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ENTERTAINMENT
Family New Rules of Camping
Booking apps, glamping, and tricked-out Sprinter vans: over the past decade, life under the stars has been upgraded. Here's your up-to-date guide for enjoying the ultimate socially distanced weekend.
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From the campers at Outsideonline.com
As the country begins to reopen, we'll keep publishing news to help you navigate the state of travel today (), as well as stories about places for you to put on your bucket list once it's safe to start going more far-flung.
In the past decade, camping has exploded from the outdoorsy set’s humble pastime to the most popular way to spend downtime. A record 78.8 million U.S. households camped at least once in 2018, says the , and for the first time, 51 percent of new campers were nonwhite. Popular apps like Hipcamp have made it easier to find and book sites on private and public land, and the company is so buzzy that last year, (among others) . The rise of glamping has also helped to make sleeping under the stars trendy: in 2019, Google searches for the term, which began in 2007, reached an all-time high. sleeping in nature. This kind of free camping in undeveloped sites, called
And #vanlife has fully mainstreamed, with 7.1 million posts on Instagram. Even as the U.S. remains under varying levels of lockdown, found that 46 percent of all “leisure travelers” view camping as the safest form of travel once restrictions lift. Experts that , as long as you avoid crowded campgrounds and ones with shared facilities like poorly ventilated restrooms. dispersed camping, is increasingly popular in the U.S. on public lands that
convenient, and accessible than ever before, all the important stuff has stayed the same—the fresh air, the trees, the sense of escape, and the quality time by the campfire. Here’s your updated guide to what’s still the best way to spend a weekend.
1. Glamping is camping.
Glamping was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2016. The definition’s ambiguity—“outdoor camping with amenities and comforts (such as beds, electricity, and access to indoor plumbing) not usually used when camping”—allows for everything from bare-bones backcountry yurts to decked-out accommodations like the three-bedroom, two-bathroom tent introduced by the in Montana last year ($2,908 per night). Are you a camping purist who’s become glamping curious? Read about Outside editor Christopher Keyes’s at Under Canvas Tucson.
2. It doesn’t have to be glam. partners with land owners in 29 states across the country to set up basic canvas tents on their properties, each one stocked with a queen-size mattress, a heater, Adirondack chairs, a fire pit, and other essentials. Prices start at $50 per night. www.tentrr.com
3. Stay local.
Many states are still under some level of travel restrictions. But even before the pandemic, more campers were sticking closer to home. KOA’s report found that 54 percent of campers traveled less than 100 miles to camp. And you don’t have to live near mountains or wilderness to do so.
4. Definitely take that dirt road.
There’s a special joy in turning down an unpaved road, bouncing over miles of washboard, and winding up in an Instagrammer’s dream: gorgeous views, no other campers, and no host plying your wallet for the pleasure of Despite the changes that have made camping more comfortable,
permit it, such as National Forest or BLM land. Not long ago, the locations of the best spots were traded like gold, each gleaned from sheer luck or hours spent poring over maps and exploring unmarked roads. Today you can use apps like OnX and to digitally scope out tracks that could lead to potential campsites, or head to Campendium or to find spots marked with GPS coordinates and enhanced with user-submitted photos and reviews. However you find a site, make sure to minimize your impact by Leaving No Trace. Outside contributor Wes Siler.
5. Roughing it is out.
The best thing about car camping is that you get to bring everything. Here’s a short list of the guilty pleasures Outside editors have been known to bring car camping: the Kelty Low Loveseat camping couch; a Tempurpedic pillow; homemade dough and a cast-iron skillet to make campfire pizzas; an Aeropress and grinder to make good morning coffee; cleansers, toners, and moisturizers to keep the nightly skincare routine on point; and a comforter with a $135 organic-cotton duvet cover by Alterra Pure.
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6. Vanlife has mainstreamed.
In October 2011, at age 23, Foster Huntington quit his Manhattan job as a designer at Ralph Lauren and moved into a 1987 Volkswagen Vanagon. He drove to the West Coast, where he surfed, shot for brands like Car camping in Utah. Photo: MC Kennedy/Gallery Stock Patagonia, and pioneered the hashtag #vanlife. Since then, so many people have discovered how sleeping on a mattress in a warm vehicle is a game changer that the tag now has 7.2 million posts. With travelers now looking for more socially distant and self-sufficient ways to hit the road, RV and camper rental companies like are citing a 650 and 450 percent increases in bookings, respectively, since the start of April compared with the same time last year. Check with the folks at Freedom RV in Murrieta for the perfect camping vehicle. 7. Find your go-to spot.
Having a go-to spot eliminates decision anxiety and cuts down on planning. Having a ‘house camping spot’ is not unlike a house cocktail or a house meal.
8. You don’t need expensive gear.
Instead of springing for gear that takes up garage space, rent from Arrive, which assembles kits for everything from bikepacking to solo trips. A set for two for a weekend, with a Marmot tent, Therm-a-Rest pads, and a Yeti cooler, is $265 including return shipping. Have it delivered to your home, your hotel, or a FedEx office near your site. www.arriveoutdoors.com 9. Go ahead, bring your phone.
A little tech support goes a long way toward relieving the logistical burden of camping. Hipcamp’s app, released in 2019, is a road-trip godsend, allowing you to reserve everything from tent sites to tree houses on the fly. (Note that along with establishing , the app recently added an extra step where travelers have to check a box to self-certify that their booking doesn’t violate any local regulations or travel bans.) offers downloadable trail maps usable without cell service ($30 per year). www.alltrails.com 10. The campfire is still everything.
No matter how much has changed about camping, the best parts have stayed the same. One of those things: sitting by the fire. (Check your local restrictions, however: in part to mitigate the strain on first responders Photo: Ian Allen during the pandemic, many areas have fire bans in place.)
And don’t stress about it too much, either. Past health problems caused by the insect repellent were mostly due to overapplication and ingestion. If you apply as the label recommends (once a day, to exposed skin only), and wash it off at the end of the day, you’ll be fine. It certainly beats risking mosquito-borne illnesses like West Nile—or the woes of being the mosquito magnet at camp. 12. You will not be mocked for your massive tent.
If you’re car camping, go ahead and go big—it’s not like you’re the Appalachian Trail. The most popular tent on Amazon, with nearly 10,000 reviews, is the Coleman Sundome ($150). The six-person model is 100 square feet, which is plenty of space for two queen mattresses. 13. Food tastes better outdoors.
Camp food tastes better. It’s a fact. And you don’t need to mess with a stove, either. For easy recipes to cook over the campfire there are many sites to view even KOA.com 14. You need a sporktula.
Outside Gear Guy used to swear by cutlery pilfered from Taco Bell for backpacking trips. “That was before I met the Morsel spork,” he says. The Morsel is a spoon, fork, knife, and spatula combo—in other words, a camping superutensil. He loves the XL size, with its long handle for scraping the last bits of a freeze-dried meal from the bag. We love that it’s only $13. www.morselspork.com
Whether you’re tent camping, vanlifing, or glamping, there’s nothing like the freedom and joy offered by a night spent under the stars. And, , camp snoozes can even be more restorative than sleeping indoors.
At Outsideonline.com they hope to inspire readers to get outside. Timing has never been more critical. In recent years, Outside Online has reported on groundbreaking research linking time in nature to improved mental and physical health.
Outsideonline.com has a weekly newsletter available for many great outdoor adventure ideas.
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