Your Camping Trips

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Campsite Recomendation: Philpin Farm Campsite, Ingleton Not tried yet but its a tent only none EHU site, £10pppn. Just close to the Ribblehead Viaduct. WIll try to get a couple nights in there in Sept.

Bliss!

It is a small 2 tiered sites with areas at the bottom and top of a small hill, the car park is adjacent to the top area as no cars are allowed on the camping field. Philpin Campsite is a basic campsite - there are no electric hookups, no vehicles on the camping field, no caravans or camper vans.

We have a Toilet and shower block which also includes washing up facilities

The old barn is available to sit eat and socialise in if required it also has free wifi and charging lockers

Barbeques allowed if raised off the ground strictly no fires

At weekends Philpin Snack bar is open in the barn. Available on request to purchase on the Campsite are;

• Cooked breakfasts and packed lunches
• Homemade cakes
• Socks, gloves, hats and rain ponchos.

We have strict no noise policy between 11pm and 7am
Limited mobile reception ask to use landline in emergencies
 

albion

Guru
Powerpacks are an essential ingredient of camping. Even more so when camping devoid of a car.
 

dicko

Guru
Location
Derbyshire
The New Forrest was always our favourite this is St Leonard’s near Ringwood in the eighties, not there anymore. We usually had the whole place to ourselves as not many knew about this site.

IMG_20250705_0004.jpeg
 

Jameshow

Guru
Have some fridge feedback :smile:

I bought this one: Hi Gear 28 Litre 12V 240V Cooler

I ran it over the weekend at various power levels. At full whack it will go down to about 2.5c with an ambient temperature of 21-23c. That would be no good for sleeping though as its noisy. Reducing the power to minimum it went to around 4.5c, about 50% power was 3.5c.

Campsite Recomendation: Philpin Farm Campsite, Ingleton Not tried yet but its a tent only none EHU site, £10pppn. Just close to the Ribblehead Viaduct. WIll try to get a couple nights in there in Sept.

If going for a weekend freeze 4 pints of milk and it will keep the cool box cool for the weekend saving loads of power. Don't open it unless you need esp during middle of the day
 

wiggydiggy

Legendary Member
If going for a weekend freeze 4 pints of milk and it will keep the cool box cool for the weekend saving loads of power. Don't open it unless you need esp during middle of the day

Power cost is not an issue - its a fixed rate for the EHU. But it will have a fair bit of frozen stuff in when we take it :okay:
 
OP
OP
fossyant

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
We run our leccy cool box off an Anker battery pack (big one) - it draws about 60w when the sun will pull in 85 w from the solar panel, so does us 3 days usually (turning off at night).

"Van Diesel" is now packed for our trip (min 11 nights, possible 16). All the seats are out, and the bed system is folded out and set up, so we can pack tent, paddle board and all sorts of crap under it. Means we can still sleep (without a major shift about) on the one nights in the van between the longer stays in the tent.

I took out the two single middle seats, and one of the single rears. I could see we needed more space for the bulky tent, so got MrsF to help lift the rear double out - my word it's heavy. But that's the advantage of a van/car - it all comes out. MrsF was insistent the van is set up to sleep in, even if we are using the tent for the longer stays (i.e. no setup for the short stays).
 

Dan Lotus

Über Member
The New Forrest was always our favourite this is St Leonard’s near Ringwood in the eighties, not there anymore. We usually had the whole place to ourselves as not many knew about this site.

View attachment 784190

Is that a Gilbern over to the right at the back?

On the subject of camping, I'm not a huge fan, mostly as my back isn't all that, and I'm not designed to handle the cold.
My best camping experience was a campsite in France my partner booked for two years ago.

It was a fairly big site, and had some 'evening entertainment' if you were so inclined, which we were generally not, however our pitch was fairly out of the way, also had electric, but by far the biggest boon was that each pair of pitches, shared a small building - this building had two sides, one for each pitch, and within it you had:
  • Washbasin & shower - both with hot and cold water
  • Radiator that heated up
  • Toilet
  • Kitchen sink and draining board
  • Fridge!

This was superb for a huge number of reasons.

Firstly, a hot shower was available whenever you wanted it, right there on the pitch
Washing up was just a few steps ago, plus you had somewhere to let stuff dry
The fridge meant we could by food that needed to be kept cold, and be able to buy a few days worth
And having the toilet right there meant needing a visit in the middle of the night wasn't such a major undertaking, plus no risk it would be occupied OR disgusting!
There were keys for all of the areas, but we never bothered locking anything.

