Ten steps to being a
Totally Obnoxious Camper
During
the years, I have philosophically concluded that every such campground should
have such a group, if for no other reason than to make everything else look
good. And the truth is, being a truly obnoxious camper is a delicate art,
relying on careful planning and orchestration. The rules are as follows:
- Make your entrance to the campground fashionably late, preferably
after10:00 pm., when there is no available light and everyone else is
asleep.
- Drive around the entire campground with your brights on so you can
inspect each potential campsite fully, and so campers can make shadow
inside puppets inside their tent if they want. Feel free to idle your
engine at high RPM for long periods while you and your family carefully
weigh the merits of each site, including those which are already taken.
- If you have a boat, camper, motor home or other vehicle that
blocks your rear view, always back into your parking space. Again, take
your time, preferably having someone in your party stand behind the
vehicle, shouting directions at the driver. Keep at it until you get it
exactly right, grinding your reverse gear, revving your engine and
spinning your tires in the gravel as needed.
- If things take longer than you planned, which they probably will,
swear a lot. This is, after all, the country. Do it loudly, leaning out
your open window and with all the gusto you can muster. And don't forget
the kids. It will ease the tension for everyone if you get them to cry.
- Pump and pump that lantern for all your worth (skip the
directions, you can't see them anyway), then throw in a lit match and
enjoy the majesty of your very own atomic blast. Keep the valve completely
open, so your campsite will serve as a beacon for other campers who may be
lost, dis-oriented or under the impression they were sleeping comfortably.
- Pack a tent that uses metal poles. Plastic poles just don't clang
loudly enough when you throw the sack of them on the ground, trip over
them and kick them out of the way.
- Be sure someone in your party is either: a) drunk and obnoxious; b)
ill with bronchitis, emphysema or some other lung affliction that produces
a loud hacking cough; c) tired and under the age of four, or d) all of the
above.
- Hours later, when you have set up and fully decorated your
campsite with hummingbird feeders, lawn chairs, Japanese lanterns and your
newly made walking sticks, zip and unzip all the sleeping bags and tent
vigorously four or five times each to ensure proper functioning for the
night.
- Have a radio playing - a
simple boom box or car radio will do. If the signal is weak, and there is
a lot of crackle, you can always turn up the volume. And last but not least...
- Plan to have your entire party sleep late. There is always a
family somewhere nearby with small children who rise and begin their day
at the crack of dawn. They'd like to eat their granola bars and drop by to
play trampoline on your tent. While their parents sip espresso and watch.
But don't leave
now... There's more you can do, such as:
- Go to sleep real late so you will have an excuse to sleep in while
your kids go to neighboring sites to drool over other peoples breakfast.
- Do your part to keep the forest tidy. Kick down and drag to your
site any tree you can. Don't bother to cut it, just let it hang from the
fireplace and feed it in as it burns.
- Let your kids peel all the bark they can from the white birches.
After all you paid for your site, you're entitled to do as you wish.
- When you're breaking camp don't bother to get your tarp ropes
down, Just hack them off at eye level. After all someone else might want
to use them.
- Don't bother to dispose of your bottle caps and cigarette butts.
Folks are looking forward to living in your dirty ashtray, and the kids
will love stepping on those bottle caps.
- Get all the heavilly painted firewood you can. Old kitchen
cabinets work great. Your neighbors will enjoy the lead, heavy metals and
general crud all over their gear.
- Travel light when you go to the shower. If the showers are metered
you can always hit someone up for a quarter. Better yet try the sincere
approach, ask folks to change a $20.
- This goes beyond camping but what the heck. Don't forget the
camcorder and make sure you get plenty of footage of things like trees and
fences. Don't be bashfull about holding everyone up endlessly while you shoot
your family documentary.
This probably isn't
the end of the list but it is for now. Thank you to all the fellow campers with
enough humor in their hearts to share their experiences.