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Avoid camping tent blunders in the Vail Valley

Filed under Sports & Entertainment by niuhaibiao on 05-07-2010

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Outdoor Camping Tent — Part of the camping tent forest’s lure is its mystery and unpredictable nature. However, those variables can make it tough to plan for camping. Just because you found the camping tent perfect place to park your tent last summer, you can’t necessarily expect to duplicate that experience this summer. Between crowds, fire danger and beetle-kill trees, Custom Camping Tent are plenty of X factors that can change the camping tent course of your trip entirely if you fail to plan ahead. Below, local experts offer ideas for navigating this summer’s conditions in the camping tent forest.
Scenario: You have a certain camp spot in mind.
Solution: Make sure the camping tent roads and trails that lead to your destination are open before you set out. One group that stopped into the camping tent Minturn ranger station recently said it drove all the camping tent way from Michigan to visit Hanging Lake Trail near Glenwood Springs, only to discover the camping tent trail is closed through Aug. 1 for repairs. In the camping tent Vail area, stream surges washed out the camping tent Lower Cross Creek Bridge along the camping tent Cross Creek Trail off Tigiwon Road. To find out if your camping route is solid, contact the Camping Tent Holy Cross Ranger Districts in Minturn at 970-827-5715 or Eagle 970-328-6388. Call the camping tent Bureau of Land Management’s field office in Silt at 970-876-9000.
Scenario: Pine-beetle-killed trees are abundant this summer, threatening to fall on campers.
Solution: Avoid setting up camp near clusters of beetle-killed trees. Check at least 70 to 150 feet away from your campsite to see what type of trees you are dealing with. Some people suggest setting up your tent at least one-and-a-half tree lengths away from beetle-killed trees. Don’t go camping if forecasters are calling for high winds because trees are more likely to blow over. If high winds strike unexpectedly while you are camping, head to a clearing and wait for winds to die down. Carry a saw in the camping tent car in case a tree falls across the camping tent road to the camping tent campsite.
Scenario: Fire danger is slightly higher than normal this year.
Solution: Check cofireban.info to see if any fire restrictions are in place where you plan to camp. Grasses and brush sprouted earlier this year, and could dry out early. Also, weathe camping tentr forecasters predict a warmer than average summer. Currently, fire restrictions are in effect on Bureau of Land Management lands in Eagle County. That includes popular camping areas like Gypsum, Wolcott and Lyons Gulch campgrounds, along with Pinball recreation site. Camp fires are allowed within designated fire grates in developed campgrounds only, so dispersed campers should not build fires.
Some areas in the camping tent White River National Forest have permanent fire bans. Examples include the camping tent Missouri Lakes/Fancy Pass loop, along with Half Moon Pass and the camping tent rest of the camping tent route to Mount of the camping tent Holy Cross. In general, fires are prohibited within 100 feet of any body of water.
Scenario: Established campgrounds are full.
Solution: For the camping tent next best thing, try camping along Forest Service roads. Although dispersed Beach Camping Tent  amenities of official campgrounds, some roads are flanked by flat areas and even fire rings that make for comfortable camping. Popular areas include Red Sandstone Road north of Vail, Homestake Road off Highway 24 between Red Cliff and Camp Hale, and Tigiwon Road south of Minturn.
— Sources: Ross Wilmore, fire management officer for federal lands in Eagle and Summit counties; Corey Myers, information assistant for the camping tent Holy Cross Ranger District in Minturn.

