โAug-09-2018 09:51 AM
โAug-14-2018 08:16 AM
D.E.Bishop wrote:Huh... Can you say google, lol? Looks pricey and will pass so don't worry 'bout us. ๐
No I'm not giving you the address yet, we want to be able to camp there at least once before it becomes very popular. It is in Oregon, however.
โAug-14-2018 07:08 AM
โAug-14-2018 06:22 AM
โAug-13-2018 06:44 PM
โAug-13-2018 12:43 PM
westernrvparkowner wrote:
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.
โAug-13-2018 09:01 AM
โAug-13-2018 08:35 AM
Expyinflight wrote:
The trees are too tall. The trees are too short. The trees are the wrong type. The trees are too slow growing. The trees are planted in the wrong place. The trees don't shade my RV at just the right time of day. The trees brush the side of my rig. The trees block my satellite. The turns in the road are too tight. The utilities are located in the wrong place. YIKES!!
There is no possible way to make each and every camper....happy.
I pity the campground/RV park owner, and often wonder where they find the patience to persevere each day. But I'm thankful that they do.
โAug-13-2018 08:15 AM
โAug-13-2018 06:20 AM
dewey02 wrote: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.
X2 on the above. From the standpoint of public campgrounds, many of these were constructed 50 or more years ago, when a lot of camping was tent camping. They have been "modernized" since then, with various amenities added, but the overall layout is difficult or impossible to change do to topography, etc and so remains the same.
And there are many ideas that go into campground design that are done SPECIFICALLY to regulate what the camper does or can do. Rather than posting a sign with numerous "Don't do this, don't do that" signs everywhere, the campground is designed to prevent, or at least discourage the unwanted use. Many of these design elements never occur to the average user, and there have been many posts on this website with people saying things like "Why do they do this, it makes it hard for me to do X." Well they did it that way on purpose, because they don't want you doing X.
โAug-10-2018 12:40 PM
โAug-10-2018 12:06 PM
camp-n-family wrote:Tree maintenance seems to be a low priority. I do as much looking at Z as much as X and Y. Nothing like low-hanging branches to really piss me off.
Posts, rocks, trees etc are always in the wrong places. .
โAug-10-2018 12:01 PM
camp-n-family wrote:
They seem to be designed by someone who has never towed anything. Posts, rocks, trees etc are always in the wrong places. For example, something we encounter a lot are sites that are advertised to fit a 40'TT but is limited to 20' because they put the number post right on the corner of the site entrances.
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-10-2018 11:55 AM
โAug-09-2018 05:07 PM