Hi everyone,
I thought I share this e-mail exchange that I found in one of my folders between my dad and I before he passed away of pelvic cancer back in 2010.
I think you will find it kinda of funny in a way and sad as well.
He talks about what camping was really like back in the 50's when they were very poor and I contrast with my dreams of an airstream. The sad part was that the infection he was talking about was the first signs of cancer. He passed away december of 2010.
He and his dad were always looking for ways to run off from the mother/wife to go fishing and hunting. Mostly to get their drunk on. But they always enjoyed theirs trips and my dad had a nick name of "Buckshot" given to him by the local hunting writer for the newspaper. It was a regular thing for the both of them to report in where the fish were biting and how many they caught.
My parents divorced when I was two years old but we got to also go camping and fishing many times, never enough as he worked overseas during the international construction heydays of the early 70s.
-----Original Message-----
Sent: Friday, August 07, 2009 4:27 AM
Subject: RE: Camping??
Hi Okie:
there is a neat website, http://www.vintage-airstream.com, we a lot of 1950s, 1960s and beyond trailers for sale. The Bambi should do for your needs.
Prebundled firewood, go figure! Miland turning over in his grave.....pay for firewood!
It was a lot of hard work back then, the roads were not so hot, the drive up after work, set up camp in the dark, the cold, mosquitoes, other pests and critters, the creek running high and cold. All I got is memories of a time long past.
I am better but getting a full checkup on 8/14, in Atlanta.
DAD
-----Original Message-----
Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 6:53 PM
Subject: RE: Camping??
Importance: High
You had better watch WHO you use the word OKIES around. Remember your Grandma and Mom came from the dust bowl of Oklahoma to the better life in sunny California.
I say OKIES with respect and dignity being one myself. I am sure that camping was not as popular in the 30's and 40's than it was post WWII. Oh Dawn and I are rewatching Band of Brothers on the big screen as it has been a few years since we last saw it. Proud and sad to see the generation talking about their brother in Easy company.
Yea I know, now it is showers (I can remember my Mom, washing Linda, in a WWII surplus blowup life raft, filled with creek water, left out in the sun, to warm it up), bath rooms - sure - we had to go with the bears. Danny and I had to bring in firewood, get water from the spring, pour the water out of the so called ice chest, and of course, we augmented our food supply by taking our .22s and hunting for mountain quail, always out of season, so Mom would freak out....Miland, we will get arrested! Dad would smile and pass out more shells. When we got
back, Mom would wash us, all the clothes from the red dirt grime accumulated. Poor Mom, it was more work, than staying at home.
We have it tough also....The camp couple drive the electric golf cart around nightly selling pre bundled firewood with starter kits for $6.
We also have to listen to the Berkeley crowds in their Subaru hatch backs with their REI tents go on about the beaurcrats in office and finding good vegan food stores.
The one in Turlock doesn't rock my boat. The other two are nice and expensive.
These days most parks have full facilities, not sure I would need an airstream with a potty and shower and full galley....when you have camp grounds with the Hilton experience. Tent trailer has two doubles, ice box and a small sink with water pump. We just use the ice chest for food and cooking is mostly on the fire pit grill or a removable three burner propane stove you mount on the side of the trailer. We have the kids do the dishes at the camp sinks they have next to the restrooms. Probably taking ice box out and using that space for storage.
Ideally I would like an airstream that is fixed up with a double or queen in the back, no potty, two chairs up front and a 1080 p flat screen TV for a movie. Maybe a small galley with an electric refrig.
Big canvas...Astroturf....and a BBQ. Oh a blender for the Mai Tai's.
NOW THAT IS CAMPING....HHAHHHAHA!!
Big Basin, stop in Ben Lomman or Boulder Creek, remember, we lived there for a while. Sister Linda born in Santa Cruz. We have pics of me and Grandpa Leal, feeding a deer, the park was quite pretty, not many people, hate to think what it is like today. Pinecrest ditto. Cuggie and Lena like the place, for different reasons, we liked the WILD.
I am thinking Pinecrest for swimming...but redwoods will be nice and quiet, plus we can do a day trip to Santa Cruz.