Earth Firsters mix camping tent, political message

Filed under Sports & Entertainment by niuhaibiao on 05-07-2010

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Camping Tent - Head chef Jessie Dowling of Thorndike issues orders while a team of workers chops and shreds mounds of ingredients for the camping tent macaroni and cheese and zucchini cakes on the camping tent day’s menu. It is a labor-intensive task to feed the camping tent 100 or so people who have already pitched the camping tentir tents in the camping tentse fields nestled between Camping Tent Bigelow and Boundary mountain ranges in western Maine.
By the camping tent time all the camping tent campers trickle in this weekend, the camping tent kitchen is expected to be turning out meals for more than 350 people three times a day.
“I love to do this,” Dowling said.
She was among the camping tent early arrivals at the camping tent 2010 Round River Rendezvous, an annual week-long international summer gathe camping tentring of the camping tent Earth First! environmental group. the camping tent location was carefully picked, not just for its scenic beauty.
Nearby are many of the camping tent projects Earth First! opposes: TransCanada’s wind project on Kibby Mountain, Nestle Waters North America’s two-year-old Poland Springs bottling operation in Kingfield, the camping tent logging operations of Plum Creek Timber Co., developer of the camping tent controversial proposed Moosehead Lake region resort and housing.
Dowling, a cheese maker and aspiring grass-roots caterer who slaughtered a few of her goats to roast during the Custom Camping Tent weeklong conference, has special credentials. She is one of the camping tent so-called Plum Creek Six, who were arrested at the camping tent Maine Land Use Regulatory Commission meeting in September shortly before the camping tent commission approved the camping tent Plum Creek development. Many of the camping tent six are in charge of organizing this year’s Earth First! convention.
Earth First! is a loosely organized group of environmental activists founded in the camping tent 1970s. the camping tenty are known for the camping tentir use of civil disobedience, such as roadblocks and tree sit-ins to stop logging and othe camping tentr land development. In Maine, Earth First! gained attention for its opposition to clear cutting forestry practices in the camping tent 1990s under the camping tent leadership of Jonathan Carter, who organized tree spiking events.
A metal rod would be driven into a tree, which can cause injuries to anyone cutting it down, just one of the camping tent group’s techniques that has won its adherents the camping tent label of eco-terrorists. But Earth Firsters claim the camping tentir tactics don’t hurt anyone.
“the camping tent question I always posed was ‘Who is the camping tent real eco-terrorist, the camping tent people destroying our forests, the camping tent industrial wind folks who are ruining our mountaintops?’ It is not the camping tentse folks who are trying to stand up and protect the camping tent environment,” said Carter, who is no longer associated with Earth First!
Philip Nyhus, assistant professor of environmental studies at Colby College in Waterville, said Earth First! is at one end of the camping tent spectrum as far as its political beliefs. At the camping tent othe camping tentr end, he said, are the camping tent mainstream environmental organizations, such as the camping tent Nature Conservancy, which have major donors, land-conservation campaigns and offices and staff around the camping tent country.
In the camping tent middle are groups such as Greenpeace, the camping tent international activist group which finances a fleet of ships to intercept whale hunts.
Earth First!, said Nyhus, takes a more eco-centric approach.
“the camping tentir logo is ‘No compromises in defense of Mothe camping tentr Earth,’ and the camping tenty see the camping tent existing political system as the camping tent source of the camping tent problem,” Nyhus said.
the camping tent Earth First! movement has undergone changes over time, with some more radical elements breaking away. Although it remains out of the camping tent mainstream, its members have begun to try to soften its radical image. This year, invitations were issued to the camping tent media to attend the camping tent gathe camping tentring.
But the camping tent invitations came with major restrictions. Reporters and photographers were barred from some of the camping tent meetings. the camping tenty were accompanied at all times by a conference organizer.
Meg Gilmartin of Corinth said this was to protect those who didn’t want any media exposure and to present a consistent message to the camping tent world.
Despite the camping tent media restrictions, members didn’t appear to hide the camping tentir political leanings.
A sign outside a restroom identified it as the camping tent “Severin Beliveau Loo,” named after Plum Creek’s Maine attorney. Trees were decorated with banners proclaiming “Life Over Profit” and similar slogans. An area for tree-climbing lessons — practice for future tree sit-ins — was prominently displayed.
News that hundreds of Earth Firsters were heading to the Outdoor Camping Tent region rattled some residents of nearby Stratton and Rangeley, according to local media accounts. Harriet Powers complained to the camping tent Lewiston Sun Journal that some of her neighbors were calling her a terrorist for allowing the camping tent gathe camping tentring on the camping tent fields owned by her and her husband, Basil.
Which may explain why Earth First! appeared vigilant about security.
Those entering the camping tent encampment had to pass through a registration area staffed around the camping tent clock by a half dozen volunteers.
On Thursday, only the camping tent occasional gawker slowly drove by to watch participants enter the camping tent gates, mostly people in the camping tentir 20s and 30s, many of the camping tentm calling the camping tentmselves homesteaders, from Minnesota, Wisconsin, Florida and New York.
Inside, the camping tent day begins with an hour-long morning circle, followed by recreational and educational workshops on both practical and the camping tentoretical topics, such as “Saving the camping tent Earth without Losing Your Mind,” “Knowing your Rights,” “Tribal Issues” and the camping tent “North Woods National Park.”
At a workshop on dental hygiene, members were invited to introduce the camping tentmselves by first name and preferred pronoun — he or she — before a hike to a nearby riverbank to identify horse tails, a source of silica good for building strong teeth.
At night, attendees may retire to the camping tentir tents or gathe camping tentr around one of two campfires, the camping tent quiet fire or the Beach Camping Tent rowdy fire, or take part in the camping tent evening’s contra dance or poetry reading.
While everyone seemed to be enjoying the camping tentmselves, participants say the camping tenty have a serious agenda.
“I am here because I feel our culture as a whole has moved in a direction that is not sustainable,” said Ryan Clarke of Corinth.

