SeaRubi
Explorer
No offense meant to anyone, but how old are you? Your mindset towards 4-wheeling and exploration definitely changes as you get older, and as your family grows. I maintain that the Maggy will make a lot more sense for you and your wife. "Glamping" as these younger guys like to call it with sneers and jeers actually makes a lot of sense and gets SWMBO out on the trail.
At the worst, just keep the tent and rig a pulley system in a carport or garage to take it off and put it back on. If you sell it you'll regret it.
A friend of mine, a former Chef, has a Maggiolina on an 100 series Land Cruiser with an EZ awning and it's a great setup. Having to operate a hand crank vs. pitching a tent every night in the dark - there's no comparison. That time is better spent chatting, pouring booze, and cooking dinner! He had nothing but praise for this particluar RTT on a recent trip from Seattle, WA to Nova Scotia and back. Their children are in college, now, and the various accouterments with the kitchen setup, RTT, awning, fridge etc. make long distance trips much less costly than seeing the states in hotels and keeps mama happy. My 10 or so other wheeling buddies all love theirs, too. It makes wheeling tight tree lined trails a problem, and there are areas in the PNW where you don't want to go with that much weight (rimrock), but for the most part it works out.
I guess it depends on what your goals are, but basing your decisions off these young fashionistas and a questionable sidehill picture seems pretty lame. Sinuhe, no offense, buddy, but if you have 5~6k of land rover anchoring you from up-hill, you didn't need to unload what must've been 200lbs max off the rack to winch forward. Tell me I'm wrong but you got spooked and chickened out
Try that maneuver with two blown tires on the down-hill side, a busted rear diff, a loaded roof-rack, only a hi-lift and strap to belay from up hill, and terrain rocky enough to warrant winching down hill. Oh yeah - it's dark, too. Then we can talk pucker.
In the past I've always been against roof-racks, snorkels, RTT's, and anything else that might suggest that otherwise I was on trail for anything else besides the sheer hell of it, including being top-down in my Jeep in the snow. Talk about low COG. These days I've come around - bring on the fridge, the RTT, the on-board shower, and all the other little things that make it nice for children and high maintenance urban dwelling females. My 15th anniversary comes up in just a few days, I guess I had my share of hard-core. My daughter is 9 and she's had a lot of FUN with other kids, too, in the tree-house enclave perched atop my buddies D90 while out on milder trips. On one trip, they just made their way down the different rigs exploring the RTT's and using FRS radios to coordinate clandestine maneuvers.
At any rate, do what makes sense for you and your overall goals. I live by the seat of my pants in general - impulse to me is usually long-term.
my .02
cheers
-ike
At the worst, just keep the tent and rig a pulley system in a carport or garage to take it off and put it back on. If you sell it you'll regret it.
A friend of mine, a former Chef, has a Maggiolina on an 100 series Land Cruiser with an EZ awning and it's a great setup. Having to operate a hand crank vs. pitching a tent every night in the dark - there's no comparison. That time is better spent chatting, pouring booze, and cooking dinner! He had nothing but praise for this particluar RTT on a recent trip from Seattle, WA to Nova Scotia and back. Their children are in college, now, and the various accouterments with the kitchen setup, RTT, awning, fridge etc. make long distance trips much less costly than seeing the states in hotels and keeps mama happy. My 10 or so other wheeling buddies all love theirs, too. It makes wheeling tight tree lined trails a problem, and there are areas in the PNW where you don't want to go with that much weight (rimrock), but for the most part it works out.
I guess it depends on what your goals are, but basing your decisions off these young fashionistas and a questionable sidehill picture seems pretty lame. Sinuhe, no offense, buddy, but if you have 5~6k of land rover anchoring you from up-hill, you didn't need to unload what must've been 200lbs max off the rack to winch forward. Tell me I'm wrong but you got spooked and chickened out
In the past I've always been against roof-racks, snorkels, RTT's, and anything else that might suggest that otherwise I was on trail for anything else besides the sheer hell of it, including being top-down in my Jeep in the snow. Talk about low COG. These days I've come around - bring on the fridge, the RTT, the on-board shower, and all the other little things that make it nice for children and high maintenance urban dwelling females. My 15th anniversary comes up in just a few days, I guess I had my share of hard-core. My daughter is 9 and she's had a lot of FUN with other kids, too, in the tree-house enclave perched atop my buddies D90 while out on milder trips. On one trip, they just made their way down the different rigs exploring the RTT's and using FRS radios to coordinate clandestine maneuvers.
At any rate, do what makes sense for you and your overall goals. I live by the seat of my pants in general - impulse to me is usually long-term.
my .02
cheers
-ike