Car camping has plenty of advantages, but the biggest by far is the ability to carry more gear than you would otherwise. If you’re hiking or bike-camping, you’re limited to whatever you can haul about using muscle power; use a motor vehicle as a base of operations, however, and the only real limit is the amount of space inside your ride. (And if that’s not enough, you can always add to that with a rooftop tent, bike rack or trailer.)
Usually, in my experience, that space in the back of the car goes towards extra food or drink, or maybe a place for an air mattress. But why restrict yourself to that? Empty space is empty space, meant to be filled with anything you can imagine. So when it came time for an early summer camping trip to Pennsylvania, I decided to put something unorthodox into the cargo area of the Range Rover Velar SVAutobiography Dynamic: a Breeo X Series 24 fire pit and its associated Outpost camp cooking attachment. How’d it work? Read on, dear friend.

This steel fire pit isn’t exactly easy to carry
Did you know the Breeo X Series 24 fire pit weighs 78 pounds? Neither did I! At least, until I picked it up to load it into the back of the Range Rover. Luckily, the Velar‘s wide hatch and load floor height made loading the mighty metal bowl comparatively easy; God knows how I would have managed trying to put it into a sedan. (Also, chalk this up as one of the advantages of SUVs over station wagons.)
The weight wouldn’t have been so awkward if the fire pit had better places to hang onto. Unfortunately, its smooth metal skin is largely bereft of handholds, while its girth made wrapping my arms around it in a bear hug impossible — at least, without running the risk of slamming my chin into that steel lip. I wound up holding it by said lip with the tips of my fingers, a solution that I wouldn’t recommend for trips of more than 10 feet.
The Outpost grille attachment was a good bit easier to lug about, thanks to the handy carrying case it came with. Still, it never fit into it quite right; the metal post always protruded from it, which made loading it into the car with the other gear a bit of a game of Tetris.