I subscribe to The Vintage Camper Trailers Magazine, have done for so many years. I absolutely love it. I also have both of your books. I saw in your magazine that trailerites could tell their stories about their vintage campers. I don’t know if you will publish my story in the magazine or put it in another book. It doesn’t matter. I still want to tell it.

My then-husband and I went camping in Cherokee, NC, in our 2005 Dutchmen. We took a ride on Cherohala Skyway into Tennesee. I spotted a vintage camper at a campground on the road. We pulled in, and I talked to the owner of the 1965 Zipper. I just fell in love with it. It was then that I decided I wanted one. So, I started my hunt to find my own. I found one in Lincolnton, NC. It was a 1972 Vacationaire. In Sept 2013. It needed work so my hubs said he would tear it down and rebuild it. But we had problems, and in 2014, we split up. He took both tow rigs that were his. Both campers continued to deteriorate. So I sold them.



I bought myself a new Kia Soul, which doesn’t tow. I continued to look for a vintage camper. Finally, I found one in March 2017. Fifty miles from my home in Lake Lure, NC. My daughter and her hubby went with me to look at it. It was a 1965 Shasta Airflyte. It was love at 1st sight! I didn’t want to pay the price he wanted; he knocked off $300.00. The trailer is powered by 110v electric, no propane, which was fine with me. It had a brand new paint job and had been restored. The original cabinets and some of the original birch walls were preserved. I started hunting for a skilled carpenter to add a loft and Wilsonart laminate countertops “Betty” pattern to the table and countertop that were painted black. I also had him add a closet and drawer cabinet. I knew that while I know how to use many tools, I didn’t know how to complete these improvements. It took me two years to find someone to do all the above. He did an EXCELLENT job. I’m so pleased with my camper. She’s everything I wanted in a vintage trailer. Meet AIKO BLUE
By Susan Fletcher
