We camped for several days in below freezing weather. Our furnace was broken so we were heating with small space heaters. We were not winterized and nothing froze. They weren't great heaters so it was chilly in the living space. It was above freezing but we needed jackets and shoes on. We did have electric hook up. We don't have a heated hose so we didn't hook up to campground water.
We went from warm weather into the cold so our lines had been flushed and sanitized. We kept the holding tank heaters on and opened cabinet doors. We now know that we should have kept the hot water tank on or bypassed and drained it. We don't worry overly much about cold temps. The Phoenix can handle it as long as you have heat inside. I would prep as follows depending on whether you sanitize lines or not:
Rig is winterized, hot water tank is bypassed, water lines are drained or blown out or have pink stuff in them (including the outside shower), there is pink antifreeze in the macerator and dump valves: load at least five or ten gallons of fresh water, turn on tank heaters, keep interior above freezing. Carry bottled water for drinking, coffee and brushing teeth.
Rig is dewinterized: sanitize the lines if needed, put a little pink antifreeze down the toilet and shower and run it through the macerator and dump valves, keep hot water tank on if there is water in it, load water, turn on holding tank heaters, keep interior above freezing using Ford truck heater during the drive then furnace or electric heaters when stopped.
If you are dry camping at a Walmart, truck stop or such, you can run your generator the same as all the big trucks around you do. Make sure you have propane and it is turned on.
Set a reminder on your phone to turn off the holding tank heaters when you hit warm weather.