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Topic: camping cheques - worth taking?
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Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
28/10/2008 at 10:07am
Location: West - North Yorkshire Outfit: Swift Speedbird 490 Mondeo Estate
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Basically Camping Cheques is an organisation, originally set up and run by a consortium of campsite owners, to encourage 'low-season' use of sites which are 'members' of the scheme. Each Cheque pays for one night for a pitch/two people/electricity/car, caravan, tent or motorhome/awning and a dog (dogs only at some sites). Each site specifies its own 'acceptance dates'. There are now 575 sites throughout Europe, including in Britain, which accept the cheques. Basically you then look through the site guide which comes with the cheques, or on the website, and can stay on any site, which accepts them on the dates you want. You can tour around, staying as little, or as long, as you want, on each site - or you can spend the whole holiday on one site. If the site accepts cheques and you are more than two people, then you pay a supplement on top of the cheque directly to the site to cover the cost for the extra people (including children - although some sites have a children go free policy and some sites will allow up to four people for one cheque).
Usually there is no need to book in advance, but if you're going to an area with few sites then buying a 'Gold Card' gives you priority booking arrangements at some sites, so that although you're getting a discount rate you can be sure you'll find a pitch at the site when you arrive.
You can buy them directly from Camping Cheque, either just the cheques, or as part of a 'package' where they can book a ferry crossing too, or from the Caravan Club (which I've found to be better value).
If you think of using them, then carefully check the site's own pricing structure, so that you can calculate whether it's worth your while when you've added on the supplements you might pay for extra children or adults. The type of site they choose may not suit you either - so it's not for everyone, but we use them twice a year now, getting in a Spring Bank Holiday fortnight and then again in late August/September.
Normally you'd buy Camping Cheques a few weeks before you're heading off to allow for posting times. If you leave it until just a few days before you can have them posted by express delivery. They are valid for two years - so any you buy next year can be used until the end of 2010. We're just using up the last of our 2007/2008 cheques with a week in the Lake District in the middle of November.
As said, at the moment with the financial turmoil who knows what might happen, so it would be prudent to pay for any you buy with a credit card so you're protected in the event of financial meltdown!
Frogman - which is the site you mentioned in your posting? Just in case we were heading there next year!
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Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
28/10/2008 at 11:04am
Location: South East Outfit: dandy dart
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Quote: Originally posted by Val A on 28/10/2008
Basically Camping Cheques is an organisation, originally set up and run by a consortium of campsite owners, to encourage 'low-season' use of sites which are 'members' of the scheme. Each Cheque pays for one night for a pitch/two people/electricity/car, caravan, tent or motorhome/awning and a dog (dogs only at some sites). Each site specifies its own 'acceptance dates'. There are now 575 sites throughout Europe, including in Britain, which accept the cheques. Basically you then look through the site guide which comes with the cheques, or on the website, and can stay on any site, which accepts them on the dates you want. You can tour around, staying as little, or as long, as you want, on each site - or you can spend the whole holiday on one site. If the site accepts cheques and you are more than two people, then you pay a supplement on top of the cheque directly to the site to cover the cost for the extra people (including children - although some sites have a children go free policy and some sites will allow up to four people for one cheque).
Usually there is no need to book in advance, but if you're going to an area with few sites then buying a 'Gold Card' gives you priority booking arrangements at some sites, so that although you're getting a discount rate you can be sure you'll find a pitch at the site when you arrive.
You can buy them directly from Camping Cheque, either just the cheques, or as part of a 'package' where they can book a ferry crossing too, or from the Caravan Club (which I've found to be better value).
If you think of using them, then carefully check the site's own pricing structure, so that you can calculate whether it's worth your while when you've added on the supplements you might pay for extra children or adults. The type of site they choose may not suit you either - so it's not for everyone, but we use them twice a year now, getting in a Spring Bank Holiday fortnight and then again in late August/September.
Normally you'd buy Camping Cheques a few weeks before you're heading off to allow for posting times. If you leave it until just a few days before you can have them posted by express delivery. They are valid for two years - so any you buy next year can be used until the end of 2010. We're just using up the last of our 2007/2008 cheques with a week in the Lake District in the middle of November.
As said, at the moment with the financial turmoil who knows what might happen, so it would be prudent to pay for any you buy with a credit card so you're protected in the event of financial meltdown!
Frogman - which is the site you mentioned in your posting? Just in case we were heading there next year!
Really helpful, thanks Val, I've cut and pasted it for my camping file.
------------- What light? I'm still looking for the tunnel.
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