โMay-07-2015 08:59 AM
โMay-18-2015 03:50 PM
4X4Dodger wrote:martipr wrote:ETyson wrote:
Hello Shearwater,
I am sorry to read you were not satisfied with the Good Sam RV Travel Guide.
The listings you refer are complementary listings, and include public parks (state, national and provincial). These listings do have limited information, but all include a phone number and either an address if a private campground, or directions if a public park, and we offer the park the option to enhance their information in their listing. We always encourage users to call ahead to confirm amenities and if space is available before arriving.
Please note that ALL private campgrounds, whether Good Sam or not, are rated and inspected each year.
Your feedback is very much appreciated and we always take it seriously when we begin working on future editions of the Travel Guide.
Kind regards,
Ellen
Sr. Marketing and Product Manager
Good Sam Enterprises
I have heard this spin before and either you are lying about the campgrounds being inspected each year or the people you pay to inspect them are inspecting from their recliners while they watch TV and sip suds. Perhaps the owners are doing the inspecting and rating. I once stopped at a campground which the guide listed the size as 60' x 18'. My 29' TT and pickup overhung the site on both ends, my slide was over the hookups and I couldn't open the awning because it was too close to the next site. I no longer use the guide but often look at it to compare the ratings to the campground I am at. I admit they are often quite accurate but just as often the ratings are so far off that it is obvious that the campground was not actually inspected. I really like Good Sam and also Camping World but the guide is really sad.
I think the use of the term "lying" in your post is uncalled for and ill-mannered. Maybe "misinformed" might be a nicer way to put it??
โMay-18-2015 05:50 AM
Shearwater wrote:
This is getting out of hand. I started the thread and stated that the new GS book is not as useful as the old Woodalls and gave some examples (which, by the way, are still true regardless of what the GS PR person said.)
I DID NOT complain about the amount of advertising in the book or how GS raters should go about their business or anything else that RVers or RV park owners have been arguing about.
The new book is significantly less useful than the old one, period.
โMay-17-2015 04:27 PM
โMay-17-2015 02:55 PM
โMay-17-2015 09:54 AM
โMay-17-2015 05:01 AM
Pogoil wrote:
Anyone want some cheese with all that WHINE!
Been using the book for 25 years we like it. No it is not perfect, but is a good tool.
Colby, jack or swiss? Anyone?Pogoil.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โMay-17-2015 03:53 AM
Redterpos3 wrote:Bob Vaughn wrote:
I find it confusing to find a campground on the road that I am on.
Online!! After Lunch the DW whips out her ipad and begins searching 3-4 hours down the road. I've not had a valuable phone book for some time now. But now I don't have a home phone so it makes sense, but the way we are used to doing things is going to change! Being able to make that change will transform businesses and travelers.
โMay-16-2015 08:08 PM
mowermech wrote:,
Oh, good grief!
the way some people like to twist things!
FACTS are FACTS!
I was NOT describing how I would rate a park. For one thing, I would never bother rating any park. In fact, the worst park I ever stayed at was rather wonderful! It was a little RV park on I90 in Washington State, all grass, lousy electrical system, very old, poor facilities, but we were tired, needed a place to stay with hookups, and it was wonderful to park, plug in, fix dinner, and get to sleep. Would I have spent a week there? NO! Would I stop again for a quick overnighter (if it is still open)? sure why not.
I was merely addressing complaints about the new Good Sam book.
It was stated that site sizes are not always accurate. Sorry, but there is no room for error there. Either the site is 25 by 50 feet, or it is not. How could a reviewer make a mistake?
The same goes for all the other items I mentioned. either the reviewer got it right, or made a mistake. Since it is obvious to any body with decent vision, how could a reviewer get it wrong?
If 45 out of 47 sites have full (or partial) hookups, and the overflow parking is in a hay meadow, SAY SO!
It isn't brain surgery, for pete's sake! Just state the FACTS!
"weight the criteria"?? WHY? Again, just state the FACTS!
