Welcome to Camping Guide
Camping Tents Family Expedition Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
Tent Camping in Florida for Yea-Around Fun
from:A subtropical climate with warm, humid summers and mild winters translates into year-around opportunities for tent camping in Florida. During the dry winter/fall seasons, there are days when you can camp in a summer tent. If you camp in a summer tent (also called a 1-season, 2-season or warm weather tent) during the spring or summer, pack a rainfly or canopy for protection against unexpected downpours. In fact, on days when sudden showers are likely, consider a well ventilated 3-season tent for better rain protection.
The mesh in both 1- and 3-season tents allows in ocean and gulf breezes while keeping the insects out. Mesh, tucked-in mosquito netting, and zippered-shut doors protect you from Florida’s six poisonous snakes: southern copperhead, cottonmouth, eastern diamondback rattlesnake, timber rattlesnake, dusky pygmy rattlesnake and coral snake. Those who often go tent camping in Florida pitch their tents away from tall grass, brush, rock piles, titi and saw palmetto thickets, and wet areas near rivers, swamps, and marshes to avoid traditional snake habitats. Don’t forget to shake out your shoes, boots and sleeping bags before use.
Most web sites and guidebooks organize destinations and “en route locations” for tent camping in Florida into five regions:
* Northwest (Tallahassee, Panama City, Pensacola)
* Northeast (Jacksonville, Starke, Gainesville)
* Central (St. Augustine, Lakeland, Ocala)
* Southwest (Naples, Sebring, Sarasota)
* Southeast (Miami, Key Largo, Key West)
You’ll find an interactive Florida map showing these regions and the state parks within them at the Florida Division of Recreation and Parks web site: http://www.dep.state.fl.us/parks/default.htm. The state’s 159 parks offer 723,000 acres of upland forests, wetlands, rivers, and lakes for swimming, boating, fishing, hiking and tent camping in Florida. If you’re drawn to sun, sand and sea, set up your tent at a campsite in the park system’s 100 miles of coastline along the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.
In addition to state parks and private sites, there are numerous opportunities for tent camping in Florida at national parks and seashores. For location and details, explore the National Park Service web site at
http://home.nps.gov/applications/parksearch/state.cfm?st=fl. Florida’s four national forests offer diverse campgrounds, many of which are primitive and require no reservations. Check the national forest web site for directions and information at http://www.fs.fed.us/r8/florida/.
While tent camping in Florida, you won’t see the state animal, the solitary Florida Panther. If you discover a Florida Black Bear or an American Alligator, give them space. You’ll probably hear the Northern Mockingbird, Florida’s state bird, singing its own song or imitating other birds. In central Florida, perhaps you’ll see the threatened Florida Scrub Jay; in pine forests keep an eye out for the endangered Red-cockaded woodpecker. In coastal parks, you can see gulls, pelicans and terns from the comfort of your tent, while egrets, herons and other wading birds won’t be far away. Wildlife, water, forest and climate are the chief delights of camping in the “Sunshine State” even on a cloudy day.
- 2 -
Camping Tents Family Expedition News
Everest: 'The open graveyard waiting above' - Macleans.ca
![]() Macleans.ca | Everest: 'The open graveyard waiting above' Macleans.ca by Alan Parker on Thursday, May 24, 2012 3:16pm - 0 Comments It is littered with abandoned tents and tin cans discarded half a century ago and empty oxygen tanks and 150-200 dead bodies. And every time a climber reaches the summit of Everest and ... Everest: surviving the death zone |
Children's books for Shavuot - Washington Jewish Week
Children's books for Shavuot Washington Jewish Week by Amy Meltzer I grew up with the firmly held notion that Jews don't camp. Growing up, I don't think I knew a single family who owned a tent or a camping stove. But, of course, we Jews have a long history of camping. After all, our ancestors spent 40 ... |
Sacrifice Amid the Ice: Facing Facts on the Scott Expedition - Smithsonian (blog)
![]() Smithsonian (blog) | Sacrifice Amid the Ice: Facing Facts on the Scott Expedition Smithsonian (blog) Just two days after the Terra Nova Expedition left New Zealand in November 1910, a violent storm killed two of the 19 ponies in Oates's care and nearly sank the ship. His journey ended almost two years later, when he stepped out of a tent and into the ... |
Books in Bloom Festival is readers' delight - The City Wire
Books in Bloom Festival is readers' delight The City Wire Tents set up on the lawn of the 1886 Crescent Hotel and Spa gave fans access to their favorite authors. Shin Yu Pai reads excerpts from her poetry to a captive audience in the Readers Tent at Books in Bloom. Cindy Lawrence and Caitlin Staton, ... |
Summer Fun Guide: Museums - STLtoday.com
Summer Fun Guide: Museums STLtoday.com “Camp Out: Finding Home in an Unstable World” (through Sept. 16) opens June 2, and check out the Discover Laumeier Festival, noon-5 pm June 10. Picnics are encouraged, and weekend concessions are available. Pets are welcome except during special events ... |
Camping equipment includes some recent innovations to keep you comfortable - The Province
Camping equipment includes some recent innovations to keep you comfortable The Province Some multi-day and expedition backpacks come with pivoting hip pads that allow the pack to sway naturally with the hiker's motion, which makes for a better balanced, more comfortable pack. It pays to invest in a tent built to backpacking standards. |
Enthusiasts hot on trail of Bigfoot in Florida - Columbus Dispatch
Enthusiasts hot on trail of Bigfoot in Florida Columbus Dispatch By Amanda Petrusich A sculpture at the Bigfoot Discovery Museum in Felton, Calif., surmises that he's a family man. A bigfoot's howl is multidimensional: a deep and undulating whoop that starts low and ends in a high, feral squeal or resolves ... |



