This last hunting trip we drove up to 4hrs a day getting from the hotel to where we unloaded the UTV and back. We have good lightweight camping stuff but aren't against being more comfortable when we can carry more weight. I'm thinking of getting a trailer that can both be a camper and haul the UTV. I priced some smaller trailers designed for this but they are way fancier and pricier than I think I need. I don't own a camper and taking a small camper trailer and the UTV would require an extra truck going on each trip, so I'm eliminating that idea.
Anyone know anyone who has made an enclosed trailer into camp and a UTV hauler? I think the mobility would be awesome if it's done simply, much quicker than setting up and taking down a wall tent.
My plan is much easier to draw than write out but here is my initial plan (started 20 minutes ago so its far from complete)
-8'6"x16' enclosed trailer
-racks built on interior wall to hold 2 Cabelas big cots folded down
-removable wall tent style wood stove near a front corner with a metal plate heat shield/reflector under and behind the stove, held 1" off the floor and walls to allow air to circulate behind.
-camper style screen door and hard door on front corner opposite the wood stove
-2 windows cut near rear corners of trailer, screens on them and capable of being covered
-12V lighting
-12V water pump and 55 gallon barrel of clean water
-plastic shop style sink (fits 5 gallon bucket) with simple hose rigged up to water barrel with 12V sprayer pump to run water
-possibly a simple removable shower set-up. Thinking real simple, like a plastic tub with a PVC frame to hold a shower curtain and a solar shower bag bolted on. Fill the solar shower bag and hang it near enough the stove to warm up before the shower.
Outside the trailer on nose
-55 gallon drum on nose to hold dirty soapy water
-12V battery, wiring to charge with my 3 Goal Zero 20 panels
Coolers, sleeping bags, all the other items I think could be carried in the truck until needed. To move camp you just make darn sure the stove is out, clean, and cold. Take the pipe down and cover the hole, hang up the cots, and make sure the water is all shut off and stored. Load the UTV and strap it down.
If we get a trailer the right size and built pretty heavy I think my hunting buddy and I can build the rest over the winter in our shop.
Am I crazy?
Anyone know anyone who has made an enclosed trailer into camp and a UTV hauler? I think the mobility would be awesome if it's done simply, much quicker than setting up and taking down a wall tent.
My plan is much easier to draw than write out but here is my initial plan (started 20 minutes ago so its far from complete)
-8'6"x16' enclosed trailer
-racks built on interior wall to hold 2 Cabelas big cots folded down
-removable wall tent style wood stove near a front corner with a metal plate heat shield/reflector under and behind the stove, held 1" off the floor and walls to allow air to circulate behind.
-camper style screen door and hard door on front corner opposite the wood stove
-2 windows cut near rear corners of trailer, screens on them and capable of being covered
-12V lighting
-12V water pump and 55 gallon barrel of clean water
-plastic shop style sink (fits 5 gallon bucket) with simple hose rigged up to water barrel with 12V sprayer pump to run water
-possibly a simple removable shower set-up. Thinking real simple, like a plastic tub with a PVC frame to hold a shower curtain and a solar shower bag bolted on. Fill the solar shower bag and hang it near enough the stove to warm up before the shower.
Outside the trailer on nose
-55 gallon drum on nose to hold dirty soapy water
-12V battery, wiring to charge with my 3 Goal Zero 20 panels
Coolers, sleeping bags, all the other items I think could be carried in the truck until needed. To move camp you just make darn sure the stove is out, clean, and cold. Take the pipe down and cover the hole, hang up the cots, and make sure the water is all shut off and stored. Load the UTV and strap it down.
If we get a trailer the right size and built pretty heavy I think my hunting buddy and I can build the rest over the winter in our shop.
Am I crazy?
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