I live in rural Florida near Lake Okeechobee. My favorite local state park is Highlands Hammock, a beautiful 9,000 acre swamp that opened in 1931. My wife and I just got a Honda Element, bolted on a hitch, and bought us a shiny new 5x8 trailer. I plan to build a variant on the 1947 Trailer for Two. Our two sons will get to stay in a tent. Due to weight and budget concerns, I plan to make it from thin exterior plywood and cover it with canvas and paint.
A very big 'Thank You' to Rowerwet for his great tutorials on PMF. that got me dig around and find some helpful classic boatbuilding sites that had a lot of info, one is a business - I am not involved in it in any way, but I learned stuff just looking through the supplies he sells.
http://forums.wcha.org/forum.php
http://www.woodandcanvascanoes.com
I spent the last few weeks avoiding house and yard work by trying to read everything on this forum, it was totally worth it.
My wife and I are starving artists (although I don't look like I'm starving) which means we happily do just about any odd job we can get our hands on.
We used to camp a lot with the SCA, a medieval recreation group, before the boys were born.
I am certainly not a carpenter, but I don't let that stop me from rendering wood into sawdust.
I included a pic of the trailer because I heard you luv pics. It recently went on sale and was the most cost effective 5x8 with 13" wheels I could get locally.
At 400lbs, its a little heavy but I will take the tailgate off. It is one of the recommended trailers and the sale is supposed to continue for a few months.
The axle is 12" back from center, so that is another plus for me. I am not involved with that business other than as a customer.
I haven't started building it yet, but I am already planning on making a "Real" one with a custom frame after I'm done making the newbie mistakes on the first one.
So many awesome builds and beautiful originals here, thanks again.
Mars