Hi again everyone -- I hope this post finds you all well and happy!
After a short appearance and then a 2-month absence, I'm stopping in again, coming up for a breath from having been submersed in a huge and intensive vat of research. I've found my trailer and it just had my name on it from first sight. It's been fully prepped and spiffed, new awning, new slide topper, Seal Tech tested, new Group 27 battery (it'll do fine for the time being), new propane tanks and it even already has an electric tongue jack (yay!). It's getting a Blue Ox Sway Pro hitch put onto it, and assuming no glitches in schedules, it should be here in my driveway Tuesday.
I haven't named her yet, but she's a 26-ft. 2005 with a perfect layout for the way I live and play. Short enough to fit into a few more wooded ilk campsites but with its slider, a tad of expanded floor space. LOTS of storage for its size. I took a moisture meter, mirror, flashlight, measuring tape, camera, etc. with me when I first looked at it and while she's "like new" inside, she has two water infections that are being considered in the price I'm paying. (That moisture meter was the best $40 I ever spent, it ditzed one trailer completely.) But regarding these two infections, after I find my truck, I'm taking her to the Midwest to visit a friend I've made who's been EXTREMELY helpful in the last 6 weeks as an advisor. He works on these issues, and he will give me a "friend rate" on fixing it. I will be his assistant extra hand, arm or holder-of-tools-and-lemonade, and do whatever grunt work makes it go faster and easier. (I've nicknamed him "Professor" because he knows a ton and has for some reason taken me under his wing as a pet rock. lol.
So now the search for the truck goes into more full tilt mode. I've become partial to GMC/Chevy so am looking for a good used 2500HD 6.0 with 4.1 axle ratio, either extended or crew cab (around here, gotta add "and one that's not been used for plowing!"). I hope the truck finding angels will like me because I'm not finding used affordable truck searching to be fun, at all. Frustrating, in fact.
Have not so much as even started on the highly dreaded, overwhelming task of going through this albatross house full of STUFF to begin the ruthless purge, but among all my reading of RVing related things my daughter gave me "The Japanese Art of Tidying" which is an odd word for a philosophical and practical systematic method to get yourself over the "yeah but..." that can happen in purging "THINGS." It advocates approaching the task by category, not by room, and it makes sense to me. She suggests starting with all clothing regardless of where it lives. (First category). And ending as the last category with "Sentimental things." And has suggestions for "get over it." Some of them are actually funny, but when you think about it, make sense. (Interesting book for anyone else who might be starting to transition from being a liflelong stick/brick dweller to nomadic.
So that's my update. Again I hope everyone is well!