Showing posts with label camping under table storage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camping under table storage. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

How do I buy gear that uses less space for car camping?




MthrNature


In the past I've done a lot of car camping. However, even in a full size 4 door sedan, I am using up all kinds of space with clothing, gear, ice chests, etc...so much so that with 2 people, the trunk and back seats are fully occupied.

I'm in a position right now to order a new set of camping gear. How should I go about it so that the gear all fits into the large trunk of my full size car? I envision being able to provide for 4 people in my trunk with food and gear, and still have the seats to transport them.

I'm not a poet or an English major, so if I need to add details, please let me know.

Thanks!



Answer
The first thing is to try to reduce the amount of gear and clothing you bring with you. While you need fresh socks and underwear every day, pants and shirts can usually go two days between changes. Exchange bulky clothing such as denim and flannel for more compact chinos or synthetics. Trim out unnecessary items from your toiletries kit. If you have a properly-rated sleeping bag you won't need to bring blankets. Leave your pillows at home and stuff your pillowcase with your extra clothing. Minimize your cooking gear down to the bare essentials.

After you eliminate or swap all you can to save weight, then you can look at replacing items with gear that's more compact.

The first easy swap is to get rid of those cotton bath and dish towels and switch to synthetic pack towels.

Things like lanterns and bug lamps can take up a lot of room. If you have huge gas or oil lanterns, consider replacing them with more compact (and longer running) LED lanterns. Instead of bug lamps or citronella candles bring mosquito coils. Replacing folding tables and chairs with roll-up tables and bag chairs will save space.

Also look at the size of your coolers and how you pack them into the trunk. Sometimes going with a different cooler design will allow you to pack your car more efficiently without sacrificing cooler capacity. And if you're bringing more than two coolers, (one for beverages, which gets used most often, and one for food), you've got too many.

Do you bring both a stove and a grill? Maybe you can consolidate by using a Coleman Grill/Stove unit (just don't use the grill side for pots and pans, it _CAN_ melt; don't ask how I know). You can also get a griddle accessory for this unit, which might replace your frying pan entirely.

Next look at your sleeping bag. Although they can be a bit expensive, you can find sleeping bags that compress down to 1/4 the size of a cheap unit. 9" x 15" pack size is easily obtainable without spending over $100 per bag. Then look at what's going under your sleeping bag. Is it a huge cot or mattress? You might be able to save a bunch of space by switching to a more compact-folding cot or self-inflating mattress.

Then look at your shelter(s). How much room could you save if you went with a smaller tent design? Is it worth the trade-off in space? Maybe you could find a tent with similar floor space that packs into a smaller footprint. Do you also bring along an easy-up, screen room or gazebo to shelter your kitchen/dining/sitting area?

Finally, if the above doesn't solve your packing problems, or the cost exceeds your budget, you can always add additional storage space by using a removable roof-top basket and/or waterproof cargo bag to handle additional gear. Just be careful to adequately secure everything before heading out on your trip.
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What are the major accessories I will need for camping besides a tent and Air Mattress?




xylem


I am a first time camper, yea I know it is sad but I have just purchased my coleman tent and air mattress and I was just wondering what other esential camping accessories I will need? Also, any camping tips would be most helpful! Thanks


Answer
My hubby and I just started tent camping with friends two years ago, and it took us a while to figure out everything we needed (btw, good start getting an air mattress!). Oh, and don't forget to waterproof your tent BEFORE the trip with waterproofing spray sold at sporting goods stores!

Here's my abbreviated packing list. You have some items already (obviously), but I've highlighted items you might still need to purchase:

SHELTER:

-Tent
-Tarp to Go Under Tent (should be the same size as tent base, not much bigger or you'll have to fold it under. This keeps the tent bottom dry, and you don't want rain collecting on the tarp and rolling under!)
-Air mattress
-Air mattress pump
-Sleeping Bags / Pillows
-Extra Blankets (1 per person in case of chilly weather)
-Beach Towel (for when you track mud all over your tent)
-Lantern (battery-operated) to hang in tent
-Foldable Chairs / Lawn Chairs (to sit around fire)
-Rope or Line to hang items to dry on - like wet towels


FOOD:

