The family and I are doing a big trip this summer. We’re leaving NC and heading to Yellowstone/Teton for 5 days, then heading down to Utah to hit the mighty 5 and then back home through Colorado. Our plan is to mostly camp on BLM land at dispersed camping areas. We have a small trailer with a roof top tent that we’re dragging around.
I’m a bit concerned about finding a spot to setup camp and leaving our setup in the middle of nowhere with no security. We don’t want to have to drag the trailer everywhere and pack everything up to go visit a park. Obviously security is always going to be hit or miss and dependent on a lot of things, mainly the human element. We would hate to head out for a few hours and come back to a ransacked camp and missing gear. What do you guys think?
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I can only speak from personal experience. I've left my trailer and gear, both set up and packed-up & ready-to-roll in all types of places over the last several years, from extremely remote federal and state land with no one around for miles, to hotel parking lots and big city streets. It's never been bothered, though I can see from tracks people have come into camp and tried my faucet, for example, nothing has gone missing yet. Those people are more curious about a strange-looking rig than anything.
What I've found I'm
most comfortable with when leaving the trailer, is leaving camp more set up than not. Though with all valuables like generator, bike, traction boards, etc all out of view, locked in the cargo bay of the trailer, or with me in the van. I think it is more discouraging to a would-be thief than a packed-up & ready to roll trailer.
Having a unique hitch helps, and though more folks are getting Max Couplers for off-road, it is still unique enough to discourage most thieves from simply backing with their ball hitch and driving away quick. I am also now removing my tow chains to make it less appealing. I know of work trailers that have been dragged off by chains only to get around hitch locks. I keep
Bolt Locks in all my hitches and cable locks, all keyed the same to my ignition key. One key for all locks. They spin freely around the hitch pin, so are a little more difficult for the long-pipe guys to bust off. Still doable, certainly, but more time involved.
I've also employed simple things like this to warn others off, whether when out walking away from camp or when away with van, bike, or canoe:
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I also have a couple
Tile locators and am thinking about getting a four pack of the new inexpensive
Apple AirTags, that work with the Find My app, and tagging my trailer, bike, and canoe with small stickers that say "GPS Tagged and Locatable" or similar.
I think one of the most important security measures is just plain good old situational awareness. Get a good sense for where you are, what the local population is like, and if there's been a recent rash of thefts in recreational areas.
I've never had any problems, but that does not mean it won't happen. I know my gear is far more at risk in higher density populations than when I am way remote.
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