Posts Tagged ‘National Parks’

National Parks Traveler: National Park System Quiz 69: Camping”

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

If you’re lucky enough to be a National Parks traveler (and I’m not), you might ace this quiz. I flunked, but enjoyed it anyway. Many of the questions are true/false, and I guess the odds were against me today. But odds are that I’ll get to travel out west to some of these parks someday, so it was nice to have this quiz as a little teaser!

“Ten Things I Learned Camping In Yellowstone”

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

If you’ve been with me for a bit, Dear reader, you know I love these “Things I Learned While Camping” posts, and we haven’t had one in awhile. This one is pretty site-specific, as its tittle suggests, but it’s a site I’d love to visit, myself, so that works for me!

My favorites are 10, 7, and 1.

Enjoy!

Jean B. in SC

C.A.M.P. at Kings Canyon National Park

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

This seems awfully generous. If you’re a newbie in the area, here’s your chance to learn how to set that tent up, start a fire, do some camp cooking, etc., etc. If not, and it sounds like a good idea, why not print this out and take it to your local National or State Parks office and see if they could put something similar together?

Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks News Release
July 23, 2009
For Immediate Release
Contact: Deb Schweizer 559-565-3703
Malinee Crapsey 559-565-3138
Camping Adventure with My Parents at Kings Canyon National Park
Have you ever slept in a tent? Or toasted marshmallows under the California night sky surrounded by ancient sequoia trees?
Have you wanted to do these things, but lacked the knowledge or the equipment to try it on your own?
Now is your opportunity to learn how to camp in a national park! Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks will offer two how-to-camp weekends for families next month.
The park staff will provide tents, sleeping bags, camping equipment, all food, and instruction for families who are interested in learning these skills.
The program, Camping Adventure with My Parents (CAMP), will be offered twice: Saturday, August 22nd to Sunday, August 23rd; and Saturday, August 29th to Sunday, August 30th . Both will take place in the Grant Grove area of Kings Canyon National Park.
For more information, and to register for the program, please go to www.nps.gov/seki/planyourvisit. At that site, you can download registration forms. Completed registration forms must be received by Friday, August 7, 2009.
Forms can be faxed to 559-565-4391; e-mailed to seki_interpretation@nps.gov, or mailed to Valerie Pillsbury, Kings Canyon National Park, P.O. Box 926, Kings Canyon NP, CA 93633.
Limited space is available. Participants will be notified by phone of their acceptance.
For more information, please call Valerie Pillsbury at 559-565-4301.

“The Last-Minute Guide to Summer Camping” by JANE MARGOLIES

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

The Last-Minute Guide to Summer Camping – NYTimes.com@import url(http://graphics8.nytimes.com/css/article/screen/print.css); This is a reprint of an article from the New York Times:

June 21, 2009

The Last-Minute Guide to Summer Camping

CARLA AND JIM BOERMAN of Walworth, N.Y., have been campers for nearly two decades, starting when their twin daughters, who are now in college, were just 18 months old. Their family has stayed in Yellowstone and Yosemite, and they’ve sampled campgrounds in New York and neighboring states, graduating fStaterom pop-ups to small travel trailers to a 30-foot fifth wheel. Last year, the Boermans went on 18 camping trips, for a total of 50 nights under the stars.

But this year, Mrs. Boerman, a school secretary, has noticed something new: campgrounds are fuller, and booking reservations has gotten trickier. “Even if you’re calling months in advance, you might not get the exact campsite you want,” she said, “or you might have to adjust your dates.”

Although it’s still early in the season, there are already signs that more Americans will be vacationing in campgrounds this summer. Bookings are up at many parks — in some cases by as much as 30 percent. And some campgrounds were filled on weekends even before Memorial Day, the traditional kickoff of the camping season.

Many in the camping community believe that the bad economy is causing this sudden interest in the great outdoors, with people who are worried about finances forgoing a stay at a fancy resort or a trip overseas in favor of a sojourn in the woods that can cost 10 bucks a night. Gas prices that are significantly lower than last summer’s (albeit rising) may also be affecting decisions to hit the road.

Suzi Dow, who with her husband, Fred Dow, writes guides to United States Forest Service campgrounds, said that back in April, traffic to their Web site, Forestcamping.com, reached 300,000 hits a day, a rate they don’t normally see until summer, and the queries were decidedly more family-focused.

