Mike – I get the whole “the trail is the thing” mentality, but I also like it when there’s cool stuff in between or at the end to check out.
PugetDude – I saw the thread where you posted pics of your front/back yard views (awesome, by the way). I bet there’s a lot of great trails out in there in the Superstitions.
So the wife had a friend of hers over for a visit, and said friend noticed our custom gates and asked if I could make one for her back yard. She doesn’t want anything fancy, just something functional so should be fairly easy. They are just a couple miles south of us on the same street, still in horse property, so their fencing and corrals are all made out of well pipe, too. They had a pile of random pipe sections for me to scrounge through, so materials are covered. While there and talking to her husband, he said he had a bunch of metal they wanted to get rid of if I wanted it. More 1.5” pipe, about .125” thick wall. I guess he built an aviary for his hawks and someone complained about it, so he had to tear it down. Looks like he built a small casita-like building for them instead. Anyways, free metal for the taking.
Started working on the gate - going to be a simple square out of round tube. Heavy stuff.
Went back to their house with the Mr.s to grab what we could of the free metal. A lot of it was still in awkward sections. Looks like it was roughly tacked together. Brought the grinder with cut-off wheels to make it manageable for transport.
Putting the Tacoma to work
Ran out of steam, but there were still a bunch of flat panel sections left, so stacked ‘em up and saved those for later.
Pipe unloaded onto the rack at home. All of this material looks to be in good condition, with just some surface rust (“desert patina”) present. No idea what I'm going to do with it all, but I'm also sure it will come in handy at some point. Also need to weld some stops on the rack ends to contain this mess.
So side-track back to Can Am stuff…we’ve mostly been taking on weekend type trips with the toy hauler. I’ve been wanting to do more day-trips close to home, so planned on using the cargo trailer for that instead of dragging the huge camper around. Well…it works, but barely.
The rig barely fits, is uncomfortably close, and requires some gymnastics to get everything secured and tied down. After the Wickenburg ride, we had people stop and ask if we would mind if they watched us load it. Evidently it was quite entertaining. The Boss was not pleased and told me we should get a bigger trailer. Who am I to argue? After debating between a bigger enclosed car hauler and flatbed, and going out and checking out a few brands/models, we settled on this Diamond C equipment trailer.
It’s WAY more than needed for the side by side, but figured it might come in handy in the future for anything bigger/heavier that may come along. Never know, I might want to get another Hummer.

It has a large built-in storage compartment near the tongue plus a hydraulic tilt bed, too. So no need for ramps, which is nice. Gotta figure out how to incorporate a winch into the equation.
So remember that pile of pipe panels left behind? 24 hours after purchase, I’m throwing rusty metal onto the brand-new trailer.
Made it easy for transport, and I can cut up the panels into manageable sections at my leisure. on my own property. Now I just need to finish making that gate…