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Lindsey Vonn Is Hosting a Reality TV Show with Dogs

Things were cooking for Lindsey Vonn.

It was early 2020, the world had yet to shut down, and the Olympic downhiller had been retired for less than a year. An HBO documentary about her had aired a few months earlier ago, and her memoir, Rise, was set to drop in March. (The looming pandemic would push its release to October 2021.) She had launched her own ski clothing line with longtime sponsor Head and then co-created a production company with a childhood friend. Soon Vonn would be making her own film about Olympic skier Picabo Street, and Frank Marshall, producer of The Sixth Sense and Seabiscuit, wanted to team up. Now Vonn was in the foothills north of San José, Costa Rica, sitting on a rock in utter bliss with Lucy, her baby-sized Cavalier King Charles spaniel and number one travel buddy. There, at the Territorio de Zaguates Dog Sanctuary, the ground around her shimmered with hundreds and hundreds of street dogs. “It was a wave of dogs, like 1,500 of them,” Vonn says. “I literally couldn’t see the ground.”

Vonn had come here to work on her latest television project: hosting The Pack, a ten-part reality competition series that launched on Amazon Prime Video on November 20. The show casts a dozen dogs and their owners—or “partners,” as Vonn calls them—on a jet-setting journey around North America, Central America, and Europe. At each location, they race to complete tasks that are designed to showcase what producers say is the deep bond between humans and their dogs. But really it’s all about which dog can tug, fetch, push, or paw its way around an obstacle the fastest. Episode by episode, the field is whittled down to a single winning human-canine team. Along the way, we learn fun dog facts (mushing started in the tenth century), see awesome landscapes (Switzerland, Costa Rica, Utah), and learn about various pup-focused charities and causes around the world. Think of it as The Amazing Race but with more barking.

The competition itself offers up a $ 500,000 prize, plus another $ 500,000 earmarked for various charities, including $ 250,000 for the winner’s charity of choice. But the takeaway, fleshed out with emotional backstories and on-camera interviews, is more about how a human’s unconditional love for a dog can bring confidence, patience, and growth to each. Fair enough—scores of new pandemic pet owners stuck at home will surely relate. 

The show began as an idea from Chris Castallo, Amazon’s chief for alternative programming, who recruited Jay Bienstock, an Emmy-winning producer from The Voice and Survivor, to bring the show to life. Bienstock, who is himself “a dog guy,” needed a host who had a spirit of adventure but who was also obsessed with dogs. “We came up with Lindsey Vonn,” he says. “She really loves dogs on a human level.”

The show oscillates between the cool and the contrived, depending on your own relationship to travel, adventure, and things you’d like to do with your dog. My 11-year-old loved watching the pups roll balls and play a giant floor piano, but for non-dog owners (guilty as charged), parts of the series—like dressing dogs in little hats and outfits for a Parisian fashion show—feel lame. Same goes for the more outdoorsy moments. Go stand-up paddleboarding with your dog? Standard. But rap off a thundering jungle waterfall with a sopping wet standard poodle dangling from a harness between your legs, just because? Um, OK. 

The show works best when we get to see dogs doing very dog things. Dixie, a bluetick coonhound, just cannot shut up at the least opportune times. One dog runs off to play with the other dogs instead of crossing a finish line, upending a tight race. Snow, the rappelling standard poodle, lets out a burp right into the face of his owner, er, partner, Josh White, as White goes to speak to the cameras.

Funny stuff aside, we also get to see dogs use their skills in ways we humans never could. We watch them find survivors entombed in a mock earthquake disaster zone at a research and training facility in Mexico City, and then we stare in awe as they sniff around a battleship to find puzzle clues tucked away in cabinets and forgotten recesses. Some tasks rely less on instincts and more on newly taught tricks. Humans desperately pleading with their dogs to fetch some keys to free their owners from a jail cell is pretty funny. Watching dogs try to deliver a fine French meal to discerning Parisians, on the other hand, just looks like a great waste of food.