“In the past, young people, singles, were writing to us saying, ‘Hey, I want to go to Glacier National Park and want to do it in two weeks,’ ” Mrs. Dow said. “Now we’re hearing from families who want to know where to go so their 10-year-old son can go fishing and 13-year-old daughter can have hot showers.”

Although certain parks have always been magnets, camping in general has been declining for a generation, according to the National Park Service. In 1980, there were 3.93 million overnight tent stays at Park Service properties, including the country’s 58 national parks, which contain 861 campgrounds ranging from primitive (pit toilets) to modern (hot showers); last year, 2.95 million stays were registered.

General visitation is down, too, prompting the Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, whose department includes the Park Service, to announce that 147 of its sites would waive entrance fees this weekend and two other weekends this summer (July 18 and 19, and Aug. 15 and 16).

“I’m optimistic,” said David Barna, the chief of public affairs for the National Park Service, whose budget this year increased to $2.5 billion from $2.4 billion last year. This does not count $741 million from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, some of which will go toward campground upgrades like restroom remodeling and the resurfacing of access roads later this year. “Typically, when the economy is not in good shape that bodes well for the park service,” Mr. Barna said.

Indeed, bookings at the 141 national park campgrounds in the National Recreation Reservation Service were up 9 percent from January through March 26 over the same period last year. The reservations are handled by ReserveAmerica, a private company, through the Web site Recreation.gov and at (877) 444-6777 (a fee of $10 is added).

Although many experienced campers booked five and six months ago, when many national park campsites went on sale, the good news for latecomers is that there is still plenty of room at campgrounds that take reservations, particularly during midweek, when demand is lower.

Cancellations do occur, and first-come-first-served campgrounds abound. (Arrive in the morning, when the previous night’s campers are checking out.)

In addition to Park Service properties, there are 5,800 campgrounds in national forests and grasslands, not to mention campgrounds in state parks.

Following is a guide for people interested in scoring a campsite at one of the country’s most popular national parks this summer, along with alternatives if their first choice is sold out. The information was accurate as of June 15.

ACADIA NATIONAL PARK: MAINE
(207) 288-3338; www.nps.gov/acad
Travel Guide

On Mount Desert Island off the Atlantic coast of Down East Maine, this park has rocky beaches, 1930s carriage roads (ideal for hiking and biking) and two wooded campgrounds, both renovated within the last five years.

Campground Status The Blackwoods Campground (207-288-3274; reservations: 877-444-6777 or www.recreation.gov; $20), which is convenient to carriage roads, hiking trails, the Park Loop Road and Bar Harbor, five miles north, takes reservations for nearly all its 290 sites. It is already booked for the Fourth of July weekend but has openings at other times, according to Jennifer Webber, the Blackwoods supervisor.

Seawall Campground (207-244-3600; $14 for walk-ins, $20 for vehicles), on the quieter western side of the park, has 205 sites — tents are separated from RVs — available first come first served. Even during peak camping season — the last two weeks of July and the first two of August — “you have a good chance of getting a spot at Seawall,” said the Seawall supervisor, Don Jenkins.

Also Consider Just across Frenchman Bay from Mount Desert is the 62-site Lamoine State Park Campground (207-667-4778; www.maine.gov/doc/parks; reservations: 800-332-1501 for Maine residents, $15; 207-624-9950 for everyone else, $25; or at www.campwithme.com).

GLACIER NATIONAL PARK: MONTANA
(406) 888-7800; www.nps.gov/glac

By late June, the snow that blankets this million-acre park in the northern Rockies for much of the year is melting, and most of the 13 campgrounds, with 1,009 sites, have opened.

Campground Status All but two of the park’s campgrounds are welcoming guests, with Logging Creek and Quartz Creek slated to open by July 1. The two campgrounds in the park that take reservations (877-444-6777 or www.recreation.gov; $23) — the 178-site Fish Creek Campground, on the west side of the park, and 148-site St. Mary Campground, on the east side — have ample availability.

In this park, the first-come-first-served campgrounds, most of which are smaller than the those that can be reserved, tend to be the most desirable. The Many Glacier Campground ($20) — which offers 109 sites among aspen and pine trees, ranger programs and prime access to trails, including one leading to (you guessed it) a glacier — often fills by 11 a.m. Wondering what your chances are? This park’s sophisticated Web site keeps campers informed with a continuously updated map showing where there are openings, and calendars indicating when each campground has historically reached capacity.

