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-   -   Camping Tips (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=32594)

johngibbs 03-28-2017 03:22 PM

No hot dogs? Come on now...

Gravdigr 03-28-2017 03:35 PM

They're in the box with the pork & beans.

xoxoxoBruce 04-01-2017 10:48 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Seems to me it would be less work to wrestle a bear for his cave. :rolleyes:

Pamela 04-02-2017 08:11 PM

Gotta share dis

http://media.oglaf.com/comic/rangerron.jpg

BigV 04-02-2017 11:19 PM

LOL

glatt 04-03-2017 07:14 AM

Back at my desk after a weekend camping trip.

We had a lot of rain Friday night, but it stopped overnight and was dry by morning. The crazy thing was, after all the leaf cover was dry and we had returned from a morning hike, a trickle had appeared in our camp area. I followed it to its source, and it was bubbling up out of the ground.

I've seen springs before, but they were already running. This is a spring I saw just as it was beginning to spring. Pretty cool. Cool that is, until the trickle got stronger and then all the paths became little streams and we had big puddles growing all around the camp area.

glatt 04-03-2017 07:59 AM

4 Attachment(s)
So the spring started off barely producing any water.
Attachment 59958
But then it started flowing more.
Attachment 59959
And threatened some tents
Attachment 59960
And flooded the paths.
Attachment 59961

fargon 04-03-2017 12:18 PM

Cool. Did you get a drink from it?

glatt 04-03-2017 02:23 PM

Nah. It was probably clean enough to drink right at the source, but it was literally in the middle of a group campsite. Humans are filthy disgusting creatures and there is no telling what had been done to that spot on the ground before the water came.

Gravdigr 04-03-2017 03:50 PM

There is no water 'clean enough to drink' untreated.

Even falling from the sky, it's too dirty to be good for ya.

xoxoxoBruce 04-03-2017 07:33 PM

Right, drink beer.

Gravdigr 04-03-2017 10:21 PM

;)

xoxoxoBruce 04-09-2017 01:27 PM

Skip the hassle of camping, go Glamping in California.

Quote:

Terra Glamping is a luxury glamping experience 2.5 hours north of San Francisco along Pacific Coast Highway 1.

Each of our ten safari tents have a full ocean view. Starting at $250/night, you can expect the following at Terra Glamping:

Comfort and luxury - Sleep well on a memory foam bed with down comforter, in a well appointed safari tent
Reconnect with nature - Enjoy a digital detox as you take in the sun, ocean and stars
Connect with others - Romance is in the air as you and your sweetheart meet new friends or enjoy the privacy of your tent
Adventure - Whale watching, a campfire with s'mores, hiking and kayaking await...or read a book and enjoy the ocean breeze
:lol:

Pi 04-18-2017 04:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by glatt (Post 983451)
Excellent ideas. Although I have to snicker at the relative sizes of some of the items in that backpack. For example number 24, the foam sleeping pad. A regular non-inflatable one takes up as much space as a tent. See if you can even find 24.

Back in my wild days as recon I bought a foldable sleeping pad. It wasn't very thick and we draw our body outline on it and cut off everything else...
It was good as a cushion too and as we didn't sleep a lot it served us well.
Also check out the newest tech on sleeping pads : http://gizmodo.com/everything-you-ev...eep-1658866916

Pi 04-18-2017 04:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 983635)
Here's something I never could figure out. Apparently you can make a snow cave and live inside w/o freezing to death. But you read of people in their cars in blizzards who get buried and freeze to death. Isn't the car effectively a snow cave once it is buried? Do they actually suffocate or is it that the space inside the car, however insulated with mountains of snow, is too big to warm? I'm guessing, now that I think about it, 2 tons of metal is a greater heat sink than two tons of snow. Presumably, it would be better to make a snow cave outside the car.

Did I answer my own question?

I did some survival in Austria and Finland. So your answer is correct and then snow insulates very well. There's no wind/chill factor to consider when staying inside the snow. It's a smaller space than probably a car and with your body head and a small candle you could live quite comfortably for a night or two.


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