S
Swa121
Guest
Do you consider camping with an air mattress, stove, and occasionally a DVD player real camping.
I remember when I was little and we would my sister and I would hike with our dad for a few hours without seeing anyone else until we reached where we would set up camp. My dad would carry the tent and other heavy stuff while we carried lighter stuff. We didn't have electricity except for lanterns, flashlights, and a radio. We cooked fish we caught over fire (not a grill or stove) and brought marshmallows, chocolate, and graham crackers for, you guessed it, smores! If the weather was nice we would not even sleep inside the tent.
I don't think that renting a cabin with indoor plumbing and electricity and a couch and breakfast table is camping. I don't think an RV is either.
What do you consider real camping?
I remember when I was little and we would my sister and I would hike with our dad for a few hours without seeing anyone else until we reached where we would set up camp. My dad would carry the tent and other heavy stuff while we carried lighter stuff. We didn't have electricity except for lanterns, flashlights, and a radio. We cooked fish we caught over fire (not a grill or stove) and brought marshmallows, chocolate, and graham crackers for, you guessed it, smores! If the weather was nice we would not even sleep inside the tent.
I don't think that renting a cabin with indoor plumbing and electricity and a couch and breakfast table is camping. I don't think an RV is either.
What do you consider real camping?