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#1
posted to rec.boats
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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. |
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#2
posted to rec.boats
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On 12/25/2012 5:14 PM, 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. One point I missed... they aren't RV spots or in an exclusive RV area, they are campsites with power and water, no concrete anywhere. |
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#3
posted to rec.boats
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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. |
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#4
posted to rec.boats
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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. |
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#5
posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 00:48:30 -0600, Califbill wrote:
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. Wow, I've never seen that anywhere. |
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#7
posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 09:11:40 -0500, iBoaterer wrote:
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! Tents are great! I can't imagine hiking into a beautiful place with a boat. That's got to be difficult! And, if you're not carrying insurance on whatever gets you to the hiking area, you should reconsider. And, actually, if while you were camping your tent and everything you owned burnt to the ground, I'll bet your homeowner's insurance, if you have same, would cover it, at least past the deductible. I cannot understand how you think you have a lot less hassle traveling. Have you ever owned an RV of any type? If not, then you've no idea of what is or isn't involved. Assumptions again? |
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#8
posted to rec.boats
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In article ,
says... On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 09:11:40 -0500, iBoaterer wrote: 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! Tents are great! I can't imagine hiking into a beautiful place with a boat. That's got to be difficult! Where did you get that idea? Are you really as stupid as you act here? And, if you're not carrying insurance on whatever gets you to the hiking area, you should reconsider. And, actually, if while you were camping your tent and everything you owned burnt to the ground, I'll bet your homeowner's insurance, if you have same, would cover it, at least past the deductible. I should carry insurance on my tent?? THAT is what I said. It get really frustrating trying to get you to understand the simplest of things. You are really stupid. I cannot understand how you think you have a lot less hassle traveling. Have you ever owned an RV of any type? If not, then you've no idea of what is or isn't involved. Yes, I have. Assumptions again? No, see above. |
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#9
posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 10:34:38 -0500, iBoaterer wrote:
In article , says... On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 09:11:40 -0500, iBoaterer wrote: 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! Tents are great! I can't imagine hiking into a beautiful place with a boat. That's got to be difficult! Where did you get that idea? Are you really as stupid as you act here? And, if you're not carrying insurance on whatever gets you to the hiking area, you should reconsider. And, actually, if while you were camping your tent and everything you owned burnt to the ground, I'll bet your homeowner's insurance, if you have same, would cover it, at least past the deductible. I should carry insurance on my tent?? THAT is what I said. It get really frustrating trying to get you to understand the simplest of things. You are really stupid. I cannot understand how you think you have a lot less hassle traveling. Have you ever owned an RV of any type? If not, then you've no idea of what is or isn't involved. Yes, I have. Assumptions again? No, see above. You should read your homeowner's policy. I'll bet it *does* cover your tent and all your other camping equipment. |
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#10
posted to rec.boats
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On 12/26/12 11:00 AM, GuzzisRule wrote:
On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 10:34:38 -0500, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 09:11:40 -0500, iBoaterer wrote: 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! Tents are great! I can't imagine hiking into a beautiful place with a boat. That's got to be difficult! Where did you get that idea? Are you really as stupid as you act here? And, if you're not carrying insurance on whatever gets you to the hiking area, you should reconsider. And, actually, if while you were camping your tent and everything you owned burnt to the ground, I'll bet your homeowner's insurance, if you have same, would cover it, at least past the deductible. I should carry insurance on my tent?? THAT is what I said. It get really frustrating trying to get you to understand the simplest of things. You are really stupid. I cannot understand how you think you have a lot less hassle traveling. Have you ever owned an RV of any type? If not, then you've no idea of what is or isn't involved. Yes, I have. Assumptions again? No, see above. You should read your homeowner's policy. I'll bet it *does* cover your tent and all your other camping equipment. We camped out here for five days last summer... http://tinyurl.com/dynmrev We didn't bring the tent we don't have or a portable generator. Just clothes and suntan lotion. |
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