Campervan - Avoidin...
 

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[Closed] Campervan - Avoiding using campsites

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Mrs Blackflag is very keen that we get a campervan for weekends and holidays. I'm 85% on board but if i did this, id want to be able to park / sleep in nice spots, rather than on formal campsites.

Having read loads of stuff online about it not being legal in England i'm now not so sure this is going to be all that easy.

What do you lot do? I'd like to just find an out of the way quiet spot and get me head down. Is this going to be a bit of a faff?

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:06 pm
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Faff.

Fact is, everyone is jumping on the campervan waggon and it's getting harder to find those quiet spots. Thise that are available get trashed with fires, litter and human shit, so action is taken to further restrict the numbers of them.

Some pubs, hotels etc are now getting on board with the idea of letting folk park up in exchange for spending money with them. Expect more of these informal parking spots to appear, often led by community groups.

OTOH there are some lovely small campsites around. What do you have against campsites?

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:21 pm
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We have a campervan (in Scotland) and it's pretty ace. We use it mostly in winter - getting a weekend away is pretty easy when you have a warm bed (two winter duvet's and central heating). Also great for getting off the hills after a walk and being able to stick the heating on & make a cuppa / bowl of hot soup. We only park up to stay over if we are the only van, and like actual wild camping arrive late / leave early...

We joined a couple of "wild camping" groups of facebook, and to be honest it's pretty grim. Lots of "I'm entitled to park here, so I will" attitudes whilst parking over multiple parking spaces complete with deck chairs and bbq's in carparks and shitting in the bushes 10ft away. generally being loutish arseholes. Local councils are naturally putting in 2m parking barriers to limit this.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:36 pm
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What do you have against campsites?

Nothing specifically, it just seems another thing to curtail the freedom a campervan would bring. So if i have to use a campsite, then why not just have either a tent or caravan instead (both a lot cheaper)?

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:37 pm
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So if i have to use a campsite, then why not just have either a tent or caravan instead (both a lot cheaper)?

And both a lot less convenient and more faff.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:41 pm
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But if you have to go to a campsite, why is a small pod style caravan more of a faff?

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:47 pm
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In my case, my campervan is my "car", so I don't need land to store it or to pay for storage. It's also easier to drive than towing a caravan on lots of the (singletrack) roads I use. Arriving at the campsite means it's easier to set up as I don't need to pitch and I don't need to dry off a wet tent back at home after a trip either. Of course, There's still the occasional night I'll slope off somewhere off-site but that tends to be in the quieter months anyway and for only a night at a time. Campervans also work out well as day-vans at places I might go walking or riding. I wouldn't tow a caravan out for the day, not pitch a tent for an hour while I have lunch etc,

Of course, caravans can be more convenient for longer stays because you don't have to pack everything away if you want to go for a drive and come back to the same place. So, there are pros and cons to each.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:55 pm
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Have a look at wild camping. There's a lot of sites that are set in woods that have fire pits & long drop toilets. We went to a lovely one at Llanthony, got water from the brook, cooked over the fire. These sites ain't stupidly priced either. The last time we went to Llanthony it was a fiver a night.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 12:59 pm
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That's some definition of wild camping right there. 🙂

Mind you - that's exactly the sort of thing I was on about above.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:00 pm
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Look at wildcamping website - https://www.wildcamping.co.uk/

If you join (by paying actual money) you get access to a downloadable database of known wild camping sites. Some are better than others. They are not official as such (as that would be an oxymoron) but are places other members have parked up successfully. Some of them are pretty much legit, especially in Scotland. Some are them are cheeky as hell but out of the way enough that you 'should' get away with it.

Wild camping can be brilliant but can also be a pita. To do it properly you turn up late and leave early. You don't get awnings, chairs and tables out - you keep it stealthy. That can be fine but can also sometimes make it difficult to feel settled and have the best of time. I've stopping in campsites with brilliant views but I've know that I 'might' get moved on. Do you have a couple of beers and hope you do or do you remain dry just in case.

