
Does this describe you?
(1) You hike frequently, so you spend a lot of time driving to trailheads, many of which are remote, some of which are accessible only via unpaved roads. You ask more of your vehicle than do most people. You either own a vehicle with high clearance and perhaps 4WD, or you often wish you did.
(2) You backpack as well as dayhike, so you’re not just a hiker, you’re a camper. You enjoy frontcountry camping (between home and trailhead) as well as backcountry camping. If you don’t own an RV, you often wish you did.
If our assumptions about you are correct, you’re much like us, so perhaps the research we’ve recently done on tow vehicles (TVs) and travel trailers (TTs) will interest you. First, however, we’ll explain our background so you’ll understand our subjective commentary.
For most of our lives, Kath and I have owned smallish, gas-sipping vehicles. And we’ve done the vast majority of our camping in tents—not just while backpacking, but while travelling for months throughout western North America and Europe.
We briefly owned a Volkswagen Eurovan Westfalia camper but found it desperately underpowered and woefully under-equipped for long camping journeys. Then, for a few years, we owned a 4WD Dodge Ram V10 truck saddled with a Bigfoot camper. We loved having our mobile basecamp waiting for us at the trailhead after a long hike. Ahhh, we could relax. We were out of the cold, the wind, the bugs. We could cook a proper meal. We could take a hot shower while still far from civilization. And we could sleep in a real bed, off the ground, in a secure shelter heated by a furnace. That was bliss, especially at the end of a backpack trip, and particularly during long stints of guidebook fieldwork. Having a basecamp at every trailhead actually enabled us to hike more often, explore farther, and do so with greater energy and enthusiasm.
But the Ram was a thirsty beast. A nearly constant 11 mpg became financially stressful and ethically uncomfortable. Plus a truck/camper combination is not sufficiently nimble to travel the roughest roads accessing the most distant trailheads. So we temporarily scaled back to a Toyota Rav4 and resumed tent camping.
Our V6 Rav has better-than average ground clearance, 4WD capability up to 40 kph, and gets acceptable gas mileage. It also has an astonishing towing capacity for its modest size: 3,500 lbs. So our intention was to eventually buy an ultralight TT—perhaps a T@b teardrop trailer, or something similar—to pull behind the Rav.
An ultralight TT, we figured, would be the ideal, mobile basecamp: economical, arguably eco-conscious, yet vastly more comfortable than our tent. When necessary, we could leave the TT at a campground, then—unencumbered—drive challenging roads to remote trailheads.
After four years of driving the Rav and camping in our tent, we need a change. Because the Rav isn’t a serious off-pavement machine, we knew we’d have to hoof it the final (and sometimes considerable) distance up some 4WD roads to far-flung trailheads. But we’ve done that too often. Our work demands that we spend our precious daylight hours hiking the trails, not the access roads. Plus, after seriously studying TTs, we’ve begun to reconsider the Rav as a TV. Yes, there are many, small, ultralight TTs the Rav can pull, but finding one that not only has the features we deem essential but also appeals to us personally has proven difficult.
Most ultralight TTs have a cheap appearance because they’re almost universally made of white fiberglass, which undeniably looks like plastic and ages equally fast. And many ultralight TTs feel cheap because they in fact are cheap. Little or no insulation, water tanks that are neither heated nor insulated, thin mattresses, no front windows, press-board cabinetry, etc.
RV manufacturers have the same modus operandi as home developers: Use flimsy materials, poor-quality furnishings, and zero imagination to extrude a soul-deadening supply of white, seemingly plastic boxes that—yawn—all look alike. No wonder most RVs rapidly lose substantial value.
We don’t believe cheap materials are necessary to achieve light weight. Nor can we comprehend why the interiors of these ultralight TTs are almost universally bad imitations of 1970s home decor. Why can’t an RV simply be an RV? Why must it try to look like a dated, tasteless, ranch-style home, and fail to achieve even that absurdly misguided goal?
For that matter, why do most RV manufacturers persist with all those childish, gaudy, exterior graphics? And what’s with all the ridiculous names? Cutesy misspellings (Komfort, Fuzion, Kountry Aire, N’Tense, Phenix, Starflyte), pompous monikers (Presidential, Rolling Thunder, Destiny, Tsunami), and outright threats (Avenger, Prowler, Conquest, Outlaw) seem to be the industry norm.
A company calling itself Entegra Coach managed to misspell an RV name that attempts to be both pompous and threatening: the Entimidator. Riiight. I really want to tug around a giant RV, essentially a mobile billboard, announcing in bold, colourful letters that I have an inferiority complex and am laughably illiterate.