Contestants Mark LeBlanc and Ace
Contestants Mark LeBlanc and Ace (Photo: David Scott Holloway/Amazon Studios)

To make sure the canines didn’t have to do anything that made them anxious, afraid, or stressed, the producers hired an animal safety team that had input on everything from the design of the tasks to how the dogs would travel. That included chartering a plane with a grassy “dog toileting area” and first-class seats for the pups. Veterinarians traveled with the group and helped keep track of all the shots and paperwork the dogs needed to clear customs quickly. The safety team followed the dogs wherever they went. “They were super conservative,” says contestant Mark LeBlanc, partner to Ace, a border collie, who does well in the show (no spoilers!). If a dog did not want to do a particular task, the team would step in. “It was never, well, maybe the dog can do this,” says Nicole Ellis, a certified professional dog trainer on the safety team. “It was nope, the dog is stressed, we’re not doing it.”

As for Vonn, she holds herself well as a host, with a combination of folksiness and glamour. With toy-sized Lucy often staring blankly from her arms, Vonn celebrates and empathizes with the contestants, but she isn’t afraid to call out bad form: Vonn gives one contestant a real tongue-lashing before booting him off the show for hanging himself out of a moving vehicle and later taking his dog out of a travel harness. “I can say what needs to be said,” she says.

In the end, Vonn’s hoping this will lead to more dogs getting homes and to another season of The Pack. And perhaps, she says, the spotlight will help her launch a real acting career. “Maybe the Rock wants me to be in a movie,” Vonn jokes. “I’m just going to throw that out there.”

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Game Fair Cancels Show for August 2020

Game Fair Cancels Show for August 2020
The popular, annual outdoors event among the region’s hunting and sporting dog community had been scheduled for two weekends, August 7-9 and August 14-16, at Armstrong Ranch Kennels in Ramsey.
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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

NEWS | Top Camping Gear & Tent Highlights From The 2020 Caravan, Camping & Motorhome Show

As always the Caravan, Camping and Motorhome Show proved to be a fantastic day out, with 5 halls of the NEC in Birmingham packed full of brand new camping innovations and lots of lovely camping gear and tents, new for 2020. Below we’ll walk you through a few of our highlights from the show.

Star of the show: Vango Radiate Heated Sleeping Bag

Vango Radiate Heated Sleeping Bag
Vango Radiate 3 Season, Heated Sleeping Bag

Choosing this sleeping bag as our star of the show, is a bit of a no-brainer. We’re forever looking for ways to make camping more comfortable that allow us to extend our camping season. Comfort for me in particular generally hinges on ensuring my sleeping set up is as comfortable and warm as possible, and we think the new heated sleeping bag and heated pad from Vango are true game changers!

The sleeping bag won a recent ISPO outstanding award, and it uses Graphene technology and works with any USB powerbank. If you’ve already got a sleeping bag you love, then there’s also a heated pad which you can slip inside any existing sleeping bag for extra warmth on chilly nights.

Vango Radiate Heated Sleeping Bag

Vango Radiate Single Sleeping Bag Show Price: £74.99, RRP: £85

Vango Blissful Double Airbed

Vango Blissful Double Airbed

Whilst we have to admit we moved away from air mattresses some time ago as we were fed up of them deflating overnight, we’re super excited about the Vango Blissful Airbed. That’s because it uses clever tech to constantly monitor pressure, and will silently re-inflate whilst you sleep to ensure it maintains its firmness, promising a blissful nights’ sleep. Cool huh?

We found it super comfortable, loved the height of it and think that this could actually tempt us back to air mattresses!

Vango Blissful Double Airbed RRP: £130

Stockists

  • Winfields Outdoors Vango Blissful Double Airbed £99.99
  • Outdoor World Direct Vango Blissful Double Airbed £99.99
  • Amazon Vango Blissful Double Airbed

Vango Antrim Air 600XL Recycled Family Tent

One of the biggest and most exciting bits of news this year comes by the way of the new range from Vango, designed in collaboration with The National Trust which includes 2 new tents and 3 new sleeping bags, all of which are made from recycled materials.

The new Vango Sentinel Eco fabric is made from plastic bottles and the Vango Antrim Air 600XL uses a whopping 91,300 plastic bottles in its construction.

