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So You Want To Try Camping?

You've been wanting to try camping and, once again, summer is coming. RLF Sporting Goods offer's affordable brand name quality supplies at discount prices, so that you can have everything you need to enjoy your outdoor experience! It's time to get serious.

Camping: Reconnecting with Nature

     A fresh breeze is blowing through the world of camping. Here's a fun, spiritually refreshing, low-carbon-footprint way to spend your holidays. With the new range of excellent, bargain-priced tents, you can have an adventure of a lifetime at minimal cost. Now that camping is all the rage, new options are opening all the time.      

One of the best things about camping is it can fit just about any budget, and you have many options. First, ask yourself how often you will camp in a year. This will help you determine the quality of equipment you should buy. Like any sporting activity, camping equipment prices reach far and wide, and "you get what you pay for." While you don't need the very best gear when starting out, don't short-change yourself either. We offer affordable, brand name, quality camping, hiking and fishing supplies at discount prices.

Next, determine where you will camp. State parks and wilderness area campsites vary greatly from primitive use to those with many modern conveniences. Prices can range from $5 to $20 or more per night. Check out our OutDoor Resources.

What do you like to eat? You can cook extravagant foods with the latest camp stove, or simplify with sandwiches, hot dogs, beans and trail mix. Check out our Free Camping Recipe page.

How much sleeping space do you require? Most campers want some elbow room, so consider this when buying a tent. Here are some tips for selecting tents, sleeping bags and cooking gear: Because your tent will be your home, and your weather-proof barrier, pay special attention to what you purchase. An average four to six-person tent will range from $69 to more than $400, but you don't have to sacrifice quality and extra features for an affordable tent. A good price range to start out with is $100 to $150. Keep in mind the tent's stability and design, its fabric and construction, and its waterproofness and assembly features. Not all tents offer the same features in the same price range, so make inquiries and get educated.

A three-pole, aluminum or fiberglass frame will provide good stability, and shock-corded poles and clip attachments will simplify the assembly and speed set-up time.

Coleman & Eureka! tents offer these features, plus a durable fabric with reliable waterproof coating and a bathtub floor, which means the seam between the floor and walls is above the ground so water cannot seep in.

Shock-corded poles and clips are the quickest assembly features available, and will save valuable time and steps when you first learn to set up your tent. Waterproofness is crucial, as any camper will confirm. A tent that isn't coated well or doesn't have a waterproof nylon fabric won't withstand a driving rain. Design is also important. When assembled, the tent should be taut and able to shed water. If water accumulates on the roof or other areas, the tent might sag and water could drip through the fabric. It's also very important to seal all tent seams before a trip.

Good ventilation is another important element. Your body can release up to a pint of water a night and if there's no place for it to go, you'll wake up in damp quarters. Eureka! positions its large windows low on the tent walls, so air can flow in near the floor and circulate up throughout the tent.

Sleeping bags are a staple for camping. A bag should be rated for 20 F to keep you warm in most spring through fall camping conditions. Bags with goose down insulation are the lightest and very warm, but quite expensive and loose their insulating effectiveness when damp or wet. Good alternative insulations are Rteq®, ThermaShield™, and Eloft found exclusively in Eureka! sleeping bags. It's important to buy foam or self-inflating sleeping pads for the extra comfort and insulation against the hard and damp ground.

For cooking gear, don't throw away those old pots and pans or plates. Pack them away for camping. Also, shop thrift stores and garage sales for old cast-iron or aluminum pans, and plastic plates and cups.

Remember, camping is enjoyed by millions of people each year. Let your budget work for you to make it an experience you'll want to do again. Camping Gear Checklist will certainly help, because setting out on a camping trip can start to look like a military expedition. So check out our checklist of essential equipment - so you don't forget the matches!

Wild Camping

   

To purists, this is the only kind of camping: pitching your tent in the wild - just you, nature and the stars.

What is wild camping?

Basically, it's camping outside commercial, organized campgrounds - pitching your tent in the wild, untamed countryside, in the place of your choosing.

The wild campers' code of conduct:

  • Do not camp within sight of dwellings, or near livestock.
  • Pitch late (i.e. after 5pm), and leave early (i.e. before 9am).
  • Ask permission from the owner, if you can.
  • If the owner asks you to leave, do so, politely and quickly.
  • Do not light a campfire without the owner's express permission.
  • Never urinate or defecate near a water source.
  • Do not wash with soap, shampoo or detergent in streams.
  • Bury your poo with a trowel (but not tampons: animals dig them up).
  • Take all rubbish with you (even other people's).
  • Leave no trace.

Minimal gear

Wild camping is all about walking and carrying everything you need. So you want the lightest tent you can afford, a lightweight sleeping bag, and a minimum of clothing. Part of the fun of wild camping is cooking meals, and there are some nifty specialist camping stoves, fueled by methylated spirits, with pans that pack together like Russian dolls. You are also going to have to carry your food: take dried food rather than cans, and water. You should be able to find water along the way - which you can purify by tablets or prolonged boiling if needs be. You can always stock up with supplies.

Wilder campsites

If you don't fancy taking the risk of wild camping, you can always do the next best thing. Some farm campsites are pretty wild, primitive and rugged - and there you know you're legal, can stay several days, might be able to light a fire, will have access to a toilet, and maybe even a hot shower.

 

 

 
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