Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Is It Okay to Cancel That Camping Trip?


I have the utmost respect for campers who push the boundaries of their camping experience--extreme cold, extreme heat and humidity. I also have been camping long enough to know that full-time camping, although a romantic on-the-road concept, isn't always easy when the rubber really hits the road. This is especially true for tiny trailer campers. The tiny space becomes even tinier in extreme conditions, even for one person, much less a couple.

That's why my wife and I have cancelled our planned week of camping in these dog days of August. When we originally reserved our campsites, the projected high temperatures were in the mid-80s . . . but the temperatures kept rising and are now in the mid-90s. We had reserved five nights at a local state park, then a weekend on the Des Moines River at a county park, and then five more nights back at the state park. (That's right, the weekend sites were booked at the state park far in advance.) It was a nice plan--spending ten days at a site with good shade and then spending a weekend at a campground on the river, a place my wife had visited but never camped at.

However, since my wife works online during the week, her options were for her to swelter outside or for us to be cramped together in our tiny trailer, and even though it's a standy, that's a pretty tight space when we're working. My wife puts it this way: it's not so bad to work together, but when I get tired and take a nap and start snoring . . . it's a bit much. And when she has to talk to a client on the phone, it's like, "What's that noise?"

Extreme conditions can be draining on the body, too. It's one thing to be out of a couple of nights, but another to deal with extreme environments for a prolonged time. In the Midwest, summer sun heats the lakes, which then tend to scum up, so even swimming can lose its appeal. Scummy water, bugs (chiggers, ticks, and mosquitoes), air conditioners maxing out . . . well, my point is that sometimes it's just okay to cancel that camping trip and stay at home.

We've put off our trip a week, cancelling the first seven days and keeping the last five-day reservation at the state park. Right now, highs for those days are expected to be in the 78-82 degrees range. Not bad! We are planning to be gone for at least a couple of weeks, now that school has begun for our grandchildren. We've been "sharing bubbles" of social distancing in our family but feel we want to take some time away in order for there to be more empirical information regarding how returning to school will affect COVID-19 infections. We don't want to get sick, of course, but my wife and I also realize that the last thing we all want as a family is for parents and grandparents to both get sick at the same time. Who would take care of the grandkids? The kids will be busy and excited, and it's just a good time for us to take a break and get away and do some camping. Also, thank god for Facetime!

Full-time living at Tails of Wanderlust--no pain in this photo!

Camping is supposed to be fun, and I personally feel no macho need to press through and experience discomfort if I'm camping locally. Camping does include times when we have to deal with more extreme situations like a thunderstorm, and that's part of the fun of camping, but it's not necessary to bring tornado-chaser mentality to the camping experience. I'm never planning on hiking to the top of Mt. Everest or to the North Pole, either.

Life is meant to be enjoyed. Camping with a tiny trailer as opposed to camping in a tent does definitely extend and expand the camping season. Even the tiniest camper provides more protection from the elements. If I'm camping locally and the thermometer is maxing out, though, then I'm perfectly comfortable, both literally and figuratively, staying at home. I don't mind coming home happy and exhausted, but heat exhaustion . . . no thanks! And, yes, those explorers to our North and South poles made history with their firsts . . . those that lived, that is. Sometimes there's nothing wrong with being a hobbit and staying in the Shire.

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Friday, August 21, 2020

Tiny Trailer Camping, Social Distancing, and KOA's 2020 "North American Camping and the Effects of COVID-19" Special Report

KOA Special Report
Tiny camping trailers are safe, easy to tow, and owned by a hardy breed of campers who don't mind getting outside and enjoying a bit of weather. As a camping group, I think tiny trailer campers are a less intimidated by the idea of self-sufficient camping that includes social distancing because of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

After all, what does social distancing and self-sufficiency mean for a tiny trailer owner? Many tiny trailers are bought with the idea of getting away and engaging in some "boondocking," camping off the grid and without campground support facilities. Continuing to boondock, therefore, isn't a big stretch for tiny trailer owners. Also, even if camping in established, full-service campgrounds, tiny trailer owners can use boondocking expertise to remain socially distant. 

