• @Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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    61 month ago

    Yes, we need to expand provincial park campgrounds to catch up with population growth. It’s a crime that in such a big, mostly forested province, people can’t easily get a couple hundred square feet of grass to pitch a tent for a weekend.

    • @JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca
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      41 month ago

      Oh don’t get me started. In BC they “expanded” the number of campgrounds by converting existing non-provincial-park campgrounds (forestry service campgrounds) to be under the provincial park system. They jacked up the prices (some were free before) and added no services. Total bullshit.

      • @anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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        130 days ago

        You guys keep stealing shitty ideas from the US. We’ve been privatizing state park reservations for years and making it cost as much as a cheap hotel in some places.

        And the bathrooms are worse than when you shoved $5 a night into a metal tube by the entrance.

    • @Xhead@lemmy.ca
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      127 days ago

      There are literally millions of acres of crown land available all over Ontario with thousands of old logging roads and gravel pits for parking and access

      I don’t know about the other provinces but use the Ontario policy atlas to find it and go experience real camping.

      • @Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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        120 days ago

        That’s a very interesting idea. I camped on crown land (hike in) as a teen, but havn’t since then. I do both inland camping by canoe, and trailer camping on serviced sites. I hadn’t thought of boondocking on crown land - that is just a combination I didn’t realize was possible in Ontario (I know it’s common out west where you have open land). I guess it makes sense. I think it would definitely take some careful scouting to find places safe and well-graded enough to pull a camper trailer into.

        I would do it, but I still think we need more serviced provincial parks because that’s what a lot of people are comfortable with, and with our land, why the hell not?