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Justan Ohlphart[_2_] March 8th 18 02:31 PM

First camping of the season
 
On 3/7/2018 9:52 PM, True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 7 March 2018 20:38:30 UTC-4, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
Ah....you've got a hy-brid.
We thought about that type and up till a few years ago you could buy a new one for less than $20K.
Since our climate is mostly cool and damp, I thought a normal small enclosed model would be best but then again, the wife probably wouldn't be interested in camping before the middle of June or after mid October. Maybe I'll rethink hy-brids.


Can you rent them? Might be a better deal for light use and no need to
store, register, or insure it. 3500 lbs is light for a wet trailer.


Not sure about small travel trailers. They do have those smaller truck based RV's but they seemed expensive. Plus it's hard to plan ahead when our climate can be quite damp. I like the option of deciding the night before...that's how we boat.

A camper is likely going to be wider than your boat.Have you learned to
back up straight without hitting your neighbor's house?
Do you expect to be dry camping out in the woods? Decent campgrounds
are hard to come by in the Northeast. You need to make reservations
weeks or even months in advance. Or you can settle for having trailer
trash boys for your neighbors.
And then there's your best buddie Fat Harrie. You have to consider
that he would never give you his blessing.

True North[_2_] March 8th 18 03:54 PM

First camping of the season
 
On Thursday, 8 March 2018 10:31:23 UTC-4, Justan Ohlphart wrote:
On 3/7/2018 9:52 PM, True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 7 March 2018 20:38:30 UTC-4, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
Ah....you've got a hy-brid.
We thought about that type and up till a few years ago you could buy a new one for less than $20K.
Since our climate is mostly cool and damp, I thought a normal small enclosed model would be best but then again, the wife probably wouldn't be interested in camping before the middle of June or after mid October. Maybe I'll rethink hy-brids.

Can you rent them? Might be a better deal for light use and no need to
store, register, or insure it. 3500 lbs is light for a wet trailer.


Not sure about small travel trailers. They do have those smaller truck based RV's but they seemed expensive. Plus it's hard to plan ahead when our climate can be quite damp. I like the option of deciding the night before...that's how we boat.

A camper is likely going to be wider than your boat.Have you learned to
back up straight without hitting your neighbor's house?
Do you expect to be dry camping out in the woods? Decent campgrounds
are hard to come by in the Northeast. You need to make reservations
weeks or even months in advance. Or you can settle for having trailer
trash boys for your neighbors.
And then there's your best buddie Fat Harrie. You have to consider
that he would never give you his blessing.


It's no country for girlie men, Justine so none of that would , or should, apply to you.

John H.[_5_] March 8th 18 05:51 PM

First camping of the season
 
On Wed, 7 Mar 2018 07:01:39 -0800 (PST), True North wrote:

Mr Luddite....we've been looking at various small travel trailers but can't find anything that appeals to me in the limited selection available locally.
I'd like something bright and airy....with a good sized bathroom and maybe a bed that converts into a sofa. Don't like trailers where the oversized bed takes a third of the floor area all the time. Or when you can't even get around both sides of the bed. Anything you've come across that's an improvement over the same ole..Same ole?
BTW...our max size would be about 18 feet in length and about 3500 lbs.in weight.


There are no 18 foot trailers with 'good sized' bathrooms. You might consider buying an 18'er,
ripping the bed out, and installing a sofa bed.

John H.[_5_] March 8th 18 05:52 PM

First camping of the season
 
On Wed, 7 Mar 2018 10:43:37 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

On 3/7/2018 10:29 AM, Tim wrote:
Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
We are not serious "campers". I bought a small, used one last year just
to use locally and for something to do. Bought it after watching
Craigslist for something small and towable with the GMC Canyon. Turns
out a guy only a few miles from me had this one for sale. He had taken
excellent care of it, roof was maintained, no leaks and everything
worked. I wasn't looking for this type that the ends fold down for beds
but now I like it for our puposes. Leaves more room inside when the beds
are deployed.

All I can suggest is to visit RV places or check what's for sale
on-line. Everyone's preferences are different. I bought this one used
for $5K.

Looks very similar to this:

https://tinyurl.com/ycpwwg2x
....

That looks about like Johns original one. It was really nice inside. Amazed at the conveniences packed into a slall space.



Actually I realized after I posted the link to the picture that the one
I bought is even smaller. I think the one in the picture is 19 feet.
The one I bought is 17 feet and has a single axle. Still has plenty of
room inside for our occasional use.

It only weighs 2,800 lbs dry which is ideal since the Canyon is rated to
tow up to 7,000 lbs.


I'd go up an extra foot or so just to get the double axle.

John H.[_5_] March 8th 18 05:53 PM

First camping of the season
 
On Wed, 7 Mar 2018 07:45:53 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote:

Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
Actually I realized after I posted the link to the picture that the one
I bought is even smaller. I think the one in the picture is 19 feet.
The one I bought is 17 feet and has a single axle. Still has plenty of
room inside for our occasional use.

It only weighs 2,800 lbs dry which is ideal since the Canyon is rated to
tow up to 7,000 lbs.

...

Not sure but I think Johns was also a 17 on a single


Nope, 18.5 on a double.

John H.[_5_] March 8th 18 06:05 PM

First camping of the season
 
On 8 Mar 2018 17:53:00 GMT, Keyser Soze wrote:

Justan Ohlphart wrote:
On 3/7/2018 9:52 PM, True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 7 March 2018 20:38:30 UTC-4, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
Ah....you've got a hy-brid.
We thought about that type and up till a few years ago you could buy a
new one for less than $20K.
Since our climate is mostly cool and damp, I thought a normal small
enclosed model would be best but then again, the wife probably
wouldn't be interested in camping before the middle of June or after
mid October. Maybe I'll rethink hy-brids.

