
Culture

Vibrant polaroids of New York’s ’80s party scene

Camera Girl — After stumbling across a newspaper advert in 1980, Sharon Smith became one of the city’s most prolific nightlife photographers. Her new book revisits the array of stars and characters who frequented its most legendary clubs.

Written by: Miss Rosen

© Eric Rojas
Music

Bad Bunny: “People don’t know basic things about our country”

Reggaeton & Resistance — Topping the charts to kick off 2025, the Latin superstar is using his platform and music to spotlight the Puerto Rican cause on the global stage.

Written by: Catherine Jones

Signup to our newsletter

Sign up to stay informed from the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture, with personal takes on the state of media and pop culture in your inbox every month from Emma Garland, former Digital Editor of Huck, exclusive interviews, recommendations and more.

Please wait...