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On Jul 17, 12:41*pm, Lil' John wrote:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 09:19:29 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 17, 12:06*pm, H the K wrote: Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 17, 11:49 am, Frogwatch wrote: My slide-in truck camper based on a design from Glen-L is nearing completion. *This project has taken far longer than expected and has not been as much fun as I expected. *For awhile I was trying to build the framing to boat building standards until I realized this was a waste of epoxy. *The Glen-L design is from the late 70s and you have to do some re-thinking for newer materials but seems to work. The metal siding was more expensive than I expected. *I used actual RV siding from an RV siding company and cutting it was a serious PITA resulting in some wicked looking edges. *Fortunately, trim has covered my most serious flaws. *Unfortunately, there are a few places where my saber saw slipped and the blade punctured the skin where trim does not cover it but I will try to seal these with epoxy and touch-up paint.. The windows will be installed this weekend and then the outside will be finished. *Then the fun starts because my wife insists on doing the interior her way. *This will mean endlessly looking at samples of fabric and linoleum till I am ready to pick something at random. Originally, I thought the camper would be ready for our annual pilgrimage to Wyoming because the bears mountain lions and now wolves have become a problem for campers. *There was a story yesterday about a family camping near Cody being attacked by a mountain lion. Many years ago (Early 80s) we were camped near Hole-In-the -Wall (Butch Cassiday's hideout) in the middle of nowhere (southern end of the Bighorn Mountains) and could hear a mountain lion at night. *My wife and I (childless then) slept in our friends hard sided slide in camper. *In the morning, we found mountain lion tracks all over in the snow around our camp. Well, you were in its backyard...and it came out to investigate. Wouldn't you do the same if you hear noises or smelled something strange in your backyard? We're still occasionally feeding the critters who walk through the forest at the edge of our back yard. Foxes, raccoons, the occasional possum, squirrels, groundhogs, birds, deer. It's getting tougher for animals every day everywhere. And of course our helping them out a bit really ****es off some of the posters in rec.boats. That alone makes it * worthwhile. I've been hoping for years that Reggie would have a stroke over this. Raccoons and foxes are just beautiful animals. So far, we haven't encountered any that are "interested" in people. The deer remain skittish. Cougars, by the way, are wonderful animals. An atypical example: snipped Harry seems not to realize that he is training raccoons to approach humans, or that raccoons are the most frequent carriers of rabies in the mid-Atlantic states (and probably others). "Over 75% of the animals reported rabid in the mid-Atlantic area have been raccoons; other affected wildlife include: skunks, bats, foxes, and groundhogs, in decreasing order of frequency." From:http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00001255.htm Even when rabid, raccoons and foxes are beautiful animals. Be careful. Have you, during this construction project, thought that you may have been better off with one of these? http://www.travelizmo.com/archives/000931.html -- John H John: I gave a pull behind trailer some thought but I also want to sometimes take my 20' Tolman boat. We are only going to sleep in the camper so space is not a problem. The place in WY has a 100 yr old log cabin we could use if I could ever convince my family to sleep in it. I admit, structurally, it is sorta "iffy". For Google Earth, coords are 42 deg 43'32.03"N 106deg. 18'14.18" W The view of Muddy Mt Google shows is what I see from the porch of the cabin with some aspens in my view.. |
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