Crash,
No, I wish I could, but the notification came out late, and I was already committed to the Midwest gathering.
I can only get a limited amount of time a year.
Are you coming to the Indiana campout in July?
I'm glad to hear you weren't really serious about the teardrop description thing!
Everyone has their own opinion about what a teardrop is, and what restored means, and what is pretty and what is not.
At some point there
should be a line drawn to describe a teardrop, as it either is, or isn't.
And when that line is drawn, though there may be some disappointment, it shouldn't turn into something ugly with people getting hurt feelings.
People that own 1957 Chevy’s and have a club for them will tell anyone that has a 1955 or 56 Chevy, that while close; it just isn't a 57...
And that is both realistic, and reasonable.
No one that owns something other than a 57 should be upset because theirs "isn't".
In that section of the old car world, many of the owners get together and share those three years as a club, since they are so close in style, and they all share a similar passion.
It is the same way in the teardrop/tiny trailer world.
We may have a true teardrop, or a close to being a teardrop, or a tiny travel trailer.
We all share a similar passion, and get along great at gatherings, and as friends, no matter what kind of trailer we own.
In the end, that is the most important result.
Rob
Waiting for "someday" will leave you on your deathbed wondering why you didn't just rearrange your priorities and enjoy the time you had, instead of waiting for a "better" time to come along...