Steve and Karen
Ranger
Well, I perused this Confessional Forum for others who may have done something similar. However, the lack of posts means either that everyone is fairly diligent about following the bug-out protocols as outlined by CI. Or they are/were just as embarrassed as me and were afraid to post.
Reserving late for this past holiday weekend meant that I wasn't able to stay in the same site in the park for each of the 3 nights and had to pull up stakes each morning. Because I was camping with friends and was using their site most of the time, my site was essentially just a parking space for the trailer and a place to sleep. I got complacent about my normal packing-up routine (cuz there was nothing to pack up) and left the single levelling jack down. And they do do a very good plowing job, and the site has a nice drainage ditch down the middle.
Thankfully the gauge of the steel in the jacks themselves is much thinner than the mounting brackets or the trailer frame, and failed before they did any damage. I'm sure that all these 24" scissor jacks on the market are made in the same factory in China, but with different branding, so a replacement was easy to obtain. I was able to leave the mounting bracket in place (its much more difficult to remove) and just replace the scissor section. Bolt holes are 2" OC if you need to match them up with another. Replacements are typically sold as a pair, which I was loathe to pay for. But if this happened to me after only 1 1/2 years of ownership, then having a spare on hand for a future incident may not be such a bad idea.
This faux pas was directly on the heels of leaving my large canoe pack (tent, bags, pads, clothes, about $1500 in gear in all) on our last site on our final morning of a long backcountry trip in Algonquin. Which I didn't notice until we got home. As the leader of a large group it was my responsibility to do the final sweep. Which I didn't do, or do very well. This necessitated an 8-hour round-trip drive back to the park, and 7 hours of solo paddling to retrieve the pack, which was still on site 5 days later, and undisturbed by human or animal. A miracle.
Both mistakes, and their ensuing consequences, will (I hope) instill in me a more thorough site sweep routine in the future, whether its front-country or back-country camping. If not, I deserve what I get.
Reserving late for this past holiday weekend meant that I wasn't able to stay in the same site in the park for each of the 3 nights and had to pull up stakes each morning. Because I was camping with friends and was using their site most of the time, my site was essentially just a parking space for the trailer and a place to sleep. I got complacent about my normal packing-up routine (cuz there was nothing to pack up) and left the single levelling jack down. And they do do a very good plowing job, and the site has a nice drainage ditch down the middle.
Thankfully the gauge of the steel in the jacks themselves is much thinner than the mounting brackets or the trailer frame, and failed before they did any damage. I'm sure that all these 24" scissor jacks on the market are made in the same factory in China, but with different branding, so a replacement was easy to obtain. I was able to leave the mounting bracket in place (its much more difficult to remove) and just replace the scissor section. Bolt holes are 2" OC if you need to match them up with another. Replacements are typically sold as a pair, which I was loathe to pay for. But if this happened to me after only 1 1/2 years of ownership, then having a spare on hand for a future incident may not be such a bad idea.
This faux pas was directly on the heels of leaving my large canoe pack (tent, bags, pads, clothes, about $1500 in gear in all) on our last site on our final morning of a long backcountry trip in Algonquin. Which I didn't notice until we got home. As the leader of a large group it was my responsibility to do the final sweep. Which I didn't do, or do very well. This necessitated an 8-hour round-trip drive back to the park, and 7 hours of solo paddling to retrieve the pack, which was still on site 5 days later, and undisturbed by human or animal. A miracle.
Both mistakes, and their ensuing consequences, will (I hope) instill in me a more thorough site sweep routine in the future, whether its front-country or back-country camping. If not, I deserve what I get.