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Rolling Home Featured on Oprah

Posted: Wed Feb 21, 2007 11:46 am
by fiddlercrabus
I was just flipping through the TV and came across a very nice hand crafted rolling home(It was a double-axle trailer platform, full wood and stained/beveled glass inside and out!) featured on an Oprah episode entitled "small spaces." It was about different ways to decorate small interior areas(96 square feet in this case). I'm not becoming a regular viewer by any stretch of the imagination, but I thought it was neat that it was featured in a very favorable light as a legitimate alternative lifestyle.

Re: Rolling Home Featured on Oprah

Posted: Wed Feb 21, 2007 1:30 pm
by Griff
fiddlercrabus wrote:I was just flipping. . .but I thought it was neat that it was featured in a very favorable light as a legitimate alternative lifestyle.
Yeah, I can't count the number of conversations I've been in with people I meet through my job, that have trailed off to an awkward silence when I answer the question: "Where do you live?" with "In a bus.". It's like I'm just a regular guy. . .until then.

Posted: Wed Feb 21, 2007 3:31 pm
by Sharkey
Yeah, was it this trailer:?

Image

"Wayzalot"

Oprah, eh? Now I know wer're doomed. I was always afraid that Martha Stewart would find out about house trucks...

Posted: Thu Feb 22, 2007 4:49 am
by fiddlercrabus
It wasn't wayzalot, but it was still pretty neat.
It kind of looked like the one on the cover of frewheeling homes:
Image

Posted: Thu Feb 22, 2007 2:11 pm
by Dj
I dig Wayzalot's style.

After getting in to the "Quad Box" videos someone posted on this site of an old Mack B61 and it's 20-speed trans, I started toying with the idea of a classic truck pulling a custom trailer instead of a housetruck or bus idea...

The pics of Wayzalot don't tend to show the "new old" truck, just an old international day cab single axle.

What kind of truck is that they're using in that pic? Can't see the grill, so I'm having trouble figuring it out :)

Posted: Fri Feb 23, 2007 4:02 pm
by Sharkey
It's an old International. Apparently, they use it for local towing and when the trailer needs to be taken somewhere fast or far away they use the more modern rig. Makes a lot of sense, have a vintage tow rig for the ambience and something with lots of power, air conditioning, etc, when you need to make time over the road.

Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2007 4:51 pm
by Dj
Call me crazy but my most favorite road trips of all time have been in vehicles that one would think lacked sufficient amenity, comfort, or power. :D