"Wait a minute, now," astute readers might say, "aren't the big-rig, fully-equipped RVs the most able to be totally self-sufficient?" They've got full kitchens, great bathrooms, and are large enough to be considered tiny apartments on wheels. How can they not be better able to be self-sufficient? I can't argue with those facts--except that many large camper set-ups, when hooked up on Sewer Alley, are cheek by jowl with other RVers. Close proximity is dictated by the need to have straight runs for the sewer system. I would say that mid-range 5th-wheels and travel trailers are better set up to have full facilities and still be able to park in a campsite with a bit more space.

Tiny trailers, though, are able to camp in those tiny nook campsites, the ones that the bigger rigs just look at, shake their head, and move on. Tiny campers are even sometimes allowed in many campgrounds that use tent campsites, which are usually primitive and more secluded. Utilizing portable toilets and showers, tiny trailer campers don't have to worry about filling tanks and then having to pull the trailer up to the dump station often (although fully equipped RVs can buy the portable waste tanks to use to transport wastes to the dump station).

Even the most simple tiny trailers, as "hard-sided tents," possess a sense of being a haven of safety from people and the elements that tent campers lack. And I'm not knocking tents, because I've had great camping experiences with tents. It's just that in these stressful novel coronavirus times, I find the added security of my standy tiny trailer comforting. I find that I can settle more, knowing that I have more control over my environment, being a tiny trailer owner. Camping in my local area of SE Iowa, campground camping has become a hybrid experience of "boondocking" with electricity and water. 

Camping this season means self-isolating while in a campground with other campers. I find myself taking a stroll through the campground loops and maybe chatting from the middle of the road but not inviting myself or being invited into the campsites of others. The closest I came to another camper on my last camping trip was after a distance chat with a husband and wife, the husband wanted to show me a photo on his phone of his black powder muzzleloader rifle (and I wanted to see it). I just said, "Stand back. I don't have my glasses, so I can see best from a distance," which happened to be both true and the safe course of action. 

On May 11, 2020, Kampgrounds of America issued a special report, "North American Camping and the Effects of COVID-19," the information in the report based on an April 27-20 survey conducted by the Cairn Consulting Group. It's been three months since the report has been issued--and a lot of social and political water has passed under the bridge. Nonetheless, in late April, society had been in some form of social restriction for about a month, and North America and the rest of the world realized (with notable exceptions) that the pandemic was a significant event. What did the special report have to say? I've provided a link so you can read it in its entirety if you wish (it's nineteen pages, including graphics), but I'd like to share some takeaways regarding camping with small and tiny campers. Those surveyed were for the most part "leisure travelers," most of whom did some camping.

Not surprisingly, most of the leisure travelers planned to increase camping in their travel plans once the country opened up again. What we see now, three months later, is that fewer people are traveling by plane and train, and more people are considering road trips. Traveling by road with some form of camping capacity ensures the greatest ability to maintain social distancing. "Among all leisure travelers, prior to the pandemic, camping accounted for 11% of all trips while post COVID-19, camping is likely to account for 16%." Forty-seven percent of travelers who sometimes camped said they would replace one of their cancelled or postponed trips with camping. Of the travelers who wanted to be outdoors and camp, 41% said it's more affordable and 37% said it would be easier to maintain social distancing. My feeling is that now that the deaths in the United States from COVID-19 are hitting 180,000 that the latter (social distancing) percentage would be higher. Many campers, I'm sure, are looking at their rigs and equipment and asking themselves how they can tweak what they've got to be more self-sufficient and, therefore, more safe. I wrote an article in mid-March, "Camping in the Time of the Coronavirus," and I think my observations and suggestions are still relevant now, five months later. The main change is that we've become more accustomed to taking safety measures when we go out.

The KOA survey included asking campers how they intended to return to camping. What would they change? How campers intended to change their camping habits and routines followed what we probably would have predicted if we had been asked in April. Camping in small groups (or alone) was one intention; even those who usually camped in groups of 3-5 intended to go smaller. Seventy percent of those who camped said they intended to camp closer to home and that they were willing to camp at less popular campgrounds in order to avoid overcrowding. Campers were more willing to try a different mode of camping, with the availability of private bathrooms being an important consideration. More people were considering the idea of full-time RVing.