If there is a noisy waterfall, I would like to know about it. If there is a noisy freeway running right by the park, I want to know about it.
Again, FACTS!
"scores"?? Again, WHY? WHY assign a "score". Just tell the facts!
I really don't see why it should be so hard to understand!
โMay-16-2015 07:36 PM
โMay-16-2015 02:18 PM
โMay-16-2015 02:11 PM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โMay-16-2015 11:45 AM
mowermech wrote:So you would "rate", meaning give a score as to whether or not the site lengths are accurate? What in your criteria constitutes accurate? Down to the foot? The inch? From where to where? Only the gravel or paved pad or do you give some length to the area behind the pad if a rig can overhang it? Does a longer site give the park a better score? If so, why would a 100' long pad be any better than a 50 foot pad for most rigs?
My old Woodalls is the 2012 edition. I find it completely adequate for commercial parks, military parks, and some USFS campgrounds.
For detailed information about USFS campgrounds, I use this site:
http://www.forestcamping.com/dow/list/nflist.htm
Fred and Suzi Dow put a lot of effort into that site, and I have found their descriptions to be pretty much exactly the way it is!
For commercial parks, I rely more on the old Mark 1 Eyeball than any description in a book. What I see is what there really is. For a quick overnight I'm not very picky. If I plan to stay for a week or so, then I get VERY picky! I often find I do not agree with reviewers, whether it be a review of a movie, a motel, a campground, a restaurant, or wine (I once read a review praising a winery on Flathead Lake, in NW Montana. I bought some of their recommended wines, and found them rather disgusting! Most definitely not to MY taste!)
Of course, paid advertising is often unbelievable; it is geared to make the payer look as good as possible. Reality has nothing to do with it.
As for rating criteria, some things are the same no matter where (or what) the park is.
either the site measurements are accurate, or they are not.
either the number of sites is accurate, or it isn't.
either there are full hookups at each site, or there are not.
either the toilets and showers (if any) are clean or they are not.
the roads are either gravel, paved, or dirt (mud when wet).
the sites are either gravel, paved, or dirt (mud when wet).
either there is a firepit and table, or there isn't.
either there is stream or lake access or there isn't.
either the reviewer tells it like it is, or he/she doesn't.
etc.
It is NOT a "judgement call", it is either/or.
โMay-16-2015 10:49 AM
โMay-16-2015 08:39 AM
4X4Dodger wrote:I am still curious as to what the great flaw is in the guidebook, and what is the solution. You make the point yourself that it is impossible to have a reviewer that is completely free of any bias. People complain that it is big and awkward, yet apparently you want even more stuff in it. It rates the private parks and lists many local, state and federal parks. Obviously, parks will fall through the cracks, and some can and do refuse to be listed at all.SDcampowneroperator wrote:
Hello All,
The 40 inspection teams who visit and rate every private park listed in the guide are contractors, without agenda influenced by rating or advertising.
They inspect and rate first, not review , then discuss listing with the camp. Their rating cannot be influenced by the listing or advertising. In my experience, they are above reproach.
The travel guide lists public camps at no cost, free,
with their provided information as a public service and that is what you pay for when purchasing the guide.
Max
While I am willing to agree that MOST of the contractor raters are honest folks just making a living and doing the best they can I find it incredibly naive to describe them as "above reproach" and "without agenda". Not even the Pope is above reproach and everyone has an agenda hidden or otherwise.
Are you really willing to contend that no rater has accepted gifts, free stays or other considerations for their reviews?
As, apparently from your name, you are an RV Park owner I find it astonishing that you don't seem to recognize that making the guide better, easier to use and more fair to all parks by correcting the rating flaws is in YOUR BEST INTEREST. Further if you are Paying for this listing in the guide it would make even more sense to make sure the book is as good as it can be...and it is surely not at this point.
Your almost blind defense of everything GSE puzzles me especially when you can read the comments of people who are your customer base telling you there are problems....???