No, actually. I don't miss our tent trailer. Thats not to say that I'm not nostalgic for it. I really enjoyed it while we had it. It was a great trailer and we had a lot of fun with it. We did a lot of mods and really made it a great place to camp.
I don't miss:
- Setting up/tearing down. It was often 30 minutes to setup and almost 45 to tear down.
- Forgetting to pull out the awning before cranking the roof and then having to stand on a lawn chair to unzip it and set it up
- Setting my truck keys on the roof, then cranking up the roof and then not being able to remember where I left my keys
- Cranking down some, pushing in canvas, then cranking down some more, then pushing in the canvas again.
- Setting up or tearing down in the rain.
- Storage: we had things in bins on the floor of the trailer that had to be removed every time we set up.
I'm sorry, David, but the things you've mentioned don't bug me.
- Trips to the dump station. Honestly, I don't mind it. Mind you, I never minded emptying the porta potti either.
- Reduced mileage. Meh. I really don't care about paying 30-40% more for gasoline. Most of our trips are 2-3 hours from home, which means an extra 20-30 bucks per trip. I paid just under 15 grand for the trailer... Hell, I pay $670/yr to store the trailer. I'm not going to complain about an extra $500/yr for gas to lug the trailer around.
- Hook-ups. If there's electrical, I'll hook up. Water and sewer I generally don't bother with unless we're staying for a while.
- Maintenance. I enjoy fiddling around; even doing the wheel bearings. My day job is a statistician: I work on equations and algorithms all day (or go to meeting after meeting)... I like a change where I spend some time working with my hands.
- I did have some new skills to learn as far as hitching and driving with side mirrors only, but it didn't take long. Hitching-up now takes no longer than it did with our tent trailer.
But, what I love about our trailer:
- Simple setup - 10 minutes, maximum, and everything's done and I'm sitting on a lawn chair with a cold beer in my hand.
- Storage: we've got room for everything. No rubbermaid containers. Nothing to move around, take out and set up. Everything has its place.
- Amenities: fridge (as opposed to an icebox), furnace and air conditioner; even the TV/DVD (although its rarely used)
- Being able to pull over at a roadside picnic area, open the trailer door, go in and make lunch.
- Pulling into a KOA at 11:00 pm, not bothering to unhitch, opening the door of the trailer and heading straight to bed.
- Urban camping. In the past, we'd go camping for the sole purpose of camping, hiking, canoeing, etc. With the r-pod, we've added urban camping, where we'll go somewhere to be tourists. We've stayed at trailer parks close to the centre of town, so that we can poke around and do the tourist thing.
- The ability to travel. With the tent trailer, we were reluctant to go on a road trip because the amount of time we'd spend tearing down/setting up each day, particularly on overnighters. With the r-pod, overnighters are a breeze!