It's also no surprise that travelers increased their appreciation of being outdoors as a safer and less stressful environment. "The pandemic has impacted travelers' views toward nature and experiencing the outdoors--43% of leisure travelers say spending time outdoors is now more important as a result of the pandemic." Those surveyed also felt it was important for kids to spend more time outside. As late summer is upon us, it is easy to see why many parents are concerned that their children will be heading back to school where their children will be inside in groups. 

A comfortable, safe, self-sufficient camp at a state park 25 miles from home

This pandemic has created stressful and uncertain times for everyone, and campers intuited the need back in April for the nurturing qualities of the outdoors. Once restrictions were lifted, those surveyed felt that they were "most likely to want to explore (69%), be able to relax (67%), and be in the outdoors to clear their mind (66%)." If the survey were held now in August, I'll bet those percentages would increase, and of those three qualities--explore, relax, and clear the mind--I think "relax" and "clear the mind" might have the highest percentages. There was a 37% increase of travelers looking forward to when it would be safe to travel again. 

Ironic, isn't it? It's not safer now to travel; it's more dangerous because the virus has spread geographically. The infection curve is still rising, as are deaths. What we would hope is that campers have adapted their travel procedures to be safer from getting the virus, but on the news we see significant disbelief and rebellion against safe health practices. This (again, ironically) makes small and tiny trailer owners safer in their travels than many other modes of travel because they can easily tow their "safe house" with them . . . or they can go out for a day trip and take their portable toilet with them to use in their SUV if necessary. Nowadays, "portable and adaptable" are two positive points if one is trying to avoid the invisible and increasingly prevalent virus, and tiny trailers and tiny trailer camping equipment is nothing if not adaptable.

Even back in April, how to handle COVID-19 was not an unknown; it wasn't rocket science that the average traveler couldn't understand. Nine out of ten surveyed (and 95% of the campers) felt it was necessary to put measures in place to deal with the virus. For parks and campgrounds, depending on the specific situation, from over a third to almost half felt it important to moderate trail traffic, group sizes, and where to use masks. Three months later, these basic health safety measures have somehow become politicized. Why? The KOA report's tone was more that these measures were just common sense, the kind of thing you do if your kid has chicken pox or lice, only more serious because of the danger of a totally new strain of virus. We have to guard ourselves nowadays not just against COVID-19 but also from people who because of stress, high emotions, misinformation, and inaccurate reasoning are placing themselves and others in danger. When camping, knowing you can get inside your hard-sided camper and close the door is a comforting safety measure.

My dad used to say, "When you leave a campsite, make sure it's cleaner than when you got there." If we can apply his words to cigarette butts and pop cans, why can't we extend our intent regarding this pandemic to keeping our parks and campgrounds covid free? When boating we worry about keeping out invasive species. We pick up after our pets to keep campgrounds tidy and to not infect wildlife with diseases. Those are simple, straightforward, no-nonsense actions; maybe we can call them ecological versions of "sterilizing" and "distancing." No matter what our mode of camping, let's respect our parks and campgrounds. Let's respect our fellow campers. No matter what size our camping rig, when it comes to COVID-19, let's leave no trace behind. And for you tiny trailer campers, know that maybe you are leaders in a new lifestyle, one it seems will be with us for at least another year. Lead the way, and may we all have safe and happy camping experiences.


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Tuesday, August 18, 2020

The Tiny Trailer Camping Blog Green Goddess Glamping Celebrates Two Years of Learning and Sharing


I learn by researching, writing, and sharing--and this article is a celebration of that fact. Two years ago I bought a tiny "standy" travel trailer, an RTTC Polar Bear, and began the process of learning everything a travel trailer owner has to know. Since I'm a life-long writer and also for eleven years have been the administrator of a writing blog, Tom Kepler Writing, I naturally had the thought to start a blog about tiny and small trailers, camping, and all things related.

I'm happy to say that in two years, Green Goddess Glamping has published 180 articles. Its articles have been viewed over 181,000 times, and now two hundred readers follow the blog by receiving email notification when new articles are posted. Last month, 13,500 readers went to my blog. These numbers are small, considering many websites, but for a non-commercial, one-person enterprise . . . well, I'm just glad and fulfilled that readers have appreciated my sharing what I've learned about being the owner of a small travel trailer.

