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Buying land for camping...

kfp673
Explorer II
Explorer II
Hello all,

I am not sure if this is in the correct category, and this is really just a curious question / dream. Has anyone every (or known anyone who has) purchased a piece of land specifically to either leave your camper or take your camper to for camping? I am not speaking of the RV parks where you own your lot. I am talking about a random super rural property where you are on your own. As I sit at an RV park in northern PA with a site right on the lake, I think it would be amazing to have a property deep in the woods that sits on a pond or lake with no one around but us. But I would think getting electric/water/sewer to those locations would be costly.

Again, purely curious.
42 REPLIES 42

ferndaleflyer
Explorer III
Explorer III
I did this years ago in WV near the Ohio river. Still have it but might sell. It sits on a good fishing stream, on a paved road, with electric, water, and septic. Isolated yet close to town and no one near.....only 1ac but not much upkeep. So it can be done depending on what you want.

smarty
Explorer II
Explorer II
We looked at this as well. As others have stated we decided to not do this so that we can continue to "move around". Was the correct choice for us.

Dick_B
Explorer
Explorer
My parents bought a farm in nw Wisconsin and would travel to it weekends and summers 400 miles from Chicago for more than 20 years. Seems to me that it makes no difference if one is staying at a farm house or an RV so it's not such a far out idea.
Dick_B
2003 SunnyBrook 27FKS
2011 3/4 T Chevrolet Suburban
Equal-i-zer Hitch
One wife, two electric bikes (both Currie Tech Path+ models)

Bumpyroad
Explorer
Explorer
4runnerguy wrote:
I know of a number of places here in Colorado where people buy a piece of land, install a well, septic and electricity, then build a pole barn under which they put their RV. Seems most use 5th wheels for this.


I would think that it would be preferable to get a large TT instead of a 5er if that was one's intention?????????????
I haven't priced them but thought you would get more bang for the buck?

bumpy

dedmiston
Moderator
Moderator
I have experience with two different friends with private camps and it's definitely a Dickensian "Tale of Two Campsites".

One guy bought a parcel in the CA desert near where we ride off road. He has access to heavy equipment, so he graded a few pads and graded a road out to his parcel from the nearest large road (not a highway).

I doubt there's any decent water on that parcel, so a well is going to be tricky. Affordable power is flat out of the question out there, and I doubt he has the gumption to put in a decent septic system.

I honestly don't see the point of that camp, besides the fact that he knows that he and his buddies will always have a guaranteed spot to camp and ride from.

The other camp we stayed at was heaven on earth. Our friends own this as part of their family's Spanish land grant in the hills above Taos, NM.

This family has the luxury of time and scale on their side, because there are so many living descendants still on the deed. I don't know, but I'm guessing there are five to ten families still involved, so it makes it a lot easier to spread the costs and labor.

This camp was heavenly. It's green, fertile, and spacious.

When we first got there last Labor Day weekend, we were the first to arrive and didn't really know where we were or what the setup was. I was confused and kept asking my buddy beforehand, "Tell me again, this isn't an RV park, but there are hookups?" When we got there, I couldn't see any pads or pedestals, but I saw six or seven RVs that were parked up there for the season. When my friends got there, they showed me where to find the pedestals and dumps between the trees up in the hills, so we shoehorned our little triple axle 45' fifth wheel up into the trees for an amazing spot.

It turned out they had paid to have power brought in the couple of miles from the highway. They also put in a huge septic field and ran their well water to every space. It looked pretty random and hodgepodge, but it was a fantastic camp.

They had a huge full-sized storage bin where they kept their ATVs for hunting along with all of their camp supplies (dry goods, paper goods, stoves, etc.). They also had a good size pole barn with roll down tent sides for when it rained (and it rained!!!) and a permanent kitchen area under the barn (sinks, counters, and bases for grills & griddles).

My take-away after knowing what my one friend had gone through just to scrape out some level dirt in the desert compared to the other family who had literally spent generations improving their camp was that this wasn't something anybody should undertake as a single family unless the area already had some natural resources (like good water) and/or was close enough to civilization to bring in power. Unless money were no concern, I don't think it's very practical to pull this off as a single family.

Honestly, pouring a relatively modest amount of money into your RV for increased battery capacity, inverter capacity, solar, and lots of fresh/waste water capacity is pretty attainable for most people, and then your options for boondocking are practically unlimited.

2014 RAM 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually long bed. B&W RVK3600 hitch โ€ข 2015 Crossroads Elevation Homestead Toy Hauler ("The Taj Mahauler") โ€ข <\br >Toys:

  • 18 Can Am Maverick x3
  • 05 Yamaha WR450
  • 07 Honda CRF250X
  • 05 Honda CRF230
  • 06 Honda CRF230

valhalla360
Navigator
Navigator
As a kid, we had 5 acres backing up on state forest land in Michigan. It was close enough to the road to we got electric in and we had a well but it had a hand pump. A couple hundred yards back in the woods we build an outhouse.

