westend wrote:
Bayoubass wrote:
Many years ago when we were young and crazy ( 28 years old) we pulled a small 12' travel trailer to Silverton Colorado for the Thanksgiving holiday . Set up at a closed service station and had no power, remember, we were 'crazy'. When we got back to the trailer to bed down after visiting and partying, IT WAS COLD and my wife's contact solution and all the can goods froze! Thank God for good sleeping bags..... and in the morning, it was hard to get out of them..... your post brought back those memories, thanks, it was a great time in our lives and wouldn't change a thing. Good luck......it will work out!
And I've done much worse when I was young.....
The OP sounds like She is strapped to either selling the trailer or bringing it along when She moves to MA. A benefit may be to stay in the trailer on the way up. Another might be using some of the trailer as a moving van. I know how this works, lol.
I'd suggest to winterize the plumbing and carry water in cans, bottles, etc. for drinking, washing, and flushing. Buy a couple of gallons of RV antifreeze and use it in the drains when cold weather is encountered.
If it snows and you're on the Interstate, slow down with traffic and be mindful of what the trailer's doing. If it's freezing rain, pull off and park. If you have to drive through accumulated snow, pick out a spot in a parking lot or in a rest stop and apply the brakes hard. This will give you an idea of braking in snow. Try to drive on cleared, treated roads and don't press your luck. You should do fine. Most folks get in trouble pulling trailers by extending their ability beyond what the combination or what they can do in bad weather. If you're not digging the weather, pull off/over and park. The weather will get better.
FWIW, I spent 2 days parked at the mouth of the Eisenhower tunnel in CO. I didn't trust the roads to go back and the road was closed ahead. After the plows came through and the snow stopped, I headed back to Denver and went up through Wyoming to reach the coast. There is always an alternative to driving in bad weather.
Brings to mind something else that no one has mentioned..
Don't wait until you are less than a 1/4 tank of fuel before looking for a gas station!
Towing eats a lot of fuel and towards the end of your trip you will be unfamiliar areas and once you get past Scranton on I81 gas stations get pretty sparse (there is some at the PA/NT boarder then a stretch of nothing..
Been 10 yrs since the last time I was up that way and I followed I81 to the NY thruway at Albany, drove the thruway for a short distance and got off (Mind is fuzzy on the route number) that was toll free at that section.. Ran into a ice storm just before Albany that time, made for a slow drive for miles.. Not fun and I wasn't towing.
Depending on how far you are going on I81 in NY you might wish to fill up at the PA/NY border.
Lot of open undeveloped land along that route and can go for quite a few miles before finding fuel or civilization..
New England states ARE spectacular so enjoy!
If you ever get bored to death and are looking for adventure, VT has the MOST covered bridges! My brother before he passed made one heck of a tour guide.. One year he decided to take us hunting for as many of them as we could find in a day..
Then there is the Bridge of Flowers which is a bridge that has been repurposed as a walking bridge and is line with flowers all summer long..
Not sure if it still there but there also is a Floating Bridge that literally is nothing more than wooden bridge that actually floats.. It was closed to traffic the time I was there..
VT has a lot of State Park campgrounds but you do need to be aware, they are ALL non electric, no hookups and NO GENERATORS.. There are some private campgrounds that do have hookups so you will have to do some research..