This article isn't just about tooting my own horn, though. I want to share with you some of the accomplishments and provide some links that might be useful for you.

  • First of all, since I own a Rustic Trails Teardrop Camper, I've gotten to know and write about the adventures of quite a few RTTC owners, which I've compiled in a "Bears in the Wild" article which provides links to most of the RTTC articles I've written. I hope you enjoy reading about great travel adventures, trailer "mods," and owner lifestyles; I certainly have enjoyed researching and writing these travelogue, profile, and how-to articles.
  • Next, once I had written about a hundred articles, I decided to compile them on static pages that would make accessing all that research and narration easier. If you view this blog on a computer, then below the header are a number of tabs, such as "Why Tiny Trailers?" where you can find article links focused on a single topic. Other topics include "Owner Profiles," "Travelogues," and more practical "How-To" articles. If you view my blog on a cellphone, then below the blog header are two down-pointing arrows. Touch an arrow and a list of categories will pop up. Touch the other arrow and another list will appear. The lists also include "Green Goddess Expeditions," which chronicle my camping adventures, many with my wife.
  • Viewing the website format rather than the cellphone mobile format brings to view the blog's sidebar. I've placed a few blog aids there to make interaction more easy. Some of the most important are a search function, an email link to me, a connection to my Facebook page, and a Labels list, which is organized a bit differently than the blog tab links (for instance, there are "Camp Cooking" and "Art and Craft Activities," topics that don't get aggregated in the tab links. I've labeled sixteen topics so far, so the list is a bit more specific than the tabs, which are limited because of space and layout restrictions.
  • In order to keep subject matter dynamic, I try to follow a rotation of three types of articles: articles about small and tiny trailers owners, personal travel experiences, and nuts-and-bolts articles related to owning a travel trailer. I tend to have more articles about my personal travels during camping season. During the winter, I have more time to connect with other single-axle trailer owners and write about their experiences and travels. The articles about gear and camping skills I write about as I learn. I also like to write about the insights I have about owning and going out with my tiny trailer, such as my article about traveling solo: "Traveling Solo: Being Alone Is Not the Same Thing As Being Lonely." 


Comments, whether on social media posts or on blog articles themselves are always appreciated. I've been writing my whole life, and I intend to keep it up since I learn by writing . . . and why in the world would I ever want to stop learning? And by "learning," I mean not just gaining information. I also mean learning about myself and others. I hope you continue with me on this journey. We can be travel companions, literary associates, and virtual friends. We're somewhat like turtles, who carry their homes upon their backs. In these uncertain times, I find it reassuring that no matter what my travels, I'm always close to home, and that I'm connected to friends who've got my back. As Ringo Starr says, "Peace and love," and may your campfire wood always be dry.

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Friday, August 14, 2020

The Best Camping Advice I've Heard in a Long Time: Drive Less, Stay Longer

Dawn at Lake Sugema Campground

Dawn and dusk are special times when camping, times of transition when the light changes and there is a pause, almost as if the world is holding its breath, almost as if that veil of earth, water, fire, and air that shrouds the eternal thins and becomes transparent. We can experience this transition anywhere and any time--on a street corner, from our home's front window, or while sitting beside a campfire that pops and crackles as its ruddy light warms us.

Why not call this experience for what it is, a spiritual experience, an inner experience, a moment of silence and stillness when we recognize that between breathing in and breathing out, within the silence behind the chatter of the stream beside our campsite, radiating from the lambent majesty of sun caressing the distant horizon--we recognize that we are spiritual beings, that the reality outside ourselves is no different than the reality inside. Like raindrops falling toward the immense ocean below, we recognize our kinship with all that exists, that we are myriad but also one, that we are both individual and cosmic, completely both.

Immersing ourselves in the natural world reminds us in ways subtle and wondrous, that we are not alone, that we are intimately a part of the cosmic ecology. That's why I camp, to gather the natural world around me like a warm and soft blanket, and yet that "safe haven of home" experience in no way interferes with the everyday experiences of swinging my grandkids on the campground swings or of making s'mores around the campfire, reminding the kids to let them cool a bit before gobbling them down. Life need not be frenetic; we can be in a hurry if necessary, but we shouldn't rush.