A good half way house are the members only small sites found through the camping and caravan club or the caravan club - they call them Certificated sites or certificated locations respectively. Small sites with minimal facilities for a maximum of 5 vans and caravans. I personally hate big caravan park style sites. Everything about them make my teeth itch. But there small sites feel totally different. You often can't camp there under canvas as they don't have toilets etc so you are accessing places you might not be able to otherwise unless you had a van.

When we go away in our little van we tend to stay in a mix of wild and actually campsites. We also use an actual site if we want to stay still for more than a night.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:07 pm
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Its all a compromise. Like scotroutes my campervan is my daily drive so no faff in storing it, but it did limit the size of the van somewhat so nowhere near as good as a larger campervan/motorhome when actually camping...but great for quick get-always as I don't have the faff of retrieving the van from a farmers field somewhere and 'prepping' it for a trip. I use it for family holidays and getaways as well as biking weekends with mates. We use a large drive away awning for longer holiday's/getaways (say greater than three days) so we can take more stuff and not have to pack it away when we want to use the van. Works fine, but you then introduce all the inconveniences and disadvantages of tenting.

And I can see the appeal of wild camping, but for me it seems a lot of faff to find places to do it and the problem of littering and actually getting away from other wild campers...cycling around Pitlochroy a couple of years ago there were campervans parked up every 50 feet or so on the lake side...so hardly getting way from it. There are some great campsites out there with great facilities in great locations...the only downsides are that often they are pretty popular and you have to book quite far in advance impacting the 'get up and go at a moments notice' part of the whole thing.

So all in all my campervan experience hasn't quite lived upto the billing, though we've had a great time with it and plenty more planned...definitely preferable to tenting, but it's not quite been the 'jump in and go' experience we were after. It's been great and we've had some great times in it and its got us out and about so no regrets.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:08 pm
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A good half way house as the members only small sites found through the camping and caravan club or the caravan club – they call the Certificated sites or certificated locations respectively.

This - there are many lovely spots, but also some dull fields, but most are quiet and out of the way and all are small and never crowded. Finding the good ones though is a bit of a PITA though as it requires thorough use of their site and Google Earth and you have to call to book.

There are loads of similar small sites like that around though that aren't in the club network. And some big ones that are massive and swallow hundreds of people.

PS Caravan Club is now called Caravan and Motorhome club, cos motorhomes are acceptable 🙂

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:13 pm
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#vanlife has ****ed most of the good free car parking spots on the cornish coast by ****s taking the piss.

parking restriction orders popping up all over the place, mostly targeted at vans. south fistral has a specific restriction on no vans between 7-8am, which has pissed all the local trades off who'd go for a surf before work.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:23 pm
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Lots of nice advice here, cheers

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:28 pm
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If you're not and a campsite and you're not sitting in it it will get broken into sooner rather than later. If you want to live in your own mobile prison that's fine.

I sold my last van/camper six years ago and have since camped or used hotels/gites/B&B. No regrets, nearly all the places we used to enjoy parking banned camper vans and quite rightly so.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:30 pm
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If you’re not and a campsite and you’re not sitting in it it will get broken into sooner rather than later. If you want to live in your own mobile prison that’s fine.

U OK hun?

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:35 pm
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One I have found useful is, https://park4night.com/ Have the app on my phone.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:43 pm
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Sure I read something the other day about wild camping being allowed/permitted/made legal in England.

Anyway, I always paid for campsites when I had one. Mainly because I didn't fancy shitting in a bucket and cleaning it out afterwards.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:43 pm
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Sure I read something the other day about wild camping being allowed/permitted/made legal in England.

That's a (rather strange) initiative to charge folk for "wild" camping - but it's aimed at walkers and cyclists.  I'm surprised not to have seen a bigger deal being made of it here on STW.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 1:49 pm
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That’s a (rather strange) initiative to charge folk for “wild” camping – but it’s aimed at walkers and cyclists. I’m surprised not to have seen a bigger deal being made of it here on STW.

It's a slightly bizarre thing. If you can be arsed to dig into it, it's run by a private company, they're trying to charge £20 per night to 'wild camp' on designated land owners' sites, so not really wild camping at all, more semi-remote super-basic campsites without any facilities. If it were a fiver per night, it might make some sort of sense if that's the experience you're after and you don't want to wild camp in the accepted sense, but at that price it's really just taking the piss.

