Thanks, Joan!
I'm keeping my eye on that website.
SoCalGalcas wrote:Hey Anne, I am very happy with your decision to buy a small trailer to hook to your van!!! I remember we talked of this at Eagle Lake! I am so happy with my little units I figure you will be too!!! Keep us in the loop! lyn
Lyn, yes we talked about this at the Eagle Lake GTG. It was a fun time there. I really like the smaller, more simple units.
What make is your unit? I know we talked about this too, and you told me, but I have forgotten. I decided to broaden my search a bit, thinking that the fiberglass Casita's are probably more expensive than a more conventional unit because they are more "specialized", being fiberglass. Although one really can't compare apples to oranges, it does not seem at first glance that a Casita is that much more expensive than a stick-built trailer. Casita's seem right in the ballpark - and I personally prefer the way that the molded fiberglass trailers are made.
Unfortunately, Casita's are few and far between here in California. I found one that - might - fit the bill on the Salt Lake City Craig's List. In the heat of the moment I considered jumping into my van to make the two-day drive to Salt Lake to take a look. Then reality thinking set back in. For example, one can never tell - for sure - what a unit is going to be like (unless buying new, of course) without seeing it in person (no matter the owner's wonderful words, or the posted photos). Or if it might get sold while I was driving there. I would hate to make a four-day round trip to look at a trailer and find it to be junk - or to be no longer there at all.
So I guess I will just need to wait until one comes up for sale here in northern California. They do, every so often.
One thing that is rather bothersome that I have often discovered when looking at used Casita's, is that people seem to feel free to make their own interior "modificaitons" to the unit.
This generally entails cutting a hole (or multiple holes - both large and small) in the interior fiberglass walls in order to install a something-or-other (maybe like a big stereo).
What people don't seem to understand is that the Casita is of "monocoque" construction. A Casita is not built on a wooden frame (as is a stick-built trailer) but rather the fiberglass body itself acts as the frame. When one goes cutting holes in the fiberglass, it can seriously weaken the structure of the trailer, especially over time as the trailer bounces down the road. Kind of like peeling back the "skin" of a stick-built trailer, and taking out a piece or two of the wooden frame.
Not good. Can definitely lead to cracking of the fiberglass, and possibly even failure.
Still on the hunt! Thanks!
Anne