Table Mountain from Carrick Creek (Annie Wynn photo)

In terms of camping, a fellow camper recently stated an idea that for a long time I've been thinking and feeling: "I’m trying to stay longer in places. Move less, drive less, relax more" (Wynn Worlds). During this time of the pandemic, it's good to establish our safe havens, our tent or trailer or van campsites--and then to stay a while. Even if we have to work and interact, we can keep our cool. We can move through our day with the regal grace of an elephant; we don't have to be twitchy jitterbugs. Camping can remind us of that. Even when a buck crashes through the brush or a squirrel stares us down with its black eyes, scolding us, even when a bluejay loudly announces our presence, still the quiet of the forest is the backdrop to these individual explosions of energy.

Dawn Kister photo

Camp nearby--I assure you that there are great camping spots with beautiful vistas almost everywhere, and since restful and peaceful camping is as much a state of mind as a geographic location, if there is no Walden Pond campsite nearby, then make one! A great many campers this season have found their backyards or driveways to be perfect spots to enjoy a sunset or to relax in a camp chair and enjoy lunch with a side order of fresh air and blue sky. Drive less, stay longer. Pause long enough to appreciate greater possibilities. "I’m in northern Michigan watching the sky. This makes me smile. I lost count of the number of shooting stars I saw last night," said a writer recently on her blog (Change Is Hard). She's been camping at some "dark sky" campgrounds that are low in ambient light so the stars are easier to see. Possibilities are all around us.

Pick the rig that should be somewhere else!

Move less. I'm willing to concede that for some, driving can be relaxing--my dad was one of those folks--but driving certainly takes more energy than sitting and relaxing around a campfire, and even if a hike might be more physically exhausting than driving, we can dial back the mental attention more on a casual meander. When we are driving, we can see a lot of beautiful territory, assuming we aren't experiencing the mono-culture of freeway driving, which carves its own reality of gasoline fumes, asphalt, and concrete overpasses (not to mention truck stops and fast food joints). We push through that interstate freeway reality like a knife blade through a watermelon, but we have to watch out for our fingers. It isn't till we sit back at the table, the ripe red watermelon before us, that we can take a breath, take a bite, and enjoy. If you have to drive a great distance to get to your destination, well, all right then.

Once you get there, though, try to stay longer. Think of yourself as a homesteader rather than a sojourner. Savor the moment, and extend that moment. You may never come to this particular place again, and you certainly will never experience this same moment again. If you leave and then come back another time, another weekend, it will be a different time and you will be a different person, having experienced new things. Cherish the "less-traveled" moment. You deserve it, and the moment deserves it.

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Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Tiny Trailers Are Camping--Here, There, Everywhere!

Falls Lake State Park, North Carolina. "Heavy rains yesterday, but the rest of the weekend should be good."
(B. Ruger photo)

Slowly and carefully, tiny trailer owners are moving out into the world again. Folks want to camp, but they also don't want to get sick or to spread this COVID;19 virus. But slowly and carefully, folks are venturing out again, towing their little trailers and parking them in beautiful climes. Campers are engaging in a variety of safe, socially distancing activities--bicycling, kayaking, hiking, or just plain relaxing around camp. Photos are being posted on social media, beautiful and inspiring photos, and I think it's time to share some.

Oregon's Mount Hood. (K. Dahlquist photos)

Out West, one tiny trailer owner is camping in her T@G and riding her Pivot Mach 6 mountain bike on Mount Hood. She can ride all day and still have a good bed and camp to return to, self-sufficient and safe.

"This is how we roll."

Basecamp set-up

The T@G includes aftermarket side wings for the rear galley, which were bought from Meme Eberspacher at Etsy.

Rent a kayak prior to considering buying. (M. Chapman photos)

With a focus on the Midwest, another tiny trailer owner decided to head east from Nebraska to NE Iowa to enjoy some kayaking. "The Upper Iowa River is such an Iowa treasure!" the tiny camper owner said. She and a friend floated the river and stayed in a city park in the town of Kendelville, "called, surprisingly,  Kendelville City Park. I typically do not go east from my home base of Nebraska, but having seen a YouTube video on this river . . . a momentous trip was planned. Temps in the 50's at night and 70's during the day!! It was damn near, perfect!!"