T@b
T@b (www.tab-rv.com) is a gulp of fresh air, and not just because of its original, intriguingly inscrutable name. Their ultralight TTs have a refreshing, retro appearance, and their interiors are decidedly contemporary, seemingly Scandanavian. (If Ikea designed a TT, it would look like and feel this). They’re also very light. Though construction quality seems adequate, they clearly aren’t designed to go off-pavement. (Check out the minimal clearance between the tires and wheel wells). They also have only a tiny fridge and no shower, so the T@b is not a trailer that will serve us for extended backroads sojourns. We applaud the T@b for dispensing with an onboard toilet. (You don’t need a toilet when you’re in the woods, and frontcountry campgrounds have toilets.) But the T@b is expensive for what you get. A larger, more fully-outfitted version called the T@da was briefly available, but the manufacturer (Thor Industries) has discontinued the T@b and the T@da.

Rpod
The Rpod (www.forestriverinc.com) seems to be the T@b’s successor. Its growing popularity is impressive. It’s certainly a more complete home than the T@b. The Rpod has a big fridge, huge holding tanks, a powerful furnace, a wet bath (combination shower and toilet)—everything one expects in an RV except insulated, heated tanks. Yet the Rpod is still light, with a GVWR (gross vehicle weight rating) just barely within our Rav’s towing capability. You can buy a new Rpod 171 (our favourite model) in Calgary for about $17,000. But we won’t. The Rpod just looks and feels too cheap. Yes, it has a shower, but the stall is hunch-your-shoulders narrow. Lacking a front window, the Rpod feels like a panic room. And the damn thing looks like a child’s birthday-party favour. Stepping out of it, I felt I should have red hair and a bulbous nose that honks when I squeeze it. We’ve nicknamed the Rpod the “the beachball.”

Camplite
Another ultralight TT we’ve considered is the Camplite (www.livinlite.com), which we’ve nicknamed “the tin can” because it’s the opposite of the Rpod. The Camplite is contructed almost entirely of aluminum. It’s strong yet light. And there’s nothing cheap about it, though it remains reasonably priced for what you get. Outwardly it has a distinctive, boxy, utilitarian appearance. But the interior has an extremely cold, industrial atmosphere. It looks and feels like the rear section of a passenger jet, where the stewards load their beverage carts, and the pre-cooked meals are stored in hatches: not a place you really want to hang out. Sadly, the shower in the Camplite is as small as the one in the Rpod. And the Camplite has a fridge and heater that run only on electricity, not on propane, which severely limits how long you can “boondock,” “drycamp” or, as we call it, “free camp” in the backcountry. (With your lights, fridge and furnace all draining a single, deep-cycle battery, that battery will be flat dead too soon.) Insulated / heated tanks? Nope. The Camplite is clearly intended for use in temperate climes at commercial, frontcountry campgrounds bristling with electrical sockets. That’s just not us.

Northern Lite
Yet another TT we briefly considered is the ultralight 16-footer made by Northern Lite (www.northern-lite.com). Northern Lite makes superb truck campers. But in our opinion, they blew it when they designed their trailer without a wet bath. They offer an outside shower as an option. But taking a shower outside is not an option for most of us most of the time. You could perhaps understand an RV manufacturer in Florida making that mistake. But Northern Lite is a Canadian company. They should know that an outside shower on a crisp, fall evening in the Canadian Rockies would not be a pleasure; it would be torture. Other manufacturers fit showers into tiny TTs. Attention Northern Lite: a shower please?

Escape
Escape Trailer Industries (www.escapetrailer.com) is another Canadian company that builds ultralight 15-, 17-, and 19-ft TTs. Even the 15-footer has an optional shower. They’re a small company with a strong reputation for personal service. When you order your Escape, you can choose from a list of options, so you essentially purchase a custom TT. But the Escape isn’t the answer for us. Escape TTs have no insulation to speak of, and the holding tanks are neither insulated nor heated. Delivery can take months from the time you order. And we think the Escape is way too expensive for what you get. A neighbour who’s happy with his Escape summed up our objection to it when he described it as “a summer trailer only.” In the Canadian Rockies, summer is pitifully brief.

