I
never pay to camp!" I've heard from
the mouth of more than one Durangoan. "I just camp where I
like."
I've always had the
impression that this was not because of the $8 to $15 that public
campgrounds charge per night. It's about being alone, away from the
hordes of people grilling and yelling and kids running through your
campsite while your partner is proposing or something.
I understand this
sentiment. I'm not proud to admit that when my husband, Bryan, and
I lived in Washington State, we had a tried-and-true routine for
scaring off the wholesome little family that had the audacity to
think of shattering our privacy and camping in the spot next to
ours. It went like this: Bryan would extract a bottle of Jim Beam
from the bed of our pick-up, slap it on the cab and holler, "Mama,
where's ma gun?" I'd holler back, "Shut yer trap 'bout that gun.
Let's go in the tent and git busy." Invariably, the family wagon
would pull out of the neighboring site and head on in search of
cleaner pastures.
That doesn't work here
in Colorado. But though we love doing the backcountry thing, we
also still love to car camp, and always at public campgrounds.
Sure, it's nice to visit Big Molas in early June when it's only at
30 percent occupancy, but the July crowds can be an endless source
of sociological research.
Take our trip to Lemon last month. As
we sat in our camping chairs enjoying our personal happy hour, we
watched two Gap-dressed kids in crash helmets ride their bikes one
with training wheels past our neighbors playing horseshoes. There
must've been a dozen people in the horseshoe clan, which wasn't
surprising given the numerous Christian symbols on their truck,
including a license plate with the "merge" symbol and the mandate,
"Merge Your Life With Christ."
Unfortunately, the close quarters led
to family feuds, which were audible despite the incessant barking
of several of their dogs. Apparently the littlest kid wanted
another look, so he looped back around and stalled for time by
talking to us. "We're having peanut butter later," he called
cheerfully. Without a word, Bryan headed back to the cooler for
another round.
We experienced another
cultural crossroads a few weeks ago at Great Sand Dunes, where the
campsites are stacked on top of each other. There was a battle of
the bands between two neighboring sites: three 30-something couples
blaring Zepplin in a site across from one with a mom and two
teen-aged girls singing along with what could only be Britney
Spears.
I ran into the girls in
the bathroom and overheard, "You're way shorter than
me."
"Nuh uh, you're like a
midget!" Then the mother exploded out of a stall and scolded them
vehemently in Spanish.
The next evening, the
girls brought back some teen-aged boys for a flirtatious campfire
that featured more Britney (and a chain-smoking mother). We decided
to visit the amphitheater for the evening presentation National
Monuments have it all! and giggled in the back while the austere
ranger pretended to have a conversation about science with two
rocks. She did all the voices, and at the conclusion invited
audience members to come meet her rock friends. She'd used a
Sharpie to draw eyes on the rocks.
This didn't hold our
interest for long, but we saw a cute dog and chatted with its
owner. Her husband was possibly going to be shipped back to Iraq
soon, but they weren't too concerned because his job had been
keeping sheep from crossing the border. "Why they need him to train
soldiers to do that is beyond me!" she said.
Small campgrounds have their own
entertainment value, like the one on the Blanco River that only has
six sites. As we pitched our tent there last weekend, a woman in
the site across from us which held an RV and a working clothesline
wandered over. "Are you joining us?" she asked. It turns out she
wasn't the camp host, just dug in. "That's our son's spot," she
said as she gestured to the site next to ours. "He'll be back real
soon."
"Is she threatening us or inviting us
to hang out?" I asked Bryan, who soon decided that we should ditch
making chili and dine in Pagosa instead.
Big campgrounds have
more diversity, including what we call "bad camp kids." They're the
older kids, usually on bikes, who corrupt the younger kids by
introducing them to matches and knives and swearing. A bad camp kid
sighting always makes me beg Bryan to promise that we'll never have
children.
Of course, there are
characters everywhere it's not a Colorado phenomenon. Near Seattle,
we met a threesome of heshers who had just come from an OzFest
concert at the Gorge Amphitheater. The booking agent had made the
comical mistake of scheduling the Dave Matthews Band to play there
the night before, and our new friends gleefully told us about
terrorizing the DMB fans camping at the venue.
"We drove around their
tents in our car screaming, Who the &%@# is Dave?'" they
laughed. "It was killer!"
Then there are the
innocents. While utilizing a pit toilet in a multi-stalled bathroom
in Sedona, I heard a British woman ask her daughter, "How do you
flush?" Her daughter replied, "You don't it's one-stop shopping,
Mum!"
These encounters provide
plenty of entertainment in the great outdoors, where everyone is
stripped of their television and must make their own fun (well,
except RV owners). And Bryan and I contribute to this in our own
way as well. Who knows what stories people tell about the time they
were camping next to a crazy couple that sat up late into the
night, gazing at shooting stars and cackling about the
marmot constellation they
just discovered.