Also Consider The Flathead and Lewis and Clark National Forests (www.fs.fed.us) border Glacier National Park and have campgrounds near the park’s western, southern and eastern entrances. Example: The Big Creek Campground (406-387-3800; $13), in Flathead, two and a half miles from the Camas Creek entrance on the western side of the park, has 22 first-come-first-served sites on the north fork of the Flathead River (garbage must be packed out).

GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK: ARIZONA
(928) 638-7888; www.nps.gov/grca
Travel Guide

The 277-mile-long, mile-deep canyon divides the park into two parts: the more accessible, and visited, South Rim, where there are two campgrounds; and the higher-elevation North Rim, which has a single campground.

Campground Status On the South Rim, the 327-site Mather Campground takes reservations (877-444-6777 or www.recreation.gov; $18) and still has openings, but “has been filling up by midafternoon every day,” according to Jim O’Sickey, the deputy fee-program manager for the park. The Desert View Campground ($12) is first come first served, and its 50 sites generally fill by early afternoon. The North Rim Campground takes reservations for its 88 sites (877-444-677 and www.recreation.gov; $18 and $25), but has only a scattering of openings in July, slightly more in August.

Also Consider Kaibab National Forest (www.fs.fed.us/r3/kai) borders Grand Canyon National Park and has campgrounds near park entrances. For example, 4.5 miles from the park’s South Rim entrance, Ten-X Campground (928-638-2443; $10) has 70 primitive sites available first come first served.

On the North Rim, there’s the DeMotte Campground (928-643-7395; $17), with 32 sites five miles from the park (fills between noon and 3 p.m.); and 52-site Jacob Lake Campground, 30 miles from the park, which rarely fills. Both are first come first served and were recently renovated.

GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK AND JOHN D ROCKEFELLER JR. MEMORIAL PARKWAY: WYOMING
(307) 739-3300; www.nps.gov/grte
Travel Guide

Along with the peaks of the Teton Range, jutting up from a sage-covered plain, the park and the parkway, the eight-mile scenic connection between this park and Yellowstone, have six campgrounds and an RV park, all run as concessions.

Campground Status Flagg Ranch (800-443-2311 and www.flaggranch.com; $25 and $50 a night), a reservation campground five miles north of Grand Teton, has 30 percent of its 86 RV sites available and 70 percent of its 74 tent sites available for July, according to Mike Perikly, the president of Flagg Ranch Resort; bookings are lighter in August.

Of the nonreserved campgrounds, Jenny Lake (800-628-9988 and www.gtlc.com/lodging; $19 and $7), with 59 tent-only sites (10 are for hikers and bicyclists only) among evergreens and glacial boulders near the lake for which it’s named, is the most popular and sometimes fills as early as 10 a.m. The same company runs the 350-site Gros Ventre Campground, and even visitors arriving late at night should be able to find a spot there, according to a park spokeswoman, Jackie Skaggs.

Signal Mountain (800-672-6012; www.signalmountainlodge.com; $20) has 81 sites that typically are occupied by noon.

Also Consider The Caribou-Targhee (in Idaho) and Bridger-Teton National Forests (www.fs.fed.us) border Grand Teton National Park and have campgrounds near park entrances. The campground guidebook author Suzi Dow suggests driving a bit farther, to Granite Creek Campground (307-734-7400; $15), in Bridger-Teton, 45 minutes south of the park, for its 51 first-come-first-served sites near a hot springs-fed pool built into the side of a mountain.

GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK: TENNESSEE AND NORTH CAROLINA
(865) 436-1200; www.nps.gov/grsm
Travel Guide

Among the misty mountains of America’s most visited national park — marking its 75th anniversary this year — are 10 developed campgrounds, four of which take reservations.

Campground Status All four reservation campgrounds (877-444-6777 or www.recreation.gov; $14 and $23) — the 142-site Smokemont, the 159-site Cades Cove, the 220-site Elkmont and the 165-site Cosby — are almost fully booked for the Fourth of July weekend, but have openings at other times. All but 20 sites at Cosby, a good jumping-off point for hiking to the Mount Cammerer Fire Tower — with fabulous 360-degree views, rare in this forested park — are first come first served. Balsam Mountain (45 sites), at 5,310 feet, is the coolest spot on hot nights; Deep Creek (92 sites), in North Carolina, offers fishing and tubing; and peaceful Look Rock (68 sites) is ideal for campers who want to string up a hammock and do absolutely nothing.

