Wonderfully useful feedback! Canadafan, your post is very encouraging -- you have actual experience with exactly the type of unit we were thinking about. It sounds like this is not impossible at all.
Gary, we are looking at the winter of 2018-2019 -- not exactly sure of the month. It depends on our family situation -- we are dealing with some elderly and infirm relatives, so we have to squeeze in our trips between medical emergencies. Not easy to do.
I will, of course, be extra-careful with driving in ice and snow -- I have some experience in the Sierras, but not as much as folks who live in Canada. The key is patience -- if a storm is forecast, wait it out till the roads are cleared.
The place I would really like to go is to the Yukon in winter -- Sue's photos are very enticing. But as far as I know, no one rents RVs in the winter up there, and it is too far to drive from Calgary or Edmonton in mid-winter, I think.
The other alternative is just to ditch the whole RV idea and then stay in an "aurora resort" in the Arctic. Less adventurous, but probably not much more expensive than renting an RV.
And I am well aware that traveling to see the aurora is a gamble -- often, there is nothing to see. That's ok. It is like some of the surf vacations we have taken -- we get to the beach, and the swell has died. That's just the way it goes.
Or when we go see a meteor shower (which we are doing next week, since the Geminids are on the 13th) -- we drive a long way, and sometimes it's cloudy when we get there. (That is what happened to us in Death Valley in 2013 -- we got snow instead of meteors.) Or we get smoked out by forest fires, which happened to us this summer at Mt. Rainier.
On the other hand, we got to see the eclipse in Idaho this summer, boondocking all by ourselves with a view of the Sawtooth Range. So sometimes the "travel gamble" works out ok.
One more thing -- Fulltimewanabe mentioned my "tuques," which I thought was an anatomical reference. Turns out it is a warm knit cap. Not only do we have several of those -- we also have Russian astrakhan hats and balaclava scarves and down parkas and snowboard pants and Sorel boots and polar fleece liners.
But I am assuming that if the weather at night is far below freezing, there are special Arctic outfits that would permit you to stay outside and watch the sky -- right??
2012 Fun Finder X-139 "Boondock Style" (axle-flipped and extra insulation)
2013 Toyota Tacoma Off-Road (semi-beefy tires and components)
Our trips -- pix and textAbout our trailer"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single list."