Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Camping/Etiquette/es"

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< AY Honors‎ | CampingAY Honors/Camping/Etiquette/es
(Created page with "Libro de Respuestas de Especialidades JA/Campamento/Etiqueta")
 
(Created page with "Sea considerado con los otros campistas. Cuando compra tiendas de campaña, compre otros en colores apagados que se mezclan con el medio ambiente. Azul, verde y marrón son pr...")
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Be considerate of other campers. When purchasing tents, buy ones in muted colors that will blend in with the environment. Blues, greens, and browns are preferred to reds and oranges. People go camping to escape the garishness of the city—leave that behind.
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Sea considerado con los otros campistas. Cuando compra tiendas de campaña, compre otros en colores apagados que se mezclan con el medio ambiente. Azul, verde y marrón son preferidos en vez de rojo y anaranjado. La gente hace campamentos para escapar de la estridencia de la ciudad-deje todo eso atrás.
  
 
Also be mindful of the noise level made in your camp.  Don't be a nuisance.  If camping in the wilderness, be sure to make your camp out of sight of the trail.  Most National Forests have guidelines for where you can camp in relation to the trail.  Find out what those guidelines are and follow them.
 
Also be mindful of the noise level made in your camp.  Don't be a nuisance.  If camping in the wilderness, be sure to make your camp out of sight of the trail.  Most National Forests have guidelines for where you can camp in relation to the trail.  Find out what those guidelines are and follow them.

Revision as of 20:32, 29 October 2014

Sea considerado con los otros campistas. Cuando compra tiendas de campaña, compre otros en colores apagados que se mezclan con el medio ambiente. Azul, verde y marrón son preferidos en vez de rojo y anaranjado. La gente hace campamentos para escapar de la estridencia de la ciudad-deje todo eso atrás.

Also be mindful of the noise level made in your camp. Don't be a nuisance. If camping in the wilderness, be sure to make your camp out of sight of the trail. Most National Forests have guidelines for where you can camp in relation to the trail. Find out what those guidelines are and follow them.

Do not enter anyone else's camp site without their permission, especially when traveling to or from your campsite to other places on the campground. It is very rude to cut through another camp. Use the road or trail, even if it will take longer.

Leave the area cleaner than you found it. If you are leading a group of youngsters on a campout, have a contest before you pile back in your cars to go home: see who can collect the most litter (define "most" first though - it can mean by volume, by weight, or by item count). Offer a prize to the one who collects the most (such as getting to choose which seat he or she will sit in on the trip home).