The other lucky bonus for us, was that the weather was hot, but the tent was also under shade, so the tent generally kept a fairly even temperature. It's the first time I have been camping and actually slept with the sleeping bag open, and just normal sleepwear on, as opposed to this country when I have to get into 17 layers of clothing, including thermal layers, thick socks, fleece tops, hats, liner sleeping bag inside of another monster thick one.
 

dicko

Guru
Location
Derbyshire
Is that a Gilbern over to the right at the back?

On the subject of camping, I'm not a huge fan, mostly as my back isn't all that, and I'm not designed to handle the cold.
My best camping experience was a campsite in France my partner booked for two years ago.

It was a fairly big site, and had some 'evening entertainment' if you were so inclined, which we were generally not, however our pitch was fairly out of the way, also had electric, but by far the biggest boon was that each pair of pitches, shared a small building - this building had two sides, one for each pitch, and within it you had:
  • Washbasin & shower - both with hot and cold water
  • Radiator that heated up
  • Toilet
  • Kitchen sink and draining board
  • Fridge!

This was superb for a huge number of reasons.

Firstly, a hot shower was available whenever you wanted it, right there on the pitch
Washing up was just a few steps ago, plus you had somewhere to let stuff dry
The fridge meant we could by food that needed to be kept cold, and be able to buy a few days worth
And having the toilet right there meant needing a visit in the middle of the night wasn't such a major undertaking, plus no risk it would be occupied OR disgusting!
There were keys for all of the areas, but we never bothered locking anything.

The other lucky bonus for us, was that the weather was hot, but the tent was also under shade, so the tent generally kept a fairly even temperature. It's the first time I have been camping and actually slept with the sleeping bag open, and just normal sleepwear on, as opposed to this country when I have to get into 17 layers of clothing, including thermal layers, thick socks, fleece tops, hats, liner sleeping bag inside of another monster thick one.

I think it’s a Peugeot 504 pick up belonging to the site owner. Yes, camp sites in France are great but you ain’t seen nothing until you camp in New Zealand. They have everything plus what France has and they have complete kitchens with all the cookers, microwaves, fridges and freezers you could wish for. The washing of dishes place is where you meet and make lifetime friends.
 

dicko

Guru
Location
Derbyshire
We were camping (in a motor home) on the beach on the Coromandel peninsula north island of New Zealand November 14 th 2016. We had dinner on the beach BBQ then turned in. At 2 am we were awakened by the NZ police and told to move to high ground straight away as there had been an earthquake on the South Island and there was a Tsunami on its way (but there wasn’t, we didn’t know).
 

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wiggydiggy

Legendary Member
I think it’s a Peugeot 504 pick up belonging to the site owner. Yes, camp sites in France are great but you ain’t seen nothing until you camp in New Zealand. They have everything plus what France has and they have complete kitchens with all the cookers, microwaves, fridges and freezers you could wish for. The washing of dishes place is where you meet and make lifetime friends.

Camped for a few days on the South Island, different sites. Worst thing we had to deal with was sand flies and a massive tourist group that took over half the communal kitchen :angry:

Rest of it was lovely, fire on the beach at one site, 5 mins walk from town (but otherwise silent) on another. One site we ended up not camping and were given the caretakers hut (had water but no toilet) for the night for the same price.

I'd go again but flight prices are too high now, and I don't know if I could stand 24hrs travelling again.
 

dicko

Guru
Location
Derbyshire
Camped for a few days on the South Island, different sites. Worst thing we had to deal with was sand flies and a massive tourist group that took over half the communal kitchen :angry:

Rest of it was lovely, fire on the beach at one site, 5 mins walk from town (but otherwise silent) on another. One site we ended up not camping and were given the caretakers hut (had water but no toilet) for the night for the same price.

I'd go again but flight prices are too high now, and I don't know if I could stand 24hrs travelling again.

We’re off to Australia early next year not so far and this time premium economy Dubai to Perth so not quite so bad.
 

tom73

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
If going for a weekend freeze 4 pints of milk and it will keep the cool box cool for the weekend saving loads of power. Don't open it unless you need esp during middle of the day

Always a good idea to freeze what ever you can before it all helps. You can't beat having a good quality cool box when off grid. They are not cheep but well worth it. We have a Yeti and can go a good 5-6 days before having to worry about cooling it down again.
 
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