โAug-03-2014 10:31 AM
โNov-25-2014 08:23 AM
โNov-25-2014 07:19 AM
โNov-25-2014 07:04 AM
โAug-08-2014 05:04 AM
BigSkyFamily wrote:
No, I would not. I live 20 miles from Glacier National Park and I refuse to pay the $35 they want for entrance.
I live in Montana, I see wildlife in my backyard, and know many places to go play outdoors that don't cost me a dime and are every bit as nice as the park.....with thousands fewer people to trip over.
โAug-08-2014 01:51 AM
โAug-07-2014 07:07 PM
monkey44 wrote:noe-place wrote:
Makes my free national parks pass look even better.
Just hope you get to keep it, and it actually works in the future.
โAug-07-2014 06:11 PM
pnichols wrote:National Park? or National Forest?qtla9111 wrote:
I don't think the current system is what Mother Nature intended. BTW, we didn't use a generator, only solar. Everyone is pushing solar, why aren't more rvers who are interested in nature turning to solar?
We're nature oriented motorhome owners ... the DW even was a Natural Science major for her degree. We're also rockhounds and boondock camp a lot, so our RV generators are not an issue for non-existent neighboring campers.
โAug-07-2014 05:56 PM
โAug-07-2014 05:30 PM
qtla9111 wrote:
I don't think the current system is what Mother Nature intended. BTW, we didn't use a generator, only solar. Everyone is pushing solar, why aren't more rvers who are interested in nature turning to solar?
โAug-07-2014 04:38 PM
โAug-07-2014 02:29 PM
bukhrn wrote:Would that be like $4 dollars in the 60's?
"would you pay $41 to enter a National Park? "
$40. just to enter, NO !
โAug-07-2014 02:11 PM
โAug-07-2014 02:06 PM
โAug-07-2014 11:00 AM
โAug-07-2014 10:36 AM
pnichols wrote:More like the first part and then the diesel generator just up wind on the gentle breeze fires up and you are gagging on the fumes to the point you just need to get out of the RV and head out on another place to rest. BTDT.pasusan wrote:
Argh... How can you say generator noise and camping out in nature in the same sentence?
Hmmm .... have you ever traveled with a small but fully equipped RV 25 miles each way on extreme washboarded roads into the pristine, serene, and otherwise spectacular Oregon Outback to explore, rockhound, and camp under brilliantly beautiful but sometimes high daytime temperature skies - without RV air conditioning so as to be able to nicely rest and sort through what you found?
Try it ... then you might learn how generators and a true nature experience can, and must, indeed go hand in hand at times. Whether we did this very much or not I wouldn't own an RV at what one pays for them that couldn't do it, just in case our tastes changed.