Going camping, what do I need?
Going camping, what do I need?
Author
Discussion

WildCards

Original Poster:

4,061 posts

233 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
For our family holiday this year we're going camping on the IoW, i've never been camping with the family before, it's always been with the blokes at Le Mans or other beery events so i'm asking for some advice with things that I may not have thought about.

Obviously i've got the obvious stuff, tent, cooker, sleeping bags, beds, table, chairs etc etc but is their anything anyone can recommend that I may have missed. 4 of us going, two boys aged 10 & 6 staying on a serviced pitch on a proper campsite.

TIA

zac510

5,546 posts

222 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
Gazebo?

Targarama

14,687 posts

299 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
Toilet paper and soap

WildCards

Original Poster:

4,061 posts

233 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
zac510 said:
Gazebo?
Our tent is has a decent living area and dirty great awning sticking out the front so I think a Gazebo would be overkill.

Targarama said:
Toilet paper and soap
Hadn't thought of that, thanks. Nothing quite like your own loo roll.

MElliottUK

843 posts

228 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
container for holding lots of water

cs174

1,271 posts

236 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
Something to piss in if you need to go through the night. Seriously.

WildCards

Original Poster:

4,061 posts

233 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
MElliottUK said:
container for holding lots of water
Got


cs174 said:
Something to piss in if you need to go through the night. Seriously.
Need

danrc

2,788 posts

226 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
WildCards said:
MElliottUK said:
container for holding lots of water
Got


cs174 said:
Something to piss in if you need to go through the night. Seriously.
Need
+ Torch.

sjg

7,607 posts

281 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
If it's anything more than a field then you'll have electric hookup available, if you want it. You'll have to bring your own lead though - and check with the site whether they require you to bring an RCD or not.

Headtorches are a much better idea than regular ones too, especially if you need to pitch a tent in the dark.

DeadMeat_UK

3,058 posts

298 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
If it's a new tent - do a practice pitch in your back garden first to make sure

a) You have all the bits
b) You won't look a tit in the middle of a campsite staring at a bag of poles for hours on end, or trying to put it up in the dark.

Also take a mallet.

Turbodiesel1690

1,958 posts

186 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
Your head examined

WildCards

Original Poster:

4,061 posts

233 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
Turbodiesel1690 said:
Your head examined
Yes, the jury's out on that currently, but I have a feeling you may be right tongue out

zac510

5,546 posts

222 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
MElliottUK said:
container for holding lots of water
An atmosphere?

live ade

86 posts

183 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
wind break (to shelter your cooker). extra pegs (get a pack of decent ones to put in the main hold points), peg puller. lantern/light of some sort (in addition to the torch). usual cutlery/plates/, etc. bottle opener !!! coolbox can be handy. football, ketchup.

maser_spyder

6,356 posts

198 months

Tuesday 8th June 2010
quotequote all
For the IoW, take bikes if you can. It's a much better way to get around the Island if you're staying central-ish.

And think about English Heritage membership.

There are three places really worth going to on the Island, Osborne House (stunning), Carisbrooke Castle (will be great for the kids - it's big) and Appuldurcombe House (very haunted!). If you go to all three it'll cost you the best part of £80, whereas annual membership is only about £75, and kids go free. Then you can go to all the other places too.

http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/daysout/southea...

Yarmouth Castle is tiny, St. Catherines is nice, but quite small and won't really excite the kids!

Other things;

Yarmouth well worth a visit though, great place.

Get the kids sailing if you can, it's never too young.

Don't go to Newport, it's a dump.

Ryde is a bit snotty too. A bit of a 70s seaside resort/Butlins holiday camp.

Cowes has some great pubs.

There's nothing at the bottom, just little villages.

It takes bloody ages to drive around the Island, even though it's small!

HTH.

WildCards

Original Poster:

4,061 posts

233 months

Wednesday 9th June 2010
quotequote all
maser_spyder said:
For the IoW, take bikes if you can. It's a much better way to get around the Island if you're staying central-ish.

And think about English Heritage membership.

There are three places really worth going to on the Island, Osborne House (stunning), Carisbrooke Castle (will be great for the kids - it's big) and Appuldurcombe House (very haunted!). If you go to all three it'll cost you the best part of £80, whereas annual membership is only about £75, and kids go free. Then you can go to all the other places too.

http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/daysout/southea...

Yarmouth Castle is tiny, St. Catherines is nice, but quite small and won't really excite the kids!

Other things;

Yarmouth well worth a visit though, great place.

Get the kids sailing if you can, it's never too young.

Don't go to Newport, it's a dump.

Ryde is a bit snotty too. A bit of a 70s seaside resort/Butlins holiday camp.

Cowes has some great pubs.

There's nothing at the bottom, just little villages.

It takes bloody ages to drive around the Island, even though it's small!

HTH.
Good info thanks, and to everyone else who has posted, it's much appreciated.

Engineer1

10,486 posts

225 months

Wednesday 9th June 2010
quotequote all
A bag of spare tent pegs, and possibly the sand pegs as well, nothing worse than only just having enough pegs only for one to bend or get lost meaning you are left working out what you can bodge. Also put out all your guys etc even if the weather is fine as all it takes is a storm overnight and your tent could end up out of shape or leaking.

Also take plastic bags or boxes for things that you need to keep dry/ clean, so one for food, one for spare dry set of clothes.

OneDs

1,629 posts

192 months

Wednesday 9th June 2010
quotequote all
The main thing I missed we I used to do camping was refrigderation.

If you are planning on cooking your own stuff then get a large coolbox that can refridgerate off the cars lighter socket or an electric hook up. failing that a large cool box and plenty of ice blocks that the campsite should be able to freeze for you. Make sure you have 2 or 3 lots so you can have one or two set of blocks in the freezer & one in the cool box on rotation.

Otherwise you won't be having any cold milk/butter, drinks and epecially wine/beers more importantly.

Edited by OneDs on Wednesday 9th June 13:32

deckster

9,631 posts

271 months

Wednesday 9th June 2010
quotequote all
OneDs said:
The main thing I missed we I used to do camping was refrigderation.

If you are planning on cooking your own stuff then get a large coolbox that can refridgerate off the cars lighter socket or an electric hook up. failing that a large cool box and plenty of ice blocks that the campsite should be able to freeze for you. Make sure you have 2 or 3 lots so you can have one or two set of blocks in the freezer & one in the cool box on rotation.

Otherwise you won't be having any cold milk/butter, drinks and epecially wine/beers more importantly.
Or just buy a camping fridge. Runs off gas, 240v mains or 12v car batteries. Best £120 I ever spent.

cs02rm0

13,814 posts

207 months

Wednesday 9th June 2010
quotequote all
zac510 said:
MElliottUK said:
container for holding lots of water
An atmosphere?
hehe

Phone and wallet. That ought to cover most things.