Vango Antrim Air 600XL Tent RRP: £800

Go Outdoors

Vango Devon 300 Recycled Tent

The new Vango Devon 300 tent is made from the brand new Sentinel Eco fabric and is ideal for weekend camping trips and festivals. We love the subtle but funky leaf print on both tents which really makes them stand out and we’d love to see more tent manufacturers daring to come out with nature-inspired prints and eco-friendly construction.

Vango Devon 300 Tent RRP: £150

Vango Gwent & Surrey Recycled Sleeping Bags

There are 3 sleeping bags in the new range, the single and double envelope-style sleeping bags both have a 2-season rating (equivalent to 7.5 tog) and are ideal for summer family camping trips and festivals. The mummy-style sleeping bag, the Surrey has a 2-3 season rating.

They are available to buy at the show, and as yet we can’t find any retailers as the range was only announced a few days ago, but we’ll update this post with details of where to buy as soon as we can.

Vango Gwent Single Sleeping Bag RRP: £25, Vango Gwent Double Sleeping bag RRP: £50, Vango Surrey Sleeping Bag RRP £40.00

Vango Serenity Superwarm Double Sleeping Bag

Vango Serenity Superwarm Double Sleeping Bag

This is superb value for a 3-season sleeping bag, it’s a really generous size and it’s got a lovely cotton-soft feel to it, so it feels more like being wrapped in a duvet.

Vango Serenity Superwarm Double Sleeping Bag RRP: £90

Stockists

  • Outdoor Gear Vango Serenity Double Sleeping Bag £74.99

Vango Aurora XL Single & Double Sleeping Bags

Vango Aurora XL Single sleeping bag

There’s a double and single version to choose from and the single benefits from a generous width, making it ideal for those who don’t like to feel confined in a sleeping bag. Again, it has a soft cotton-like feel to it and it has a 3-season rating, making it ideal for camping in chillier months.

When we checked the price on Amazon 22/02/2020, you could pick this up for £62.99.

Vango Aurora Double Sleeping Bags 2020

Vango Aurora Double Sleeping bag RRP: £130, Single RRP: £90

Stockists

  • Winfields Outdoors Vango Aurora Double Sleeping Bag £79.99
  • Outdoor World Direct Vango Aurora Double Sleeping Bag £69.99
  • Amazon Vango Aurora Double Sleeping Bag
  • Amazon Vango Aurora Single XL Sleeping Bag

Coleman Weathermaster 4XL Air Tent

Coleman Weathermaster 4XL Air Tent
 Coleman Weathermaster 8XL Air Tent
Coleman Weathermaster 8XL Air Tent

The award-winning Coleman Weathermaster 4XL Air makes the ideal choice for family campers and particularly for lone-parent families as it can be put up by just one person. Featuring a 4500mm HH, plenty of space and of course, Coleman BlackOut Bedroom® technology.

For larger families, the Coleman Weathermaster 8XL Air provides heaps of space with flexible interior options. There’s also a 6XL option if you’re looking for something a little smaller, but with all the same features.

FREE Camping & Caravanning Club membership worth £46 is included when you buy any of these tents, making them an even more attractive option for family campers.

Stockists

  • Winfields Outdoors Coleman Weathermaster 4XL Air Tent £849.99

Coleman OctaGo Tent 2020

Coleman OctaGo Tent 2020

We fell in love with the adorable little Coleman OctaGo, brand new for 2020. It’s the smaller sibling of the well-established Coleman Octagon 8 tent but in a smaller size, making it ideal for festival campers.

It’s fast to put up and features Coleman’s excellent blackout technology and is big enough to sleep up to 3 people.

Coleman OctaGo Tent 2020 RRP: £199.99

Coleman Collapsible Camping Wagon

Coleman Foldable Camping Wagon Transporter

When it comes to festivals and family camping, a wagon like this is indispensable as it makes transporting all of your camping gear from the car park to the camping field a doddle.

The new wagon from Coleman can handle heavy loads of up to 85kg, so it’s ideal if you’ve got a big tent and lots of camping gear to move around.

Coleman Collapsible Camping Wagon RRP: ££89.99

Stockists

  • Amazon Coleman Collapsible Camping Wagon
  • Outdoor Camping Direct Coleman Collapsible Camping Wagon £77.99

Coleman Octagon Blackout Tent

The popular Octagon tent from Coleman has been updated for 2020 and now includes their blackout technology which blocks up to 99% of daylight along with a hinged door and it sleeps up to 8.

