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- jimh406Explorer IIIIn case you are wondering, I got RV spaces at 3 different campgrounds in Yellowstone campgrounds: Bridge Bay, Grants, and Fishing Bridge.
I could have saved a spot for a 40 ft RV, but oh, well. - Executive45Explorer IIIFrom Websters:
on·ly
??nl?/
adverb
adverb: only
1. and no one or nothing more besides; solely or exclusively.
I don't see any exceptions in that definition....:S.....Dennis - JfreshExplorer
jimh425 wrote:
Can I park a Truck Camper at a Tent Only space in Yellowstone? There are some spaces marked as Large Tent Only but with 2 vehicles, for instance.
As far as Yellowstone is concerned is my Truck with Camper a vehicle? :) Has anyone used one these Tent Only spaces in Yellowstone with their Truck with Camper?
This is the exact reason you have a TC and not a RV. If there is a parking spot you have a camp site. As far as I am concerned a TC is the exact same as sleeping in the back of your pick up. If you fit in the parking spot you are good to go. If you treated a TC like a RV you would be limiting the places you could stay and the experiences you could have. - HMS_BeagleExplorer
JaredWPhillips wrote:
Seems to me, if you could park your vehicle at a tent site, and setup your tent, you would be allowed to go sleep in your vehicle should a heavy rain come. A Truck Camper should be no different. Park it, setup a "tent" and then sleep in your vehicle.
Trouble is, the same argument could be used for a 45' class A bus. Set up a little pup tent, and you're good?
By the way, these days, just because they are in a tent doesn't mean they don't have and run a generator at all hours. I've seen that a lot recently. Including TVs set on the camp table blaring away. - rexlionExplorerYou might still get a site in Yellowstone. Just keep checking the reservation system every couple of days. That's how I got 2 nights in a row (in different sites) in Yosemite Valley, just 1-2 weeks before leaving home.
- RickWExplorer IIII was at a national park last month, scoping out campsites on my bicycle, then asked about availability of sites. Some were for tents only. I specifically asked the ranger at the gate about parking a truck with TC at a tent only site. (He did not see my rig-I was on a bicycle!)
He produced a laminated card illustrating all kinds of vehicle configurations. From my memory, cars ok, cars with trailers, no. Regular SUVs and vans, ok, Class B looking vans, no. Trucks with shells, ok, Trucks with anything past the tailgate or over the cab, no. RVs, 5ers, trailers, no.
The only wiggle room I can think of might be an old, non-cabover Alaskan TC popup with the tailgate raised so it looks like a shell.
Just one mans observation at one campground at one NP.
FYI I believe there were no more sites of any kind available for the rest of the year. :E - Kayteg1Explorer IILife is always full of variations and gentle questions in slow season will always go long way.
I've been parking my 40' motorhome at campground having "32 max" rule.
Don't try that Friday afternoon, but I arrived on Tuesday. - DuctapeExplorer^ This. I've seen lots of tent campers sleep in their cars for one reason or another and it never bothered me. Nor anyone else AFAIK.
Just don't crank the genny and watch TV until 10:00 and who knows or cares? - JaredWPhillipsExplorerSeems to me, if you could park your vehicle at a tent site, and setup your tent, you would be allowed to go sleep in your vehicle should a heavy rain come. A Truck Camper should be no different. Park it, setup a "tent" and then sleep in your vehicle.
- toedtoesExplorer IIII agree. But there are a lot of campgrounds that try to offer that "traditional tent camping" experience and RVs just don't quite fit that image.
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