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Sunday, July 25, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

Travel-trailer fanatics' passion fueled by fond memories of kitschy classics

By Jack Broom
Seattle Times staff reporter

MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
One of Patty and Eric Dobbs' favorite trailers is this gleaming 22-foot 1957 Airstream Caravanner. Eric has paid as little as $150 and as much as $5,000 for his eight trailers, which he started collecting and restoring about three years ago.
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Sitting by a campfire in Northern California last fall, Patty Dobbs of Snohomish made a rather frank admission to two men she had just met.

"My husband is a really sick man," she told them. "He has eight travel trailers."

For a moment, the two men just looked at one another, then one of them spoke sheepishly. "Well," he said. "I have 30."

Softly, the other man joined in: "I have 22."

Dobbs, 48, responded with the first thought that popped into her head, "Man, a shrink could sure make a killing around here."

Some call it "silver fever." Some call it nostalgia. Some say it mixes a simple desire for inexpensive lodging on the road with the satisfaction of maintaining a piece of American history.

MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
The Dobbses also restored the warm interior of another favorite trailer, this 1941 Kozy Coach, which they keep in their Snohomish-area garage.
However diagnosed, love of vintage travel trailers — whether an owner has one or 30 of them — is spreading from coast to coast.

In that same decade, Hesselbart said, rallies of vintage-trailer owners "went from being very rare events to the point that now there's about one a week all summer long someplace in the country."

About 50 restored vintage trailers, up from 35 last year, are expected next month at the fourth annual Majestic Mount Baker Vintage Trailer Rally east of Bellingham.

Organizer Pat Ewing, who owns seven trailers, said nostalgia is a key factor, particularly for Baby Boomers like himself

"My earliest memories are of trailer trips we took when I was a kid ... to Mexico, Florida, Washington, D.C., and a lot of places in between," said Ewing, 52, who grew up in Kirkland.

MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Fellow trailer buff Luke Hinman sands a window opening on a 10-foot 1958 Serro Scotty. Hinman says he's drawn to refurbishing because of the detailed, technical work combined with the down-home charm of vintage trailers.
As soon as automobiles were within the average person's reach in the early 20th century, Americans started looking for ways to stay overnight in or alongside them. Beds were made to fit in various car models; awnings and tents were rigged to hook up beside or behind them.

The motor-home museum in Indiana has what it believes to be the oldest non-tent trailer made in America, a wood-framed, 10-foot 1913 "Earl" made in the Los Angeles area. Inside, two benches flanking a fold-up table convert into beds.

They're not RVers

MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
The kitchen and living area of a 31-foot Airstream belonging to Pat Ewing, organizer of the Majestic Mount Baker Vintage Trailer Rally.
People who enjoy vintage trailers — a trailer has to be at least 25 years old to qualify — are a smaller and separate breed from those hitting the highway in today's mega-RV's.

In fact, the two groups are almost impossible to compare. While 50 rigs make a decent-sized vintage-trailer event, rallies of current-day RVs regularly draw hundreds. The "Grand National Rally" of Winnebago owners at Forest City, Iowa, draws more than 1,500.

Ewing has no interest in modern RVs. "It's gone from camping to bringing along a deluxe condominium on wheels," he said. "We just want to go camping."

Vintage trailers, with their shiny metal on the outside and warm tones of birch or mahogany on the inside, carry a coziness irresistible to their admirers. Trailer-travel in Ewing's youth was different from today, he said. "We'd just park alongside a road or by a fishing lake." If a storm was brewing, his father would seek permission to park behind a building for shelter.

MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Ewing with his sentimental favorite, "Bambi," a 16-foot 1961 Airstream "pin-up girl" that was pictured in a 2004 calendar of vintage trailers by photographer Douglas Keister.
"My dad didn't see much point in paying for a campsite," Ewing said. "His idea was, why have a trailer if you had to do that? ... But there's a lot fewer places you can just pull over like that now."

Ewing got his first trailer when he moved to Florida to attend college in the mid-'70s. "I hated dorm life; I went down there to learn, not party ... so I bought a 24-foot, 1966 Fan and put it in a park near the college so I'd have someplace quiet."

He's had trailers all through his career as an auto-parts manager, Puget Power worker and real-estate agent. He and his wife, Joanne, also in her early 50s, live on 1.3 acres outside the Whatcom County town of Everson, where their small fleet, in various stages of restoration, sits under tall carports amid stately cedars.

Although he has trailers up to 31 feet long, Ewing's sentimental favorite is his shiny, 16-foot 1961 Airstream Bambi. "When I go camping, I go way up into the outback, and this will fit in a little tent site."

Camp calendar models

Majestic Mount Baker Vintage Trailer Rally

August 19-22, Deming Log Show Grounds

Information: 360-966-4253, pre52@verizon.net or www.tincantourists.com

His Bambi is also a pin-up girl of sorts. Posed next to Ewing's 1931 Ford Model A, it's the July photo in a 2004 calendar of vintage trailers by photographer Douglas Keister, whose work also includes photos for the book "Ready to Roll: A Celebration of the Classic American Travel Trailer." (Viking Studio $32.95) Also in the calendar is a 1962 Shasta — a classic "canned ham"-shaped trailer — owned and renovated by Luke Hinman, 44, a laid-off Boeing worker now living near Deming, Whatcom County, and studying computer engineering.

