Forum Discussion
drsolo
Jul 06, 2015Nomad
I have overnighted in a great many RV parks and seasonal campgrounds in flat areas with bushes but no trees, seashells (Florida), dirt (out west) and often packed like sardines. I try to pass up the sardine parks by looking online for maps of the campsite. I remember I had very high hopes for a campsite run by Methodists as a summer camp for kids, online pictures showed cabins under heavy woods. So we drove thru nice curvy road under big trees only to come out on a cleared RV site with absolutely no trees or buses right out in the baking sun and the RVs were parked sardines. The problem is trees interfere with those big RVs with their slides, etc. The other problem is the seasonals get the best and most treed lots. I know I scored the absolute best campsite this last winter at the campground. To hang onto it I must pay for it year round but I get to leave my TT there and nobody else uses the site when I am gone.
The beauty of camping with a B is that we can fit into lovely little sites no big RV can get in. There was one in Kentucky that wasnt really a site, but nestled under a tree next to a babbling brook and I had a 100 ft electrical cord to run to an outlet.
And, BTW, I dont want a larger rig, even my TT is going to be there for friends and relatives to visit.
The beauty of camping with a B is that we can fit into lovely little sites no big RV can get in. There was one in Kentucky that wasnt really a site, but nestled under a tree next to a babbling brook and I had a 100 ft electrical cord to run to an outlet.
And, BTW, I dont want a larger rig, even my TT is going to be there for friends and relatives to visit.
About Motorhome Group
38,756 PostsLatest Activity: Oct 02, 2025