Upper Iowa River

My wife and I have considered kayaks before, and these kayaking photos were certainly an inspiration! "Kayaks are a hot commodity currently with covid happening," the camper/kayaker said. "I had never kayaked before I purchased, but I had done canoeing and white water rafting for years. I've no regrets and really enjoy pushing water in my yak."

The American Teardrop at Kendelville City Park

Setting up her camp was easy with her American Teardrop, manufactured in Auburn, California. "It's a 2012 Falcon and is 100% 200-watt solar, running to a deep cell marine battery housed in the box on the tongue. DVD watching, phone charging, lights, Fantastic Fan, anything 12 volt," was the rig's information.

Don't worry! This is not the tiny trailer and tow vehicle route! (Nick Uthe, photographer)

Mountains and tiny trailers are a good match because twisty roads and grades aren't the gas-guzzling challenges that the big rigs find. A third tiny trailer traveler, the Salt Lake City photographer Nick Uthe, recently camped in the Ouray, Colorado, area and saw some beautiful off-the-beaten-path country. His journey wasn't for weekend RVers, though, because some of the roads he traveled were nominal, but oh, the beauty!

Bean trailer, equipped for the roads less traveled.

Taking his Bean trailer on Yankee Boy Basin trail, the camper found the smaller, first-come, first-served campsites a couple miles up the trail already filled up. "I ended up pushing the limits a bit," he said, "by bringing the trailer past those parts, as I know 4x4's can easily make it to the end of the trail. There were no camping signs past a certain point, but I'm almost certain people were overland camping back there. I would have needed a spotter to make it past the rocky shelf portions (I wouldn't want to back out with the trailer) about a mile past the campgrounds." He ended up boondocking because there wasn't an open campsite within an hour from Ouray. Weekends are busy!

Adding that the Ouray area is "an incredible spot to explore and hang out, tiny trailer owner Nick Uthe suggested to not come during the height of camping season because you probably won't get a campground.

RTTC Polar Bear, the same model as mine . . . beautiful color! (K. George photos)

Finally, the owner of an RTTC Polar Bear chose a more relaxing trip, visiting several parks and campgrounds all within her home state of Wisconsin, proving that it's possible to travel closer to home and to still safely explore and discover.

Northern sunset

"Well, it wasn’t the trip to Acadia and Sleeping Bear Dunes as we had planned," the camper said. "However, we did discover a new-to-us state forest with loads of great campsites and nice facilities. Ten nights on the road—Northern Highland American Legion State Forest-Crystal Lake campground, then Twin Bridges a very nice Marinette County Park before heading home to Peninsula State Park—all in our home state of Wisconsin. A couple of waterfalls, a bit of rain, heat and then very cool up north nights. Lots of ice cream cones and supper club take-outs ensued."

Peninsula State Park

Climbing into your safe little tiny trailer after a full day's adventure of biking, hiking, kayaking; or the restful pleasure of just enjoying nature's beauty, camping is revealing itself to be a way to get out of the house and to still maintain those safety measures necessary during the COVID-19 pandemic the world is experiencing. There is beauty in the world--even close to home--and the low expense of smaller trailers makes it easier than ever to get out and enjoy!

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Friday, August 7, 2020

Are We Camping or Picnicking? Who Cares?

I'm not sure what to call the camping my wife and I have done for the last four nights, but I am pretty sure that it's not all that important to slap a label on our tiny trailer camping experience. Yes, I'm feeling content, whatever we call our recent camping style--and one reason I'm feeling so content is that I've just finished eating a bowl of peach crisp and ice cream, the peaches from the tree out in front our house.

Monday morning I pulled into Jefferson County Park campground, set up camp . . . and then left, going home across town. That's been the pattern of camping for my wife Sandy and me for these last four days: get up, go home and work all day, and then come back in the evening for dinner, maybe a campfire, and then bed. We didn't hike. I didn't ride my bicycle.

What Sandy did was work in her office at home all day long, and what I mostly did besides my daily chores was prep and freeze peaches from our tree, nine quarts so far. In addition, for the last two weeks I've eaten all the fresh peaches I want for breakfast, and I've prepped and baked one large peach cobbler and two large peach crisps. I've been having a fantastic, peachy time! Our tree fruits every other year, and this year because of all the rains, we've had a heavy crop. Poor me!

