Anonymous wrote:A few ideas:
1. Most regional/state parks have cabin rentals. They will also have bathroom facilities/running water (if the cabins don’t have bathrooms).
2. Skyland in Shenandoah NP feels like camping to me: lots of hiking, junior ranger program for the kids, but a dining room so you don’t have to cook. You can get a lodge room or a cabin.
3. Also in Shenandoah: Lewes Mt Cabins. There’re more to do at Skyland though.
4. Blue Moon Rising at Deep Creek Lake is closer to “tiny house” glamping, but I thought it was fun.
5. Also near Deep Creek Lake (because the resort gives you entertainment options when your kids get bored with “camping” like mine did at that age): Ella’s Enchanted Treehouses. I’ve never stayed there but it looks fun.
OR…
6. Borrow a tent and pitch it in your yard. Borrow a solo stove for a “camp fire”. We did this during Covid to entertain the kids (a little older than yours are now). They loved it.
These are great suggestions! At that age my kids considered camping anything with a campfire and a park ranger.
You may also consider the Peaks of Otter lodge. It is rustic.