-Hand Axe (to chop fire wood)
-Long-reach lighters
-Fire-starting kindling twigs (buy them from camping supply stores - they're wood chips soaked in some fire-starting chemical)
-Pie Irons (to cook food in over the fire - these are ESSENTIAL!)
-Campfire Fork (to roast weiners, marshmallows on)
-Food (should include basics like eggs, bread, peanut butter, deli meats, cheese, butter, hot dogs, s'mores makings, pop, juice, tea, coffee, ketchup, mustard, brownie mix, pizza sauce, pepperoni, potatoes, oatmeal, beef stew, trail snacks, chips, popcorn, etc.)
-Campfire Cooking Pot
-LARGE Cooler with ice
-Egg Holder Storage Case (designed for camping trips)
-Plastic Utensils, Cups, Paper Plates
-Garbage Bags
-Giant Ziploc Bags (to place singed pie irons in when packing to come home)
-Sharp Knife
-Rubbermaid Tote to wash dishes in
-Dish Soap
-5-6 Dish Towels
-Campfire Glove (heatproof gloves that allow you to pick up hot logs off the fire, or hot pans)
-Mugs (for coffee & tea)
-Kettle to boil water (should be campfire safe)
-Bottled water - large quantities
-Picnic Table Cloth (campsite picnic tables are dirrrrrty!)
-Can Opener
-Travel Cutting Board
-Aluminum Foil & Ziploc Bags
-Non-Stick Cooking Spray

CLOTHING / HYGIENE / SAFETY:

-Standard clothes
-Extra socks, 1 pair extra walking shoes
-Rain coat, poncho, or garbage bags
-Bug Spray
-Sunscreen
-Usual Hygiene Products (forget shampoo if it's a short trip - you're allowed to be dirty when tent camping!)
-First Aid items (bandaids, benadryl, calamine lotion, antiseptic cream, aspirin, immodium AD, etc.)
-Hand Soap
-Towels (in case you get soaked in rain)
-Hand Sanitizer

FUN / OTHER:

-Deck of Cards / Travel Boardgame
-Camera / Extra Batteries
-Flashlights / Extra Batteries
-Fishing Pole / Tackle Box
-Lots of Cash to buy firewood near campsite - it's expensive!
-Wallet, ID, Cell Phone

Phew! It seems like a lot, but skip here and there and you'll be wishing you had these items when you're at the campsite. It's worth filling up the car with Rubbermaid Bins filled with this stuff. Oh - don't forget Rubbermaid Bins to put all this stuff in! You'll need to keep your possession and food waterproof if it rains!

Have fun!




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Saturday, January 11, 2014

How can I clean my room and make my room ready for High School?

camping under table storage on Here are some more photos from the last trip - a place called sandon ...
camping under table storage image



Sweetie_pi


I am 13 years old, 14 in August.
I recently painted my room, purple and green, 4 months ago. I have already bought new bedding, but I cannot get it until my birthday, and until my room is clean. When I painted my room, I got a new desk which is now a mess. I really want some ideas on how to make my desk more usable for high school, by the way I plan on doing my homework in there. I am saving for a laptop, so that will go on my desk but I don't know what else I need to study, etc. Are there any inexpensive things I need to help me study at home?
The other part of the question is cleaning my room where do I start? What do I need to organize clutter what about my closet? It's a mess!!
Here some pictures of my room and please no rude comments about things that I have or what not.
Under my bed {Lots of room for storage!}
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara006.jpg
My Desk {a mess..}
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara006.jpg
Full Room View:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara004.jpg

&
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara005.jpg
Chest:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara003-2.jpg
Closet:http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara007.jpg

Sorry the links got messed up.
Under my bed:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara006.jpg

Full Room:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara005.jpg

Different full room:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara004.jpg

Chest of Drawers:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara003-2.jpg

My Desk:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara002-2.jpg

Closet:
http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j210/hermionechic200567/Lara007.jpg



