Thanks. Yes, I do not want to do it myself.
I'm looking in the Yellow Pages now under "trailer hitches" and see U-Haul
places as well as places that only sell and service trailers. I guess a
trailer-only place is what I want. In the ads, I see something called a
Draw-Tite trailer hitch advertised which I am hoping means a hitch that
doesn't stick out far from the back of the vehicle.
And, yes, I will be doing some backup practice. I only had to back the
trailer up one time so far (using a different vehicle) and it was amazing
how complicated it seemed. But, I'm sure I'll learn it and figure it out.
> Thanks. Yes, I do not want to do it myself.
>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> Draw-Tite trailer hitch advertised which I am hoping means a hitch that
> doesn't stick out far from the back of the vehicle.
Draw-Tite is a brand. It won't stick out much if you pull the hitch out of
the receiver when you're not using it.
> And, yes, I will be doing some backup practice. I only had to back the
> trailer up one time so far (using a different vehicle) and it was amazing
> how complicated it seemed. But, I'm sure I'll learn it and figure it out.
It's a snap. Just remember that you do everything backwards with a two
wheel trailer. Start out right from the beginning, and practice backing up
using your mirrors. Learn to do that from the start and you'll never regret
it. Set out some plastic cones or some other obstruction that you don't
have to worry about damaging (or damaging your trailer or your vehicle), and
go at it. You'll quickly learn how to set up your turn by the way you pull
past the place you want to back into, how to back up to your blind side,
etc. It's just a practice makes perfect thing. It's more intuitive than
you might first think, so just get out there and try it.
Good luck.

Signature
-Mike-
mmarlowREMOVE@alltel.net