I'm sure someone'll start a thread on it some time soon. The website is:]

Update: they've suspended it... I bet it seemed like a good idea at the time.

https://www.ukwildcamp.org

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 2:03 pm
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[strong]nofx[/strong] wrote:

Have a look at wild camping. There’s a lot of sites that are set in woods that have fire pits & long drop toilets. We went to a lovely one at Llanthony, got water from the brook, cooked over the fire. These sites ain’t stupidly priced either. The last time we went to Llanthony it was a fiver a night.

Might well of been my place 🙂

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 2:07 pm
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Fine, Scotroute. Five break-ins in as many years with our T2. On an Italian campsite we had walked 50m and turned around to see someone breaking into the driver's door. This was particularly annoying as the passenger door no longer locked following the previous break in.

Then there was the occasion we parked our Ducato on the sea front in Marseille, we hadn't even got 50m before a car pulled over and a couple of blokes jumped out and started prowling around it then got back in the car and drove off as we ran back.

And the occasion I put it in for service, they destroyed the gates of the garage, had broken a lock , broken the stering lock and were trying to hot-wire it when the security company turned up and stopped them driving off.

Ther spare wheel from the Ducato was nicked in a supermarket car park and they tried to ram me with their car when I turned up.

Car/bike/walk + rucksac + hotel = relaxing holiday.

Forget sleeping in it with bikes locked on, they won't be there when you wake up.

Doctors say the gassing stories are rubbish. Try telling my biking buddy that who woke up in his van feeling groggy with all the valuables gone. Neither he, his partner or their dog were woken despite the thing being throughly turned over - in Spain.

T'ain't worth the hassle.

Edit, I forgot to mention the Ducato being seen a source of spare parts when it wasn't being broken into.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 2:18 pm
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Its not wild camping in a campervan. Its also often not under the auspices of the land reform act in scotland that states IIRC that if a campsite is available you should use it.

IMO the actions of these folk in campervans are causing a lot of issues and will cause a reaction needing a change in the law. I would support a definition of allowable wild camping of more than 500m from a road only.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 2:44 pm
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This is an interesting article:  Clicky

If local councils in the UK created Aire/Stellplatz style sites on the outskirts of towns then I think a lot of people would use them.

We were on Skye and the Uists recently and the number of vans astounded me. Most seem to be behaving themselves but there are always idiots who ruin it for others. What I don't understand is why would you drive to that remote spot only to park 2ft from the next van?

@Edukator - you must visit some shitty places as we've never had an issue. The weirdest thing I ever saw was a middle-aged English bloke ratcheting the doors shut from inside his crappy old motorhome whilst sat in the boarding queue at Calais.  He must have been scared by your colourful stories.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 2:54 pm
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Go on, call me a liar, ElShalimo. And take the piss out of people taking reasonable precautions having been bitten and being a bit shy.

If anything the problem is going to non-shitty places. Theives operate where there's money and valuables to be had. I suppose if you only have a couple of weeks holiday a year and spend it places so hostile no-one lives there the risks are lower. The amount of glass on car parks in say the Peak in enough to tell you there's a problem in the very places people like to go.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:16 pm
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Honestly dude, you're either the unluckiest guy in the world, or it's all made up.

(or there is a massive crimewave that, for reasons unknown, is being hidden by a conspiracy between the authorities and campervan owners)

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:21 pm
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If you’re not and a campsite and you’re not sitting in it it will get broken into sooner rather than later. If you want to live in your own mobile prison that’s fine.

I’ve been daily driving and camping in various different camper vans for 30 years and yet to have one broken into. Camping or otherwise.
(And as a daily drive it gets left anywhere a car would)

Just lucky I guess 🤔

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:23 pm
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No, just someone who spent a lot of time in a camper van, Scotroutes. You obviously haven't travelled much,which is after all the objective if you buy a camper van.

I find it quite offensive that two of you accuse me of lying.

Anyhow the dream the marketeers sell is nonsense. It's like the adverts for 4x4 cross over things in wilderness landscapes when they're sold to people who will sit in traffic jams in them. You might love holidays in Skye with midges, freezing lochs, bogs, rain etc., no thanks.