"In the last 10 years, interest in vintage RVs has gone from a handful of collectors and — in those days, kooks — to something that involves thousands of people," said Al Hesselbart, a consultant to the RV / Motor Home Heritage Foundation Museum in Elkhart, Ind.

Follow these trailer trails


Do you want a canned ham, or maybe a bread loaf? No, we're not talking sandwiches here; those are nicknames for a couple of common shapes for vintage trailers.

Whether you want to find the trailer of your dreams, figure out what to pay for it, learn how to fix its leaky toilet seal or buff it to an eye-piercing sheen, the Web offers a wealth of information. Here are a few sites to get you started:

www.tincantourists.com Tin Can Tourists, the revival of a travel-trailer club dating back to 1919, is "dedicated to the enjoyment, preservation, and promotion of vintage trailers and motor coaches." The site lists upcoming vintage-trailer events and offers memberships ($25 a year), which include a quarterly newsletter.

www.vintage-vacations.com This site of an Anaheim, Calif., shop has information on some upcoming rallies and detailed depictions of trailer-restoration jobs, including a 1946 Spartan Manor.

www.birchwoodbeauties.com Scott Lockwood, a former commercial photographer and graphic designer in California, now specializes in restoring old trailers.

www.vintagecampers.com This Indiana-based business sells vintage trailers from the 1940s, '50s and '60s. The Web site also has a fun collection of old camper ads; check out the one for a 1938 Fleetwheels, which looks like a pickup truck giving birth to an elephant. www.vintagetrailerlinks.com An excellent entry point with dozens of links to different trailer makes, styles, specialists, parts and more. www.airstream.net

The Vintage Airstream Club site tells about gatherings of people who own Airstream trailers that are at least 25 years old. www.airstreamtrailers.com A great starting point for an exploration of everything related to old Airstream trailers, with some 200 links to clubs, how-to projects, restoration companies, dealers and more.

www.ebay.com

Follow the link to "eBay motors" and then click on "RVs and campers." Although the site primarily offers newer units, some vintage trailers are included. www.rv-mh-hall-of-fame.org Recreational Vehicle / Motor Home Heritage Foundation. Backers of this 11-year-old library and museum in Elkhart, Ind. — now 18,000 square feet — plan to break ground in 2005 on a new building that would more than triple its size.

Jack Broom, Seattle Times staff reporter

Hinman, who is also rebuilding a 1958 Serro Scotty Sportsman trailer, is drawn to the refurbishing because of the detailed, technical work combined with the down-home charm of vintage trailers. "It's part Spaceship One and part Jethro Bodine," he said.

Figuring out what a vintage trailer is worth is an inexact science; there's no Blue Book listing their value. Even for a particular model, prices can vary widely depending on its condition, not to mention how badly someone wants it — or wants to get rid of it.

Take that 16-foot Bambi of Ewing's, for example. According to a price guide on www.vintageairstream.com, one of those would be worth $800 to $1,900 in an "as-found" condition, meaning it would likely have numerous dents and miscellaneous damage inside and out.

But, boost it up to "average" condition and the price range jumps to $4,500 to $8,500. Take the painstaking steps to bring it to "restored" condition, faithful to its original style and materials, and the price range leaps to $11,000 to $19,000.

Eric Dobbs, 54, the Snohomish man whose wife tattled on him for having eight trailers, has paid as little as $150 and as much as $5,000 for his trailers, which he started collecting about three years ago. "When you get one home and you see how much work it needs, you get a little buyer's remorse. But then they kind of grow on you," said Dobbs, who calls the bullet holes in one of his trailers "beauty marks."

The Dobbses' two favorites, which they have put countless hours into restoring, are their light blue, bread-loaf-shaped, 20-foot 1941 Kozy Coach, and a gleaming 22-foot 1957 Airstream Caravanner. Eric Dobbs even uses a small, "teardrop" trailer, a replica of a style popular in the 1950s, to haul around the equipment for his carpet/upholstery dry-cleaning business.

And although Patty Dobbs teases her husband about his collecting ways, she's got the vintage bug, too, and calls herself "the tacky flamingo lady." She spent $800 outfitting the Caravanner with a pink flamingo theme, including flamingo shower curtain, dishes, coffee cups, statuettes, salt-and-pepper set and window curtains she made herself.

The Dobbses plan to explore renting their restored trailers out as movie props, and have no end of projects in mind for the ones that fill their carports and sheds, spread out around a small pond in the back yard and stand in the tall grass near a row of short pine trees. (And because we can hear you asking: Only one is covered with a blue tarp.)

MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Luke Hinman's 1962 Shasta is a type of trailer nicknamed "canned hams" because of their body styles.
Eric Dobbs, who has found trailers on the Internet, in classified ads and in old barns, fields and alleys, says he's still looking for more diamonds in the rough.

"But I made him a deal now," said his wife. "If he brings one home, one of these has to go."

Jack Broom 206-464-2222 or jbroom@seattletimes.com

Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company

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