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The camper is then secured to the vehicle with chains or spring-loaded tie-downs. Truck campers are a popular choice for horseback riders, fishermen, hunters, and other sportsmen as a boat or horse trailer may be easily towed. They facilitate camping "off-road" in relative comfort. A good quality truck camper can cost as much as a much larger RV.
The low price of Shastas made them a favorite with campers all over the United States. A 1966 Shasta travel trailer at a vintage camper trailer rally in Gillette, Wyoming Shasta Loflyte trailer, built in 1971, currently located at Lost Valley Educational Center. The "wings" on the rear sides were a visible identifier from 1958 and beyond.
Jayco partnered with a UK-based company in the late 1970s and produced a tent camper for the European market. [2] Jayco Australia Ltd was founded in 1975, and production commenced there the following year. Jayco of Australia soon became the largest player in the Australian camper/caravan industry.
In June 2002, Cusack put the team up for sale on eBay. The club's owner, Cusack, accepted a $1.862 million bid from Duncan Harrison, owner of Alaskan Automotive Distributing in Anchorage, but U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge Donald MacDonald converted the Aces' bankruptcy case to Chapter 7, which allowed him to reject the Harrison bid.
The vehicle remained unused for a time, and was then put up for sale for $1.4 million in 1969. [9] All that remains of the Mark II is the control cab which remains at Yuma Proving Ground Heritage Center, [10] the rest was sold off to a local scrap dealer. The Mark II retains the record for the longest offroad vehicle in the world. [8] [11]
In February 1946, Bob Reeve received a call informing him that some ex-USAAF C-47s and Douglas DC-3s were for sale (the C-47 being the military version of the DC-3). Reeve bought his first DC-3 for $20,000 with $3,000 down and the balance payable over 3 years.
A pair of extremely rare Tlingit masks were given an even rarer price tag on Monday night's episode of "Antiques Roadshow." "The wolf, on a retail basis, I believe would sell in the neighborhood ...
Richard Louis Proenneke (/ ˈ p r ɛ n ə k iː /; May 4, 1916 – April 20, 2003) was an American self-educated naturalist, conservationist, writer, and wildlife photographer who, from the age of about 51, lived alone for nearly thirty years (1968–1998) in the mountains of Alaska in a log cabin that he constructed by hand near the shore of Twin Lakes.