Answer
There are a few tips that may help you out for study in highschool. When you start highschool, you will probably have a little more homework just because of the class type, and a larger stress on "free thinking" and research projects. Although you may be wanting to use your desk for study and homework, statistically if you do your homework outside of your living space, say at the kitchen table, or on the patio (nice days), or really any place that's relativly quiet, with less distraction. (I used to do homework at my dad's work bench in the garage.) As far as organization, it looks like you have a lot of nail polish and that sort of thing. Think about where you actually use those. If you use that sort of thing in your room, you might want to think about having it in storage, even if it's still easy access storage. Where you've lofted your bed, you can use things like rubbermade drawers under your bed. Drawers or shelves are good because you can sort things by type. A drawer or shelf for nail polish and that sort of thing, a drawer for school supplies (if you're dead set on using the desk for homework), a drawer for computer stuff if you're going to have one in your room, a drawer for magazines, etc. It looks like you have some of those drawers in the closet, and it would free up some space for hanging cloths if you move those under your bed. One thing I always find myself doing when I clean house, is find out that there's a lot of things I either don't need anymore, or, in the case of my closets, things I never use anymore that is just taking up space. You do have an oddly shaped accent rug, wich is fine and all, but if you're thinking about a rolling office style chair for working at your desk, you may run into problems with it rolling over the edge of the rug, either stopping the chair, or tearing up the edge of the rug. When re-organizing, just keep in mind to have the new layout make sense to you because if it's not "user friendly", you won't use it. One more tip for paperwork that you'll find increases exponentially in highschool, and college, is get in the habit of fileing things. A hanging file box can save you a lot of time when you're looking for that copy of a reference letter for a job application, or your reference list for college scholarship and summer camp applications. Good luck with you're cleaning/re-organization.

Car not low to the ground and under 6k?




Jessica


My parents are buying me a car and I really wanted a jeep or truck but because I have to pay for gas, I can't. So I need a car that's not low to the ground and good on gas millage but under 6000.


Answer
97-01 Honda crv. Great mileage, AWD, great space, cheap to maintain. Good for camping and whatnot. Auto or manual. Lots of little cool options. The rear storage tray comes out and becomes a table for when you camp/tailgate!




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Monday, January 6, 2014

What are the major accessories I will need for camping besides a tent and Air Mattress?

camping under table storage on The Glam Camping Company , Luxury Camping, Camping Accessories, Tents ...
camping under table storage image



xylem


I am a first time camper, yea I know it is sad but I have just purchased my coleman tent and air mattress and I was just wondering what other esential camping accessories I will need? Also, any camping tips would be most helpful! Thanks


Answer
My hubby and I just started tent camping with friends two years ago, and it took us a while to figure out everything we needed (btw, good start getting an air mattress!). Oh, and don't forget to waterproof your tent BEFORE the trip with waterproofing spray sold at sporting goods stores!

Here's my abbreviated packing list. You have some items already (obviously), but I've highlighted items you might still need to purchase:

SHELTER:

-Tent
-Tarp to Go Under Tent (should be the same size as tent base, not much bigger or you'll have to fold it under. This keeps the tent bottom dry, and you don't want rain collecting on the tarp and rolling under!)
-Air mattress
-Air mattress pump
-Sleeping Bags / Pillows
-Extra Blankets (1 per person in case of chilly weather)
-Beach Towel (for when you track mud all over your tent)
-Lantern (battery-operated) to hang in tent
-Foldable Chairs / Lawn Chairs (to sit around fire)
-Rope or Line to hang items to dry on - like wet towels


FOOD:

-Hand Axe (to chop fire wood)
-Long-reach lighters
-Fire-starting kindling twigs (buy them from camping supply stores - they're wood chips soaked in some fire-starting chemical)
-Pie Irons (to cook food in over the fire - these are ESSENTIAL!)
-Campfire Fork (to roast weiners, marshmallows on)
-Food (should include basics like eggs, bread, peanut butter, deli meats, cheese, butter, hot dogs, s'mores makings, pop, juice, tea, coffee, ketchup, mustard, brownie mix, pizza sauce, pepperoni, potatoes, oatmeal, beef stew, trail snacks, chips, popcorn, etc.)
-Campfire Cooking Pot
-LARGE Cooler with ice
-Egg Holder Storage Case (designed for camping trips)
-Plastic Utensils, Cups, Paper Plates
-Garbage Bags
-Giant Ziploc Bags (to place singed pie irons in when packing to come home)
-Sharp Knife
-Rubbermaid Tote to wash dishes in
-Dish Soap
-5-6 Dish Towels
-Campfire Glove (heatproof gloves that allow you to pick up hot logs off the fire, or hot pans)
-Mugs (for coffee & tea)
-Kettle to boil water (should be campfire safe)
-Bottled water - large quantities
-Picnic Table Cloth (campsite picnic tables are dirrrrrty!)
-Can Opener
-Travel Cutting Board
-Aluminum Foil & Ziploc Bags
-Non-Stick Cooking Spray

CLOTHING / HYGIENE / SAFETY:

