Camping With Kids. Goldie Silverman

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Camping With Kids - Goldie Silverman

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thin foam pad.

      c. a tarp to cover the bare ground.

      4. I can’t eat unless I have:

      a. a table set with cloth, napkins, and china dishes.

      b. no flies or mosquitoes.

      c. a chair or bench with a comfortable back.

      d. all of the above.

      Answers: If your T-shirt has four clean fronts, if you cook on a campfire, and if you eat and sleep on the ground, you can be a backpacker. If your T-shirt has only one clean front, if you socialize around the fire, if you sleep on a mattress, and if you dine in style, you should choose an RV. Anyone in between can be a tent camper.

      Some models of RVs have walls that slide out, making the interior even larger. On another outside wall, most have an awning, creating a shady haven for lounging or cooking outdoors. Often there is room underneath for bringing along tricycles, bicycles, and scooters.

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      RV amenities might include a satellite dish.

      RVs are self-contained, which means that they carry propane gas for cooking and heating, a water supply for kitchen and bath, batteries for lights and television, and a holding tank for waste from the kitchen and bath. However, most RV campers prefer to park where they have a complete hookup, which means they connect to water, electricity, and sewer. Some private parks have deluxe hookups that also include cable and telephone service, and almost all parks have a dumping station so the holding tank can be emptied.

      Features of Tent Camping

      Tent campers do not have luxury kitchens. They cook outdoors over a fire or on a one- or two-burner gasoline or propane stove. They bring long-handled tools for roasting hot dogs or marshmallows, and aluminum foil for cooking in the coals. Tent campers store perishable foods in an ice chest and dry foods in a tightly closed container. At night they must store their foods where animals can’t get them. Some campgrounds provide creature-proof storage; in others, the food goes back in the car or it’s hung from a tree. Tent campers eat at picnic tables, sitting on benches that have no backs. While some bring folding chairs for lounging around the fire, many campers sprawl on the ground.

      There are no bathrooms in a tent; you either shower in a bathhouse, if there is one, bathe in a basin, or skip it. Some campgrounds provide flush toilets in the bathhouse, but more primitive camps have only outhouses. Some campers carry portable potties to avoid a long walk to the outhouse in the middle of the night.

      Tent campers carry water. Some of them bring big jugs from home. Others walk to a central spigot or pump in camp and carry water back to their campsite. If there is no central water supply, campers will pump and filter water from a lake or a stream and carry it back to camp.

      Many campers deliberately choose to live for a few days with the barest minimum of essentials as a way of challenging themselves. In between those campers and those who go for the most luxurious of furnishings, there is a wide variety of opportunities. Campers in trailers, in pop-up tent-trailers with cloth side walls, and in outfitted vans have some of the amenities of the RV campers without the spaciousness. They also have some of the Spartan challenges of the tent campers.

      My friend Vicki has a lovely childhood memory of indoor camping. She had a “campfire” made of crumpled red and yellow tissue paper with a flashlight inside. She remembers eating lunch at her campfire, from a “mess kit” made from a recycled deli container filled with a sandwich, fruit, and snacks. Vicki probably thought this was a game, great fun, but her wise parents were actually preparing her for camping, learning to live in a tent. Preparing your family to camp is actually a learning experience, for you and for them. In this section, we will cover learning to live in a tent and in an RV; we’ll go over some ways to learn about nature, with special emphasis on two great programs, PEAK and Leave No Trace; and, finally, we’ll learn about campgrounds—they aren’t city parks.

      Learning to Live in a Tent

      A great way to prepare your kids—and yourself—for camping is to practice setting up your tent and letting your kids spend some time inside. You need to practice setting up your tent anyway; later, we’ll talk about near disasters that happened to people who tried to make camp when they didn’t know how to put the tent up.

      If your tent is self-supporting, that is, if it doesn’t need to be pegged down, you can set it up in the family room or play room. Let your young children nap inside the tent. If your tent is set up outside, don’t just put it up and take it down, but leave it up for a while. Eat a meal outside next to or inside the tent. Perhaps you can even spend a night, or part of a night, sleeping outside.

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      IMAGINARY CAMPING

      Camping at Home

      Help your kids “experience” camping before you go by practicing camping at home. Make a tent by spreading a blanket over a low table or a chair tipped on its side. Let them spend time inside this smaller space, which will have the same feel as a tent.

      Talking about the tent in advance and putting it up at home before your trip could avert a problem when night falls in camp. Many campers can tell you horror stories of being kept awake by a crying child two or even three campsites away from theirs. I can’t emphasize this enough: Practicing with the tent is a wise idea on two counts—you need to know how to do it, and young children need to feel that it’s a familiar space.

      If you don’t have access to a tent, improvise. When my brothers and I were little, one of our favorite games was “covered wagon.” Every Saturday, we tipped our big rocking chair over and spread a blanket over the rockers. The room inside the blanket could just as easily been called a tent. If you don’t have a rocking chair, make your tent from a blanket and a card table or a low table or a tipped-over chair. Let your kids take a nap in their tent or take their favorite stuffed animals inside and tuck them in for a “nap.”

      Learning to Live in an RV

      If you’re planning to camp in an RV, you can also spend some days and even nights in it, if it’s parked at home. If you haven’t yet acquired the RV, whether you plan to rent or buy (more on this later), you can stop at an RV sales lot with your kids and walk through a few models.

      If you’re driving somewhere where your route takes you past an RV sales lot, plan to leave an hour early to allow time to check out the RVs. Walk through the different models and show the kids where the bed is over the cab, if it’s that kind of arrangement, how the dinette folds down to make another bed, where the range and refrigerator are, where the toilet and the shower are located. Talk about who might sleep in each bed, and how you will eat breakfast after the dinette is folded into place again.

      Don’t be shy about visiting RV lots more than once. Sales people in RV lots should welcome you as potential future customers.

      Learning About Nature

      At the same time you and your children are preparing to eat your meals and spend the night out of doors, you can be getting ready for the up-close-to-nature adventure of camping. Remember my definition of camping: spending the night up close to nature within a beautiful natural setting. Your goal is to make your children comfortable and curious in the out of doors.

      You can

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