Conde Nast

That's why our recent, very local camping trip has been so lacking in our usual pursuits, such as hiking. Driving from home (and office) to the campground each late afternoon has been a joy, though. Turning onto the campground road, one is soon shaded by the overhanging trees that provide a green canopy. Such a grand entrance! I think the quality of the light is different in the campground, that all the greens and earth tones of the park and the blue sky and gray clouds affect my mood. I feel like I'm a part of a team, and of a team that's got a very deep bench. I feel more supported, more integrated.

We've camped here quite a few times, and even though it's my big backyard, it's a great backyard. Sandy's been happy, too, to feel that she's leaving the office and getting away--maybe just for a supper picnic and a sleepover, but that's okay! We've all had to get more creative and adaptable about our camping habits this season, haven't we?

If we cut out the politics and practice safe pandemic procedures (rather than reading or yammering about them), then this season has been a lesson on how essential and simple our natural environment is to our happiness. We aren't alone, we aren't isolated. We are a part of the natural world, and camping in even the most genteel of campgrounds can remind us of how we fit in. Give it a chance, I say . . . or think . . . or maybe it's just a whisper I hear in the wind soughing through the trees.

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Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Local Tiny Trailer Camping--and I Mean REALLY Local

Evening at Jefferson County Park

I'm camping because I'm a superhero . . . or is it superhusband? Maybe both, and maybe don't take me too seriously. And don't worry, I'm not wearing spandex!

Last week I camped at an Army Corps of Engineers campground at Lake Rathbun, and from that base I explored another Corps campground on my bicycle--so, bicycle exploring, and reading, writing, napping, and meditating in the hot afternoons in my tiny (air conditioned) camper ("Dances with Lightning Bugs"). It was a fun experience, and I found two new campgrounds that my wife and I can camp at. Both have good cell phone receptivity, so we can camp while my wife continues her business work at "Mobile Office 1." 

However, while I was out getting sunshine, fresh air, and exercise in the morning and rest and relaxation in the afternoon, my sweetie was working her derriere off at home with a productive yet long and exhaustive week. This week, however, is great for camping with highs in the 70s and lows in the 50s, no rain and low humidity. My wife is training an employee, though, so my solution to her "why am I not camping with Tom even though I'm not retired" blues is to camp locally, and I mean really local--at the local county campground just four miles from our house, across town, at Jefferson County Park

I camped there about a month ago ("Surfing the Heat Wave") to check out the camping-in-heat experience and to try out some new covid procedures. Now I'm here and giving Sandy a chance to work, train her employee, and camp--all the while being safe and just a skip and a hop from home. It's always an interesting camping experience so close to home because there's always more interaction with home. I might ride my bike home to work in the garden. Sandy might commute home to work in the office rather than at camp. Her employee (her son) might drive out to the park and work there. It's flexible. 

Evening relaxation, cool enough for a fire not to be laughable

I've set up our six-person Big Agnes Town House tent for Mobile Office 1, so everyone has many possibilities for daily activity. A big plus for us is that Jefferson County Park has fine hiking trails, so we can weave hikes into the day. In an article I wrote a  year ago last spring, I called camping here like having a "dacha just outside of town." We were having our home remodeled, so we just moved for a few days into our tiny trailer here at JCP.

My schedule for the last two days has been mornings and evenings at our "dacha," with the day spent at home working on the garden and Sandy's working downstairs in her office. Our peach tree is full of ripening peaches right now, so for three days, I've cut and frozen enough peaches for five pies. I hope to prep more peaches as they ripen--that in addition to eating fresh peaches with my morning cereal and also having already baked a large peach cobbler and a large peach crisp over the last few days. Yum!

It's great, though, to get away from the house and to enjoy this short respite from the usual summer heat and humidity, which will return again by the weekend. This has been an easy time this week, and our tiny trailer is one main reason it's been so easy. Even if we just get out to the campground in the early evenings, as we have been, we can feel ourselves relax--less headline news and watching TV, more talking to one another and just enjoying a campfire and the setting sun. Local camping has its charms!

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