Also Consider The Cherokee, Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests (www.fs.fed.us) border the national park. Tsali Campground (828-479-6431; $15), in Nantahala, a half-hour from the southern boundary of the park, has 42 unreserved sites, hot showers and a network of mountain-biking trails.

OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK: WASHINGTON
(360) 565-3130; www.nps.gov/olym
Travel Guide

Thanks to the “Twilight” books — the young-adult series about the romance between a high-school girl and a vampire, written by Stephenie Meyer and set in the Forks, Wash., area — this park has been drawing a new breed of visitor. These “Twihards” wander, wide-eyed, down trails in the misty Hoh rain forest under giant trees festooned with moss, “trying to see what Bella saw,” said a park ranger, Jon Preston. He estimated that at times up to 30 percent of park visitors are Twilight-related and said that he was contemplating putting together a nature program on bloodsuckers (mosquitoes, flies and lampreys).

Olympic has 16 campgrounds, all run by the Park Service.

Campground Status The sole reservation campground, the 170-site Kalaloch (877-444-6777 or www. recreation.gov; $14 to $18), on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean, has only scattered openings. Of the other campgrounds, the 82-site Sol Duc Campground ($14), with a riverside location, great hiking and proximity to the pools at the Sol Duc Hot Springs Resort, often fills by noon. The 88-site Hoh Campground ($12) is right in the rain forest, and, Mr. Preston said, almost always has openings.

Also Consider The Olympic National Forest (www.fs.fed.us/r6/olympic) surrounds the national park. Nine miles from the park’s northwest entrance, the Klahowya Campground (360-374-6522; $17), with 55 spacious, moss- and fern-covered sites, many of them right on the Sol Duc River, is first come first served.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK: COLORADO
(970) 586-1206; www.nps.gov/romo

The chance to ogle “charismatic megafauna”— the elk, bighorn sheep, moose and other large animals that roam within easy viewing distance — is part of the allure of this land of majestic mountains. Five campgrounds await, and sadly, so does a beetle epidemic that has infected forests from British Columbia to Mexico. The park has removed many dead trees and sprayed others, and these continuing efforts will result in fewer campsites this summer, though an exact count has yet to be determined.

Campground Status The two campgrounds taking reservations (877-444-6777 or www.recreation.gov; $20) — the 245-site Moraine Park Campground, in a ponderosa pine forest with Continental Divide views; and the 54-site Aspenglen, bordering the Fall River — are already booked on weekends through July, though there are some openings midweek. There is more availability in August, including on weekends.

Glacier Basin ($20), where many infected lodgepole pine trees have been removed, has opened 61 sites; parts of the 98-site Timber Creek ($20) are expected to open by the end of June. Both these campgrounds no longer have the woodsy character that they did in the past.

But Longs Peak, in the southern part of the park, with 26 first-come-first-served sites for tents only, is as yet unaffected by the epidemic, according to Kyle Patterson, a park spokeswoman.

Also Consider The Arapaho, Roosevelt, and Routt National Forests (www.fs.fed.us) border Rocky Mountain National Park and have campgrounds near park entrances. Five miles from the Wild Basin entrance on the east side of the park is Olive Ridge (303-541-2500), in the Roosevelt National Forest, with 56 sites, half of which can be reserved after June 26 (877-444-6777 or www.recreation.gov).

SEQUOIA AND KINGS CANYON NATIONAL PARKS: CALIFORNIA
(559) 565-3341; www.nps.gov/seki

Groves of giant sequoias are the big draw at these adjoining parks in the southern Sierra Nevada. Overnight stays increased almost 8 percent in 2007, and 5 percent last year. Fourteen campgrounds offer more than 1,200 sites in all.

Campground Status The two campgrounds that accept reservations (877-444-6777 and www.recreation.gov; $20), both in Sequoia, are the largest and busiest: 203-site Lodgepole is fully booked for summer, and 204-site Dorst Creek is fully booked on weekends and 80 to 85 percent on weekdays. But it doesn’t hurt to check for cancellations before your visit and no-shows when you arrive. Tracy Thetford, the revenue and fee business manager, said, “We sell 10 to 15 percent of the sites with daily walk-up sales.” Among the other campgrounds ($12 and $18), the 40-site Potwisha and 28-site Buckeye Flat, which are near the entrance to Sequoia, tend to fill by early Friday evening.

