A little late to this... Susan and I love our mahogany upgrade, we think it adds a most luxurious look to the cabin area. We have lived on our very small boat ( it's 31 feet on deck but in this age of bigger is better it is considered small)"Talelayo" for the past 9 years now. People say to us all the time " how can you live in such a small space" and I tell them a finely fitted yacht of impeccable craftsmanship is a pure pleasure to live with and on. I marvel everyday we are aboard of the beauty, efficientcy and function of our little home. Now of coarse no matter how beautiful a boat is if your going to live on it it has to function as a home and our Cape George Cutter does. We have a working galley with propane stove/oven, sink with running water and refrigeration. Our salon has 2 bench seats where each of us can sit back or stretch out and watch TV, read, etc. A head with hot showers and clothes storage opposite and going forward a large double bunk.
We're spending our 66th night in Dewey tonight, it's a tad chilly out so we're snuggled in early. The extraordinary craftsmanship of our trailer adds to the comfort of the experience. Our neighbors in their 40 foot motor homes, I'm sure are scratching their heads wondering how could we be comfortable in a 8 foot trailer... and there lies the magic of Camp-Inn trailers and other objects of beauty, they just do. It is never about size, it's about quality. Now like our boat Camp-inn trailers have to offer the comforts in order to be enjoyed by their owners. A warm comfy bed, ample storage and efficient galley are essential comforts. It is the ethereal aspects of the design that make them so enjoyable, the pleasing exterior shape, the auminum skin, the stainless steel galley the birch ply interior and now the mahogany paneling.
Michael