Wednesday 30 October 2013

Knight Stainforth caravan site our 41st trip part 2

Knight Stainforth caravan site our 41st trip part 2
 
 
 The above waterfall is directly at the bottom of the camping field. Brilliant and you get to see Salmon as well.
Assuming you are there in Salmon season. 
Yesterday was Tuesday and as everyone should know this is Settle Market day.
This is convenient situated in the market square, which isn't square at all but
more like 2 triangles put together to form a square  We had been here last year 
and there was one stall in particular that I was looking forward to and this year 
it wasn't here. Drat, I wanted some cheap crisps and snacks, but alas it wasn't to be.
After 4 minutes we had seen every stall and decided we weren't old enough to enjoy 
the cardigans and old lady handbag stalls and descended on the charity shops looking 
for a dress for my eldest's halloween costume. 
 
Me and the boy separated company from the girls and went to buy some chips instead. 
Our 3rd bag of chips in as many days, my lad had suddenly discovered an appetite and 
wanted 2 cones of chips but settled on 1 when he found out he was paying for his own.
 It started raining again so we headed to the car to wait for the womenfolk. 
We had paid for 1 hour but it was raining so hard and we were eating chips that it 
was only as we were leaving that we noticed we had gone over our ticket time by 
10 minutes.  Rebels.  Parked next to us were 4 motorbikes in 1 car space who 
obviously had forgotten their tickets as they had rushed to get a table in the chippy 
cafe. I don't feel as guilty for my 10 minutes now if they can park for free. 
 
After we had scoffed our chips and the boy had cadged half of mine as well as his own 
we decided to go to Malham Cove. The road from Settle to Malham is a very steep and 
windy narrow track.  On the way you go past some interesting geographic features, one 
that my daughter got too excited about was the interlocking spurs. She had to send a 
text to her school friend to tell her of her find. 
 
As you approach Malham Cove you can see it from about 2 miles away and it is an 
impressive view. It's hard to imagine that this was once a magnificent gigantic 
waterfall. There is a carpark in Malham which is £4 for the day. It is always full 
and we drove around it twice until someone arrived back and gave us their space and
day ticket. Fantastic and thanks, whoever you are. It's kindness like this that 
gives you a good feeling inside. There are 2 main routes to Malham cove and last 
year we took the long route, because it was a sunny day. This time the weather is 
colder and it keeps raining, so we took the short route. The walk is quite easy 
and the views are spectacular. If anyone is still reading this far down, then you 
should go and see it. 
 
One of the bribes we had used to get the kids to go on the walk was that we would 
buy them a hot chocolate from a cafe. The first cafe we came to was a poky little 
shop/store room/cafe. It didn't look inviting so we turned around and came back out
 again. We weren't the only family to do so. We found the next cafe which was 
called The Old Barn Cafe and decided we shouldn't take out a second mortgage on 
our house so only had the agreed hot chocolates and 2 cups of tea. 
 
There are some (read, quite a lot) of properties for sale in Malham. Some are 
residential but there are several businesses for sale. It's hard to imagine how 
you can't succeed in a busy place like this. Our only thought is greed makes them 
fail. £2.30 for a hot chocolate is a lot of profit per cup. At those prices at lot 
of customers keep on walking past your cafe and don't spend anything. If the price 
of a drink and cake was affordable and sensible the volume of customers would be 
greater and the overall profit would also be better. It makes sense to me. 
 
Back in Settle and it's about 3.30 and the market stalls have mostly gone so I 
drive around the sign which says 'no entry on Tuesdays' due to market day and find 
a lovely free parking spot so I can get some snacks from the co-op. 
 
Back in the caravan and we play cards and watch cartoons over wifi for a few hours 
before I get overtired and need my bed. 
 
A busy day tomorrow, we are packing up and going home and our friends are coming 
to visit so we can show them the salmon leaping the waterfall at the bottom of the 
site. 
 
Here is a link to our last trip to this site in 2012 

Sunday 27 October 2013

Our 41st trip - Knight Stainforth - Settle North Yorkshire Part 1

Knight stainforth 4 nights from 26/10/13.
We were supposed to be holidaying with Gary and Ann but they cancelled last minute.
 