Can you rent them? Might be a better deal for light use and no need to
store, register, or insure it. 3500 lbs is light for a wet trailer.

Not sure about small travel trailers. They do have those smaller truck
based RV's but they seemed expensive. Plus it's hard to plan ahead when
our climate can be quite damp. I like the option of deciding the night
before...that's how we boat.

A camper is likely going to be wider than your boat.Have you learned to
back up straight without hitting your neighbor's house?
Do you expect to be dry camping out in the woods? Decent campgrounds
are hard to come by in the Northeast. You need to make reservations
weeks or even months in advance. Or you can settle for having trailer
trash boys for your neighbors.
And then there's your best buddie Fat Harrie. You have to consider
that he would never give you his blessing.


If Don wanted to park an RV next to trailer trash, he could reserve a spot
in your driveway or Herring’s driveway. Of course, he’d want to be
armed...heavily armed.


Does he know how to shoot anything, or are you referring to a broomstick?

Tim March 8th 18 06:06 PM

First camping of the season
 
John H
- show quoted text -
Nope, 18.5 on a double.
....

I thought it was a 17. No wonder the layout looked better than I thought...

Mr. Luddite[_4_] March 8th 18 09:30 PM

First camping of the season
 
On 3/8/2018 12:52 PM, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 7 Mar 2018 10:43:37 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

On 3/7/2018 10:29 AM, Tim wrote:
Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
We are not serious "campers". I bought a small, used one last year just
to use locally and for something to do. Bought it after watching
Craigslist for something small and towable with the GMC Canyon. Turns
out a guy only a few miles from me had this one for sale. He had taken
excellent care of it, roof was maintained, no leaks and everything
worked. I wasn't looking for this type that the ends fold down for beds
but now I like it for our puposes. Leaves more room inside when the beds
are deployed.

All I can suggest is to visit RV places or check what's for sale
on-line. Everyone's preferences are different. I bought this one used
for $5K.

Looks very similar to this:

https://tinyurl.com/ycpwwg2x
....

That looks about like Johns original one. It was really nice inside. Amazed at the conveniences packed into a slall space.



Actually I realized after I posted the link to the picture that the one
I bought is even smaller. I think the one in the picture is 19 feet.
The one I bought is 17 feet and has a single axle. Still has plenty of
room inside for our occasional use.

It only weighs 2,800 lbs dry which is ideal since the Canyon is rated to
tow up to 7,000 lbs.


I'd go up an extra foot or so just to get the double axle.



I agree. If I were more into RV'ing and actually traveled anywhere
longer distance I would not buy the one I got. But the longest trip
we make with it will probably be about 18 miles to the Cape. Most of
last year it was at a very nice place about 10 minutes from my house.



Justan Ohlphart[_2_] March 9th 18 12:27 AM

First camping of the season
 
On 3/8/2018 10:54 AM, True North wrote:
On Thursday, 8 March 2018 10:31:23 UTC-4, Justan Ohlphart wrote:
On 3/7/2018 9:52 PM, True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 7 March 2018 20:38:30 UTC-4, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
Ah....you've got a hy-brid.
We thought about that type and up till a few years ago you could buy a new one for less than $20K.
Since our climate is mostly cool and damp, I thought a normal small enclosed model would be best but then again, the wife probably wouldn't be interested in camping before the middle of June or after mid October. Maybe I'll rethink hy-brids.

Can you rent them? Might be a better deal for light use and no need to
store, register, or insure it. 3500 lbs is light for a wet trailer.

Not sure about small travel trailers. They do have those smaller truck based RV's but they seemed expensive. Plus it's hard to plan ahead when our climate can be quite damp. I like the option of deciding the night before...that's how we boat.

A camper is likely going to be wider than your boat.Have you learned to
back up straight without hitting your neighbor's house?
Do you expect to be dry camping out in the woods? Decent campgrounds
are hard to come by in the Northeast. You need to make reservations
weeks or even months in advance. Or you can settle for having trailer
trash boys for your neighbors.
And then there's your best buddie Fat Harrie. You have to consider
that he would never give you his blessing.


It's no country for girlie men, Justine so none of that would , or should, apply to you.

What an odd thing to say, little man.

Justan Ohlphart[_2_] March 9th 18 12:31 AM

First camping of the season
 
On 3/8/2018 12:53 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
Justan Ohlphart wrote:
On 3/7/2018 9:52 PM, True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 7 March 2018 20:38:30 UTC-4, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
Ah....you've got a hy-brid.
We thought about that type and up till a few years ago you could buy a
new one for less than $20K.
Since our climate is mostly cool and damp, I thought a normal small
enclosed model would be best but then again, the wife probably
wouldn't be interested in camping before the middle of June or after
mid October. Maybe I'll rethink hy-brids.

Can you rent them? Might be a better deal for light use and no need to
store, register, or insure it. 3500 lbs is light for a wet trailer.

Not sure about small travel trailers. They do have those smaller truck
based RV's but they seemed expensive. Plus it's hard to plan ahead when
our climate can be quite damp. I like the option of deciding the night
before...that's how we boat.

A camper is likely going to be wider than your boat.Have you learned to
back up straight without hitting your neighbor's house?
Do you expect to be dry camping out in the woods? Decent campgrounds
are hard to come by in the Northeast. You need to make reservations
weeks or even months in advance. Or you can settle for having trailer
trash boys for your neighbors.
And then there's your best buddie Fat Harrie. You have to consider
that he would never give you his blessing.


If Don wanted to park an RV next to trailer trash, he could reserve a spot
in your driveway or Herring’s driveway. Of course, he’d want to be
armed...heavily armed.

I don't think Donnie shares your paranoia. Besides, he's afraid of guns.


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