โJul-05-2015 06:41 PM
โJul-08-2015 02:28 PM
Coach-man wrote:laknox wrote:
Campland on the Bay in San Diego has a powered trailer dolly and will pull trailers into opposing sites, nose to tail. That way you have awnings facing each other. Frankly, never paid any attention to the pedestal, but I believe they're all at the back of the pad anyway. I thought that was a very cozy idea for camping with family/friends in another rig.
Lyle
Coconuts at Fort Meyers Beach is like that, but at least your hook ups are in the correct side!
โJul-08-2015 07:57 AM
Bob Vaughn wrote:
We stayed in a county park one time that had the water hook up near the road and 100' away was the power hook up. It as at the back of the site. I was already unhooked before I realized this.....
โJul-08-2015 07:34 AM
โJul-08-2015 07:18 AM
โJul-08-2015 07:01 AM
laknox wrote:
Campland on the Bay in San Diego has a powered trailer dolly and will pull trailers into opposing sites, nose to tail. That way you have awnings facing each other. Frankly, never paid any attention to the pedestal, but I believe they're all at the back of the pad anyway. I thought that was a very cozy idea for camping with family/friends in another rig.
Lyle
โJul-08-2015 06:53 AM
โJul-07-2015 09:52 PM
โJul-07-2015 09:26 PM
Dtank wrote:laknox wrote:
Campland on the Bay in San Diego has a powered trailer dolly and will pull trailers into opposing sites, nose to tail. That way you have awnings facing each other. Frankly, never paid any attention to the pedestal, but I believe they're all at the back of the pad anyway. I thought that was a very cozy idea for camping with family/friends in another rig.
Lyle
"Cozy" it ain't..:R
Guess some things never change!
*Crampland* on the Bay (AKA - San Diego Zoo Annex) would stack RVs on top of each other if they could figure out a way to do it.
Went there many, many years ago when kids were little.
Once was enough...;)
.
โJul-07-2015 08:38 PM
laknox wrote:
Campland on the Bay in San Diego has a powered trailer dolly and will pull trailers into opposing sites, nose to tail. That way you have awnings facing each other. Frankly, never paid any attention to the pedestal, but I believe they're all at the back of the pad anyway. I thought that was a very cozy idea for camping with family/friends in another rig.
Lyle
โJul-06-2015 03:19 PM
enblethen wrote:
I have seen that in some side by side setups.
That is not typical for MHs.
MH, TT and 5ers are all setup the same way
โJul-06-2015 09:34 AM
โJul-06-2015 09:22 AM
โJul-06-2015 08:25 AM
โJul-06-2015 07:17 AM
korbe wrote:Executive wrote:
You must be referring to Sunshine Holiday. Often, when a campground has sites that face a lake or the ocean they put the pedestals on varying sides of the sites. Motorhomes can then pull in facing the water and fivers can back in with their rear window facing the water. Make sense?...sounds like you picked a motorhome site....Dennis
Yep, my thoughts also. And with this theory, the picnic table, and any patio area would also be on his back side.