-Standard clothes
-Extra socks, 1 pair extra walking shoes
-Rain coat, poncho, or garbage bags
-Bug Spray
-Sunscreen
-Usual Hygiene Products (forget shampoo if it's a short trip - you're allowed to be dirty when tent camping!)
-First Aid items (bandaids, benadryl, calamine lotion, antiseptic cream, aspirin, immodium AD, etc.)
-Hand Soap
-Towels (in case you get soaked in rain)
-Hand Sanitizer

FUN / OTHER:

-Deck of Cards / Travel Boardgame
-Camera / Extra Batteries
-Flashlights / Extra Batteries
-Fishing Pole / Tackle Box
-Lots of Cash to buy firewood near campsite - it's expensive!
-Wallet, ID, Cell Phone

Phew! It seems like a lot, but skip here and there and you'll be wishing you had these items when you're at the campsite. It's worth filling up the car with Rubbermaid Bins filled with this stuff. Oh - don't forget Rubbermaid Bins to put all this stuff in! You'll need to keep your possession and food waterproof if it rains!

Have fun!

What is the deepest viewing personal telescope? Would it be the largest Dobsonian telescope I can afford?







I'll spend max $1000, but ideally 5 or 6 hundred.


Answer
If you want to get a feel for how much you can spend on an amateur telescope (non custom) -
http://www.obsessiontelescopes.com/telescopes/25/index.php

For your price range, a $1,000 is a good starting place. For just the telescope -
For a decent push-to system -
http://www.telescope.com/Telescopes/Dobsonian-Telescopes/IntelliScope-Dobsonians/Orion-SkyQuest-XT12i-Computerized-IntelliScope-Telescope/pc/1/c/12/sc/27/p/27189.uts

Or a fully computerized system -
http://www.telescope.com/Telescopes/Dobsonian-Telescopes/GoTo-Dobsonians/Orion-SkyQuest-XT10g-Computerized-GoTo-Dobsonian-Telescope/pc/1/c/12/sc/30/p/8949.uts

For a fully manual scope -
http://www.telescope.com/Telescopes/Dobsonian-Telescopes/Classic-Dobsonians/Orion-XT10-Classic-Dobsonian-Telescope-amp-Beginner-Barlow-Kit/pc/1/c/12/sc/13/p/27162.uts

However, For under $30, get this book first -
http://www.telescope.com/Accessories/Books/NightWatch-Astronomy-Book-4th-Edition/pc/-1/c/3/sc/42/p/51521.uts

Not only is it a good starter book, but also has a nice chapter on how to select the best telescope for your needs.

The other alternative, is to find an astronomy club near where you live and see when they have a public star party event. Then not only can you ask folks who use the equipment what works best, but also look through and maybe play with the scope.
http://www.go-astronomy.com/astro-club-search.htm

Bottom line, aperture (the diameter) rules all. The wider the scope, the more light it collects and the more you can see. Second is portability and third price. Portability is how and were are you going to be using the scope - in your back yard, transport it by car to a dark sky site or some combination. If you are going to haul it somewhere, will it fit in your car along with your camping equipment (if longer than a night), along with telescope equipment (eyepieces, charts, tables and so forth) The same for storage - where are you going to put the critter when your not using it?

Then price. The telescope is one thing, then you have accessories. Eyepieces, filters, charts, books, software, (and something to run software on), table, chair, warm clothes, red flashlights, batteries, water snacks and all that other stuff that makes up the infrastructure of the hobby. All of that does take money. Luckily, you don't need to get it all at one time, but its all needed stuff.

For me, it took about 3 - 5 years to pick up enough stuff to where I felt my kit was complete. I can go out to a regional week long star party for about a week and do just fine.

Your scope is an investment and chances are that whatever you get, you'll want to upgrade after a couple of years. You can keep the accessories and just change out the scope as needed.




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Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Car not low to the ground and under 6k?

camping under table storage on camping checklist camping checklist camp kitchen organized in tubs ...
camping under table storage image



Jessica


My parents are buying me a car and I really wanted a jeep or truck but because I have to pay for gas, I can't. So I need a car that's not low to the ground and good on gas millage but under 6000.


Answer
97-01 Honda crv. Great mileage, AWD, great space, cheap to maintain. Good for camping and whatnot. Auto or manual. Lots of little cool options. The rear storage tray comes out and becomes a table for when you camp/tailgate!

what are the pros/cons of a pop-up tent camper?




Woodland H


We're considering getting one (probably a 10' for our family of 4) and just want to know what all people experience and what they regret before we buy one. Thx!


Answer
Go for it.

