โFeb-28-2014 02:49 AM
โMar-01-2014 06:17 AM
senior-cit wrote:
Iknown thought I would post this to bring all of us who have these homes on wheels and "camp-out now.
Back years ago, my wufe and our then 2 children took a camping vacation down into Kentucky to stay in a State Park.
Packed evetthing in a 2-wheeled trailer, we tented, and I had installed a plywood area in the back seat so the kids could play. Yes, I know, they weren't restrained, no seat belt law in the "olden days". Unkown to me at the time, my wife had put a small cooler with fresh eggs in the back window. We arrived at our campsite, only to discover our son had gotten into the eggs and you can guess the mess.Wifey tosses the egg mess into the woods and I informed her that we are going to attract animals tonight. Off to bed we go and about 2hrs. later, we hear something outside out tent. Our tent, being well used, had a zipper that wouldn't zip all the way down, so got flashlight out and snuck a peak outside and stared face-to=face with the biggest skunk in the forest. Now unfortunatly he wants to come in and the tent won't zip up so we took the diaper pins off our son and as careful as we could, we fastened the tent opening up. After trying several times to get in and us huddled in a corner of the tent, laying out a plan, he left. After a while we went back to bed until the next morning, and life went on.
โMar-01-2014 04:22 AM
โMar-01-2014 03:11 AM
tatest wrote:
Camping is still camping, If you choose to do it. When I take my RV out to the campground, I'll sometimes choose a place when I am surrounded by campers. Sometimes I'll take my tent and kitchen. Sometimes I'll take the kitchen box, a low cot, and sleeping bag. Still have, and use, the camping equipment I bought 40 years ago.
I don't see RVing, another thing I do as a road trip convenience, as camping, but someone wants to call it camping, that's OK too.
But if you want to really camp, where I am, there's not much to keep you from doing it, hundreds of campgrounds, a long season if you can tolerate the heat and are not afraid to see wildlife.
But if you want to backpack, camp outside a campground in a wilderness area, we don't have much of that. that works better where you have forests.
โFeb-28-2014 10:14 PM
โFeb-28-2014 07:45 PM
โFeb-28-2014 06:58 PM
โFeb-28-2014 06:32 PM
senior-cit wrote:Dog Folks wrote:
A vast majority of us started out in tents. I now we did, 40 years ago.
Good times.
But the body grows old and starts to protest about sleeping on the ground, and thus the RV.
Did you know that a tent attracts rain? Ours did everytime we used it.
โFeb-28-2014 06:24 PM
โFeb-28-2014 04:39 PM
โFeb-28-2014 04:02 PM
โFeb-28-2014 03:34 PM
โFeb-28-2014 02:06 PM
โFeb-28-2014 02:01 PM
โFeb-28-2014 01:48 PM
โFeb-28-2014 01:29 PM
Campfire Time wrote:
x3. Our friends used to joke to others not to go camping when we did, because it always rained when we did. As much fun as tenting was and as many memories we have, we don't miss it in the slightest.
Whenever someone tries to tell me we aren't "really" camping. I tell them I have nothing to prove. I've done far more deep woods camping when I was young than most people will ever do in their entire lives.