Favorite Hobbies - Camping
One very popular hobby for many people is camping. I have gone
camping many times throughout my life, in rain or snow, desert
or forest. I have also camped on the banks of rivers, in snow
caves, and in cabins. No matter where you go camping, your
camping necessities may change a little, but the basics remain
the same. You will need to stay warm. You will need shelter. You
will need food to eat and a means to cook it.
The only places I have gone camping are in Utah, but there is
such diversity in Utah's climate and landscape, that I
experienced a variety of different camping experiences. A
camping hobby is great
in Utah and other outdoor states. As I boy scout, I used to go
on the Klondike every year. This was a winter campout in the
Utah Mountains. It would get freezing up there at night. A
couple of times when I went, I slept in a tent. The tent was
freezing. A nice sleeping bag kept me warm, but the air was too
cold to breathe. By morning my lungs felt like they had sand in
them. My scout leader, another scout, and I got up a little
early to make a fire, because we were so cold. The scout kept
complaining about how his feet hurt all morning, until the sun
came up and then we realized he had his boots on the wrong feet.
I think every year that I went to the Klondike, I fell through
the ice on the lake and got wet. The warmest I have been at the
Klondike was when I built a snow cave to live in. You just make
a large pile of snow and pack it down. Then you dig out the
inside large enough for a couple people to sleep in there. If
you just have a candle, it will stay very warm inside the cave.
The snow acts as insulation to the cold air outside. Snowcaving
should definitely be added to your camping hobbies list.
I have camped in the high Uintah Mountains of Utah. My
grandparents have a cabin up there that we have stayed in often.
Now that I am older, I am a much bigger fan of cabin camping.
You can just light the wood burning stove to keep the whole
cabin warm. We had an electric generator to have electricity in
the cabin. It might not sound much like camping to some people.
We were up in the mountains alone though, and cooked our food on
a campfire and got our water from a spring.
I have also camped in other areas of the High Uintah Mountains,
without a cabin. Once I went on a fifty mile hike through the
mountains. It took us five days going ten miles a day. We had to
carry our tents, sleeping bags and all of the necessary supplies
for food and other things, through the mountains for five days.
Which reminds me; do not ever let your mom pack your backpack if
you are going on a trip like that, unless you want to carry
whole boxes of cereal and other things that are not useful on a
long hike. When I hiked to King's Peak, the highest peak in
Utah, my mom packed my backpack and once I got to our base camp,
I found in my pack a large iron skillet to cook on that weighed
a ton, a whole loaf of bread, a large jar of jelly and a large
jar of peanut butter. To say the least, I was not a happy camper
after I realized I had just lugged a cast iron frying pan up the
mountain.
I have also camped in the deserts of Southern Utah. There is no
end to the scenery and variety of landscape there, from arches
to the Grand Canyon along with Goblin Valley to Lake Powell.
There are also the large canyons with the Green River and the
Colorado River carving through them. Find your camping gear at
your online hobby store
and more.
Peter Jay is the Owner/President and CEO of Variety Access -
Your online hobby store and more. For more information about
hobbies, hobby products, or Variety Access, go to
www.VarietyAccess.com.