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Favourite Campsite

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I'm sitting at home planning another trip to paddle new waters and camp on new shores. Well, new to me at least. I've found an interesting map layer on CalTopo showing sunlight analysis. It permits the viewer to assess roughly how much shade or sun a particular spot on the topo map receives on any given month (1st or 15th of the month) and any hour (or average) of day (between 4am and 8:45pm). Now of course anyone can just carry a map and compass and guesstimate the sun's path from sunrise to sunset as we do. But it's interesting to see the sites tucked in shadows and those enjoying morning and/or evening glory.
This isn't life threatening stuff but it sure can be life changing. On a recent trip we put in to a campsite tucked up on a narrow shore up against the forest. The sunset across from us was spectacular but when the sun rose behind us we were shrouded in dew soaked shade until the sun could climb over the trees. Not an enjoyable mood for breakfast. A day later we relaxed on our very own island site where we got the full benefit of the sun from 7am to 7pm. And still there was shade for the intensely hot part of the day. Lots of smooth rock slopes into the water for swimming, reading, relaxing, laying under the stars. We hated to leave. We almost didn't. It may be our favourite campsite ever.
Do you have a favourite campsite?
 
Not a favorite site per se but I do like to be able to watch a sunset in the warmer months but have the sunrise in front of me when winter camping during the darker months. I also appreciate either a point or elevation with a breeze during the buggier portions of the year. My guess is most folks feel the same but they might have a specific site in mind where I can't think of anyplace special at the moment. Great question, though.

That's all for now. Take care and until next time...be well.

snapper
 
Jean Lake, Quetico, the first site as you enter from Conk I believe.

It's on a treed point with the tents tucked back in the bush.

Come to think of it - most of the Quetico sites were like that.

 
Level tent pad, easy approach from the water, shade trees, good cooking area, hammock trees in just the right spot, nice view, swimming spot with easy in and out, sandy beach, I'm getting carried away.
 
Two that immediately come to mind.

Years of camping on family land in the Sierra Nevada mountains near Yosemite NP. Good memories, great and some awful weather, scary memories, stunning scenery in each point of the compass, lots of great adventures and lifetimes of experiences and direction started from those dry and hot acres.

Sigurd Olsens favorite site on ??? Lake in one of his books (Listening Point?) where he and a favorite companion camped for so many years that their respective resting places made long lasting shallow impressions in the duff near the lake. Like his late and lamented companion, I am still adjusting to the loss of so many of the important figures that gave me the direction and interests in life that I still treasure today.

Their ghosts are my constant woods and water companions...
 
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The campsite in Temagami I mentioned earlier.
I guess I just blew our little secret place. Now we'll have to go find another. That's half the fun.
 

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Some favorite campsites include those with big trees, like the pine in your previous pic... when the late afternoon light starts slanting through those, it's magic hour.

Here's a different favorite close to home... Bark lake. Gravel beach, lots of room to move around, long view and big water, big sky (and no big trees to obscure the view).

30392671276_d57d46c190_b.jpg
 
I've visited so many great sites, it is tough to choose. One definite favorite is the Ogden Point site on Lobster Lake in Maine. A little exposed, but it has a great beach with a great view that just screams for a beach chair and a beer in hand. Downriver from there is Pine Stream campsite on the West Branch Penobscot, which has a great swimming ledge and a phenomenal 180 degree upstream and downstream view of the river.

-rs
 
I have a lot of faves and Ogden Point is on the list.
Pine Stream is not. ( so much of it had to be remodeled from overuse )
RedBrook in Chesuncook is another
 
Do you have a favourite campsite?

That is a really tough question. I have a lot of favorite campsites, or at least a specific favorite at every place I visit repeatedly. Hell, I have favorites at places I’ll probably never see again. Views, sunrise/set, privacy, breeze, ease of landing, etc. Sometimes that is situational to the type of place or terrain, like a prevailing breeze to knock the bugs down, or afternoon shade in the desert, or privacy when I just want to be alone.

One of my favorite off-season sites is a whopping two mile paddle away from the launch. Hammocks Beach State Park in North Carolina, site #12.

https://files.nc.gov/ncparks/maps-an...-paddlemap.pdf

The paddle in sites on Bear Island are a scant 2.5 miles from the mainland, across a fairly protected marshland route. Tide matters though. Wind too, it’s the NC coast. Get both of those wrong and it’s a long couple of miles.

There are 11 sites along the beachfront, or at most one dune behind. Those are some of the nicest paddle-in beachfront sites in the mid-Atlantic region. But, there is no natural shade, little wind protection and not much in the way of trees for hammocking there at Hammocks Beach.