I've owned an 8' and 10' pop-up and a 21' hybrid camper and a Class-C RV. Unless you can afford a Class-C (both the initial purchase and ongoing storage, insurance and maintenance), a pop-up is the way to go. Comfort, storage and convenience are the main benefits of a pop-up.

In terms of comfort, you are sleeping up and off the ground on a well-padded, insulated and flat surface that you can easily get into and out of without crawling around on your hands and knees. Most pop-ups have heat and many have air conditioning. During bad weather you have a well-protected and comfortable place to hang out.

While cabinet space in a pop-up, compared to larger RV's, is limited, it is still sufficient to permanently organize and store all the reusable gear and supplies you need for a camping trip. All your kitchen and dining stuff, cleaning stuff, bedding, etc can be permanently stowed in the cabinets or under the dinette benches. Larger items such as a tabletop BBQ grill, cooler, folding table and chairs can be organized on the floor to fit when the pop-up is closed, and still leave room to add groceries and clothing just before heading out on a trip.

As for convenience, first and foremost is most pop-ups can be towed by lightweight trucks, SUV/CUV and some mid-sized cars. They are small enough that most people store them in their backyard, driveway or garage, saving lot storage fees. With adequate storage to be fully packed and ready to go (except for groceries and clothing), taking that spur of the moment trip is a breeze.

The Cons:

As compared to tent camping, the only con is you're not going to to be backwoods camping or taking it backpacking. There is some annual maintenance required, most of which can be DIY, though I prefer to have pros deal with anything involving propane.

As compared to other RV choices? The biggest disadvantage is the time setting-up the pop-up and unloading the stuff stowed on the floor before you can use the pop-up at all. This means that if you're going on a long distance trip with many short stays, setup and breakdown can be tedious. Clothing storage is a bit problematic in a pop-up, you will need to live out of your suitcases which get stowed on the bunks by day and tucked under the dinette table or on counters by night.

Some things to think about:

A front, outside storage trunk is a wonderful feature.

Unless you plan to do a lot of dispersed / dry camping, don't bother with a bathroom in a pop-up. Although it might seem nice, there's practically no privacy. That space is better used for storage and/or seating.

An outside shower is almost an essential feature. A water heater is also a nice-to-have feature, but it does eat up storage space. A portable, water heater such as Eccotemp, Camp Chef, even Zodi costs around $100 and takes up less space.

Slide-outs on a pop-up are also a mixed bag. A slide-out adds significant weight and, when closed, steals valuable floor space. Most of the time you'll only be in the pop-up when sleeping or to escape bad weather. Having a few extra square feet of floor space when the slide is out does not make up for the lost storage when its closed.

One awning is essential, but two awnings are better. Add a second awning to the back side of your pop-up where you can setup your dining or picnic table. This leaves the normal front-side awning for lounging and relaxation.

Consider an add-a-room or screen room. The screen room is less expensive and will help protect you from insects. An add-a-room has opaque panels with screens in them, and roll-up flaps so you can close the screens for a private, sheltered area. We've used an add-a-room with the second back-side awning and cots to sleep an extra three people in comfort and privacy.

If you have two kids make sure your camper can sleep at least 6, as your kids will usually want to bring friends or relatives along. Once boys get to be about 10-12 years old they will not want to share a bed, but girls -- even teenage girls-- have no problems sharing with a female friend or cousin.

In many pop-ups the dinette bed is less than six feet long. Try to find a model with a dinette bed that measures 72" x 48" so you can fit two full-size people.

Buy used and save a ton. Most folks only use their pop-up a few times each year. Others buy one and use it a few times, then let it sit, while a few use it once and have a change of mind or situation. Even a 10 year-old pop-up is worth considering if it has been kept and stored well.




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Thursday, December 12, 2013

where can i find a stealthboy on fallout 3?

camping under table storage on OASIS 2-Person Folding Table and Chairs
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Loser





Answer
In an office in Farragut West Metro Station.

Tepid Sewers when you first enter to subway. Deal with 3 raiders (1 behind sandbags, other 2 in corridor); enter the corridor, go ahead to the main room. The Stealth Boy will be in the floor safe between 2 beds.

Museum of Technology on displays. One in the atrium, two more on the upper level.

Canterbury Tunnels toward AntAgonizer's Lair, on a shelf near a mined hallway.

In the Broken Bow in Pinkerton's workshop there are three of them.

In the VAPL-84 Power Station north of the Robco Facility.

