Helping Us With Camping

Screen Tents For Camping Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Camping-Tents
Email:
First Name:



Main Screen Tents For Camping Sponsors


 

Latest Screen Tents For Camping Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Screen Tents For Camping!



Newest Best Sellers


Welcome to Helping Us With Camping

 

Screen Tents For Camping Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Tent Camping in Florida for Yea-Around Fun

from: Helping Us With Camping

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 -



Other Screen Tents For Camping Related Articles

Tent Camping In Arizona
Self Erecting Camping Tent
Rent Camping Tent
Atv Camping Tent Trailer
Tent Camping In California

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Screen Tents For Camping News

Entertain a Crowd With the Brookstone iPhone Pocket Projector

The last time I was stuck in an airport with my kids I ended up handing over my iPhone so they could play games and watch movies. I wasn’t the only parent trying to keep their kids busy, and in a very short time there were half a dozen munchkins all trying to watch that teeny tiny screen.

Read more...


Guide to African safaris

YOUR guide to everything from luxury camping to when is the best time to go and how much you should pay.

Read more...


Caraviello: In the infield, they're not fans -- they're family

Caraviello: In the infield, they're not fans -- they're family

Read more...


Asheville outfitters can equip families with everything they need to be active outdoors

Diamond Brand’s Sarah Merrell suggests families take a day pack and hydration pack on their adventures. The Camelbak Scout hydration pack is shown in blue, and the Deuter Junior Pack is seen, at right, in red. Carleigh White models with the packs and other gear available at the Arden store.

Read more...


Boy Scouts participate in campout

Boy Scout Troop 279 recently participated in a two-night campout at Texana State Park to work towards their camping badge.

Read more...