bka0721 wrote:
What puzzles me is you shared you have 20 years of experience in doing this and just the school of hard knocks should provide you a good start already. You mentioned you have put insulation on the pipes. That is good to a point, if you have warm water or heat running through them. Think of how a thermos bottle works. If you have something cold inside it, the thermos keeps it cold, Warm it keeps it warm. So the insulation can actually work against you.b
I do have a lot of experience with trailers and living in the woods but most of the time we were in trailer parks or spiked out in the woods in the summer. We usually had electricity hookups and the Government was paying for propane. I no longer work in the wood and camping these days is strictly pleasure.
This is my first trailer, last weekend was its maiden voyage and I used the batteries hard to see what I could get out of them but it was 75 during the day and we only camped out 2 nights. I am just trying to get some ideas on fall and winter camping so I can stay a little more comfortable in the trailer then my tent camp. I figure if I have to set around bundled up with a stocking hat and gloves on I might as well save the fuel it takes to pull the trailer and load my tent camp in the back of the pickup and head out.