Coleman Octagon Blackout Tent RRP: £399.99

Stockists

  • Amazon Coleman Octagon Blackout Tent

Coleman Maluti 3 Tent

New for 2020, Coleman have released a range of smaller tents aimed at the backpacking market which range in size and weight, but all of them feature Coleman blackout technology, which means now you can get a great nights sleep even when backpacking and wild camping. Our favourite of the 3 due to space, is the Coleman Maluti 3 tent.

Coleman Maluti 3 Tent RRP: £249.99, Coleman Batur 3 Tent RRP: £199.99, Coleman Laramie 3 Tent RRP: £249.99

Coleman Laramie 3 backpacking tent
Coleman Laramie 3 backpacking tent
Coleman Batur 3 backpacking tent
Coleman Batur 3 backpacking tent

Outwell Stonelake 7ATC Tent

The Outwell Stonelake 7ATC is a super Polycotton tent that’s perfect for family campers who spend a serious amount of time living under canvas. We love the internal doors that can be closed quietly thanks to the Outwell Quick & Quiet Inner door system and the lighting track system which allows you to hang lights and whatever you want in a position to suit you.

The tent features 3 Premier Dark Inner bedrooms and an easy access front door system that opens fully, with a detachable tub-style groundsheet

Outwell Stonelake 7ATC Tent RRP: £2,500

Stockists

  • Outwell £2,500
  • Camping World Outwell Stonelake 7ATC Tent

Zempire MonstaMat Camping SIM

The MonstaMat SIM from Zempire always gets rave reviews and it remains one of the most comfortable SIMs we’ve ever tried.

Zempire MonstaMat SIM RRP: £200

If you’ve not managed to get down to the show yet, you can visit tomorrow for the final day. There are loads of amazing show-only special offers on, so it really is a great place to bag yourself some new camping gear ready for your next camping trip.

Find out more about the Caravan, Camping & Motorhome Show 2020.

Caravan, Camping & Motorhome Show 2020.

Go Outdoors

Where to next?

  • Camping and Caravanning Club Launches Competition To Win The Funkiest Ever Caravan
  • Vango Launch Eco-Friendly New Range Of Recycled Plastic Tents and Sleeping Bags
  • 6 Of The Best Luxury Camping Beds & Mattresses
  • Gear Up For Spring – Essential Outdoor Gear For Spring 2020
  • Here’s What You Should Pack For A Glamping Trip – Your Complete Glamping Packing List

[Read More …]

Be sure to visit UnexploredPodcast.com and connect with us on social below.

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

SHOT Show 2020 Optics

SHOT Show 2020 Optics
Outdoor News ventured out to Las Vegas for SHOT Show 2020. We stopped by Bushnell, TruGlo, Leupold, and so many more booths to show you the latest and greatest in optics for 2020.
[Read More …]

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Outdoor News video: Top trends at the 2020 SHOT Show

Outdoor News shooting writer Ron Spomer shares some of the highlights he saw the hunting industry unveil at the recent Shooting, Hunting, Outdoor Trade Show in Las Vegas.

Categories: Firearms, Firearms Videos, Illinois Videos, Michigan Videos, Minnesota Videos, New York Videos, Pennsylvania Videos, Wisconsin Videos
Tags: SHOT show

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Emails Show DOI Falsified Fire Data for Political Ends

In November, 2018, the Camp and Woolsey Fires burned over 250,000 acres in California, killing 88 people, destroying over 20,000 buildings, and together costing $ 22.5 billion. It was the deadliest, most destructive month for wild fires in California ever, and the Camp Fire alone was the costliest natural disaster anywhere in the world in 2018. Emails obtained by The Guardian last month show the Trump administration asked its scientists to manipulate data about emissions produced by the fires to support its promotion of the logging industry. 

