Camping Tents

TwitterFacebook
Get flash to fully experience Pearltrees
http://www.smallcampsites.co.uk/

Small selected UK campsites for camping touring and holiday caravans

The only Website dedicated to selected small camping & caravan sites in the UK. The participating campsites have usually less than 30 camping or caravan pitches in total, are inspected by one or several camping caravaning or tourist organisations and offer quiet family enjoyment in areas of interest across the UK.

Guy Grieve's top tips for a winter camping trip | Travel | The Observer

http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2007/nov/11/escape.camping2 ยท 'Fire is winter's fruit' - so goes an Arab proverb that sums up the beauty of fire in winter. Before you set out, teach yourself to start, nurture and put out fires, and (assuming you're not using a stove) learn how to cook on them. When you have done cooking, scrape the embers together and place some good lengths of wood on for light while you eat.
http://weburbanist.com/2007/09/28/urban-camping-subversive-city-living-from-times-square-to-the-car-tent/

Urban Camping from Times Square to the Car Tent | Design + Ideas

Urban camping means different things to different people, from living without a vehicle or electricity and plumbing to squatting in unused properties and more. However, the most popular definition of urban camping provided by the urban dictionary is: "camping in an urban setting by sleeping on rooftops, under bushes, and in public parks."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2007/may/12/guardianspecial4.guardianspecial22 I go camping up to 10 times a year with my wife and young daughter, visiting a mix of festivals and the sites that promise an interesting encounter with nature. The twist is that we do all our travelling without our own car. Therefore my camping philosophy is all about keeping things light and simple.

The only gear you really need | News | The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2007/apr/01/camping.escape For both of us, camping has always been part of our lives. First making camps in the front garden and then in the field behind the house but always coming home for tea.

Camping made easy | Travel | The Observer