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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    I'm the only one allowed to whine
    Posts
    10,557
    I got the Croozer Dog trailer, which Trek had just sent me a PM about.

    I played hooky from church and went to my LBS. Meandered over to the trailer section, and there was a woman with a Croozer and a Burley comparing the two.

    Turned out their Croozer was too big for their dog, so they wanted to sell/trade for a Burley Tail Wagon. So I bought it! She trusted me (not even knowing my last name or phone or anything) to take it home and just "send her what i thought it was worth." Well, gawd, I couldn't do that! So we asked the LBS guys what they thought a fair price was, and we agreed.

    She still let me take it home without knowing anything about me. I'm sending her a check tomorrow.

    the Croozer is big enough for my dog AND big enough to be used for a serious Costco run. It will also easily hold enough stuff for a good long camping trip. It folds flat, and could be used as a flat-bed trailer for awkward shaped things.

    I'm so excited!
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Bay Area, CA
    Posts
    336
    but the critical question... will your dog voluntarily go into the trailer?

    p.s. pictures of said dog in said trailer would be appreciated

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    I'm the only one allowed to whine
    Posts
    10,557
    he knows the command "in the crate", so I'm guessing we can expand on that behaviour a little. The trailer is just a little smaller than his crate. He's a 70lb dog.

    Honestly, I want the trailer more for shopping trips than anything.

    And for camping.

    The dog trailer has a nice cover that zips shut so it won't lose my toothpaste, and it looks like it will hold a case of toilet paper from Costco.
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Orygun
    Posts
    1,195
    Jeez Knot, what are you doing with that much toilet paper? What exactly are you eating? Back away from the lentils...

    Good score with the trailer! Congrats. I can't believe she trusted you to just send a check. I mean, you are a bit shifty looking. I'm just sayin'
    Oh, that's gonna bruise...
    Only the suppressed word is dangerous. ~Ludwig Börne

  5. #5
    Kitsune06 Guest
    Huh. Back in the day, when we bought a case of TP, we just did our green duty and pitched it back to the trees where it belonged. *sigh* Ah, nostalgia and raking paper mache after homecoming...

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    I'm the only one allowed to whine
    Posts
    10,557
    Quote Originally Posted by Xrayted View Post
    Jeez Knot, what are you doing with that much toilet paper? What exactly are you eating? Back away from the lentils...

    Good score with the trailer! Congrats. I can't believe she trusted you to just send a check. I mean, you are a bit shifty looking. I'm just sayin'
    All the LBS guys were greeting me by name, so I think she figured I must be ok. Little did she know...

    Lemme tell ya, tp from Costco is a beautiful thing. A year's worth for $14. The problem is finding places to store it. I'm on my last roll now, but I'd better buy some more before Trek gets here for the weekend, which means using the car. (otherwise I'm riding in the dark; no thanks!)

    My cholesterol (to quote my doc, exclamation point and all) is "very high!" So maybe I'd better be eating more lentils. If she wants to put me on statins, I'll tell her how much better it is when I really get some exercise. I'd rather spend $$ on riding than on meds. The best it's ever been was 205, and my good chol was high which made it ok. I was riding a lot then.

    Must. Ride. Bike.
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Virginia's Blue Ridge
    Posts
    500

    Wow...Wish I'd done more research!

    Hi........A few months ago I bought one of the kids' "Trans-It" trailers for my 45-lb border collie, for what I thought at the time was a good price: $200. Ack! (Impulse purchase at local Performance shop....) I discovered too late that I could have gotten the darned thing for less than half that price at Nashbar, sigh..........Now that I've seen the Croozer and other models on this thread, I wish I'd dug around more before kicking out the cash!

    I tuck Sam's comfy dog bed in the bottom of the trailer, both to provide a "floor" for her and to give her a sense of safety and security when we're out on the road. (See my avatar for an on-the-move shot.....) She hates the screen and plastic cover that pull down, so I just leave 'em up. Fortunately, once she settles in and lays down, she doesn't seem to be tempted to move around much, and definitely has no interest in jumping out while we're moving. One of the first times I took her out in it, we were rolling down (actually UP) a pretty (and quiet) paved road at a slow pace when a deer popped up right next to the road, not 10 feet away. I held my breath, thinking Sam would be itchy to get out; instead, she just gazed at it contentedly as we rolled slowly by. (In fact, I could envision her doing the 'parade wave' with her paw.....) It *helps* that she's 9 and has a touch of arthritis. She loves to hike, but seems to know that her jaunts in the trailer are all about sitting back and enjoying the ride!
    Last edited by KathiCville; 10-29-2007 at 04:50 AM.
    "If there are no dogs in heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went." (Will Rogers)

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Sacramento, CA
    Posts
    747
    I am jealous. I am really looking forward to the day when Penelope can ride in the trailer (she's pretty strong and we managed to find a teeny helmet, so hopefully around her first birthday), but I am also regretting a bit that we bought the ultra-slick Chariot single trailer instead of a double Burley. We were thinking we'd mostly be doing family picnic rides every weekend on the bike trail, and at the time we were choosing the trailer there were a bunch of stupid barriers up on the trail that my husband thought would be difficult if not impossible to navigate with a double Burley.

    But I am all about utility and being able to haul what I need to haul. Right now I am a pedestrian -- I've got a stroller with a huge shopping basket, and Penny and I run all the errands on foot, which I love. (While I was pregnant I was getting gas often enough that the guys at the gas station knew my due date. Now I'm back to filling the tank every three months -- have only filled it once since she was born!) This stroller will only fit her for about nine months, though, and the big kid strollers just don't have the storage space. I hope that we can do the shopping with the Chariot plus the baskets on my bike, but I might have to reconsider the whole single-speed situation!

    I told my husband I was eventually going to get an Xtracycle and he said, "Not with my baby on board, you aren't." Apparently Mr. Let's Take The Baby Rock Climbing! thinks that the little surfboard seating arrangement is totally unsafe. And I have to admit that it looks a bit precarious. The one person I know who rides one with kids has dumped her seven-year-old at least once, too.

 

 

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