Visit somewhere like Chamonix (which isn't exactly a shitty place) and I suggest you stay on a campsite and leave someone sitting in the van if you park anywhere else.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:33 pm
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Prefer campsites. There are a plenty of good ones where you get a lot of space, even on a bank holiday weekend, are not expensive, and feel more 'wild' than campsite. Better than sleeping in a car park or a layby 4 feet away from another van.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:37 pm
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My van was perfectly fine in Chamonix

As it was in bourg d'oisans

Alp d'huez

Annecy

Paris

Ghent

Grenoble (including being left alone parked up all weekend while I flew to another part of France)

Amsterdam (admittedly was nervous on that one).

It survived a night on Irvine beach front.....I'm pretty sure no one wants my van. If it was going to go the Irvine scrotes would have taken it.

Perhaps you were targeted. Your reputation precedes you n all that.

As above. Mix it up a little. I certainly won't entertain parking close up to other people. But if I see a nice spot I'll park up. If I see a campsite in a nice location I'll use it. That's the beauty of the van.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:37 pm
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PS. At least 10 trips to Chamonix that I can remember, probably more.
And many other similar places over the years. As I lived in Austria and travelled to other alpine areas a lot outside the ski season.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:38 pm
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We [s]wildcamp[/s] camp for free for the odd night but prefer a proper campsite, we try and hunt out the cheaper basic ones. When do do wildcamp its generally to break up a journey or near the venue for a party etc.

Trying to find somewhere to camp usually involves a bit of faff, I prefer to park somewhere that is streetlit and isn't completely deserted, such as a residential area on a corner plot so you are not outside someones windows, or a supermarket carpark. The wife would rather be in a dark layby shielded from the road in the middle of nowhere which obviously increases the chance of someone trying to break in, but less chance of being moved on.

We've only been moved on once and thats because we parked up near Morecombe bay and had dinner, nearby campsite owner was obviously looking after his business interests and the council had tried to pacify him by erecting a tiny 'no overnight camping' sign he could point people at.

On our way to the north Scotland at the moment and we've broken up the 700 mile journey, 150 miles Sunday evening, wildcamp, 500 miles today, then the last bit to relatives tomorrow morning.

Campsites for anywhere we expect to want to actually arrive before darkness, or at least a car park that permits overnight camping so you can settle in without drawing attention to yourselves. We've also done pubstop scheme a couple of times (go for dinner and they let you camp in the car park for free) but when we've asked normal pubs they usually say no, its definitely better just to ask if you can leave your 'car' overnight and collect it in the morning 😉

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:38 pm
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@Edukator - reasonable precautions, it was the boarding queue at the port!

... and I didn't call you a liar. Have you had too much lunchtime pastis?

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:40 pm
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the big question is .... would wolves change your attitude to parking your van in laybys 😉

I have a bigger fear of them than of being gassed.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:46 pm
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My biggest fear of laybys is trucker poos lurking in the grass right outside the door!

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:48 pm
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I think the carbon monoxide rumours have been debunked by The Royal College of Anaesthetists but other gasses are available and there are some bad people everywhere. Stay safe kids !

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 3:56 pm
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Jeez this place sometimes, so some of you have never been broken into, that's great, long may that continue. But what's the problem with me being honest about my experiences too?

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 4:02 pm
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It really depends where you are staying - any touristy areas are a bit crap for it. Lakes, Cornwall, West coast of Scotland etc - in these areas the locals get pissed off and fair enough so its better to find a campsite - usually possible to find a nice cheap one - or a farm that does camping quite easily with a bit of google.

A lot of less popular areas are still fine, lots of the less touristy populated bits of scotland / wales / north east etc. Would only usually stay one evening mind.

Anywhere on the med coast like Marseilles forget it - go to a decent campsite with a fence around it!

There are some amazing aires set up specially for motorhomes / campers in France that are free! ideally you want some kind of toilet solution in your van though.

In my opinion campsite owners are missing a trick by not catering to late arrival / early out people. Certainly in the lakes I've had to search for overnight parking spots for ages and would happily have paid a few quid but all campsites shut! Obviously its their business but its a bit rich when they then get peeved about someone doing a free camp somewhere discrete!

