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Camping while touring

Buckeye Bleau

New member
I want to start doing something different with touring.
I have no experience with motorcycle touring, but I recently acquired a 622 trailer and will use it primarily for me and Ann to go to the golf courses to play a round, but the alternate use would be to do some touring.
I plan to try to camp in order to hold down costs, but I don't know how to find places to pitch a tent and camp for the night.
If anyone knows how to find campsites while on the road your assistance would be appreciated.

Thank you,
Joe
 
:thumbup: Your best source of camping might just come from the bicyclists. They've got all of the lightweight gear, and compact camping techniques all figured-out already... :clap:
 
We have been doing this for years. Started out with a tent, now tow a pop up camper.
Several ways to find campsites, one way is to go to a KOA and get their book, or log into KOA.com and looking at their nation wide map. We like KOA campgrounds because they are motorcycle friendly.
Depending if you are planning out your entire trip with each nights campsite booked in advance, or if you are like we are where we have a set destination in mind, but it may vary a little on when we arrive. This way leaves us more at liberty to stop and see things, drive a road some local told us about, or not pay for something we cant use due to inclimate weather.
We will then look at the route we are taking, stop at about 2pm we stop for lunch, look at what campground are close by the route we are taking, looking them up on the phone, computer, or GPS, and then book the site for that night. This prevents us from ever not having a place because of all sights booked.
We love being free to stop when we want and wherever we want without having to push through rain, wind, tiredness, or golden opportunities just to have to make it to the next location.

2015-08-19 19.46.33.jpg2012-07-25 20.08.23.jpg2014-07-15 18.38.49.jpgJust a few places we have stayed.
 
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camping while touring

We love to camp also, but at my age I no longer want to sleep on the ground so we pull a pop up tent trailer, and after about 3 or four days on the road we will get a hotel room for a night then back to camping, some time we stay in KOA's and sometimes in isolated camp grounds. There is an internet site , freecamping.net that shows many camping places.
Camping upon the Crest 4-19 003.jpg Spyder camping 4-13-14 010.jpg
 
We love to camp also, but at my age I no longer want to sleep on the ground so we pull a pop up tent trailer, and after about 3 or four days on the road we will get a hotel room for a night then back to camping, some time we stay in KOA's and sometimes in isolated camp grounds. There is an internet site , freecamping.net that shows many camping places.
View attachment 149422 View attachment 149424
You chose a good color of Spyder too!
I tried freecamping .net and it goes to a game site.
Could it possibly be freecampsites.net?
 
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I have always had good luck at state parks and they are usually priced very reasonable and have hot showers. I have even been allowed in when the campgrounds were full since I only had a motorcycle and a small tent they will stick me back in a corner somewhere which is fine with me. I have had them charge me as little as $5 to do this, probably stuck the $5 in his pocket, but I have a place for the night so I don't really care. One trick I use if there are no camping areas around or they are all full and it is getting late is to find a country cemetery and spend the night at the rear of the cemetery. I'm always respectful and stay in the wooded area away from folks final resting spots. For some reason it is usually very quiet and no visitors at night. I have asked farmers if I could pitch a tent in a corner of a field and have had luck with that, sometimes that comes with an invite for a nice home cooked supper or breakfast. There really are still plenty of good folks out there. I have slept in some really strange places over the last 40 years including on a picnic table, under a picnic table (raining), on a church bus parked beside a church, and probably the best spot was in an old caboose at a small train museum in Alabama. I had taken the train ride and when we got back it was storming big time and also getting late. The manager offered me the caboose and I took him up on it. Be creative, don't be afraid to ask someone about camping, and most of all have fun. As I said, there are still good people in this country and they enjoy talking and sharing their area's history with a old nut who is traveling on a motorcycle. Folks ask me how I can afford to take off on my bike and be gone for 6 weeks or more at a time, now you know my secret. Look at what hikers and bicycle riders use for camping. I have a nice dry tent, air mattress, and warm sleeping bag and they ALL will fit in one saddlebag on my RT.
 
camping spot

I want to start doing something different with touring.
I have no experience with motorcycle touring, but I recently acquired a 622 trailer and will use it primarily for me and Ann to go to the golf courses to play a round, but the alternate use would be to do some touring.
I plan to try to camp in order to hold down costs, but I don't know how to find places to pitch a tent and camp for the night.
If anyone knows how to find campsites while on the road your assistance would be appreciated.

