sdca2va wrote:
Anyone here have a Thousand Trails membership? Do you like it?
We tried them out this year and also bought a northwest zone pass. Have been to 10 or 11 of them in Wa. & Or. Most of them are very nice if you like more on the rustic/nature side. (No concrete pads or manicured grass.) They don't trim trees or fell overgrown ones and some parks are like the Amazon jungle (Florence Or. and La Conner Wa., eg.) and are hard to get around, esp. with a big rig. Many sites are also not deep enough, very sloped or too narrow.
Many of their parks are old and tired and not up to date compared to other parks. Voltage can be really low. Had one park where the pedestals only had 106 volts before turning anything on and our EMS shut us down once plugged in. Moved to two more sites before we found decent voltage and then on the way out one morning, the entire park had no water due to a broken faucet somwhere. NOT a pleasant experience there. Another we were at they handed us a notice at sign-in not to use AC units due to power problems and it was 100F out. Water pressure can be dismal and be barely adequate. Many of the parks hardly have any sewer hookups (have water and power tho.) and it's impossible to find a FHU site in the camping season. Also, because the parks are old, there are very few 50 amp pedestals because the NEC didn't require many decades ago, and if old enough, none. Some do not have cell phone service and wifi can be pretty baaad.
Were at one of their parks and when I went to use the dump station, it backed up all over the place. The maintenance guy came over and said it happens once in a while. Apparently head office spends almost nothing on maintenance or upgrades on their parks according to staff I've talked to.
Many of the TT parks have permanent sites which is a bit of a turn-off.
Some parks are very nice tho., like Seaside, Or. and Ocean Shores, Wa. Not many trees and Seaside has FHU throughout. Funny thing with the heavily treed parks is that it is easy to get lost and dis-oriented plus if you like to chat with fellow campers you won't see or bump into them as often.
Great staff and activities, good clubhouse buildings. Sites are usually spaced well apart and have decent privacy.
Go online and read user reviews like on
rvparkreviews.com. If some say the voltage or water pressure is bad, it is. Expectations can vary a lot between users too like MH-ers vs TT people. Stayed in one TT and the reviews said it was noisy on one side due to being next to the interstate. So we picked a site on the opposite side but it turned out that was right next to a race car track (a few hundred feet away) and it was flippin' loud and could not talk outside. Could not see the track due to being heavily treed... Read the reviews carefully and in between the lines too!!
If you want to travel around the US, about 1/2 of the US (in the center) does not have any TT parks and you'll need RPI or another one. Bugs me that if you live on the west coast if you want to camp in Ca. and Or., you need to buy 2 zone passes. I'd look online to get an older pre-owned membership that has NLA perks and privileges. Watch the number of days you're allowed to stay at one park or in the system. They have sales on the zone passes sometimes.
I have no idea about the east side of the US but believe it is similar. We're planning to get rid of our KM resort membership in Wa. and will likely get a full TT membership. If you plan to do a lot of camping, it is a pretty good deal. We did almost 60 night this season and that would equate to under $10 a night compared to $40-50 or more for reg. pricing.