Family-friendly Easy Camping Trips
Posted: Sat Jun 05, 2010 9:52 am
Hi Folks,
We were wondering if anyone would be keen on some easy kid-friendly camping trips?
Although we do enjoy trips like Whipsaw that are further offroad, sometimes it is also nice to just have an easy drive to a nice campsite next to a creek or a small river, and spend a day or two relaxing and letting the kids build dams out of rocks, or try their hand at fishing and wienie-roasting.
There are some great spots we have visited along hwy 3, that are not too far from Vancouver. Far enough to be off the beaten track but not so far that the kids go stir-crazy in the back seat.
Please let me know if anyone is keen on some trips like this and we will try to organise a few suitable trips this summer.
If you have any suggestions please feel free to post them here too, we are always on the lookout for new spots.
The sites I am thinking of off the top of my head are:
1. The free creek-side camping site on the old Hedley road near Princeton - this is a well-maintained provincial site but it's on the old road, away from the highway, so it's usually pretty empty, it has a kid-safe section of river, and has a section of the old Dewdney wagon trail on the hill behind the campground for exploring. Not much shade at the river but the campsites themselves are shaded. Minutes from the restaurants in town in case of a heavy rainfall that washes out the wienie roasting.
2. The Copper Creek campsite that Pete showed us - this is a "primitive" site, it's well hidden so it's clean, and easily accessible by any land-rover but not by a trailer or motor-home so it's nice and quiet. Has the big creek for fishing, and a little creek for the kids to play in. This is a shady site so good in the hot months.
3. The old ghost-town by Coalmont. The Provincial campsite is usually full and busy, but across the creek there is a nice spot on the creekside below the old ghosttown. Nice little creek to dam up, and lots of crooked trees to climb. Also we are close enough to the provincial site to walk over to use their toilets if one prefers them to the "digging a hole" option.
We were wondering if anyone would be keen on some easy kid-friendly camping trips?
Although we do enjoy trips like Whipsaw that are further offroad, sometimes it is also nice to just have an easy drive to a nice campsite next to a creek or a small river, and spend a day or two relaxing and letting the kids build dams out of rocks, or try their hand at fishing and wienie-roasting.
There are some great spots we have visited along hwy 3, that are not too far from Vancouver. Far enough to be off the beaten track but not so far that the kids go stir-crazy in the back seat.
Please let me know if anyone is keen on some trips like this and we will try to organise a few suitable trips this summer.
If you have any suggestions please feel free to post them here too, we are always on the lookout for new spots.
The sites I am thinking of off the top of my head are:
1. The free creek-side camping site on the old Hedley road near Princeton - this is a well-maintained provincial site but it's on the old road, away from the highway, so it's usually pretty empty, it has a kid-safe section of river, and has a section of the old Dewdney wagon trail on the hill behind the campground for exploring. Not much shade at the river but the campsites themselves are shaded. Minutes from the restaurants in town in case of a heavy rainfall that washes out the wienie roasting.
2. The Copper Creek campsite that Pete showed us - this is a "primitive" site, it's well hidden so it's clean, and easily accessible by any land-rover but not by a trailer or motor-home so it's nice and quiet. Has the big creek for fishing, and a little creek for the kids to play in. This is a shady site so good in the hot months.
3. The old ghost-town by Coalmont. The Provincial campsite is usually full and busy, but across the creek there is a nice spot on the creekside below the old ghosttown. Nice little creek to dam up, and lots of crooked trees to climb. Also we are close enough to the provincial site to walk over to use their toilets if one prefers them to the "digging a hole" option.