Thank you for the kind words. We're hoping to get some "late winter/really, really early Spring" camping done in the next few weeks. Most of the state parks up this way (central Wisconsin) are closed until April 1st or the 15th, so we'll probably make our maiden voyage to our favorite--Govenor Dodge State Park. They keep some sites open for winter. Meanwhile, I've got some bedding and curtains to sew up, and getting everything in it's place. When it warms up a bit, we might do a night or two of garage camping.
The hardest part of bringing the camper home was sitting at the DMV this afternoon, waiting to see how the folks there were going to register and plate it. Yes, I know, my teardrop didn't have to be registered or carry plates. It's way under the weight limit for those requirements, BUT---for the $60 to title it, and the $13.50 a year to keep plates on it, I figured it would keep out of state cops from pulling us over. Bob and I like to keep what's his, his and what's mine, mine, for the sake of separate financial and estate planning. The fun part was watching the original clerk at the DMV take my paperwork and photo's (thank goodness I brought some photo's!) to the other clerks asking what to do with it, then finally taking it to the gal who orignally worked for the state patrol. According to the original clerk, my teardrop was (according to the ex-state patrol gal), "pushing the limit" as to whether it was an RV, or a trailer to haul stuff in. Apparently, as long as more than 50 percent of the trailer was "living space" it could be registered as an Rec. vehicle. The front cargo area, and the galley kitchen area were "problemsome". After a bunch of going back and forth, they finally decided it was an RV and it's sitting in the garage with plates on it now.