“Can you have Brad and Todd gin up an estimate on the total [CO2] equivalent releases are so far for the current 2 [fires],” wrote James Reilly, director of the United States Geological Survey in an email to agency scientists on November 16, 2018. “That would make a decent sound bite the [Secretary of the Interior] could use to put some perspective on it.” Reilly is a Trump appointee with a record of suppressing climate change science. 

fire-email-3
(Photo: DOI)

At the time, that Secretary was Ryan Zinke, who hadn’t yet resigned from the position over corruption allegations. On November 30, the Department of the Interior issued a press release claiming that the 2018 wildfire season in California had emitted roughly 68 million tons of carbon dioxide. “This number equates to about 15 percent of all California emissions, and it is on par with the annual emissions produced by generating enough electricity to power the entire state for a year,” stated the press release.

Then-Secretary Zinke was quoted in that release: “We know that wildfires can be deadly and cost billions of dollars, but this analysis from the U.S. Geological Survey also shows just how bad catastrophic fires are for the environment and for the public’s health. There’s too much dead and dying timber in the forest, which fuels these catastrophic fires. Proper management of our forests, to include small prescribed burns, mechanical thinning, and other techniques, will improve forest health and reduce the risk of wildfires, while also helping curb the carbon emissions. The intensity and range of these fires indicate we can no longer ignore proper forest management. We can and must do a better job of protecting both the forests and the communities on the urban-wildland interface. Leaving forests unmanaged is no longer a safe option.”

fire-emails-2
(Photo: DOI)

Four months prior to the release, Zinke wrote an op-ed in USA Today arguing that “active forest management,” (Zinke’s very politically correct term for logging) was the only tool that could address the state’s wildfire problem, and claiming that “radical environmentalists” were putting lives and homes at risk by working to limit or prevent that logging. I fact checked that op-ed, demonstrating that logging cannot be shown to reduce instances or severity of wildfires, and that the “radical environmentalists” cited in Zinke’s piece were actually working in partnership with the logging industry to try and create more fire-resilient forests and more profitable logging practices. 

Of course, Zinke’s claims about the efficacy of logging weren’t the only factual inaccuracy. Scientists have since questioned the validity of the carbon emissions the USGS ginned up in support of the former-Secretary’s messaging. 

Chad Hanson, a forest ecologist and founder of the John Muir Project,” told The Guardian that the emissions numbers produced for Zinke by the USGS were an “overestimate,” and said they, “can’t be squared with empirical data.” The USGS numbers also under represent emissions caused by the burning of fossil fuels by cherry picking data. While electricity consumed by California in 2017 did produce just over 60 million tons of CO2, that particular data point covers just one of many sources of greenhouse gas emissions emitted in the state, which total about 430 million tons a year. The emails show Reilly searching for such a comparison; he first asked his scientists to compare fire emissions to that of the state’s transportation. 

fire-emails-1
(Photo: DOI)

All this is doubly problematic because these falsehoods soon left the realm of propaganda, and entered actual policy. Less than a month later, on December 21, President Trump issued an executive order calling for a massive increase in logging on federal lands. The purpose? “For decades, dense trees and undergrowth have amassed in these lands, fueling catastrophic wildfires,” the order read. “Active management of vegetation is needed to treat these dangerous conditions on Federal lands but is often delayed due to challenges associated with regulatory analysis and current consultation requirements.”

That order goes on to mandate that DOI and the Department of Agriculture (which manages the United States Forest Service) exploit existing categorical exclusions and create new ones, in a move intended to reduce the public’s role in decision making under the National Environmental Protection Act. 

This order was the culmination of a months-long disinformation campaign led by then-Secretary Zinke and President Trump, intended to shift the blame for the fires away from climate change, and onto California’s liberal government, with which Trump continues to feud. At the same time that Reilly was ordering his scientists to manufacture emissions numbers for the fires, the President made his bizarre claims in 2018 about the effectiveness of “raking” forests to clear their dense underbrush. And it was in August of that year, while the Carr Fire raged, that Trump issued his bizarre tweet about California diverting water into the ocean that was needed for fire fighting. 

https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1026524292396273664

That tweet appears to be connected to the work of David Bernhardt, who was Zinke’s deputy, and has since succeeded him as Interior Secretary. At the time, Bernhardt was threatening to sue California for objecting to actions he was taking in benefit of a former lobbying client—Westlands Water District, an agricultural water provider. One of Bernhardt’s first actions upon taking office was to divert water from northern California to the state’s central valley, an area controlled by WWD. This water has nothing to do with fire fighting or prevention efforts. 