We were low on cash and left it until Thursday to book, but the site didn't answer our
email which we had sent to arrange the booking. We phoned at least 5 times and left
messages but heard nothing. I went on twitter and asked if anyone knew of a site near
Settle and someone told me by tweet, that knight stainforth had a twitter account.
Within 15 minutes Chris at knight stainforth had answered my tweet to him and 
apologised and said he would answer the phone now. (9.15pm). Yay we were booked. 
He said he had been organising the fireworks all day.
So we set off on Saturday morning and arrived at noon and we 
set up the caravan. I made the mistake of driving on the grass whilst backing the van 
into position and made a lovely muddy ploughed effect in the nice grass. I think it
added to the overall view, don't you? 
Don't drive on the grass, you will get muddy wheels
 
 Gary and Ann visited us for the day and we walked to the river Ribble to watch the
salmon leaping up stainforth force. We then went to Settle and had a walk through the
village and then back along the river to the chippy. £12.95 later we are stood outside 
stuffing our faces with yummy chips. We all came back to our van for tea and coffee
and Gary and Ann went back home. The weather is starting to get cold and it started
to rain quite heavily just in time for the 6pm start in the barn. The barn had a bar
and a cake stall with a lovely Eton Mess with cream for £1. There was a children's
disco but my kids are too cool for dancing, obviously. At 7.45 we went back into the
rain to walk back to the caravan to settle down for the evening. At 8pm the firework
display started in the next field to where our caravan is so we could stay dry and 
warm whilst everyone stood watching in the cold and torrential rain. 
The firework display lasted about 20 minutes and was accompanied to music which was good.
 By the time it had 
finished we all had a stiff neck from staring out of the window for so long. It was
a good firework display and the site had probably spent a lot of money on it.
Well done. 
Sunday morning and the clocks have gone back 1 hour so we got an hour extra in
bed apparently!
The wifi that we had to pay for last year is now free, but I haven't managed to 
connect to it yet. I'll have to have a word via twitter when I get a decent 
connection. 


 
 Not sure what we are doing today, I will probably go and look at the salmon leaping
again. 
Well it's now Sunday afternoon and today we dossed about in bed for longer than 
normal. I had 4 slices of 'jam on toast' and a large bowl of shreddies. 
We had a 20 mile drive to Hawes, which is where Wensleydale cheese is made. 
We paid our £2.50 per adult and £1.50 per child to look around the museum of cheese 
and watch a grainy worn out video all about cheese making. Yes it was as exciting
as it sounds. You get to watch the factory making cheese which was quite interesting
actually. I would hate to have people staring at me through a window while I was
working. 
Anyway into the shop we then trudged and into the cheese tasting section where you
will find about 30 different cheeses all available to try without any guilt trip
in how my you can try. We tried them all and me and my 9 year old went around 
for a 2nd taster session. I've never eaten so much cheese in a month, never mind in
half an hour. Yummy. 
If we go again, I won't pay but go straight to the shop and get free cheese samples. 
We did spend about £15 in the cafe, so I won't feel too guilty.
Anyway back in Settle we discovered they have a free wifi for
visitors which made me and the kids happy for 20 minutes while we got some shopping
done in the co-op. 
Back on the site and the wifi is working but only 1 device at a time, so while my
eldest is socialising via Skype to her friends back home, me and my wife go back 
to the river to see the salmon leaping the waterfall. The water is now twice as wide
and more powerful than yesterday and the salmon have no chance getting up the river
with the current being so strong. The 3 waterfalls look like one long raging rapids 
today due to the heavy rain over the last day. 
Tomorrow is forecast high winds and stormy, so let's hope our caravan gets through 
the storm in one piece. 
to be continued... photos will be uploaded when I get back home. 

Saturday 26 October 2013

Why do we pay so much for kids camping?

Why do we pay so much for kids camping?

 