Exposing the myth of the camping tent

Filed under Sports & Entertainment by niuhaibiao on 13-06-2010

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Camping Tent- I have heard disturbing rumors among the members of my family to go camping tent this summer. There are large projects, fly fishing, cycling and swimming for days.
You do not know, but I have a conspiracy theory about the camping tent industry, the cover of our plans for the summer to skip. If I become a conspiracy theorist, you ask? Well, more or less since I heard the word, in regard to camping tent gear this summer. Desperate times call for desperate measures.
That’s what my research has found: the camping tent industry is on us. So also are needed before purchasing the supplies for the area, they begin to lie and lie again during the entire camp experience.
Lie No. 1: A tent for two people is enough for two people. Have you ever bought a business with two men sleep and tried it in with someone? I do not know where they are men who are used to measure the size of the tents to be found, but I think that even two Chihuahuas, the beats are trying to live in this region came.
My time in the last camping tent trip with my sister and my two children in Ohio, where we slept in a tent for four people. The next morning I woke up in my side, her face be on the side of the tents made of nylon and a child pressed against my back, give me a 3 inch tall, exist. At that time I was ready (1) Eat my youth, (2) Start the whole store at the stake, and (3) Call my chiropractor due to the fact that, unnoticed by me, my sleeping bag was on the underlying result of a tree in the night.
Lie No. 2: The camping tent is relaxing time for all family members. Sorry, but do you think these people fed? For the mothers. So the way to five days worth of food, cooking three meals a day pack and clean the dishes with no more than a slap on the side of a latrine relaxation for me?
Seriously people, can I get more peace and quiet in my daily life at home where I have a comfortable bed, washing dishes and running water.
Lie No. 3: His dream is reinforced by the sounds of nature. If the sounds of nature that you are my son’s tent uncompress four men referred to a trip to the dependence of 3.00 to make, I’m not buying. (Incidentally, the locks may have more volume in the stores?) On another Camping Tent trip, woke me was the sound of nature at 4:00 digging identified some rodents the nylon tent. I heard him breathe smell, and scratching turned centimeters directly from my head before my daughter around and threw his camping tent to his face. My question is: If I get to the dream after the holidays, how does one go?
Do not get me wrong: I am perfectly willing and capable of camp, if done well. First, we have a cook on board, so I actually get a trip. Then purchase one of these transactions with vaulted ceilings up to 16 people, almost the right size for four of us, mind is. (The cook was sleeping in his own tent is irrelevant, store size to me, because I’m on vacation.) We offer a camping tent for each of us and no one may be away in the arms, if started suddenly and the night. And quietly, I suggest you put a ban on all compression and decompression, the bell rings to invite us to breakfast cook.
If we do not put the Cutting Machine is good. I suggest you just go to Plan B: Select a camp next to a hotel. Between swimming, fishing and cycling, you can download for free, meet at the pool, relax cleaned with the sweet, sweet sounds of the Tent Camping and bathroom.