In Tenpenny Tower You find one in your suites safe.

In the National Archives sub-basement in the generator room behind a very hard locked gate.
At least four of them scattered around the Robco Facility.

In Ahzrukhal's safe in The Ninth Circle in Underworld

In Greener Pastures Disposal, in the back end of a truck in the southwest near a dead scientist.

Inside the VAPL-58 Power Station on one of the control panels in back.

In the northeast corner of the Super-Duper Mart, behind the counter.

Inside the armory in Megaton.

In Vault 108's entrance hall on a table next to a broken computer.

In Gallo's storage closet under an overturned crate.

Two in the Bethesda Ruins West, one on the lower floor in a crate next to the water fountain, and another upstairs on the table.

In the Bethesda Underworks in a skeleton's hand in the central storage room.

In the Vault 92 Overseer's Office, sitting in the center of the desk.

During the Trouble on the Homefront quest, look on the body of Steve Armstrong, found in Vault 101's entrance.

La Maison Beauregard at Georgetown East, upstairs on the pool table.

Georgetown, northeast of the DCTA Tunnel 014-B Potomac, upstairs of a building housing Super Mutants.

In one of the Wasteland Gypsy Village buildings, just north of Jalbert Brothers Waste Disposal and east of Rockbreaker's Last Gas, on the table.

In Dupont Station, in the middle of the three abandoned houses guarded by raiders. The Stealth Boy is on the floor next to the shelf case.
In the Abandoned Shack on cliff west of Rockbreaker's Last Gas. It is in a hole in the first locker.

In the Talon Company camp south of Arlington Library, on the top of a round table on the highest level.

Almost directly south of Megaton, in a hollowed out boulder among the rocks bordering the town, along with a Sniper Rifle (See Hollowed-Out Rock).

Five are given when a total of 700 caps (or 350 with the Master Traderperk) are invested in Crazy Wolfgang's caravan at Canterbury Commons. You must speak to Crazy Wolfgang to receive the 5 Stealth Boys.

At the entrance to Rivet City, run to the right of Harkness, and when you land on the area under the platform that him and the entrance are on, turn around and run in the opposite direction (Away from the direction of the broken bow) and there's one in a little alcove.

Directly east of the MDPL-05 Power Station floating inside a boat by a dock with raiders.

In Paradise Falls inside a wardrobe in the main building.

In Minefield Outside the Gibson house

In the Outpost in Grayditch

In Franklin Metro Utility, accessed through Falls Church/Mason Dst Metro.

Kayak Camping in California?




swimmerboy


I want to know of a good place to kayak and camp on a beach with some friends. We don't have any equipment, so I would need to rent. Does anyone know of a place in California I could do this? It would have to be southern to around Santa Cruz. Also I don't want to pay hundreds of dollars for it either!


Answer
Writer has previously owned inflatable, sit-on-top, and conventional
cockpit kayaks over previous two decades. Mainly touring tidal water.
To answer objectives of Question my answer is under-stated to be brief.
Sit-on-top rental: for cost and lack of expertise reasons. These are hourly
or day rate. One marine tote, aft, provides dry weekend outfit (i.e, one dry
change of clothing, toilet tissue, zip-lock bags to return all your fecal and
liquid excretions for decent disposal). Sleeping bag fills bow deck storage
inside another dry storage bag. I suggest two mil-spec MRE and a gallon
of water daily for ingestion. These require non-waterproof sacking. Sit-on-
tops are slow. It took me two days to circle a nine mile long island. Tidal
flows reverse and change speed about every four hours; go study local tide
table for your cruise area. Deck cargo is sail area to overcome by paddling
harder. When capsized hold on to your paddle, flip boat up-right, and drag
upper body aboard bow-ward of seating. Snake a leg over next and center
your body mass to sit up. It helps to have a paddle-float extended like an
outrigger to stabilize hull. I paddle using lower half of farmer john ski-type
wetsuit, diver boots, nylon windbreaker (or not, if sunny), Type 3 USCG
approved vest with pockets, and any wide brim straw hat that floats. Feel
free to capsize and piss; you can't afford the comfort model wetsuit. Try
departing Monterey for Salinas River and an inland landing at disused
railroad trestle. That's a ten mile bee-line in bay and another mile upriver.
Start at dawn and get there before dark. Let flood tide carry you inland.
Its a unique camp, offers fishing, and some rope swing potential. Exit
river with start of Ebb Tide. Full ebb might prove a little too fast for you.




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