This is probably going to sound like BS, but i have a 1990 Ford econoline 150 parked at a relatives house inside Casa De Campo. it has a flat screen tv, dvd player, radio, dorm size refrigerator, water bed, and two very large tempered glass bay windows with curtains on each side of the van; situated below both bay windows are smaller sliding glass windows with screens...to keep the mosquitos out.
The waterbed in the back of the van is full size; although it may need slightly filled, but i doubt it needs much water. It also has two small, rotating fans bolted to each side of the inside of the van; they're plugged into a 12volt inverter which is connected to 2 Trojan batteries. I also have a dorm size refrigerator and the flat screen tv plugged into the batteries as well in order to save the main van battery from running down and getting you stuck in the midle of a sugar cane field...where i've found myself numerous times without enough juice to start the engine. No problem, i keep two back-up batteries with jumper cables in the back.
You could drive the van down to the Marina inside Casa De Campo and park it strategically where it's facing the water. From this strategic location inside the marina, you can sit back and watch breathtaking evening sunsets and sunrises. The van is neat and tidy and has new wall-to-wall shag carpeting; i've recently had the old carpeting replaced with new carpeting so that it no longer has a musty smell to it. The van is equiped with A/C and a 3.6 liter v6 diesel engine which is suprisingly good on gas because of a heating oil converter i had placed inside the engine bay--this allows the diesel engine to run on used vegetable oil. No joke. The van is green stickered and unbelievably fuel efficient when running on used vegetable oil. i do the filtering myself and keep the filtered vegetable oil inside 55 gallon drum barrels. As such, the van is well equipped and will come with a full tank of vegetable oil--which needs to be slightly heated by a coil switch situated next to the radio volume button before switiching the diesel fuel over to the vegetable oil. In other words, the vegetable oil needs to be slightly heated to tempature before running it through the fuel injectors.
I also have a small 12 volt heater connected to the water bed so that it can be heated up as well just in case it gets chilly at night. This will come in handy if you decide to take the van up into the mountains of Jarabacoa or Constanza.
The van is parked inside a relatives garage inside Casa De Campo. i can rent it to you for $55 dollars a day, and as i mentioned, i will supply you with a full tank of vegatable oil...which is a lot more than you will get from the car rental agencies here on the island.
Frank