Thank you,
Joe

Go to recreation.gov for camping
Get yourself a senior pass,its only a one time $10 dollar fee. With this pass u will get discount camping,some places 50%
It will also get you in national parks free or at a discount. You must be 65 or older though
 
Camping

Go to recreation.gov for camping
Get yourself a senior pass,its only a one time $10 dollar fee. With this pass u will get discount camping,some places 50%
It will also get you in national parks free or at a discount. You must be 65 or older though

Corps of Engineers campsites are 50% off for over 65 years old
 
Go to recreation.gov for camping
Get yourself a senior pass,its only a one time $10 dollar fee. With this pass u will get discount camping,some places 50%
It will also get you in national parks free or at a discount. You must be 65 or older though

The "Golden Age" pass is now available for 62 and up. Sad part is that the fee is now $80. Still rather cheap since its a lifetime pass. I'm still doing $80 a year.
 
camping while touring

I want to start doing something different with touring.
I have no experience with motorcycle touring, but I recently acquired a 622 trailer and will use it primarily for me and Ann to go to the golf courses to play a round, but the alternate use would be to do some touring.
I plan to try to camp in order to hold down costs, but I don't know how to find places to pitch a tent and camp for the night.
If anyone knows how to find campsites while on the road your assistance would be appreciated.

Thank you,
Joe

Joe,

Kind of surprised that no one mentioned typing in state parks/campgrounds into your GPS. Will locate what is available in the area, select it as your new destination and viola you're there. State and national campgrounds are usually the cheapest and KOA is usually your most expensive and most times the noisiest because everyone and their spawn stay there. JMO FWIW

Al
 

Joe,

Kind of surprised that no one mentioned typing in state parks/campgrounds into your GPS. Will locate what is available in the area, select it as your new destination and viola you're there. State and national campgrounds are usually the cheapest and KOA is usually your most expensive and most times the noisiest because everyone and their spawn stay there. JMO FWIW

Al

Thanks Al, you are always a big help, and still. Since we have shared a phone call or two and I have learned of your extensive experience, I thank you.

Joe
 
Spelling and grammar DO still count, don't they?

Joe,

Kind of surprised that no one mentioned typing in state parks/campgrounds into your GPS. Will locate what is available in the area, select it as your new destination and viola you're there. State and national campgrounds are usually the cheapest and KOA is usually your most expensive and most times the noisiest because everyone and their spawn stay there. JMO FWIW

Al


Sorry, can't let this go. I think you mean 'voila', not 'viola'.

Could you possibly not use all 'bold' font in your posts? I'd much appreciate it. Thanks.
 
The best camping is west of the Mississippi

Joe,

Kind of surprised that no one mentioned typing in state parks/campgrounds into your GPS. Will locate what is available in the area, select it as your new destination and viola you're there. State and national campgrounds are usually the cheapest and KOA is usually your most expensive and most times the noisiest because everyone and their spawn stay there. JMO FWIW
Al

Jesus, Al, turn the volume down a little, would ya?

Anyway, it's all well and good to seek out developed campgrounds in National Parks, etc. and maybe that's all you have in the Midwest and East. But west of the Mississippi, we have BLM land as well as National Forests, and those are some of the best lands to experience the true outdoors if you're of the mind to 'rough it' a little.
 
In 2012 I set out on a trip from Las Vegas to Indiana with the intent to camp. I was traveling with a girlfriend and two couples. My friend and I practiced setting up the tents in her living room while our husbands sat there laughing. We went to dinner after setting up our tents on the first night and while we were gone it stormed and tipped our tents over and got everything wet. The next night it was storming as we got to our intended destination and my friend said Hell no Im not camping so we checked in to a Holiday Inn Express. We spent two nights in Eureka Springs AR which would have been ok if I hadn't given the tent site with soft ground to the couple with a pop up camper. I had a blow up mattress that took up most of the tent and I was set up on rocks so to get out of the tent without kneeling on rocks I would unzip the door and bounce off the mattress to launch myself through the door.

We wound up shipping the camping gear home and we stayed in hotels instead. I have not camped again.
 
Camping Guides

We have been doing this for years. Started out with a tent, now tow a pop up camper.
Several ways to find campsites, one way is to go to a KOA and get their book, or log into KOA.com and looking at their nation wide map. We like KOA campgrounds because they are motorcycle friendly.
Depending if you are planning out your entire trip with each nights campsite booked in advance, or if you are like we are where we have a set destination in mind, but it may vary a little on when we arrive. This way leaves us more at liberty to stop and see things, drive a road some local told us about, or not pay for something we cant use due to inclimate weather.
We will then look at the route we are taking, stop at about 2pm we stop for lunch, look at what campground are close by the route we are taking, looking them up on the phone, computer, or GPS, and then book the site for that night. This prevents us from ever not having a place because of all sights booked.
We love being free to stop when we want and wherever we want without having to push through rain, wind, tiredness, or golden opportunities just to have to make it to the next location.

View attachment 149417View attachment 149418View attachment 149419Just a few places we have stayed.

If you're a member of AAA, you might stop in and obtain a camping guide. Or a friend could probably pick one up for you.


-tom
 
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