Biggest thing is to check the local regulations and utilities. If it's remote getting power in can get expensive. Likewise, can you sink a well of reasonable depth at reasonable cost and find water? If you want to be able to dump, a septic system is needed (the outhouse was 50yr ago and I doubt my dad pulled a permit).

It's certainly possible just is it worth it. Keep in mind, you will likely be paying property taxes and in most states property taxes are significantly higher if it's not your primary residence.
Tammy & Mike
Ford F250 V10
2021 Gray Wolf
Gemini Catamaran 34'
Full Time spliting time between boat and RV

gbopp
Explorer
Explorer
spoon059 wrote:
If I was doing it and making it semi-permanent I might set up a Carolina Carport type system for an additional roof system. That would keep water and branches off the roof, while also keeping you out of the sun and keeping additional solar gain off your roof and out of your interior space.

Excellent Advice!

4runnerguy
Explorer
Explorer
I know of a number of places here in Colorado where people buy a piece of land, install a well, septic and electricity, then build a pole barn under which they put their RV. Seems most use 5th wheels for this. They often have a storage shed to hold stuff they don't want to haul around. Maybe they have another similar property somewhere warmer for the winter months or this is just a weekend getaway.

One significant advantage is that without an actual house, the property taxes are a whole lot lower. Our "cabin" is nothing more than a 1974 mobile home with a roof over it. Well, septic, electric all installed. Hasn't moved since it was moved in. Nice deck. Storage shed. Trees. Lake view. But because the trailer isn't attached to the land, our yearly property taxes are just $88. A neighbor with a similar sized stick built house pays nearly than 15 times that in taxes.

One has to do some research to make understand the variabilities in the county laws and regulations to see what is possible. Also, you rarely find someplace that is near a major tourist attraction like a national park or even a lake in the woods.

I've thought about it often but can't convince DW to live in a RV all the time. Happy wife, happy life!
Ken & Allison
2 Camping Cats (1 diabetic)
1996 4Runner, TRD Supercharger, Edelbrock headers
2007 Fleetwood Arcadia, Honda EU2000i
4 mountain bikes, 1 canoe, 4 tents, 8 sleeping bags, 2 backpacks
(You get the idea!)

DarkSkySeeker
Explorer
Explorer
This was a dream of mine for years. I investigated several properties. I wanted mimmick my friend's set up on 40 acres nearby. Ultimately it turned out to be a trade off between the following: cost, location variety, effort to add amenities. At I've gotten older the effort to set up water, power, etc overcame my interest.
There is something special about camping in an RV.
.

Lwiddis
Explorer II
Explorer II
Certainly good for some but Iโ€™d get tired of going the same place all the time, the lack of adventure.
Winnebago 2101DS TT & 2022 Chevy Silverado 1500 LTZ Z71, WindyNation 300 watt solar-Lossigy 200 AH Lithium battery. Prefer boondocking, USFS, COE, BLM, NPS, TVA, state camps. Bicyclist. 14 yr. Army -11B40 then 11A - (MOS 1542 & 1560) IOBC & IOAC grad

spoon059
Explorer II
Explorer II
Haven't done it myself, but many people have. If you have the finances, go for it. Like ford truck guy said... find a way for a septic type system (or composting toilet) and a way to get power and water. Generator might get expensive and logistically difficult to run continuously. A solar setup or wind turbine system with a battery bank could give you reasonable power. Heck, get a mountain property with a stream running through it and set up a watermill to create a couple of kilowatts of power.

If I was doing it and making it semi-permanent I might set up a Carolina Carport type system for an additional roof system. That would keep water and branches off the roof, while also keeping you out of the sun and keeping additional solar gain off your roof and out of your interior space. Your camper will last a LOT longer and provide you with a covered exterior space as well.

Heck, years ago my dad talked about wanting to buy a piece of property in West Virginia that had mineral rights and drilling a natural gas well to provide free power.
2015 Ram CTD
2015 Jayco 29QBS

ppine
Explorer II
Explorer II
When you run out of access to public land, then buying your own parcel is a viable idea. I never liked the idea of going to the same place all the time. It is why I will never buy a second home for recreation.

Camping or having an RV allows for discovery and new places and experiences which is the whole point of going out there if you ask me.

My best friend purchased 99 acres in Upstate PA for this exact reason. He is W of Towanda .. He dug a well, placed a 55 gallon drum about 10' under the ground with a TON of holes in it for waste..
He has a small solar set up for the well pump and runs a generator when he wants electric for the camper.. He cleared about a half acre to park on and it is on the top of the mountain overlooking everything.

He also placed stone from the dirt road up to his cleared spot.. just enough to allow him to pull his 35' TT up to the location
Me-Her-the kids
2020 Ford F350 SD 6.7
2020 Redwood 3991RD Garnet