kevin_standlee: (Rolling Stone)
kevin_standlee ([personal profile] kevin_standlee) wrote2019-01-11 01:12 pm
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Ity Bity Travel Trailer

While walking to the fire station last night to attend the Fire Board meeting, I took a picture of the smallest travel trailer I've ever seen.

Tiny Trailer

A bit of research about the Lil' Loafer finds that these trailers have a small kitchen area (three-burner stove and oven) and a dinette that folds into a bed. There's no toilet or washroom, and Lisa thinks they probably didn't have either water tanks or holding tanks, and thus could only be fully used in a park setting where they could "moor" to groundside utilities and give the user access to showers and toilets.

It's a cute little thing, but the kind of RV living Lisa and I have done requires something in which you can at times go off-grid rather than having to go from RV park to RV park. But it's probably a very light tow, easily towable by car rather than needing a truck.
gridlore: (Burning_Man)

[personal profile] gridlore 2019-01-12 03:44 am (UTC)(link)
We were looking at these before buying the Free Trailer Beowulf. Decided it was easier to pack a good camp stove and kitchen.
clothsprogs: (Default)

[personal profile] clothsprogs 2019-01-14 09:09 pm (UTC)(link)
That's positively English in its sizing.

Teddy
auntie_m: Steampunk Head Shot (Default)

[personal profile] auntie_m 2019-01-24 10:08 pm (UTC)(link)
There are ones slightly bigger than that, that had a wet bath, so holding tanks and everything. Technically, a big SUV or minivan can tow them. Your van could probably do it. The modern building techniques have lightened trailer components considerably.
But they are really small, not much storage, basically weekend usage.