โAug-09-2018 09:51 AM
โAug-09-2018 04:02 PM
hotpepperkid wrote:
Which direction should the spaces face,
โAug-09-2018 03:23 PM
โAug-09-2018 02:45 PM
โAug-09-2018 02:29 PM
westernrvparkowner wrote:dedmiston wrote:The OP was referring to large shade trees. Out here in the west those are multiple decades in the making.westernrvparkowner wrote:
Unless there is something I don't know about, most trees take 30 - 50 years to mature.
There are plenty of trees that mature much quicker than that. Depending on the size/age of the specimen you begin with, you should be able to plant many varieties of trees that reach near maturity within 5-10 years.
(My wife runs a landscape construction company. She and our son are both Landscape Architects. I've been subjected to decades of flora lore, and one learns this stuff whether one wants to or not.)
2014 RAM 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually long bed. B&W RVK3600 hitch โข 2015 Crossroads Elevation Homestead Toy Hauler ("The Taj Mahauler") โข <\br >Toys:
โAug-09-2018 02:28 PM
โAug-09-2018 01:35 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
I would bet dollars to donuts CG layout is thought out in advance to maximize use of available land Ie: number of sites, traffic flow, utilities etc.
Course majority of existing CGs are older and were set up for RVs of their era.
Upgrading can be VERY expensive
โAug-09-2018 01:28 PM
โAug-09-2018 01:20 PM
dedmiston wrote:The OP was referring to large shade trees. Out here in the west those are multiple decades in the making.westernrvparkowner wrote:
Unless there is something I don't know about, most trees take 30 - 50 years to mature.
There are plenty of trees that mature much quicker than that. Depending on the size/age of the specimen you begin with, you should be able to plant many varieties of trees that reach near maturity within 5-10 years.
(My wife runs a landscape construction company. She and our son are both Landscape Architects. I've been subjected to decades of flora lore, and one learns this stuff whether one wants to or not.)
โAug-09-2018 12:52 PM
westernrvparkowner wrote:
Unless there is something I don't know about, most trees take 30 - 50 years to mature.
2014 RAM 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually long bed. B&W RVK3600 hitch โข 2015 Crossroads Elevation Homestead Toy Hauler ("The Taj Mahauler") โข <\br >Toys:
โAug-09-2018 12:44 PM
โAug-09-2018 11:45 AM
imgoin4it wrote:Trees at the front and back of a site are less likely to block slides and satellite reception. It is also a location where the roots will be less likely to grow into the underground utility lines. Plus they forcd the rvs to swing out into the roadway rather then cut short and drive across the sites. There is a lot of reasons trees are placed there.
The single thing that โbothersโ me most about layout of RV parks are the ones that plant trees at the ends, one or both of the parking spot. Doesnโt take long for a little growth to make getting into or out of the spot without scratching up the motor home. Stay at several that have this situation and it is tough to get into and out of them and even more so when neighbors vehicles are parked at their spot.. These parks were designed and built that way on flat ground in the south west where space does not look like a limiting factor tp me.
โAug-09-2018 11:32 AM
โAug-09-2018 11:30 AM
westernrvparkowner wrote:
Unless there is something I don't know about, most trees take 30 - 50 years to mature. Pretty hard to anticipate what the needs of RVs will be in 2068.
Design of parks is almost entirely dependent on the topography and unique features of the site. Flat, level sites with straight wide roads might be easy to construct in a Kansas cornfield. Not as easy to carve those features out of the side of a mountain. Placing utilities in the ideal spot isn't always possible. Sometimes that would require removing a 200 year old tree or blasting thru 50 feet of granite.
Personally, I don't want exact uniformity in much of anything other than McDonalds.
โAug-09-2018 11:29 AM
โAug-09-2018 11:28 AM