Also Consider The Inyo, Sierra and Sequoia National Forests (www.fs.fed.us) surround the parks, and there are campgrounds in Sequoia National Forest (877-444-6777 or www.reserveamerica.com) convenient to the entrances of both parks (the 90-site Princess, $18, and 74-site Hume Lake, $20, for instance). Eshom (559-338-2251; $18), also in Sequoia, and reached by a narrow, dusty hairpin-turn drive, has 23 first-come-first-served campsites in a former Indian settlement.

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK: WYOMING, MONTANA, IDAHO
(307) 344-7381; www.nps.gov/yell
Travel Guide

America’s first national park (1872), famous for its steaming hot springs, bubbling mud pots, exploding geysers and roaming grizzlies, bison and elk, has 12 campgrounds. Four of them and an RV park, run by Xanterra Parks and Resorts, take reservations; the Park Service operates the other seven on a first-come-first-served basis. There are 2,100 sites in all, and most of them fill up every night from mid-May through mid-August.

Campground Status The Xanterra campgrounds (866-439-7375 or www.travelyellowstone.com; $18.50) still have ample availability, according to Rick Hoeninghausen, director of marketing and sales for Yellowstone, but “walk-ins have been strong.” The RV park ($35) is almost sold out through the second week of August. The Park Service campgrounds ($12 and $14) often fill by 10 a.m.

Also Consider The Beaverhead, Gallatin, Custer, Caribou-Targhee and Shoshone National Forests (fs.fed.us) surround Yellowstone and have campgrounds on all sides of the park. Three miles from Yellowstone’s west entrance, in Gallatin, is the Baker’s Hole Campground (406-646-1012; www.hebgenbasincampgrounds.com; $14 and $20), which has 73 first-come-first-served campsites and fishing on the Madison River — all that separates the grounds from Yellowstone.

Just southwest of the park, in the Caribou-Targhee National Forest, the Cave Falls Campground (208-652-7442; $10) is rustic and secluded, with 23 unreserved sites a mile from Cave Falls, in Yellowstone’s backcountry.

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK: CALIFORNIA
(209) 372-0200; www.nps.gov/yose
Travel Guide

This 1,200-square-mile wilderness in the heart of the Sierra Nevada has 13 National Park Service-run campgrounds containing 1,410 sites. (A 1997 flood wiped out 353 campsites.)

Campground Status The seven that accept reservations (877-444-6777 or www. recreation.gov; $20) — two of them also have first-come-first-served sites — sold out in minutes, as they do every year, when they went on sale five months ago. Cancellations do occur, and no-shows mean that spots at these campgrounds can open up at any time.

But visitors’ best bets are the first-come-first-served campgrounds ($10 and $14). At Camp 4, the only such campground in Yosemite Valley, lines form at 6 a.m. for the 35 walk-in sites. The farther campers go from this prime area, the more likely they are to get a spot as the day wears on. “You have a better chance of getting into Tuolumne Meadows than you do at Tamarack Flat,” Ranger Kari Cobb said.

Also Consider Yosemite National Park is surrounded by the Inyo, Sierra and Stanislaus National Forests (www.fs.fed.us) with campgrounds near entrances on all sides of the park. Three to five minutes from the eastern entrance, in Inyo, are the rustic Lee Vining campgrounds (760-647-3044; $19), including Tioga Lake, with 13 unreserved sites right across the lake from Yosemite.

THE STATE PARK SQUEEZE

All 50 states have park systems of their own, together offering 1,737 camping areas with almost 213,000 sites, according to the National Association of State Park Directors.

Overnight stays increased 12 percent in the year ending June 30, 2008, to 15,486,687, the association, based in Raleigh, N.C., reported. But this total was still well below the peak of 18,011,516 stays in 2003.

This year, budget cuts have forced parks to reduce the days some campgrounds are open, close less popular sections and, in some cases, shut down campgrounds altogether. In New York, for instance, where reservations statewide are up 5 percent over last year, two campgrounds have been closed, and in California, a proposal is under consideration that could result in the shuttering of 220 parks and 56 percent of the state-park campsites.

