afidel wrote:
Lantley wrote:
afidel wrote:
toedtoes wrote:
Interesting article. Sounds like there is an institutional failure at Colorado State Parks.
I was at Lassen Volcanic National Park the other week and the camphost checked for no shows and opened the empty campsites that same day. And this was without cell service or wifi in the campground. Very effective.
Hmm, I'm not sure I'm ok with that. If I've got a week long reservation that I've paid for and something has delayed me a day (weather, mechanical issue, food poisoning, whatever) I shouldn't lose my entire stay because I can't get there on the first day. Heck, I've had traffic accidents that caused such delays on trips that an 8pm arrival became 1am and I decided to Walmart the first night so as not to be rude to the other campers, being courteous shouldn't be penalized.
If they've got a way to contact the park and you're a no show no call on day 2 then fine cancel the reservation to free the spot up but otherwise I payed for the spot and if I need to delay my arrival then so be it.
I think the responsibilty should be on the camper to contact the CG if there is an delay or arrival issue. Not the other way around.
No contact from camper within the 1st 24 hours and the site should be available to others. That gives the camper 24 hours to inform CG which should be ample time to make contact.
I think we agree, toedtoes was talking about a location without communications clearing out sites in less than 24 hours. You should absolutely need to contact the park before close of business on day 2 to keep your site.
Actually, it was not "less than 24 hours". Check in was at 1 pm on day 1. The host didn't cancel the reservation until after 1 pm on day 2. And the host left the campground to do the cancellation - to where there was service. So it was not just someone randomly cancelling reservations without any checks and balances. And the policy is that if the reservation is cancelled due to a no show, the fee is refunded partially (you usually forfeit at least a nightly fee).
Regardless of if you "paid for it", the state and federal parks have an obligation to make the park available to everyone - not just those with the extra money they are willing to throw out for an unused campsite. If you can't make it, then call and let them know. They can hold your reservation if you will make it the following day, etc, or they will cancel it so someone else can enjoy it. If you don't call, then you cannot expect them to hold it indefinitely for you.
You're not buying the campsite. You're renting it. If you reserve a rental car and don't show as scheduled, they rent it out to someone else. You don't get to lock it up and leave it sitting.
Hotels will give away rooms if you do not show - unless you ask for a "late arrival guarantee" and are willing to forfeit a night's fee. They don't leave your room empty for a week.
If you rent equipment and don't pick it up as scheduled, they don't leave the equipment sitting around. They rent it out to someone else.