Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People camp for different reasons. The draw for me is the peacefulness and beauty for a reasonable cost.
Lots of campgrounds are pretty unremarkable. But there are dozens or even 100+ within a day's drive of DC that are truly stunning, with large, quiet campsites on bodies of water. You can have 8 people and a dog at one of these for $20, using gear that you use over and over again. These are settings that would cost hundreds and hundreds for a house.
Would you mind to share your favorite?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love climbing in the Alps, but would be OK overnighting at the treeline there, in a tent. The hiker's cabins are spartan and communal and I would never go there, so one tent night is all I can do before I need real toilets and a shower.
Since I don't want to buy tents and things just for rare nights outside, I rent a nice chalet.
Me again. I don't quite know how to camp in the US. Isn't the entire country overrun with ticks? I'm used to Europe, which has fewer ticks, especially at high altitude in the Alps.
Most of the eastern US has lots of ticks. You check nightly. You check ALL OVER.
You take antibiotics if you get bitten for long enough, or if you don’t feel well after possible Lyme exposure.
For me and many others, it’s worth the risk.
Anonymous wrote:I love kayaking and hiking but hate camping.
There are different versions of outdoorsy. Personally, I love indoor plumbing and a proper bed, but otherwise love being outside in nature.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me, RVing is not the same as camping. An RV can be just as comfortable as a hotel room, just more compact. There’s running water and electricity, sometimes a bathroom/shower, no sleeping on the ground. That is nothing like camping.
Being in a compact space is not my idea of comfortable.
Anonymous wrote:People camp for different reasons. The draw for me is the peacefulness and beauty for a reasonable cost.
Lots of campgrounds are pretty unremarkable. But there are dozens or even 100+ within a day's drive of DC that are truly stunning, with large, quiet campsites on bodies of water. You can have 8 people and a dog at one of these for $20, using gear that you use over and over again. These are settings that would cost hundreds and hundreds for a house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love climbing in the Alps, but would be OK overnighting at the treeline there, in a tent. The hiker's cabins are spartan and communal and I would never go there, so one tent night is all I can do before I need real toilets and a shower.
Since I don't want to buy tents and things just for rare nights outside, I rent a nice chalet.
Me again. I don't quite know how to camp in the US. Isn't the entire country overrun with ticks? I'm used to Europe, which has fewer ticks, especially at high altitude in the Alps.
Anonymous wrote:I am too old for camping.
Anonymous wrote:I love climbing in the Alps, but would be OK overnighting at the treeline there, in a tent. The hiker's cabins are spartan and communal and I would never go there, so one tent night is all I can do before I need real toilets and a shower.
Since I don't want to buy tents and things just for rare nights outside, I rent a nice chalet.
Anonymous wrote:In America, I think camping is popular among white people. I don’t see it much with other ethnic groups, aside from the tent encampments set up by the unhoused.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a family that had never/would never go camping. Now I see everyone and their mother owns an rv and kayaks. When and why did this become so popular?