Its probably not as good as it used to be and plenty of places doing annoying height barriers now but personally I still like having a camper van (mine is mid sized). If you are going to a trail centre / race / riding location / beach its nice to have all your stuff with you - somewhere comfy to have a cup of tea, cook food etc. No packing unpacking as you travel between campsites when touring as well.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 4:22 pm
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Those websites that tell folk place they can park up have cause a couple of funny situations in Edinburgh. there is now a unofficial campsite on porty prom usually with a couple of dozen campers and caravans on it and also there is always campervans outside the scottish government building in leith!

Just use a campsite FFS

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 4:26 pm
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Thanks for the replies everyone.

I think i'm trying to get the best idea in my own head on what this would be really like, rather than mrs Blackflags somewhat idealised version of what life would be like. We will certainly be hiring one a few times to see if we can get on with it, but it sounds like you still need to do a bit of prep (find a good campsite, make sure they have spaces, book in advance and hope the weather holds) rather than the 100% "just go where the sun is at the last minute" dream she seems to have.

Sorry you have had such a bad time of it Edukator, sounds like a proper run of bad luck that!

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 4:57 pm
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What Jambo said applies round most of Cornwall, New Polzeath will be next.
Arrive late, leave early & leave no trace...

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 5:17 pm
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Just like to add that campervans aren't cheep to buy maintain or run. Caravans are cheaper to buy in better condition than most campers and you can unhook it and go for day trips with out having to tat down before setting off... Undoubtly you will drive off in your camper and stuff will fly about at some point no matter how careful you are. In my experience it cheaper and better value to stay in a hotel. Campers are a total luxury which isn't that luxury.. its a half way ground between a hotel or a tent..

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 5:44 pm
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The whole French aires thing is whats missing - probably because councils fear someone would take the piss and move in full time. Not sure why this isn't a problem in France but is apparently here..

Wild Camping is what I tell Mrs B, when what I mean is 'me and the boy sleeping in the van in a lay by somewhere SW of home' - I'd echo just being outside the tourist hotspots. If all you want to do is get your head down for the night, 10 minutes drive away can be enough for a late stop / early start.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 5:58 pm
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Those websites that tell folk place they can park up have cause a couple of funny situations in Edinburgh. there is now a unofficial campsite on porty prom usually with a couple of dozen campers and caravans on it and also there is always campervans outside the scottish government building in leith!

Just use a campsite FFS

The last time i was along at Porty TJ, there was a two storey mini-house on an Ifor Williams trailer parked there :o)

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 7:57 pm
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Social media and #vanlife has a lot to answer for.

I went mid week last may to slatterdale and it was rammed. Mainly by nc500 ****ers in McHire or other twee shitty hire names vans.

I'm looking at buying a bigger van but my t4 goes under 6ft barriers and gets used daily....

I'd rather use a nice quiet site now as I don't want to piss off locals and most "wild" campers you see parked up are just ruining what they seek. Or just a tightfisted ****er not helping the economy

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 11:17 pm
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The whole French aires thing is whats missing – probably because councils fear someone would take the piss and move in full time. Not sure why this isn’t a problem in France but is apparently here..

Cos they're on motorways that you have to pay to get off.

 
Posted : 03/06/2019 11:30 pm
 Ewan
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No they're not - pretty much every small village in France had a small Aire. Most are lovely - not the same thing as the motorway ones.

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 6:06 am
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We have a T4 camper and occasionally we don't use a campsite, this has included car parks up on the hills or even Co-ops in small towns but mainly we use pub stops and campsites because its far more relaxing knowing that we aren't going to get any hassle (having said that we have never had any issues).
The main reason for not always using campsites is that we love not planning too far in advance so finding room on a campsite isn't always possible. We have a Freedom Trail loo from Go Outdoors so no need for a bucket or bag...

We had a lovely weekend over the bank holiday using a pub car park in Hebden Bridge 🙂

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 7:01 am
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The French Aires are pretty good. There's an Aire here but it's a part of the main town car park has a tap and 30p a pee public toilets.