I was looking for a campsite last night for my caravan holidays and I noticed a worrying trend that has been bugging me for a while.
As the title says, why do we have to pay so much to take our kids to a campsite.
A quick google search finds plenty of examples of extortionate prices which for a 3 child family makes it difficult to afford.
We want to go out more often and visit the country and let the kids have a varied childhood by taking them away from their computer games and laptops and televisions for the odd weekend. They will learn about the countryside, our country's history and get lots of fresh air and exercise.
So, it seems, I have to go into debt or take out a loan from a bank or building society to go on a 2 week holiday in the uk.
The prices at a lot of campsites are very off-putting.
I'm writing this at the end of October 2013 and the weather is atrocious and I'm saying, 'let's go in our caravan', whereas the people I know at work or local friends have given up on their holiday season, because it's too cold or dark or wet.
Not us, we want to get some adventure while the kids are still young enough to want to do it, before boyfriends or girlfriends or other peer pressure kicks in as they get to their teens and then they won't want to come away with us.
Until that happens, it seems campsites want us to pay the earth for a night in a field just because there are five of us. It's not like these sites have fabulous kid's facilities and that's what the charges are for, sometimes a campsite has a grotty, decades old play area, that the kids only use because it's there, not because it's a super exciting place to be.
So, I don't get it, apart from the fact that people keep paying per child and the campsites don't care that us poor families are missing out or perhaps 3 kids is unusual these days with all the 1 child families out there and they don't notice the cost.
Let's face it, I wouldn't be moaning if had to pay for 1 child at say £2.50 per night, but multiply by 3 and £7.50 per night soon adds up over a week. Imagine if you had to pay £5 per child like many sites are charging, bloody hell £15 per night tots up to over £100 in just a week. For what? a rectangle of grass and a nice view? Come on! I can't afford it and I suspect I'm not alone in not being able to afford this kind of money for no real value given in return.

A few quotes I quickly found on Google

  • Adults £10.00 per night and children over three years £5.00 per night. Clippenham campsite.
  • Camping charges per night are £5 per tent plus £5–9 per adult (depending on the season); children (3–12) half adult price. This is £4.50 for high season. Blackberry wood campsite
  • £3.00 PER CHILD PER NIGHT (Children 12 and under). Pillaton Hall Farm
  • Child (5-16) £3.50 per night. Carnon downs caravan park
  • Extra Child £2.50 per night. Langcliffe caravan park.
  • £3.50 per Child per night. (aged 12- 16 years)
    - £0/free for under 12's. The Edwardstone White Horse

As you can see the costs are all over the place. The last one above Edwardstone White horse was interesting because under 12's are free.

It would be good if we could pay at the most about £20 per night for electric hookup and it shouldn't cost you more because you have a large family.
At Gibraltar farm in Silverdale the cost for a caravan with ehu is £17 and £3 for an awning. No extra cost for children. Brilliant that's how it should be done.
Please comment to me on twitter @caravantourer or comment below.
Am I right? or am I just a tight whingeing moaner?
Thanks

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Wednesday 23 October 2013

Windy - A caravan restoration project - part 6

A caravan project that is coming to an end.
Gary and Ann have worked hard to turn the wet and rotten 34 year old (ish) vintage caravan into a decent looking caravan that can be used to enjoy a week away in style.

Part 1 of the Windy caravan restoration project
Part 2 of the Windy caravan restoration project
Part 3 of the Windy caravan restoration project
Part 4 of the Windy caravan restoration project
Part 5 of the Windy caravan restoration project



The table is in place and the sofas are cleaned

Floor tiles are going down over the wooden floor


The window has a nice white strip and the wall is repaired

The side wall is repaired and the windowsill is sorted

The wheel has a chrome wheel trim
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Monday 7 October 2013

Our 40th Caravan holiday - Osberton horse trials part 1

Our 40th trip in the caravan was to Osberton Horse trials a 3 day event.
We were on a Caravan Club Rally and we had no electric.
We were staying in a large field with about 150 other caravans and motorhomes.
We arrived late on Friday, about 6.45pm and were one of the last vans to arrive so that meant we were on row (I) which was the furthest point from the horse trials and a fair old walk to get to the attractions.
We were knackered walking to and from the event.
We had a very enjoyable weekend and the weather was glorious.
A very strange rainbow-cloud.

Osberton Horse trials jumping through the hole


The Duck and Dive bar at Osberton Horse Trials 2013

Our caravan in the field

caravans as far as the eye can see


The Christmas market
A good looking crop of toadstools

The best conker tree in the country

The Christmas Market

A big pan of very expensive noodles



A double superlative Most Handsomest, is that allowed?

Don't forget the dog when you drive off

A close up of the expensive noodles


This dog was digging for something, we don't know what he was looking for

Expensive ice-creams mean you have no customers

A massive log to jump over

Big wooden toadstools

An arsehole of a steward, didn't want us using flash on our phone - muppet.



Nearly got this photo of a horse





It hurts when the horses don't pick up their legs high enough, that's blood

Some iffy looking electrics




It's a horse show, what does this mean?

Not the best spelling on this sign












This guy and his horse had a nasty fall over a big log, he seemed ok

The big log that the guy fell over in the video above


The view from the toilet waste drum