ReserveAmerica (through www.reserveamerica.com and the company’s call centers) handles campground reservations for 19 states; other states have their own reservation systems. The Missouri State Parks and Historic Sites Web site (www.mostateparks.com/camping.htm), for example, lets you look up campgrounds, then click on photos of actual campsites at some of the parks — not just general campground views — so campers can pick the home away from home that appeals to them most.

Our Weekend Camping Trip

Monday, June 15th, 2009

I told my husband that this year all I wanted for my birthday was a family camping trip, soon (I was born on May 31st). Now, even the Boy Scouts lay off their camping somewhat during the summer months in the south, because most people can’t take the heat, literally, but I’m not most people. I freeze in air conditioning and only start to feel warm around 86-87 degrees.

So, yes, we went camping this weekend, although our families thought we were nuts– it won’t surprise anyone familiar with June in the south that we were the only ones out there. We had planned to go to Edisto Beach State Park, which would have entailed cooling ocean breezes, but it was full every weekend available to us, so I get a dual present– this brief little jaunt inland to camp in the the Francis Marion National Forest, AND a long weekend at Edisto to camp in the fall! Yea!

It was in the low 90’s, which is comfortable for me; I didn’t even break a sweat until one of my late-afternoon outhouse visits, which I think was psychosomatic! There was no ventilation, it was relatively small, and I’ll leave my description of it there, except to say that all I could think was, “How in God’s name did women in hoop skirts manage the simplest necessities?” (actually, I had a lot more thoughts than that, most being of the “Dear God, get me out of here!” variety). But I digress…

me drawing from nature

me drawing from nature

As I was saying, during the day Saturday it was in the low 90’s, and my husband and son were really suffering– so we mostly just lazed around and did our nature study and played games (Pass the Pigs, Uno, and Worst-Case Scenario). Around 5:30 there was a quick little thunderstorm, which cooled things down enough that my menfolk got comfortable and I started to get cold. That was my cue to cozy up to the fire and start s’mores duty. Darn!

Richard shuffling the Uno cards

Richard shuffling the Uno cards

The Honey Hill Loop campgrounds in the Francis Marion National Forest includes about ten large sites, most with a concrete picnic table and a lantern stand, and all free. It has the one aforementioned outhouse at the front of the campground and a hand pump for well water centrally located in the middle of the loop. On the far side from where we set up lay wetlands– so wet that there’s even a small pond, but no one in their right mind would get into the water in our area, due to gators. (I looked for gator slides on the side we were on, but didn’t see any, which made sense because there was a bit of a drop-off down to the water, and gators aren’t built for climbing. However, I did hear what sounded like some kind of animal mimicking an old engine trying to turn over in the distance, which could have been an alligator. Anyway, down where we live, you know they’re there whether you see them or not.)

It was a real pleasure having the place to ourselves. With the exception of a Park Ranger driving through twice on his rounds and some undoubtedly drunken teenagers setting off some fireworks at the entrance and then peeling out for our entertainment on Saturday night, we didn’t see or hear another human being besides each other for almost twenty-four hours. Even my fourteen year old son remarked about how nice that was.

We didn’t see much wildlife, with the notable exception of a gorgeous wild turkey and a hummingbird. There were feral cats on the prowl, and they got the leftovers from our pork and veggie hobo packs (aluminum foil cooking), which cooked up beautifully in the coals, and our bacon and eggs the next morning (for which I did use our trusty Coleman stove, being as I knew neither of my menfolk would appreciate the extra heat from a fire).

R.'s camp gadget in use after breakfast

R.'s camp gadget in use after breakfast

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We heard a lot, though, including two different types of woodpeckers, a screech owl, some mongo bullfrog on steroids, and squirrels calling constantly. We enjoyed lots of bird calls all day llong and into the night, too, and I’ve decided to educate myself with some recordings so I know what I’m hearing next time we camp as a family (when we camp with the scouts, they’re pretty much all you can hear!).

I tested a new product for you, Dear Reader, on this family tent-camping outing, called “The Bugpatch,” a transdermal dose of Thiamine (Vitamin B1), DEET-free, which claims to repel “mosquitos, no-see-ums, black flies, and yellow flies” up to 36 hours per patch. The patch must be applied two hours prior to needing its effects, and I gave it three hours after that. It is true that during that time I didn’t get one mosquito bite, nor was I bothered by gnats. However, the deer flies and horse flies landed right on it, not to mention the rest of me, and were not impressed. I did have to resort to the Off we had with us due to them and the ticks– which the patch makes no claims of repelling, anyway. I’ll try the patch again on the 27th, during the Great American Family Campout, which is the next time I expect to be both in a tent and easy mosquito bait. It should be just the ticket in my backyard, but I won’t rely upon it in the woods.

