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adamis's avatar
adamis
Nomad II
Aug 02, 2020

What's changed about camping?

The family and I just completed our three week road trip and I've been reflecting about the past and future of our adventures. I know as adults we always idealize our past but it seems to me that the camping experiences I had as a kid are almost impossible to replicate as an adult. Let me opine a moment...

As a kid, our family mostly boondocked in Northern California. We would load up for a week of camping and head up from Chico on highway 32 and drive into some forest service roads to spots my parents had known for years. Those places were remote mountain meadows with flowing streams and beaver ponds for fishing and exploring. Nothing but good memories and the truck camper my parents had fit in their short bed half ton 4x4.

As I try to replicate this experience for my kids, I am finding it difficult to do. Granted part of my problem is location. I'm currently living in the SF Bay Area (not by choice) and good National Forest is a minimum of 2 to 3 hours any direction to get to. Even with that challenge overcome, I'm observing some of the following:

1a. Forest Roads once accessible are now closed off (due to fire concerns) forcing the use of public campgrounds over the hidden gems our parents knew of.

1b. Marijuna "industry" making taking over the remote areas in National Forest and making it unsafe to go to.

2. Public Campgrounds are overcrowded (population has doubled but when is the last time you saw a new campground being built?).

3. Campgrounds today are akin to "combat camping" where fire rings are right on top of each other to cram as many campsites into as small of an area as possible.

4. People are less respectful of others. Someone in the campground thinks that everyone else nearby wants to their music all day long or the people that get hammered around the campfire partying or, the worse, people that leave trash all over the place after their "party".

5. Sight seeing the local sights means fighting for a parking space which is undersized for your vehicle.

6. Electronic devices taking kids attention away from the wonderment of being in the forest and now having to fight their attitude if they don't get their daily dose of tik tok / youtube.

7. RV parks that are profit driven and have turned into nothing but parking lots.

8. Homeless / long term campers taking over campgrounds and living there (aka, junk all over the place).

9. Reservation systems that require months in advance of planning now versus the "pack and go" that we grew up with.

I'm sure you all can add to my list of gripes and feel free to do so. Yes, I realize boondocking is still a thing and in certain parts of the country solves nearly all of these gripes. Perhaps my issues are mostly related to Northern CA and it's population boom since I was a kid.

That being said, my concern is that these problems are not going to get fixed on their own. They are a product of a growing population and a society that no longer respects others. My only counter to this is the need for a growing number of private campgrounds run by people like us that remember the good old days and seek to replicate that to the extent possible. I've looked at buying mountain property for years to do just this but haven't pulled the trigger yet but someday hope I will.

How many of you have considered the same thing?

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