Matt_Colie wrote:
Life outside of a house:
Real Camping - You have to be able to pick up everything you are going to have with you.
Back Packing - you carry everything on your back and walk where you are going.
Bicycle Camping - pack or load everything you just don’t have lift it all at once.
Canoe(or Kayak) Camping - Like bicycle camping, but packs should be waterproof.
Sail Camping - Just like canoe camping except you don’t have to paddle.
(Allows a lift and carry exception for the boat itself.)
Horseback Camping - like above in most all respects.
Real Camping ends here as all the rest require you to drive a vehicle to the “camp ground”.
Well ... the above descriptions certainly make it clear that the discriminating criterion for "is it real camping" is whether or not a "vehicle" is used for transport of the people and their gear.
For instance, personally I see no difference between a horse carrying people/equipment to a campground and an engine-powered contraption carrying people/equipment to a campground. I see backpackers walking down roads in the wilderness and I see camping vehicles going down roads in the wilderness that are almost just a trail.
One should also be careful in forming "real camping" definitions that exclude persons who are not ambulatory. Many elderly and other-wise limited folks deserve to, and wish to, do "real camping" too. For them a powered vehicle coming along to carry them and their gear is often necessary.
I consider the DW and myself as "really camping" when out in the Utah desert somewhere - whether or not our legs or our motorhome got us and our gear there.
This all begs the question - were the early pioneers doing real camping when crossing the West using their wagons to carry themselves and all their "camping gear"?