Outdoor Clothing Camping Storage: what to Carry, what to leave behind, the Camping Guide

Clothing

In a caravan there’s usually plenty of storage place — the problem is deciding what to leave behind. But don’t leave behind your plastic laundry basket, especially if you are going to do a lot of hiking or have a small family and need to launder clothing every day. The basket can always be used to keep things from falling about while you’re travelling.

Plastic hangers are a good choice, as they can be left permanently in the caravan and won’t attract mildew. They are light and can be bought in packs of 10 or 20. Read the rest of this entry »

Motor Homes, Camping with Caravans continue…

The living area of the motorhome tends to be built around the front end of the vehicle — the engine needs to be accessible from various angles for servicing, and one of these may be from inside the cab. Access to the cab is made easier by the fact that there is already a side entrance, and in these cases access to the driver’s seat will be via the living area. Some cabs do not depart much from their industrial origins and access here is gained via an ordinary door on each side. Depending on the country of origin, many imported motorhomes have the steering wheel and door on the ‘wrong’ side for South African roads. While this is not illegal, it does mean that the driver will have to make allowances for restricted vision. If you don’t like the idea, rather buy a locally made vehicle. Read the rest of this entry »

Traveling by Car, the taste of Adventure

When travelling by car, a large family may have a little trouble stowing all its camping gear into the boot or tethering things onto the roof rack. But usually there is still room for one or two luxuries to be included and very few home comforts have to be sacrificed entirely. Space can generally be found for several changes of clothing; for bulky quilt-type sleeping bags; for chairs, stools, full-length mattresses and even for some of the ordinary, fairly heavy pots, pans and cutlery out of the home kitchen cupboard. Even the frame tent in which the family sleeps is quite generous in size. It is large and square and has all the characteristics of a small house, with ample headroom and separate living and sleeping compartments — by no means the minimum space that would be needed just for bedding down for the night. Read the rest of this entry »

Paddling your own Canoe

Clearly, one place where it is not wise to venture alone is onto a river or lake, but if you can swim and are used to the water, canoeing makes a delightful basis for a camping holiday. You can either set off to explore the waterways near home (and it is surprising how many discoveries you make when you see a familiar landscape from this new angle); or the canoes can be transported to your starting point on a roof rack or trailer. Read the rest of this entry »

Outdoor Camping Tents, Playing Camping, Leisure Break in a Countryside (Travelling Tents, Spare, Travelling Luggage)

Specialized Travelling Tents

If you intend travelling in a large vehicle such as a Kombi, you may wish to try a tent that fits snugly over the vehicle, extending its interior by several square metres. It works somewhat like a carport, and you can still drive the Kombi away — the inside door of the tent matches that of the vehicle, which allows access between the two without them being attached.

For school groups or sports tours of 20 people or more, look in the army surplus stores. The tents you’ll find there are very big, and although they are sometimes used by campers they’re more suited to caterers who hold large functions. They are sturdy but also very heavy, and require many strong hands to put them up and take them down. Such tents are usually associated with school outings, outer-fringe religious group gatherings and soldier-of-fortune reunion weekends. Read the rest of this entry »

First-time Campers Baggage taking it all with you

As an alternative to staying in a ready-erected tent, it is possible to hire the tent and other equipment before setting off from home. This has the advantage that you are not tied to staying at a particular campsite and it also disciplines first-time campers into cutting down on the amount of baggage that they take with them.

Considering the huge packing problems that the beginner faces, he might wonder exactly where the advantage of the latter lies, but it is an odd fact that above a certain basic level the family’s comfort and happiness on holiday do not increase in proportion to the weight of paraphernalia that has been dragged along. Read the rest of this entry »

Travelling Wilderness Hazards Part 4

Frostbite

When you get really cold, the body transfers warmth from the skin surfaces to the body centre in order to maintain core heat. This causes shivering as the skin tries to generate heat and can lead to frostbite. Frostbite is a term which means an actual freezing of the flesh, until ice actually forms in the tissues. A less serious, but still painful form is frostnip, where the skin becomes burnt and blistered by the effects of exposure to winds and low temperatures, but swift action in covering the affected parts and re-warming the flesh can quickly prevent this, or reduce the effects.

Slight frostbite is usually indicated by a whiteness of the skin and a loss of sensation. The ears, toes, fingers, nose, cheeks and chin, are particularly vulnerable. If such signs are noticed and the areas concerned covered and re-warmed at once, then no further damage need result. Read the rest of this entry »

Survival and rescue Techniques Part 5

Rescue services

Most mountain and wilderness areas have established rescue services and they may be broadly divided into three sections:

1 Amateur but skilled teams: These are often the members of climbing clubs, hill walking organizations, or the local Civil Defence teams, who are trained in rescue techniques and stand by at weekends or in bad weather in order to answer emergency calls. These are almost always part-time volunteers, without whom the wild places would be a good deal more risky than they are.

2 The police: In remote areas the police have assumed the liaison role in mountain rescue. Many members of the police service are trained in rescue techniques, and thanks to their radio communications network and mobility, are in the ideal position to liaise between people in trouble and the rescue services. Read the rest of this entry »

Survival and rescue Techniques Part 4

Food

Most survival situations are, mercifully, of a fairly short duration and usually end within forty-eight hours. Food is therefore the least of your worries, but nevertheless a great deal of comfort and morale booster.

In addition, food does provide the fuel which keeps the body warm, and for this reason every outdoor person should have a small pack of survival food kept in the rucksack and changed only in order to keep it fresh. This food pack is only opened in an emergency.

A survival ration might consist of:

  • A bar of chocolate or mint cake A packet of glucose sweets
  • Tea bags
  • A tube of cheese
  • Nuts and raisins
  • Sugar
  • A packet of oatmeal or muesli. Read the rest of this entry »

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