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Generator
On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 21:12:35 -0500, ESAD wrote:
On 12/25/12 8:49 PM, GuzzisRule wrote: On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 15:06:34 -0500, ESAD wrote: On 12/25/12 3:07 PM, GuzzisRule wrote: Well, you are exceptional. Most of the time there are tenters where we camp, but I've only seen one, that I can remember, on a site with water and electricity. The great majority of tenters rough it without electricity and water hookups. - - - So, you want to be upwind and upstream of the tenters, eh? Why? Because without water, they're going to smell bad. The campgrounds we use all have bathhouses. I've never noticed any smelly tenters. |
Generator
On 12/25/2012 6:06 PM, GuzzisRule wrote:
On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 16:19:51 -0800, thumper wrote: On 12/25/2012 12:15 PM, GuzzisRule wrote: Great. We just don't see that many tenters paying the extra for the hookups where we camp. But why would you feel free to annoy them...? How? If you're not planning to run a noisy generator near them at night never-mind. |
Generator
GuzzisRule wrote:
On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 17:14:08 -0800, thumper wrote: On 12/25/2012 1:26 PM, Boating All Out wrote: In article , lid says... BS. If available I always take a spot with power/water. I don't get it. Why? When I tent camped I never carried any electrical gear that wasn't battery powered. Didn't carry a shower or toilet either Used the campground facilities. Coleman stove, battery lights, 5 gallon collapsing water jug. Always thought going light weight was what tent camping was about. Besides that, the RV area is noisy. And most of them I've seen have concrete aprons. Real hard to drive tent stakes through that. Never considered for a second buying an RV spot. Are you talking about a tent, or a popup tent camper? See my other response. Perhaps this location and our activities are unusual. The power is convenient for a coffee pot and microwave which allow more time on the river. We use a tent. Oh, so maybe what I said wasn't 'BS'? If you are staying in a place where the tenters are on sites with electricity and water, then it would be unusual as hell from what I've seen. We've been doing a lot of camping, with motorcycles/tents and RV's over the past 20+ years, and I've not seen much of that. While at Bryce Canyon National Park we stayed at a very nice campground outside the part, It had a tent area and RV sites. On one of the RV sites was a Moto Guzzi, with a guy and a girl at the picnic table. They paid the extra bucks for the water and electricity, but they were the only ones we saw doing that. They didn't have anything that took 110 volts, but they liked having the water right there. Oregon parks seem to be the same cheap price, for any site, power and water included. |
Generator
In article ,
says... In article , lid says... On 12/24/2012 3:23 PM, GuzzisRule wrote: On Sun, 23 Dec 2012 19:12:38 -0800, thumper wrote: On 12/23/2012 5:38 PM, GuzzisRule wrote: On Sun, 23 Dec 2012 15:47:00 -0800, thumper wrote: On 12/23/2012 2:58 PM, Eisboch wrote: John, the point is that if you are thinking of it for camping use .... and plan to stay at public campgrounds ... they are most likely not going to allow use of a generator like that. It's too noisy and an annoyance to other campers. You might not mind, but others will definitely complain. Heck, I remember back when we were into the RV thing for a while. Campsites didn't like you running the generator that came with the camper. Anyone in a nearby tent will especially hate it. Actually, I can't even think of a place we've stayed where tents were nearby. Usually the tent area is well removed from the RV area. My favorite campground isn't segregated. http://www.oregonstateparks.org/park_37.php None of them are segregated. But most tent campers don't want to pay extra for water, electricity, and sewer. So they usually stay in places other than the sites where all that is available. BS. If available I always take a spot with power/water. I don't get it. Why? When I tent camped I never carried any electrical gear that wasn't battery powered. Didn't carry a shower or toilet either Used the campground facilities. Coleman stove, battery lights, 5 gallon collapsing water jug. Always thought going light weight was what tent camping was about. Besides that, the RV area is noisy. And most of them I've seen have concrete aprons. Real hard to drive tent stakes through that. Never considered for a second buying an RV spot. Are you talking about a tent, or a popup tent camper? Tent. Every few days I'd hit a campground that had showers, laundry, etc. for one night, and for a couple of bucks more, I could get electricity and water. Used the water to wash gear, etc. |
