Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"It’s not a poor people hobby; it’s often part of the summer orientation at rich kid colleges."
My DS's private and snooty college not only takes the entering freshman on camping trips, it boasts about its amazing collection of outdoor gear that the student's can use for free throughout the year as well as all the outdoor adventures they coordinate for the kids in the nearby mountains and rivers. I figure that's part of what the huge tuition payment is for, and I prefer to pay for that instead of stupid crap like the lazy rivers they have a big state schools.
What school is this?
Anonymous wrote:I love camping if 1. Not bear country 2. a peaceful, scenic setting with space and low occupancy. 3. Good weather.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Camping is for poor people.
Sadly, this is becoming more and more true. But it isn't actually camping - it is how they live.
Go to any federal/state/municipal campground and you will find families (with children) who are living there. A lot of elderly, too. They may move from site to site or location to location depending on availability but they have no other place to go. It's especially prevalent in warm or moderate weather locales.
As housing and rental costs rise so have the number of people living in campgrounds.
My sister lives at campsites. She works in a very high cost of living area (Aspen). So she can either have a roommate, live an hour from work and have a hell of a commute, or live in her camper at one of the many amazing campgrounds in the Rocky Mountain area.
She makes $75k year (radiology technician), and cannot afford rent (one bedroom apartment) in Aspen as a 50 year old college educated woman with a full time professional job. Sad. But she absolutely loves the freedom of living in a camper.