I've wanted a Weekender since discovering the world of tiny trailers, but having tent camped for two seasons, my girlfriend and I are getting tired of sleeping in a ground tent due to the usual disasters that seem to target people in tents. The extra effort of gathering all the camping gear from its various hiding places, packing the truck after work, arriving after dark and having to set up with flashlights and headlamps and the river that always seems to spring up directly underneath the tent regardless of how carefully we select the spot on the parking pad have been detrimental to our camping experience and we'd like to find a solution.
I would build a Weekender this fall/winter, but our garage is packed with my lawn equipment and my plan to build a shed this summer has been delayed until at least the spring due to more critical house projects. So one option is begin building a tear next spring/summer, hoping to have it campable late in the 2013 season, if we're lucky, but spring 2014 if anything delays the project. Unfortunately my basement isn't laid out very well, and 4x10' sheets of plywood could not negotiate a critical turn.
The other option is a small expedition trailer and roof top tent, like schaney's Explorer Pod build. I could do the large plywood cuts on the driveway and handle the trimming, fitting, primer, first paint coat, biscuit and kreg prep, etc, in the basement without much difficulty, and then assemble it on the trailer over a fair-weather weekend with two more coats of paint once assembled to seal the seams. Being able to work in the basement regardless of weather would be a big help, and the smaller scope of construction would mean a high probability of being campable in early spring. The roof top tent purchase would be a bitter pill to swallow, they seem to average $1k+, but the total build cost seems to be about the same between the two options. If we ever decided to upgrade to a tear, we could sell the trailer and keep the RTT for housing additional campers or sell it separately, depending on circumstances.
So it boils down to: Should we camp another season in a ground tent to have a teardrop in 2014+, or compromise and have a heavy-duty tent, but sleep off the ground and our gear always packed for 2013+?
Any thoughts?