It's only an 11 hour drive! We recently vacationed on the big Bear Lake (on the Utah side though.) That is an awesome lake. And there was almost no one there.
My bro-in-law recently asked something similar, that he had never welded but it looks like fun. He asked how easy it would be to pick it up on his own. I suggested it's not too bad, but you'd better know what you're doing if you're going to haul it down the road at 65 mph. I learned welding as a heavy equipment mechanic in a former life. I showed him the Titanium mig welder I have (Harbor Freight, good machine) and said that while the machine itself is pretty much point and shoot and it's good at giving you all the necessary settings for what you are welding, it does take some know-how to know when something's going wrong. Like what it does when it runs out of gas, what a good vs bad weld looks like, stuff like that.
It really boils down to knowing what a good weld should look like and then practice. Nice smooth motions, confirm it's penetrating, and just stack them dimes. There are a lot of welder channels on YT that are good at showing how to fit things and weld thin stuff, which is handy. I think welding is really fun. Except for overhead/upside down welding. That kinda sucks.
I had wanted to find a short-term or hobby welding class at a local community college for my kids, but they only offer full trade programs. My knowledge base is old and very narrow.
What's not on the camper yet is the little 110V flux-core welder I have. If I ever get into long-term off-roading/overlanding, it might come in handy.
(Don't use flux-core if you don't have to. It's finicky.)
Sorry for the wall of text...