Evan still sick. I don't think I got a full dose, and it's a long story, but I had some antibotics from a bladder infection, so I started on them, before seeing the doc, with the high fever. Anyway, I am about back to normal. Tell Evan to drink lots of water, be good, mind his parents, no video games, read books instead. He will get well,
quick.
Evan went to doc to day...no pneumonia, and fever trending down...taking antibiotics.
love
David
-----Original Message-----
Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 1:18 PM
Subject: RE: Camping??
Importance: High
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/nby/rvs/1301917265.html
http://sacramento.craigslist.org/rvs/1307667824.html
http://modesto.craigslist.org/rvs/1277267988.html
I personally like the one in Turlock...semi restored but not all the way there.
I am restoring the Starcraft tent trailer and then would like to graduate to a real trailer. Most of the canned hams(check that website they have all kinds of vintage trailers on there) are nice, but eventually they leak or get rot somewhere. The airstreams are beautiful either oxidized or polished. They were all made mostly with Reynolds aluminum from the WWII surplus aircraft. I have seen many of them but have not been inside.
Our camping is a bit different than the okies from the grapes of wrath. Hot showers, fire pits/grills, hook-ups...clean bath rooms. Pre-marinated angus tri-tip, bush beans, and our LL Bean 40 degree sleeping bags. Oh if we do not want make lunch, just drive into town and have the lunch special at chop suey shop for 4.99.
Maybe in a couple years we will graduate to an old airstream.
Evan still sick...
Next camping trip is 8/17 four nites at Big Basin...may switch to Pinecrest...not sure yet.
David
-----Original Message-----
Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 4:41 AM
Subject: RE: Camping??
Remember Louise and Miland, Andy and Linda, poorer than church mice.
During all those years of the 50s, our camp gear, Montgomery Wards vintage, bought on time, consisting of: a wall tent, 2 person, no floor, (Dad replaced the center and end poles, with his own wooden creations, they collapsed on call between 8pm to 6 am), it leaked, so Dad painted it with Thompson water seal (not the product of today), it gave it a strong smell), he replaced the tent pegs, with something more substantial, railroad spikes, think about running into one of those, as you went out in the darkness to pee.
A Coleman stove, two burner, white gas, a pump system so touchy, if you gave it one stroke too many, the stove burners erupted into a bonfire, one stroke to little, the burners would light like a candle. A Colman lantern, more finicky than the stove and the mantles were a bear to put on and light. A ice box, metal, with 1/2 of insulation, a block of ice, lasted a couple of days. Folding cots, wooden, when set up, harder than the ground. And of course, 4 feet off the ground, ensuring you were cold, top and bottom. Plastic air mattresses, real plastic, when blown up, the cot felt better w/o the mattress, and of course, they deflated on command. Cotton sleeping bags, make unknown, provided almost no warmth beyond blankets. A box of left over and well worn dishes, pots, pans, cast iron fry pan, a pancake skillet (I burned my hand on), assorted plastic glasses, etc. and assorted other items from the house.....all of which filled their 1947 Fleet line Chevy, including the
kids and the dog. We looked like the Grapes of Wrath.
I wish I could show you pictures of the Wards fishing equipment, we had in those days, metal, telescoping, fishing rods, they were so bad - I think Dad's cost under $5 and mine $3, they collapsed all the time, they
have no feel to them....we caught few trout in those days. Dunking worms mostly.
So, we never saw any of these fancy retro camping trailers. The one you sent me a picture of, the teardrop, was a rental, Dad and Mom splurged that trip, luxury accommodations for them -as we were camping on the Consumes River, for a week or so. During this trip, in the dead of night, the top from a huge pine tree, which was rotten, broke off and
came crashing down in our camp.....a very close call. I mean, scared them to death, Dad spent the next day, cleaning up the camp area, chopping away limbs, bark.
But, after all these years, I would love to have a retro Airstream, a truck to tow it and 6 months off to travel the Western states, just camp and fish. Not to be, old Andy only has his memories.
HOPE Evan is better? Weird that both of us would come down with the
same disease. I have somewhat recovered, still have two days of
antibiotics, I was scared, it can be a death notice to old folks, like me! :0)
-----Original Message-----
Sent: Wednesday, August 05, 2009 2:31 PM
Subject: Camping??
Dad and Dawn,
I do not remember camping being like this??
Have a look at all the retro trailers!!
http://vintagetrailercrazy.com