How does one prepare for a trip across county with 1000 lbs of baggage and a tiny Subaru?
By finding the perfect trailer, of course.
The quest began months ago.
In the dark of winter, holed up in my little chalet (actually, it was a trailer, itself) in the wilds of Breckenridge, I spent many-a-frosty evening in the dark caverns of Craig's List: relentlessly foraging the unforgiving tunnels of clue-lessness.
Without the perfect trailer...I am NOTHING.
But, I also...knew nothing.
A blonde who barely passed high school algebra, what did I know about the laws of physics??
Surely, I can pull a 25 foot flatbed behind me...it rolls, right?
My Subaru manual said it could only pull 1500 lbs.
I might as well have been figuring out how many sticks of wrigley's it would take to reach the moon.
None of the trailers I looked at knew how much they weighed. Pshaw! Wouldn't it be great if we could all say that?
The manual also said I would need to get hitched.
(Insert screaming and slamming manual closed here)
If you know me, you know my feelings about
that word.
Based on phone calls with every farmer and good ol' boy trying to unload a trailer from Fairplay to Frankfurt...one ought to know the empty weight of any trailer...without asking.
And getting hitched was as simple as calling Uhaul.
Really...?
This drove me on through mutliple nights of no sleep and even more wine bottles.
Soon, however. I realized.
I was using the trailer as an excuse to drink.
Something had to change.
I decided to immerse myself into the world of trailers. To conquer something, one must know it, completely.
I bellied up to bars called JJ's on rural routes called CR 669 and 1/2.
Made small talk with the regulars.
"If you were to pull, say 1000 pounds of baggage, across the country in a Subaru, you know, just by chance, what type of trailer would you use"?
Ol' Grizzly Bob would scratch his chin, toss back another shot of jager, think deeply...
"Dang. That's a lot of baggage".
I drove crooked backroads in towns like Berthoud, Colorado. Seeking answers.
Pulled over in crooked gravel lots. Went into crooked trailer yards.
Scene: 5 crooked men sitting at 5 crooked desks. Crooked legs kicked up over rounded bellies in crooked boots. Licking fried chicken off crooked fingers. Crooked door swings open. Dust blows in off the plains. There stands a blonde, city girl...dumb as a crooked post...and lookin' for a trailer.
Ka-CHING!!!
Straight as an arrow they'd sit.
They had me convinced I could take out a second mortgage (or in my case...a first) to purchase one of their beauties.
But, it fell through when I found out they couldn't take baggage as a down payment.
Then, I found it. Back in the caverns of Craig's List.
She was a gem. Tiny as a sidewalk square, The World's Smallest Trailer. Must weigh less than 1500 lbs and was right in my budget of...$100.

The World's Smallest Trailer
Su-weet.
I drove to the Boulder turnpike. To an avacado green house inhabited by motorcycles and made my purchase.
Turns out the trailer had been used to tote the 1000 lb German Shepard, who was snarling at me from under the thing, across the country.
Perfect. My baggage has been known to growl.
Satisfied. I went to bed with a smile on my face and dreamed of happy, dancing baggage trailers.
Until. The DMV.
Turns out you can't register "hot trailers" in the state of Colorado. You know...ones with the vin number scratched off that have been reported as stolen.
Oh.
Really...??
Back to the avacado green house to demand back my whopping $100.
Turns out, the dog had already eaten the check. So, we were good.
Back to the caverns.
Where I found: The World's Second Smallest Trailer.
A little more expensive..this bad boy set me back $175.
But, aint he adorable?

The World's Second Smallest Trailer
I drove to the suburbs of Littleton. To a quaint little house. With flowers and trees and lawn sprinklers. No German Shepards. Just a little yappy dog who peed on the trailer as I looked it over.
I smiled as I ran my fingers over the shiny VIN number.
And said.
You did good, kid. You did good.
It was love at first sight.
And we got hitched immdediately.
Now, to figure out how he's gonna carry ALL that baggage. Sigh.