Still awesome beachfront sites with the right prep and gear, and the “No campfires” rule means the windswept sand is clean and not festooned with charcoal bits. Beachfront site camping at Hammocks is novel.

http://s1324.photobucket.com/user/Jo...?sort=2&page=1

However, if the peculiar rigors of beachfront camping aren’t your thing there are 3 sites along the paddle-in route, all very different from the beachfront sites, and all different from each other. Those three are all a ½ mile paddle to the beachfront, convenient for a visit to the Atlantic (easier to paddle than walk over, and a good beach for shells), and all have easy proximity for day paddling the Maritime Forest and etc on Huggins Island.

http://swansborohistory.blogspot.com...ns-island.html

Those 3 sites:
Site #14 is a big open site surround by trees. It can seem damp and dreary on overcast days, but it is the shadiest place at Hammocks Beach and the best single site for multiple (3 - 4+) tents. Unfortunately, while most sites at hammocks are pristine #14 can be a bit trashy from inconsiderate groups and hard use.

Site #13 has two distinct levels. The bottom level is backed against a very tall (and very steep) dune to the west for afternoon shade; the upper level is atop that towering dune. East facing for morning sun, and the view from the top floor is amazing, looking out from high above the beachfront and far into the Atlantic ocean horizon.

Site #12 is my barrier island jewel. A shady grotto encircled by a grove of stunted live oak, backing a level sandy clearing with room for tent, tarp, chair and kitchen. Easy landing, either directly at the site at high tide, or 50 feet away at low.


I like watching tidal landscape changes, and the tidal difference at site #12 is spectacular. It is situated near a shallow sandbar in the narrows of the approach to the beachfront. Since that approach fills and drains an inner-island “lake” it can get fast flowing midway in the tidal twelfths.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_twelfths

Just watching the water rush in and out can occupy me for hours, and that narrow approach looks totally different at low tide than it did at high. I love it when I stay put and the landscape around me changes, or I can taking a progging explore, walking & wading ankle deep along the low tide channel on firm packed sandbars. Trippy different throughout the day, like moving camp without ever packing up.

BTW, the birding at Hammocks Beach can be magnificent, even outside the Atlantic flyway migration. From an old November trip report:

“Sitting motionless in the chair reading I noticed something moving fast in my peripheral vision and glanced up to catch a glimpse of a small accipiter, Sharp-shinned or Coopers, coming in on a glide path at 12 o’clock, aimed straight for my head. He (she?) pulled up at the last second and landed a few feet behind me in the live oak grotto.

I knew the instant I lifted my head it would take flight, and it did, but it is the closest I’ve been to a wild hawk since mist netting in the 70’s.

That would have been the bird highlight, even with the constant view of something aflight, osprey, marsh hawk, eagle, egret, heron, and sundry warblers. But at one point I heard a splashing and crashing of water and arose from my hammock recline to look down the low tide inlet.

A mixed flock of everydamn thing – gulls, cormorant, egrets, herons and etc – has gathered into a dense mass and is driving a school of small fish up the inlet into the shallows.

The cormorants were the herding pros and would line up 6 or 8 abreast across the shallow inlet in front of the rest of the flock, beating the water with their wings, driving the school of fleeing fish further and further into the shallows until it looked like the water before them was boiling”

This was one of the coolest ornithological things I have ever seen, especially the diversity of specie involved.

#12 at Hammocks Beach is an awesome site, in an odd and curious place with an odd and curious history; from pirates to Rebel fortifications to early governor’s abode to a NY surgeon’s privately own hunting island, willed by him to his local hunting Guide, willed by said Guide to the Black NC Teachers Association during Jim Crow, eventually taken over by the State as an early “Blacks only” segregated State Park to today’s off-season canoe-in gem.

That’s a lot of history on a couple specks of weathered, shifting sand.

Paddlein on a high but falling tide, back out on a rising one. If you need more of a challenge than a 2.5 mile marked trail with the current going your way just reverse the tides and pick a windy day.

Camper Caveat: Camp Lejune is adjacent. That isn’t thunder, it’s artillery. Those are in fact Osprey flying in formation, but they are the tilt rotor kind. And that distant vee in the sky may get loud when it becomes a flight of Marine helicopters thundering overhead.

That uncommon overhead display is an awesome treat to witness once you tune out the distant boom of artillery. And cannon fire has been going on at Bouges Inlet since the heyday of piracy.

Maybe I do have a favorite among favorites.
 
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My favorite campsite is the one we have set up for the end of the day and night. Later, my memories of the day take in the different scenes of the day and the campsite is one of the big highlights (even if it isn't top notch).
 
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