Casita
The Casita (www.casitatraveltrailers.com) is a molded, fiberglass TT similar to the Escape. We’ve spoken with many Casita owners who are very content. But we rejected the Casita for largely the same reasons we did the Escape: little or no insulation, holding tanks that are neither insulated nor heated, and a price that seems to exceed the value. The Casita also has a slightly less homey atmosphere than the Escape. There’s so much exposed fiberglass (rather than wood) in the Casita interior that it feels like a small, spartan sailboat. And, while not a deciding factor, we find the Casita company’s relentless, flag-waving nationalism obnoxious.
After seriously considering and eventually rejecting the T@b, Rpod, Camplite, Northern Lite, Escape, and Casita, we’ve turned our attention to the TT we’ve always found most appealing: the Airstream.
TO BE CONTINUED
Hello,
I couldn’t help to chime in a bit and let you know what I have done, which is basically come up with the hybrid between the RV and the Tent in the Edelweiss Campervan that I rent. Fuel economy and ease of driving that rivals a car, but a bed in the back. Basically car camping without the tent!
Posted by Bob Swan on November 22nd, 2010.
Hi Bob, I checked out your website. Looks like you offer a great service. Because Kath and I are in the field for long periods every year, we want an onboard shower. But for anyone who wants to rent, rather than own, and is willing to forgo an onboard shower for the duration of their journey, http://www.campervannorthamerica.com seems worth considering. — Craig
Posted by hikingcamping on November 22nd, 2010.
Interesting post. We, too, are long-time outdoor enthusiasts who do a lot of front country camping as part of our travels. Setting up the tent in the dark, in the rain, after an extended back country trip is definitely getting old. I love the compact, lightweight t@b, but agree that a shower is a must. It sounds, from later posts, that you may have settled on an Airstream, something I didn’t even consider, as I assumed, new or used, they would be out of our price range, but I’ll have to take a look. I’m curious though – have you looked at the Boler units, and if so, what’s your opinion?
Posted by Jody on March 3rd, 2011.
Hi Jody, thanks for following our blog and for commenting. We too were smitten by the T@b but decided a shower was essential given that we’re constantly returning to camp sweaty and dirty after a long day of hiking. Yes, we did settle on an Airstream. We discovered that if you shop patiently and carefully, it’s possible to find a used but beautifully cared for Airstream for about the same price of, say, a new Escape or Casita. Yet the Airstream is far more comfortable. An Airstream, however, even a 16-footer, requires a more robust tow vehicle than do trailers such as the Escape or Casita, because the Airstream is a bit heavier. I’ll explain more soon — when I complete the blog post about the decision we made and how its worked out so far.
Posted by hikingcamping on March 3rd, 2011.
Anybody who owns a T@b or a similar trailer that lacks a shower should include a camping shower kit to their gear. A camping shower kit includes a pop-up tent and a solar shower bag or propane water heater or any other means to heat up the water.
Of course if you’re going to be camping in cold spots showering outside could be a bit uncomfortable. Otherwise it’s a cheap solution for those who don’t have the budget to spend on bigger TTs.
Posted by Joel T. on March 30th, 2011.
I had gone through a similar experience . Tired of the tent camping, sleeping on the ground etc. Looked at a lot of the similar trailers and how some of them are cheaply made for the cost. I too have settled on the Airstream and have no regrets what so ever. I love it! It is hard to find the smaller ones used and for sale , people tend to hold onto those. I intend to pass mine on to my children if it ever comes to a point will no longer be able to use it. The only problem now is i can’t get out often enough. When i get to the point can retire i want to travel the country in my Airstream.
Posted by Kathy on May 4th, 2011.
Hubby and I have a 2005 Airstream Safari Sport – 22′ long and under 4,000 lbs — and we love, love, love it! And we are able to tow her with our Toyota Tacoma, which gets around 18mpg when towing. A shower, refrig/freezer (ice cubes!), heater, air conditioning, a queen size bed: what luxuries for former tent campers. We have taken her on gravel roads but nothing I would consider “off road”…
Posted by AirstreamPattie on May 4th, 2011.
We just bought a brand new Airstream 684 and we absolutely love it. Cool camping with all the luxury where ever you want. If you are looking for renting an Airstream in the UK, have a look at http://www.chillout-in-an-airstream.com
We will take it to a location of your choice.
Posted by Heike Heinzelmann on May 6th, 2011.
Might want to check in again on the new Camplite trailers. I too am looking for a small, lightweight trailer to get us (and our future brood) to front country/provincial campgrounds etc without feeling the need for a massive dinosaur remains sucking tow vehicle.
In my search I’ve so far narrowed it down to the Escape (though my reservations about it are similar to yours) and the Camplites.
The new years models appear to have 3 way fridges etc and the interiors have been warmed up a touch with new wall panels/fabrics etc. It still won’t be mistaken for a cozy or opulent lounge but it’s definitely an improvement. They also appear to be built like ultra-light little tanks, I LOVE that there’s nothing to rot or rust.
Posted by JRob on June 28th, 2011.
Hi Rob… Thanks for commenting. Please let us and our readers know what you decide, and how the decision works out. Glad to hear Camplite is warming up their trailer interiors. Have you actually been inside one? — Craig
Posted by hikingcamping on June 28th, 2011.