Nathaniel by the loaded car

Nathaniel by the loaded car

Camping in the summer is a real treat for me, because there’s no A.C. to contend with, and I can luxuriate in the heat. It is a real act of love for my husband and son, who, like most people, depend upon air conditioning for comfort (I’m bundled up in my own home right now, writing this, as I always am in the A.C. in the summer). I thoroughly enjoyed having the undivided attention of my family for a day– no t.v., no friends running in and out, just us and a tent for shelter. It was a wonderful birthday present– and I still get the second installment of Edisto Beach in the fall!

Guns to Be Allowed in National Parks

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

I can’t think of a single logical, sound reason to have a gun among the s’mores ingredients and hand sanitizer when camping, can you? I’ve been mulling this over ever since reading this article, “Camping? Pack Some Heat, Baby” by Carl Hiaasen. I’m a fan of the Constitution, although no member of the NRA, so I’m not interested in sparking some generic gun-rights battle here in my blog– I’m just concerned about people carrying in National Parks! Camping is fraught with enough pressures– what if it rains all weekend? What if little Jimmy drops his marshmallow into the flames and goes in after it? What if Suzy gets lost and was wearing her camo sundress so she blends into the environment? Do we really need to add, as Hiaasen sarcastically suggests, what if “the drunks at the next campsite might be fooling around with a loaded .357?”

Hunting, of course, is illegal in National Parks. Protecting yourself from wildlife gone– well, wild– with firearms isn’t encouraged, either. (If you’re going to shoot at the bear going for your cooler, you’d better be a damned good aim, or you’ll have a hungry AND furious critter to contend with.) Encouraging your camping neighbors to observe quiet time after 10:00 with a gun probably would be frowned upon, also, at least by said neighbors. And what good could come of a situation in which they answered with their own heat?

Read Hiaasen’s article, and if you have a rebuttal, by all means, comment here. I’d love some answers to all those questions this new law to allow loaded guns– even concealed weapons, with appropriate state permits– in National Parks raises. What does it accomplish? Who does it benefit?

Befuddled and incredulous,

I remain,

Jean B. in SC

National Parks Waiving Entrance Fees for 3 Weeks

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Many National Parks don’t have entrance fees, but those that do are waiving them for three weekends this summer. In a news release dated June 2nd, the Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced that the weekends of June 20-21, July 18-19, and August 15-16, 2009 would feature free admission to all National Parks.

Other fees still apply, however, such as those for camping space. Still, considering that entrance fees can range from $3.00 to $25.00, this could amount to quite a savings. “Meanwhile,” the press release adds, “many park partners including tour operators, hotels, restaurants, gift shops, and other vendors will offer additional discounts and special promotions on those dates. More information on the fees and discounts can be found at http://www.nps.gov/findapark/feefreeparks.htm.”

Of course, those weekends are probably going to be very busy and packed with people! But I’d give it a go if I were near any National Park that charged admission.

The Basics of Family Camping Seminar, Shenandoah

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

This is a great opportunity for beginning campers that Shenandoah National Park is offering on two weekends, 6/27-28 and 7/18-19. In a recent news release, the park describes the seminar:

“Campers will learn from park rangers and camping experts how to pitch a tent, build a campfire, plan and prepare meals, explore nature with your children, and how to “Leave No Trace,” while creating memories to last a lifetime. Tents, cooking equipment, and food will be provided. The Basics of Family Camping costs $50 for one adult and child (5-12 years old) and $10 for each additional family member. Reservations are required and you may register online. Shenandoah National Park Association members will receive a 20% discount.”

If you live close enough, by all means take advantage of this cool opportunity! And if, like me, you don’t, why not draw the attention of your nearest National Park to the program? Maybe they could do the same thing! If any of you attend this, please drop me a comment so I can let people know how it went.

(Okay, I was trying not to, but I have to mention that the first weekend is also the Great American Backyard Campout– but if you don’t even have a tent to pitch in your own backyard, and Shenadoah National Park is nearby, believe me, this sounds like a fantastic learning adventure of a mini-vacation for the price!)