And there was one other policy action that almost took place as part of this effort to justify the expansion of logging as a fire management tool. The month after that executive order, on January 9, 2019, President Trump threatened to withhold Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster relief funds from victims of the fires in California, again under the guise of arguing that the state was not effectively managing its forests. That’s the very argument Zinke was trying to add to, using those ginned up numbers on carbon emissions. 

https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1083022011574747137

Connect these dots, and we see an administration that is willing to falsify information on deadly natural disasters in order to speed its rollback of environmental regulations in benefit of industry. And, rather than take effective actions to address the cause of these fires, is actually worsening the chances of fires burning out of control in the future both by reducing the fire resiliency of forests, and speeding the effects of climate change. While that’s going on, the President is continuing to threaten to cut off federal aid to the victims of these fires, in what appears to be an effort to support all the above. 

“Photographing the Woolsey Fire, I watched people flee for their lives, only to later realize they’d just lost everything,” says Stuart Palley, who took the photo on top of this article. “It’s unimaginably cruel to exploit these tragedies for any political gain. Let alone to do so for a cause that will make fires like these more common, and more destructive.”

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

SHOT Show Rifle & Shotguns

SHOT Show Rifle & Shotguns
Outdoor News ventured out to Las Vegas for SHOT Show 2020. We stopped by Benelli, Sig Sauer, Savage, Browning and so many more booths to show you the latest and greatest in guns for 2020.
[Read More …]

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

NEWS | The Scottish Caravan, Motorhome and Holiday Home Show Gets Ready For February 2020 Event

Scotland’s largest caravan, motorhome and holiday home exhibition gears up to take over the SEC, Glasgow next month 6th February – 9th February 2020, providing tourers and holidaymakers with the perfect getaway inspiration for the year ahead.

The Scottish Caravan, Motorhome & Holiday Home Show

The Scottish Caravan, Motorhome & Holiday Home Show 2020 brings over 200 of the best UK touring brands together under one roof, including, stylish motorhomes, caravans, campervans, tents, luxury lodges, marine products and camping accessories.

Experts will be on hand to offer advice on the best picturesque locations, adventurous touring holidays, camping accessories and general hints and tips for enjoying the great outdoors. Visitors will also have the opportunity to compare models, avoiding the need to travel from one dealer to another and enjoy show only discounts and offers.

The Scottish Caravan, Motorhome & Holiday Home Show

As well as a brilliant range of touring products, the show has a Farmers Market with over 25 artisan producers selling delicious local food as well as the latest outdoor fashions and homeware for campervans and caravans. Novice tourers can test their skills at the Camping Village and give pitching a tent a go, or, attend the Caravan and Motorhome Club free towing tutorial and practice manoeuvring with a 20-minute taster session.*

Darren Brechin, Show Director said:

“The Scottish Caravan, Motorhome and Holiday Home show is all about showing our visitors the different ways you can make the most out of your holiday – whether it’s exploring the great Scottish outdoors or touring Europe’s top beaches in your very own campervan.

This year we’ll have even more to offer visitors with new exhibitors and the unveiling of our Campervan Hall, where you can watch a live build of one of Caledonian Campers compact tourers.

There’s no showcase quite like this in Scotland, that brings all these brilliant brands together under one roof, and we’re proud to be able to offer this great event in the heart of Glasgow.”

The Scottish Caravan, Motorhome & Holiday Home Show
Caravan Show Photographs by Alan Peebles

You can book tickets and get more information here.

Win Tickets To The Scottish Caravan, Motorhome and Holiday Home show

Watch this space, we’ll be giving tickets away to the Scottish Caravan, Motorhome and Holiday Home Show in the next few days!

Where to next?

  • Camping & Caravanning Club Owner Satisfaction Award Winners 2020
  • Seaside Campsites For The Perfect Family Holiday
  • The Ultimate List Of Camping Tips – 63 Camping Hacks & Tips
  • Should I Buy A Canvas Bell Tent? The Ultimate Bell Tent Buying Guide

[Read More …]

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

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