daveesl77 wrote:I'm sorry, and I will probably ruffle some feathers here, but when I see a KOA I just cringe. It isn't "camping" it is a parking lot, an outrageously expensive parking lot at that. Look at those pics - side by side by side. The cover photo was done somewhere that wasn't yet full. Look at the airstream photo, there isn't anyone outside. Give me BLM, National Forest or Corps of Engineers any day.
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dave
jss06 wrote:I stayed at several KOAs on my trip to Yellowstone. The facilities were nice, quiet and not expensive considering the facilities I had access to.
daveesl77 wrote:I'm sorry, and I will probably ruffle some feathers here, but when I see a KOA I just cringe. It isn't "camping" it is a parking lot, an outrageously expensive parking lot at that. Look at those pics - side by side by side. The cover photo was done somewhere that wasn't yet full. Look at the airstream photo, there isn't anyone outside. Give me BLM, National Forest or Corps of Engineers any day.
And now back to our regularly scheduled programming.
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dave
daveesl77 wrote:I'm sorry, and I will probably ruffle some feathers here, but when I see a KOA I just cringe. (edit: I mean all of this in our own concepts, doesn't mean for everyone). For us, it isn't "camping", it is a parking lot, an outrageously expensive parking lot at that. Look at those pics - side by side by side. The cover photo was done somewhere that wasn't yet full. Look at the airstream photo, there isn't anyone outside. Give me BLM, National Forest or Corps of Engineers any day.
... Being one that "stirs the pot" (hey I'm an old hippy and submariner),
...if I stay at many Corps of Engineer campgrounds, each site has water and electric. Laundry and showers in many locations. They don't have pools because they are usually on a body of water. At Ridge Road in Georgia, each campsite is about 1 acre in size on a giant lake. The price just went up to $20 per night. I have the access pass, so my cost is $10 per night.
About 20 miles east of Yellowstone is Wapiti NFS campground. My site was on the river, electric and water avail. No showers and vault toilets. Electric site is $20 per night regular price, $10 with pass. KOA is $60, but you do get cable.
BLM site off I-70, $5, no electric or water, but it is on the river. Valley of Fires BLM in New Mexico, $12, water/electric, amazing shower and laundry facilities. and the list goes on and on and on.
Oh, and yes, I have been forced to stay at two KOA sites. One in PA, one is SC due to aged family members. Could hardly wait to leave.
Now, with that all said, you'll notice the one location I purposefully left out are the National Park campgrounds. For the most part, these are super packed, expensive and offer essentially nothing. But sometimes you have no choice, such as Chaco Canyon.
As to tents, we still do them and enjoy them, but at my age and level of disability, it just isn't practical anymore. The teardrop concept is the closest you can come, IMHO.
But for all, it is whatever makes you happy and most important, the FAMILY happy, whatever that is, right?
dave
daveesl77 wrote::D Being one that "stirs the pot" (hey I'm an old hippy and submariner),
dave
daveesl77 wrote:Ah DrCrash - another "sewerpipe sailor". I was a boomer jockey.
NavET, SSBN 633 here
dave
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