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You are here: Home / Archives for Travel Tips / Camping

Camping

Buying an RV and hitting the road

January 31, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

Ever dreamed of leasing or buying an RV, selling all your worldly possessions, and hitting the road to find adventure out on the open road? Blowing in whatever direction the wind takes you? Seeing the world?In some form or another, I’ll bet a thought similar to this one has crossed your mind. And, just as likely, you probably quashed it five seconds later, when the weight of the “real world” can crashing down on you: all those bills, all those responsibilities. How could you possibly escape them?

How indeed?

First, you’d need money to live on, and nothing can change that. That means either saving some money and going on a temporary sabbatical, or it means retirement. That’s the bad news.

The good news is that you can live on very little money, taking your home with you like a turtle and going traveling.

“But what about my house? My car? My stuff?” [Read more…] about Buying an RV and hitting the road

Filed Under: Camping

Reasons Why You should Take the Family Camping

May 27, 2009 by admin Leave a Comment

tentSit back as editor, Ingrid McCleary (a veteran camper) extols the virtues of camping.

You get hands-on experience with your state’s symbols. In California, for example, you could spot the valley quail perched in a redwood tree while you hike through a field of golden poppies. You could also find evidence that a grizzly bear has visited your campsite: There’s the smashed windshield of your car (you left sunflower seeds on the front seat) and the demolished ice chest (you didn’t realize bears weren’t deterred by flimsy storage locks).

An article in the Yosemite Guide newsletter mentioned that backpackers could protect their food from black bears by renting a bear-proof food canister instead of hanging their food from a tree. This canister could hold a three-day supply of food and yet weighed only 2 1/2 pounds. I told my husband I couldn’t imagine how such a lightweight item could keep bears from getting to the food. “The canister probably includes a big roll of cellophane wrap,” Bill replied. “You wrap your food in it, and the bear goes nuts trying to find the edges.”

You get to wear all your grungy clothes. You know the ones; those faded T-shirts, torn shorts and baggy jeans that are so comfortable you just can’t throw them out yet…even though your spouse has tried on a number of occasions to bury them in the bottom of the household rag bin.

Your kids don’t have to wash up before dinner. What’s the point? Between the bathroom and the campsite are 100 yards of Grade A Magnetic dirt. Speaking of bathrooms…

You appreciate the overlooked luxuries of home. Like having a toilet that flushes. Or taking a shower that doesn’t cost a quarter for every five minutes. Once, during a 10-Day California to Colorado Road Trip, Bill and I had only two quarters between us. I finished in time; Bill didn’t. He stood there, covered in suds, while I dressed and ran out to try to find someone with change for a $20 bill. The suds nearly dried on him.

You’re prepared for an emergency. If a moderate earthquake should hit California while you’re camping, you won’t be inconvenienced because 1) your musty tent is suddenly a safe haven, 2) you’ve already got all your food on ice and 3) you have a portable radio and a lantern, so you won’t miss what most people miss after an earthquake–electricity.

You get to have barbecue for every night for dinner. And every morning for breakfast. And every afternoon for lunch. In fact, you can reach your barbecue quota for the entire summer in just one campout.

You get to see just how many pores you have on your face. This is a good time to play connect-the-dots or mimic the Orion constellation on your left cheek. It’s also the perfect opportunity to have your palm read by a fortuneteller, since all the lines in your hands stand out in stark relief.

You get to commune with nature. Blue jays and squirrels infiltrate your campground to clean up your crumbs. At dusk, bats fly overhead. Do you really trust their sonar? Are you sure they won’t get tangled in your hair? At Cherry Lake campground, there are the two-inch bomber pine beetles; these, I can tell you from personal experience, DO get tangled in your hair(I almost toppled into the fire in a frenzied effort to get the bug out!).

You get to exercise. This can range from trying to reach that mosquito bite in the middle of your back to chasing the raccoon that’s absconded with your favorite bag of chips to consenting to a hike because the sign says it’s only two miles long (but neglects to tell you that it’s two miles straight uphill).

And the No. 1 reason why you should go camping? It’s cheaper than staying in a hotel.

Tripwiser is a fun place to visit! Our free social trip planning service leverages the collective wisdom of travelers worldwide and makes road trip planning interactive and enjoyable

Filed Under: Camping

Great Camping tips

May 27, 2009 by admin Leave a Comment

I was just out camping this weekend with the kids and it made me think how unprepared that I was for the camping trip. I am sure that I will get better but at the same time wanted to shared these tips that I found a few minutes ago to have a better camping trip.

I have added my own bits to the end of all the points here to reflect on my last trip to the mountains camping this weekend.

We all love to unwind and take a breather. We love to explore nature at its pristine beauty. Generally speaking, we love to camp.

But do you think camping is as easy as strolling along the shores? Or perhaps you are thinking of something adventurous, like riding on the back of an elephant? Pretty simple as they seem, but once you get there, you’ll need more than anything you have planned. Camping is not merely a day out in the sun; more often, it is a much-needed adventure for many. And it would be more fun if it involves a lot of daring challenges. [Read more…] about Great Camping tips

Filed Under: Camping

First Long Weekend of Summer

May 16, 2009 by admin Leave a Comment

Here in Canada we are starting the first long weekend of Summer. Is it the same in the US? I am spending a quiet weekend at home but I know judging from the lineups and travellers in the grocery store yesterday afternoon that lots and lots of people are going to be camping this weekend.

USA Today has an article about lower gas prices this weekend which is a boom to everyone planning a roadtrip.

The USA will kick off the summer vacation season with slightly more people taking Memorial Day trips this year than in 2008 as lower gas prices and abundant travel bargains unleash the nation’s “pent-up demand” for travel, according to a report from leisure travel organization AAA. [Read more…] about First Long Weekend of Summer

Filed Under: Camping

The Golden Age of Amercian Family Vacations

June 6, 2008 by admin 1 Comment

coverSusan Sessions Rugh has written a great book about the history of the family camping or at least car driving adventure. The book is called The Golden Age of American Family Vacations and in it she captures some of what I grew up with in the 70’s the travelling of the family to the campground and prts unknown, the excitement of family vacations.

Americans have been making fun of family vacations from the time they came into style after World War II. The emergent medium of television captured some of the travails of the traveling family in late-night variety shows. Morey Amsterdam opened his show one evening in 1949 with a monologue reporting that he was just back from a vacation to Florida with his family: “I steered, my mother-in-law drove.” He commented on the expense of the vacation: “It cost us $400—a day.” It was “ten dollars for an aspirin.” He suffered the usual fate of the New York tourist in Florida when he admitted he went out on the beach and “walked away one big beautiful blister.” Morey Amsterdam’s jokes made television viewers feel better about spending the money and putting up with their families on vacation because they could laugh at themselves. Perhaps at least they recognized they weren’t alone in their stupidity!

In their comedy show on NBC television in 1952, Bob and Ray satirized the summer vacation by offering for sale a summer vacation kit “for people who want to be uncomfortable without leaving home.” It included a dozen items, among them “a bathing suit that makes you look kind of silly” and “a hard table so you feel like you have slept in a camp cot.” It came complete with a beach umbrella, along with a “handsome lifeguard to divert your wife’s attention while you are setting up the umbrella.” Finally, the sound effects man added the sounds of a day in the country: bullfrogs, owls hooting, crickets chirping, waves pounding on the beach, moose calling, the horn of a passing train sounding. Summer vacations were a lot of trouble and not really much of a vacation, but the men were caught up in this travel ritual for the sake of the family. [Read more…] about The Golden Age of Amercian Family Vacations

Filed Under: Camping

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