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 7:56 am
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I’ve had a few camper vans. A high proportion of the likely looking ‘wild’ spots we stopped at in England were littered with human faeces.

we gave up for the most part, there’s loads of decent sites around, put money into the industry, support the people trying to make a living out of it.

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 8:44 am
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TJ:Its not wild camping in a campervan. Its also often not under the auspices of the land reform act in scotland that states IIRC that if a campsite is available you should use it.

The land reform act (right to roam) makes no reference to using a campsite if it is available, if such a comment were to exist it would be in the Outdoor Access Code but I don't see any such reference.

The code does explicitly permit wild camping, but it defines it as "Access rights extend to wild camping. This type of camping is lightweight, done
in small numbers and only for two or three nights in any one place. You can
camp in this way wherever access rights apply but help to avoid causing
problems for local people and land managers by not camping in enclosed fields of crops or farm animals and by keeping well away from buildings, roads or historic structures. Take extra care to avoid disturbing deer stalking or grouse shooting. If you wish to camp close to a house or building, seek the owner’s permission. Leave no trace by:
• taking away all your litter;
• removing all traces of your tent pitch and of any open fire (follow the
guidance for lighting fires);
• not causing any pollution." (the bold is mine)

Note that access rights DO NOT APPLY TO MOTORISED VEHICLES.

IMO the actions of these folk in campervans are causing a lot of issues and will cause a reaction needing a change in the law. I would support a definition of allowable wild camping of more than 500m from a road only.

It doesn't need a change in the law, it simply needs at most (1) a clarification of the code; (2) some mechanism for dealing with anti-social camping outside the scope of the code. To be clear there is no de-facto right to "wild camp" in a campervan in Scotland.

Being a fixed distance from a road is initially logical, but being 100m from the A82, is rather different from being 100m from the B8069 or B862. You could be the other side of a loch (or on an island) and still prohibited.

I have genuinely wild camped <50m from a road, but only after walking many miles to arrive there. I'd say that the definition of "lightweight" should be clarified so that someone (or a group) camping should be able to carry all their equipment at once using the mode of transport that confers the access right - if you are making multiple trips to a car you are not lightweight camping.

spooky: Trying to find somewhere to camp usually involves a bit of faff, I prefer to park somewhere that is streetlit and isn’t completely deserted, such as a residential area on a corner plot so you are not outside someones windows, or a supermarket carpark. The wife would rather be in a dark layby shielded from the road in the middle of nowhere which obviously increases the chance of someone trying to break in, but less chance of being moved on.

Does it make you more likely to get broken in to? Not many thieves wandering around in the dark in the middle of nowhere hoping to get lucky and find an insecure van worth robbing. Either way if I spent my time thinking I was going to get broken into I'd pick somewhere nicer to go on "holiday". Most of the places I go people don't even bother to lock their doors.

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 8:53 am
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https://www.searchforsites.co.uk/

We use good sites, MrsT is of a nervous disposition so not much chance of us wild camping.
However it would seem that the increase in campervans/motorhomes doing so is on the increase and causing many issues.
Waste disposal, waste water disposal, toilet waste disposal etc. Locally ‘van owners have been witnessed emptying their cassette wastecinto the rivercthey had parked beside!!!! Filling waste bins to overflow, blocking public toilets!!!!!!!!

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 11:00 pm
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Interesting Poly - I have certainly seen that in the advice somewhere. Looks like its been updated. I'll have a further look to see

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 11:51 pm
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Although camping beside a road is not normally considered wild camping, it does take place and is lawful. Following a few simple guidelines can reduce any impacts.•Whenever practicable use an official campsite with sanita-tion facilities. W

I assumed as this is the guidance that you are pointed to from the outdoor access code website that acting outwith this guidance would be assumed to be not acting responsibly

 
Posted : 04/06/2019 11:59 pm
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Being a fixed distance from a road is initially logical, but being 100m from the A82, is rather different from being 100m from the B8069 or B862. You could be the other side of a loch (or on an island) and still prohibited.

Good point well made. Its a tricky area but I do feel that roadside camping needs to be dealt with in some way that is not piece meal and is consistent across the country.

 
Posted : 05/06/2019 12:03 am
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Some councils offer overnight camping places, best look on each local council website.