Memorial Day Camping Tent

Filed under Sports & Entertainment by niuhaibiao on 02-06-2010

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Come rain or shine, thousands of people pack up and head out for a weekend of Camping Tent every memorial day.  Some believe it’s an affordable and fun trip.
Every Memorial Day for the past five years it’s rained, but that didn’t stop one family from Camping Tent.  “The water got through a little bit, but I survived. It made it more fun for me,” said camper Brandon Mcclarrinon.
Brandon opted to rough it in a tent despite this weekend’s forecast.  “I like a tent, because there’s something about having to build your Camping Tent and being a little old fashion about it that I really like,” he explains.
While he weathered out the Shower Room in his tent, others upgraded to an RV.  “There’s a shower, there’s your personal bed room, sinks, kitchen table, refrigerator, everything you need,” camper Han Mantor explains.  “Have something already set up, don’t worry about the wind blowing it over or bears getting into it right away,” camper Bil Mantor says.
Whether you’re camping in an RV or a tent, some say it’s the best way to get away. “Getting away from all technology and electronics and phones and jobs,” Han tells us.  “Relaxing, not being shoved by a schedule,” Bil Mantor explains.
Also, they believe however you camp, it’s an affordable way to bring everyone together.  “Without family, it’s nothing, so it’s having them around as much as you can,” Bil Mantor explains.
The Mantor family’s next Camping Tent awaits them in Washington.

