Two years ago I drove to Hell's Canyon in my Chevy Avalanche. Slept halfway in the back with the midgate down, just me and the dog. And then parked at a campsite in ID during the hunt. Works for 1 man and a dog, albeit a 35 lb EB. Before that I had a Tahoe and love the camping feature of a large SUV. Have a buddy with an Excursion and they sleep a family of 5 in it. This gives the best of both worlds of low gas cost and no hotel cost. wake up cold, turn the heat on while you hit snooze and get dressed. Any trailer will knock mpg. I myself have 2 kids now and we just purchased a 17BH this spring and I was surprised at the mpg even with a small 3k trailer. Wind resistance being key, but I'll be damned if I'm going to get to destination and crank open some contraption to set up. Main use is with the family and going to lakes around the midwest for water ski tournaments, but I'd love to hunt out of it. I'd say any more that a 5 hr drive tho you start to question mpg vs hotel. However, like others have stated location is key and it would be worth dragging it somewhere to be close to the hunt AND you have your own space, place to stay while travelling, storage, etc. Plus, campers are cool. I also take a grouse hunting trip to northern MN and there's a nice motel right in the middle of the national forest we hunt. Something to be said about clean towels and other amenities. All depends really. If I was driving a distance, with myself and dog, I would probably choose a Suburban. Check out the 17 Bushwhacker Plus teardrops. I was really leaning towards these for ease of towing, and you can stand up in it.