Taxa
-
My family spent a week with the Taxa Outdoors Woolly Bear Overland camp trailer, and we loved it. Camp trailers like this are an off-road-ready camping option with a lot of storage, organization, and other useful features.
-
Two innovators of modern outdoor recreation have come together to create a special-edition camping trailer. Taxa and Kammok load the off-grid micro-camper with hammock gear until it overflows in backcountry comfort.
-
After updating its Mantis and TigerMoth trailers, Taxa has turned its attention to its smallest model, the Woolly Bear. The rolling tent-top toolbox has new and improved features that help it serve as a 21st century chuck wagon or complete camper.
-
Taxa Outdoors' off-the-wall towables can camp off-grid for up to a week but lack the true off-road equipment necessary for rambling over rugged terrain on the way there. Taxa makes up ground by upgrading two of its staples with an Overland package.
-
Taxa Outdoors has grown from the otherworldly Cricket camping trailer to a full-model lineup with trailers of all sizes. It updates the flagship Mantis for 2020, adding a new multifunctional indoor/outdoor dining area, rear access hatch, and more.
-
Taxa Outdoors has been making a name for itself, putting NASA engineering know-how into a lineup of funky trailers. It has been going smaller and smaller since the original Cricket, but now it's going bigger with the all-new Mantis, an 18-ft (5.5-m) flagship that sleeps four adults.
-
The new Taxa Outdoors WoollyBear hits the market as one of the slimmest, simplest camping trailers out there. But that doesn't mean it's light on fun or features, preparing campers for a few days of outdoor adventure and comfortable camping.
-
After successfully putting his NASA design skills to work on the Cricket Trailer, Garrett Finney has started on an even smaller field shelter. The new Firefly is designed to split the difference between gear hauler and camper.