its swings and roundabouts, we recently stayed on a nice site (Seven Acres near Frome) they only charges for the pitch £10.00 per night, no suplements for awnings gazebo's dogs etc, We took a six berth tent for the two of us and two dogs, our friends took a five berth tent for two adults two children and one dog, and our mate took a back packers tent for him, we set up a mahosive communal covered kitchen area and we all paid £10.00 per night per pitch, our mate was put out by this but we were happy...
find a site that does not charge stupid supliments?
If the owners of the site reworded their website this wouldnt even be brought up.They have to charge what they need to to make the business work.If they need a minimum amount per pitch for the business to work then so be it.It appears £8 is the lowest they can go to make a profit.
Just enjoyed a stay at Heathy Roody Farm CS. £4 per night per person no extras for cars/pitche size or that stuff some site use to maximise there profits.
Les D
Most of the municipals I stayed on in France charged per pitch + per person + car + EHU + dog. I don't have a dog & wasn't using EHU so most of them ended up costing me around 5-6€ per night. A very fair system IMHO, & I didn't really mind paying to keep the car with me, I could understand that.
The only one I would name & shame is the municipal at Cambrai, where I paid 29€ for 2 nights!!!! If I'd been in a camper van it would've been 10€ per night! Regardless of the number of people. Where's the justice in that? I do begrudge paying the same as a caravan with awning when I'm just a small tent & single person, although I've rarely come across this situation, I tend to stay away from family type sites, so I'm unlikely to incur these costs. I've actually yet to sample the British sites & their prices, but £8 for a single camper seems reasonable to me, I thought they'd all be well over a tenner in this country.
Quote: Originally posted by Francophile1947 on 16/9/2010
Quote: I thought they'd all be well over a tenner in this country.
They mostly are
If that's the case I can now justify the extra expense of the ferry crossing & expensive fuel costs over there.
"I had to go camping in France, the sites are cheaper!"
I have been away 3 times this year and am a solo camper. The most I paid as a single camper was £8 per night. This was Aug Bank hol weekend.
Last weekend I paid £5 per night and back in July £5 per night.
All 3 sites had free showers, washing up facilities.
These were all farm sites.
I tend to avoid sites that charge for facilities such as club houses.
If you pick your sites, solo camping can be cheap.
Quote: Originally posted by gulliver7952 on 16/9/2010
I have been away 3 times this year and am a solo camper. The most I paid as a single camper was £8 per night. This was Aug Bank hol weekend. Last weekend I paid £5 per night and back in July £5 per night. All 3 sites had free showers, washing up facilities. These were all farm sites. Last weekend I stayed at a CL which was next door to quite a large caravan site, both part of the same farm. The pitch fee on the caravan site, with ehu and all the facilities, was £12 per night - pitch fee on the CL with ehu only was the same £12 per night, though you are allowed to use the showers/loos on the big site, so in this instance being on a CL was no cheaper. And even though I was on my own with just a small campervan I still paid the same price as a family of two adults and three kids with a 24ft caravan.
I tend to avoid sites that charge for facilities such as club houses. So do I, but with the exception of a site on Anglesey - £7 per night, no ehu - I haven't been anywhere yet this year that has charged me less for being a solo camper
------------- Tigermouse
I have a very temperamental personality - 50% temper and 50% mental
I, too, am a single camper and I would not stay at a site where there was a single person supplement; after all, one of the reasons I went back to camping is that hotels and B&Bs charge them as so few have single rooms nowadays - ok, can see they can make more money from doubles and twins, so not whingeing - they have to survive.
Like most singletons, I have accepted that I have to pay the same as two people in one tent although I have had a £ or 2 knocked off for being on my own which was offered not requested. That is fair - the site gets the bulk of the pitch fee and the singleton gets a bit of a bargain, so feels good.
Think this is going to come up more and more as more singletons go camping.
The most I've been charged this year was £14 a night and although I thought it was expensive, I thought reasoning behind it was fair. There was a £12 charge for a family sized tent (4m bell) and £2 per person. So the price was combination of space used ( no marked pitches) and people using fascilities. Normally I use smaller tents and as such would have been charged less . Fair enough.
------------- Zymocenosilicaphobia-excessive fear of an empty beer glass
' When I die, I will return to seek the moments I did not live by the sea'