26 year old who lives further from the beach than she'd like
Does a lot of walking
Takes aesthetic comfort in small, cozy spaces
Has 3-day weekends every weekend
The Dog:
65 lbs
Shar-pei mix
Walks a lot with the girl
Has never seen a beach and does not know what the fuss is about
Would like to get out of the yard more
(Looks like she's half-hippo)
The Goal:
Sun, sand, surf, and breeze
The Problem:
Expensive!!! accomodations
Most hotels are not dog-friendy
Can camp for free, but at the mercy of the elements
Car cannot tow a traditional camper
The Need:
A sturdy vessel
wind-and-water tight
capable of supporting Girl and Dog for several days camping
And thus begins: Project Dashaway!
I was going to call this Project Runaway as a pun but a quick forum search revealed that The Runaway is already a thing. So this is the Dashaway! My build project for a tiny trailer to tow behind my Hyundai Sonata to weekly (or at least monthly) 3 day 2 night camping sessions in the sand.
I'm doing a lot of reading in the forums and I must say you guys have quite a lot to read! But as I was going along I began to realize if I'm to begin making any decisions about the build here I need to make a list of priorities, so I can start crunching numbers on designs. So I have started my build thread here, which at this point is just a checklist of stuff to consider for the camper. If you happen accross this thread and you, in your esteemed experience, might point my search to more fruitful boughs to speed my searching and researching up, I'll be exceedingly pleased. Or you can just lurk and comment, really, anything's fine. =>
Below is my list and the categories thereof. Following the list will be a series of questions I'm asking myself and currently seeking answers for in the many posts of this forum as well as external websites.
NEEDS:
Lightweight
Roof Vent
Windows - almost everywhere!
Space to sit inside without bonking my head on something
Mattress that can be put to the side
Insulated
Exterior capable of withstanding extended beach stays - no shade, salty and sandy wind! Should be easy to repair or recoat when it eventually does start to wear.
The roof vent is a no brainer - a necessity for all Teardrops! Windows are a personal need, and I'll need as many of them as I can concievably fit without sacrificing the benefit of the insulation and making a mobile greenhouse/camper roaster. The lightweight is important because my Hyundai Sonata can only tow 1000 lbs - and it is 100k miles so less than that would be nice. The car still has a long way to go but I'd like to not overstress the engine by pushing limits. I don't want to HAVE to ay down in my trailer all the time I'm in it, and if I can sit up comfortably cross-legged the 65 lb mutt I have will be comfortable walking about. Also, its Texas where I live and in any direction for about 6 hours at the least, so keeping the sun from turning the camper into a little wooden hotbox is a good thing.
The mattress, at least in the section that I can sit up in, should be able to be moved to the side so I can let the dog play on the nice solid floor and reduce the sand-in-bedding issue.
NOT NEEDS BUT REALLY REALLY WANTS:
Roof Vent fan
Interior Lights
Solar Power for lights and fan
Windows that open, with screens
I'd like to have interior powered lights. I could use a camper lamp hanging like a tent chandelier in a pinch but actual lights with a switch are right at the top of my list - and enough battery power to give me reading light long into the night: I am very nocturnal, haha. I can use those LED running light strips or small LED lights, they don't have to draw a lot of power - its a small space, after all. Since the places I plan to camp are essentially stretches of beach where you're allowed to park a camper for free (for x days) but there are no hookups, if I implement lights its gonna need battery and if I have something like a battery bank I charge before leaving I might as well try to charge it from solar while I'm out. And if I have some power that I'm towing with me then I should put a fan in my roof vent and power that too.
And if I've got windows and I'm at the beach they should be able to be opened and let that sea breeze work its magic.
WANTS BUT ITS OKAY IF CAN'T HAVES:
Shore power to lights/vent fan/batteries
Shore water to galley sink
Electrical system for a few galley appliances
A plug in the sleep cabin to charge phone/computer
Little spigot by door for rinsing off feet
A/C
Ceramic heater
There are a few places I'd like to camp at the beach (or elsewhere in the US) that have hookups so shore power and water would be lovely for those instances. When I've got shore power, I might as well be able to cook and not live off just sandwiches and cereal while I'm camping. For the purposes of lightweightedness this will probably be just a hot plate, and maybe a tiny one person crock-pot. And if I've got shore power lets add in movie-watching world-connectivity equipment into the sleeper cabin. And since I'll be using this primarily at the beach, if I've got shore water lets run a little pipe to out by the door so I don't have to unplug the hose to rinse myself off before trying to climb in the cabin. Also, its Texas where I live and in any direction for about 6 hours at the least, so if I've got shore power, we can do more for temperature control than vents and open windows (weight permitting, let's add that A/C.)
And I have people in Colorado I'd love to go camp near and see, so if I add shore power I should probably get one of those little ceramic wall-mounted heaters.
"WOULD BE COOL"S but "PROBABLY CAN'T HAPPEN"S
Bigger Interior Space
I'd like to build something more akin to a Wanderer or a Midget - the bed cross-ways on the trailer, the ability to sit in an actual chair-like structure, the ability to place a toilet somewhere. Those features at that size would make multi-day campouts at the beach much more enjoyable. Problem is - everything comes down to needing a lightweight. The slightly wider and taller plans would be on my NEEDS list if I thought it was likely I could design one lightweight enough.
So that's my list. Right now I'm trying to get weight estimates for various construction types. I'm leaning towards a Foamie for the reported lightweightedness of that sort of build and its built-in insulation, but digging through build threads to try and find out what some previous builds weigh in at is hard. I'm also considering Reflectex style (foil-bubble-foil) insulation, with a thin frame, thin outer skin, insulation flat against outer skin, and then a dead air space of about an inch or so before the inner skin. since its a small enough space this should be sufficient to keep sun-baking energy from heating the cabin TOO much, in theory. Looking for info on anybody who might have tried a similar build, or for any Foamies who have tested their rigs in very warm weather and direct sunlight.
What about running Shore connections through a Foamie? Research Research Research. *dives back into the threads*