For instance, Havant BC used to let campers overnight on Hayling Island Seafront at Beachlands..  until it became like a version of a Gypsy on-mass parkup and all the spots filled with overnight vans.

Until the locals had enough of the mess, the council had enough of the mess and agro caused by en-mass parking and lack of payment for overnight parking which was only £8pn

Word got around that no wardens would come knocking for the fee (untrue) and it exploded into a mass campsite gathering during the summer.

I got blocked in by an arrogant git whilst out for a late evening surf, the arsehole rammed the back of his camper up against my bumper and refused to move it. When asked he got all aggressive so I called the police, the tosser went purple and threatened all manner of violence to me and my body parts... until the police turned up.

We had many an aggressive git turn up and park side on taking 4 spaces up just so they could watch tv whilst looking out at the IoW...

Then late last year Havant BC banned campers, and FB went ballistic..our local surf page got hacked by the wild camper lot and all manner of threats of death and killing our children ensued.. someone got a green waste bin thrown through their home window by some aggressive camper type when they spotted the surfers car reg on a photo, found out where they lived (must have followed him home)

Have to say not all camper types were that arrogant,  some of them just simple old folk enjoying the latter years and being respectful and nice folks, but it was typically the ones that the world owed them a living types that spoiled it for everyone..

Now they’re banned from pretty much anywhere on the island other than the campsites.....

🤷‍♂️

 
Posted : 05/06/2019 5:56 am
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My campervan is no bigger in footprint than a mondeo estate. It can do 100+mph, 40mpg if driven efficiently. It has 6ft bed, 2 gas stoves, cupboards, water, grey water and porta potti. It has 100w solar, hook up (never use it) and all manner of charging ports. Got back from Austria Tuesday morning having driven 1000mls non stop (ferry excluded) back home. We did 1000mls non Stop to get there too.

I built it to ferry me and my daughter to climbing comps and it does exactly what I wanted. I counted up the other day that by the time the next couple of comps are over I will have done about 30 nights in it this year. I would say that 7 of those have been on paid sites, 5 of which we just did in Austria.

At first I was nervous about finding spots but tbh I now don’t care if someone says don’t park here. I just find somewhere else. I NEVER leave any sign of me being there and 9 times out of 10 I am gone by 8am. Recently found myself short of a place in the Peak District. Drove for a while and found shilito woods. Had a great night fending off the doggers but even that wasn’t so bad as my black out blinds blocked out the worst of the lights flashing.

Have had some great nights in the lakes, wales, Scotland etc. Have parked on country lanes, lay-bys and in woods. I don’t have fires, I don’t leave rubbish and I take my grey water and other waste with me. I can’t see that I am doing anyone any harm

 
Posted : 05/06/2019 3:29 pm
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We almost always stay off grid in our camper and have found loads of top places to stay. Don’t mind using a campsite from time to time though. If you are persistent there are always places to find out of the way. Have loads saved in google maps but I’m not telling anyone where they are!

 
Posted : 05/06/2019 4:07 pm
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[i]Does it make you more likely to get broken in to? Not many thieves wandering around in the dark in the middle of nowhere hoping to get lucky and find an insecure van worth robbing[/i]

All vans are pretty insecure, especially campers with extra windows and no bulkhead! The layby I stayed in was pretty pleasant but theft is rife, and that's why all the truckers leave one of their back doors open to show when they are empty (or full of timber or something else unwieldy or low value). My van has windows but looks like a crew van so could easily be mistaken as being unoccupied and therefore an easy target.

 
Posted : 05/06/2019 5:11 pm
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If you’re determined to wild camp get to know an area first and work out what is ok and what’s not.

Personally I never stop over more than one night in a single spot. Always arrive late (after dark/ 11pm) and leave early (7 latest).

There are loads of great campsites, and plenty of reasons to have a van. There are just as many reasons not to. Personally I love the sound of rain on the pop up roof, the central heating, running water and fridge. I also dislike camping.

 
Posted : 05/06/2019 9:35 pm
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Have loads saved in google maps but I’m not telling anyone where they are!

Spot on. It's pretty easy to see potential from a map to be honest.

 
Posted : 06/06/2019 10:16 am

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