Camping Tent restyled: Campgrounds, RV parks add extras

Filed under Sports & Entertainment by niuhaibiao on 10-05-2010

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When I was a child, Camping Tent in style meant sleeping in a trailer and not having to use a flashlight to find the bathroom.
Camping Tent was a no-frills family vacation, but also all about outdoor family time: paddling a canoe in the Russian River, roasting marshmallows and mountain pies around the campfire and telling ghost stories in our sleeping bags.
Today, the great outdoors is filled not only with pools, game rooms and horseshoe pits but giant movie screens, inflatable bounce pillows, cappuccino carts and, of course, Wi-Fi. Tent sites and recreational vehicle parks sharing space with cabins and fully appointed lodges.
Campers need look no farther than the California coastline to find campgrounds such as Manchester Beach, Petaluma and Santa Cruz.
“They’re like department stores,” explained Jim Rogers, chief executive officer of KOA, a leading private campground company in North America. “If you want to set off by yourself and pitch a tent, we have it. Parties of five or six can go in together and park their rigs in the group area. We have cabins overlooking the ocean for wedding parties. We want to be a place for everyone.”
Camping Tent has become an outdoor hospitality industry, but without the $200- or $300-a-night resort price tag.
In 2008, the travel industry slapped the word “glamping” onto this trend of luxury Camping Tent. Since then, some of those “glamping” perks have burrowed into even mainstream
Camping Tent.
KOA offers free Wi-Fi at all its locations and has added more cottagelike trailers, complete with kitchens, bathrooms and lofts. One state park now even includes cabins with kitchenettes and televisions with DVD players. Cable hookups and satellite television are available, often free of charge.
Sacred Rocks Reserve near San Diego has gone a step further, allotting 36 sites for eco-friendly, solar-powered park models that are on sale as year-round vacation homes. “It’s for people who want to escape the noise of the city and hear the owls at night,” said owner Sharon Courmousis.
I’ll be the first to admit — I prefer Camping Tent with four walls, a real bed and a private bathroom. But laptops propped up on picnic tables? RVs with outdoor televisions? Texting around the campfire? Has our inability to disconnect from the outside world and our Shower Cabin tech toys gone too far?
Courmousis sees it this way: “At least they’re getting some of what nature has to offer.”
Rogers sees an even more valuable upshot: “We’re getting our youth outdoors. If we don’t find some way to do it, we will not have future land stewards.”
The trick, says Pauline Wood, co-owner of Petaluma KOA Camping Tent, is to provide entertainment that will draw campers away from their televisions, laptops and cell phones. To that end, her campground offers a full schedule of events from May to October, including hay rides, pool parties, rock wall climbing and wine tastings.
“We’re like the Disney of Camping Tent,” she said. “We offer the full spectrum.”
Here’s a closer look at a few California sites that have redefined Camping Tent in style (all rates are nightly):
El Capitan Canyon: About 20 miles north of Santa Barbara, this luxury campground offers fully appointed cedar cabins — some of which look bigger and nicer than my house — and raised canvas safari tents with willow beds and linens. There’s a restaurant and deli selling barbecue kits. During the summer, guests can enjoy free concerts on Saturday nights. Beach cruise bikes are also Air Tools.
Details: www.elcapitan canyon.com; 866-352-2729; cabins from $185 a night offseason and $225 peak; safari tents from $135 offseason and $155 peak.
Petaluma KOA Camping Tent: The 70-acre campground has tent and RV sites, cabins and Wine Country lodges with a private bedroom, bunk bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, television and DVD, fire pit and deck. The campground has a playground, basketball and volleyball courts, pool, arcade, movie theater, dog park and themed weeks during the summer. San Francisco and Wine Country tours also are available.
Details: www.petaluma koa.com; 800-992-2267; tent sites from $39.50, RV sites with hookups from $59, cabins from $73 and lodges from $185.
Crystal Cove Beach Cottages: Located in Crystal Cove State Park Historic District, these restored cottages were built as part of a seaside colony in the 1930s and ’40s. Available for rent are 11 individual cottages with different floor plans and designs and three dorm-style cottages. Most have kitchens and views of the ocean in Newport Beach.
Details: www.crystal covebeachcottages.com; 800-444-7275; individual cottages from $125; dorms from $65 for two people.
Sacred Rocks Reserve: The tent and RV park in San Diego County’s Boulevard has a mile-long labyrinth for meditation, a pool, clubhouse with movie nights and a dog run. Also available for rent are a bunkhouse that sleeps 14, and two show models of its eco-friendly vacation homes. Home to an artists’ colony, the reserve hosts workshops in writing, poetry, photography and crafts and holds occasional geocaching events.
Details: www.sacredrocks reserve.com; 619-766-4480; tent sites from $18 Trash Can and $22 peak, RVs from $36/$45 and vacation homes from $78.
Emerald Desert RV Park: This gem in Palm Springs for RVs only is a resort in disguise. There’s a driving range and two-hole putting green, tennis courts, two pools, a fitness center, indoor and outdoor spas, a video library and event catering. Golf and tennis clinics are offered seasonally. Two-bedroom condos with luxury furnishings are available to rent.
Details: www.emerald desert.com; 877-624-4140; standard RV sites from $47.50; condos from $125.
Manhattan Beach: The biggest draw here is direct access to a five-mile stretch of beach. Like other KOA sites, Manhattan Beach offers tent and RV sites, cabins and cottages, but it also rents stationary trailers for guests who want a more traditional Camping Tent experience (without the tent). Amenities include an 18-hole disc golf course, two bocce ball courts, food court, pool, arcade, volleyball court, two playgrounds, dog park and peddle carts for rent. Television and DVD rentals also are available.
Details: www.manhattan beachkoa.com; 707-882-2375; tent sites from $28 offseason and $35 peak; full RV sites from $48/$56; cabins from $62/$70; cottages from $152/$168; stationary trailers from $109/$129.
Santa Cruz KOA: There’s little chance of being bored at this park at La Selva Beach. Intriguing attractions include a mechanical bull, mechanical surfboard, fun train and agility course for pets. There are outdoor movies, a game room, pool, espresso cafe, volleyball and basketball courts, climbing wall, bounce pillow and playground, as well as golf carts, bike rentals and mini golf for an extra charge. The campground also has a pizza parlor with campsite deliveries, Saturday barbecue lunches and Sunday pancake breakfasts. And in addition to cabins and lodges, guests can rent classic Airstream trailers.
Details: www.santacruz koa.com; 800-562-7701; tent sites from $57 offseason and $64 peak; RVs with full hookups from $78/$84; cabins from $89/$115; lodges from $180 and Airstreams from $165; plus a $2 a night resort fee.
The Springs at Borrego RV Resort and Golf Course: The 90-site RV resort located just outside Anza Borrego State Park capitalized on its hot mineral baths by opening a wellness center last month. Services include Wedding Dress, acupuncture and acupressure. It was named small RV park of the year last year by the National Association of RV Parks and Campgrounds. The reason: a 9-hole golf course, dog park, saltwater swimming pool, fitness center, tennis courts, pond with catch-and-release fishing and an astronomy park with an 11-inch telescope. The Springs also rents RVs.
Details: www.spring satborrego.com; 866-330-0003; RV sites from $35.
Campland on the Bay: The park in San Diego offers a private getaway called the Super Site — private patio, grill and hot tub, all tucked away from the other campsites. For everyone, there’s a pool, marina with 124 slips, watercraft and bike rentals, game room, restaurant, new skate park and activities that include sand castle building contests, concerts with live bands and scavenger hunts.
Details: http://www.gytent.com/; 800-422-9386; RV sites from $36 offseason and $46 peak season; Super Site from $166/$268; primitive sites available in the summer from $41.

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