Generator
In article ,
says... On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 09:50:35 -0500, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 15:06:15 -0500, iBoaterer wrote: The biggest limitation I see with camping is you are pretty much limited to where you are willing to drive. Sometimes we are up to the maximum of 3 bags each, on a 3 week fly drive vacation the way it is. I am usually just my big duffel bag and a cooler but my wife packs heavy, particularly coming home. Really? You can hike to the AT trail for a few days at a time and never see a vehicle. That's great if you think the east coast of the US is the only place you want to see but we like hiking around out west. I have been on the AT a number of times but the scenery doesn't really change that much from Georgia to Pennsylvania. Well, I've also hiked the Pacific Coast Trail, spent two weeks backpacking in Yellowstone, and in my teens spent a summer in Yosemite. I find it funny that you don't think the scenery changes much from GA to PA. I guess you really didn't notice much. That may be your trouble, you need to take the time to look, learn and appreciate. They don't have anything like this is North Carolina http://gfretwell.com/ftp/alaska/Glacier%20lake.jpg or this http://gfretwell.com/ftp/california/...big%20tree.jpg or this http://gfretwell.com/ftp/colorado/Ju...kes%20peak.jpg or this http://gfretwell.com/ftp/dakota/Devils%20tower.jpg Duh! So, what's your point? Are you saying that you can't hike and tent camp in those areas??? |
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In article ,
says... On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 17:14:08 -0800, thumper wrote: On 12/25/2012 1:26 PM, Boating All Out wrote: In article , lid says... BS. If available I always take a spot with power/water. I don't get it. Why? When I tent camped I never carried any electrical gear that wasn't battery powered. Didn't carry a shower or toilet either Used the campground facilities. Coleman stove, battery lights, 5 gallon collapsing water jug. Always thought going light weight was what tent camping was about. Besides that, the RV area is noisy. And most of them I've seen have concrete aprons. Real hard to drive tent stakes through that. Never considered for a second buying an RV spot. Are you talking about a tent, or a popup tent camper? See my other response. Perhaps this location and our activities are unusual. The power is convenient for a coffee pot and microwave which allow more time on the river. We use a tent. Oh, so maybe what I said wasn't 'BS'? If you are staying in a place where the tenters are on sites with electricity and water, then it would be unusual as hell from what I've seen. We've been doing a lot of camping, with motorcycles/tents and RV's over the past 20+ years, and I've not seen much of that. While at Bryce Canyon National Park we stayed at a very nice campground outside the part, It had a tent area and RV sites. On one of the RV sites was a Moto Guzzi, with a guy and a girl at the picnic table. They paid the extra bucks for the water and electricity, but they were the only ones we saw doing that. They didn't have anything that took 110 volts, but they liked having the water right there. Let's see, by tent camping, I have a wider choice of beautiful places to camp, I use a LOT less fuel, I can park just about anywhere, I have a lot less hassle traveling, can take my boat, don't have insurance of my tent, can pick up and go in less than a half an hour, and on and on. Yep, tents are horrible! |
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Generator
On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 18:35:31 -0800, thumper wrote:
On 12/25/2012 6:06 PM, GuzzisRule wrote: On Tue, 25 Dec 2012 16:19:51 -0800, thumper wrote: On 12/25/2012 12:15 PM, GuzzisRule wrote: Great. We just don't see that many tenters paying the extra for the hookups where we camp. But why would you feel free to annoy them...? How? If you're not planning to run a noisy generator near them at night never-mind. I can't imagine anyone doing that. Although, I have seen show stars, like Rhonda Vincent, leave the generator in their bus running all night at the Gettysburg Bluegrass Festival. Their bus was probably a hundred yards from the nearest RV, and the generator was very quiet. If you camp where people are doing as you describe, running a noisy generator all night, try asking them to shut it down. There must be rules about such things. Most places we've been to disallow running generators after around 10-11 PM. I have seen tenters with a generator. They bring everything in a pickup and have room for lots of stuff. But, I've not heard one running at night. |
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