To start, I will do a quick background:
I have been huge into camping and outdoors (skiing and mountain biking) and road tripping for the past 20 years
Introduced my passion for the outdoors and roughing it to my two daughters from the get go (they are now 10 and 13).
Previously, this was completed on a super budget and mix bag approach (back of car, tents, lots of tarps, cooler and ice, etc.)
During the past 10 years, I dreamt of purchasing/building an 'overland' capable setup, and how this can be achieved, which always continued to changed as priorities and realties changed (but many remained the same and many would relate):
To add to the fun, my wife has been in a PhD program in Victoria, BC from 2014-2021, and Sept of this year, she was placed in Hamilton, ON to complete a 1 year residency. As trade-off to move me away from the north-east living (I freaking love the mountains and alpines), she agreed I can finally make my dream into a reality. and we would this setup to travel across Canada on a 3 week road trip (but I had to bring 10 of her huge house plants and our 5 animals (1 dog, 1 cat, 1 bunny, 1 gerbil and 1 mouse). to had to adapt to make a setup that could work for that extreme trip, but be small enough for my weekends outings once we arrived. the kids agreed I could get the cargo trailer if they got a bunny....)
challenge accepted!
So in March 2021, I bought the cargo trailer (continental 5x10 tail wind) and began the build (knowing that I had a deadline of July 10 to have it ready for a 7000km road trip and prepare to have all our items be moved (in a shipping container) be completed in order for us to hit the road. In the coming days, I will go over the build, design, layout and what works and what does not for your entertainment and hopefully resource.
for reference, the towing vehicle is a 2010 BMW x5 diesel - which i love - plenty of space for all our gear, awd and adequate ground clearance for my needs, great fuel economy for its ability (24-28mpg on highway), and the seats fold flat and is large enough for me and the 2 kids to sleep in (I am 6'2") AND bought it with the intention to have the ability to tow a trailer if need be (425 ft-lb of torque).
but namely, I took the completed trailer and vehicle out last weekend for a 5 day camping trip (without 5 animals, 10 house plants and so many other items that we shoved in the trailer so it made the destination), which included good amount rain, and the setup exceed my expectations. As i have used this forum for much needed advice, ideas, solutions and what not, I wanted to return the favour. (but lost my phone on the trip and lost majority of the pictures and will do my best to locate pics)
I have been huge into camping and outdoors (skiing and mountain biking) and road tripping for the past 20 years
Introduced my passion for the outdoors and roughing it to my two daughters from the get go (they are now 10 and 13).
Previously, this was completed on a super budget and mix bag approach (back of car, tents, lots of tarps, cooler and ice, etc.)
During the past 10 years, I dreamt of purchasing/building an 'overland' capable setup, and how this can be achieved, which always continued to changed as priorities and realties changed (but many remained the same and many would relate):
- ability to sleep 4 people comfortable and keep all our gear dry (and the 2 dogs need a spot)
- a true 4 season camper (take it to a ski hill and camp in the parking lot)
- small / light enough for ease of traveling and fuel economy (again, taking it to a ski hill parking lot) and ability to drive 10 hours without hesitation or avoidance
- room to transport all 4 mountain bikes
- a large kitchen / cooking space - my kids (and also I) eat often and eat a lot and focus on quality / homemade meals.
- robust, strong and durable to hold up to gravel roads, very mild off road, etc. but yet, be comfortable cursing 70mph on the roadway
- to be able to setup beds in under 10 mins and do it comfortable in a heavy rain
- to be a 'base camp' and all 4 can hang out in all day long comfortable during major rain or extreme weathers (both heat and cold)
- to setup camp for a week and be self contained (no shore power namely) and i have a water filter for drinking water as required
- to do this all within a $10-15K CAD budget ($7-10K USD)
- truck with pop-up camper
- (hate the fuel economy, cooking in bad weather too small, breaking down camp to only do a day trip sucks)
- truck with canopy / pull out kitchen / sleeping platform / roof top tent
- fuel economy a tad better / very tight space and would become unorganized mess by the 2nd day / day trips difficult / not comfortable stuck inside / all 4 have to sleep in platform in winter
- suv with small trailer and 4 person rooftop tent
- did not feel confident in the 4 season ability
- suv with a fiberglass trailer
- did not feel confident in its ability to hold up on gravel roads and extended use (the axels are almost always at 80-90% capacity!) - and 4 bikes proved to be difficult - very hard to work on with fiberglass and the radius
- suv with a kamparoo
- this one was my 2 choice - but the success in bad weather with cooking and staying inside was concerning. also, finding one used was nearly impossible / and storing bikes on top works, but time consuming to setup camp once you arrive
- suv with a cargo trailer converted into a camper (as the title says, this was the road i went down)
To add to the fun, my wife has been in a PhD program in Victoria, BC from 2014-2021, and Sept of this year, she was placed in Hamilton, ON to complete a 1 year residency. As trade-off to move me away from the north-east living (I freaking love the mountains and alpines), she agreed I can finally make my dream into a reality. and we would this setup to travel across Canada on a 3 week road trip (but I had to bring 10 of her huge house plants and our 5 animals (1 dog, 1 cat, 1 bunny, 1 gerbil and 1 mouse). to had to adapt to make a setup that could work for that extreme trip, but be small enough for my weekends outings once we arrived. the kids agreed I could get the cargo trailer if they got a bunny....)
challenge accepted!
So in March 2021, I bought the cargo trailer (continental 5x10 tail wind) and began the build (knowing that I had a deadline of July 10 to have it ready for a 7000km road trip and prepare to have all our items be moved (in a shipping container) be completed in order for us to hit the road. In the coming days, I will go over the build, design, layout and what works and what does not for your entertainment and hopefully resource.
for reference, the towing vehicle is a 2010 BMW x5 diesel - which i love - plenty of space for all our gear, awd and adequate ground clearance for my needs, great fuel economy for its ability (24-28mpg on highway), and the seats fold flat and is large enough for me and the 2 kids to sleep in (I am 6'2") AND bought it with the intention to have the ability to tow a trailer if need be (425 ft-lb of torque).
but namely, I took the completed trailer and vehicle out last weekend for a 5 day camping trip (without 5 animals, 10 house plants and so many other items that we shoved in the trailer so it made the destination), which included good amount rain, and the setup exceed my expectations. As i have used this forum for much needed advice, ideas, solutions and what not, I wanted to return the favour. (but lost my phone on the trip and lost majority of the pictures and will do my best to locate pics)