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Camping

Tell me everything about camping with children please!

45 replies

User07 · 14/08/2019 13:18

We have never camped as a family. My husband has in the past, I have never. We did want a caravan but feel its a big outlay if we dont like it as a family.
We have 3 young children, 7, 5, 2......
What do we need? We are starting from scratch! We have seen a tent that has inflatables rather than traditional poles which looked good.
Any tips and suggestions please!

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tmh88 · 14/08/2019 13:41

Hoping someone comes a long to this thread! We are wanting to camp with our nearly 2 year old but not sure at all what we will need! We went before baby a lot and got a new tent the last time before and it turns out not all tents are waterproof!! So definitely do your research on tents! You’ll want one which is hydrostatic at least 1500mm (Learnt that after our tent flooded)🤭

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User07 · 14/08/2019 13:52

Oh thank you, Im sure this tent we went to see was 4000mm. Im getting excited at the thought of it but Im worried it will be a lot harder work than I think!

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Aroundtheworldin80moves · 14/08/2019 14:01

If you have never been I would look at borrowing a tent or going somewhere where you can use a ready pitched tent. Camping can have a large set up cost... The tent, sleeping bags (proper 2/3 season ones, not cheap ones for using indoors), airbeds/SIMs, chairs, table, cooking stuff, cool box, plates and cups... It's a very long list

For 5 you will probably need an 8person tent. If you do buy or borrow practice putting it up at home (and sleep in it to work out what you find comfy).

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User07 · 14/08/2019 14:13

Thank you for the advice.
Im surprised you have mentioned needing and 8 person one? We were looking in 6 persons ones and these seemed really spacious but were of course empty. I guess I have under estimated the amount of stuff we would have with us? Ill have a look in to bigger ones. Thanks again

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Hoppinggreen · 14/08/2019 14:14

It’s shit
Don’t do it

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Iggly · 14/08/2019 14:22

The “berth” of a tent is based on very narrow dimensions.

We are a family of 4 (dcs are 6&8) and we have a five man tent which is getting on the small side now.

We need to move up to a 6-8 man tent for the bedrooms to be big enough.

Personally I’d go with poles if it’s always two of you putting a tent up, rather than an air tent - only because I know of a couple of people with air tents who’ve had punctures etc (but they are getting better), whereas poles are easily replaced.

Make sure you have decent sleeping arrangements. We’ve gone for traditional rubberised cotton air beds which can be inflated to your comfort. For the dcs they had toddler air beds with raised sides to keep them contained.

We take duvets and proper pillows now instead of sleeping bags. Plus hot water bottles and layers to go underneath you between you and the air bed.

If you camp when it’s cool at night, you need extra layers. So I have proper real wool army style blankets. These are also safe for sitting around the fire at night as they’d not flammable.

Cooking - get a decent gas stove and a couple of pots/pans.

Tables and chairs - we have three tables (!) and four chairs. Two tables are for cooking/storing and the third is for eating at. An absolute god send.

I also have two large picnic blankets. One for outside the tent at all times and the other is carpet inside the tent. It’s handy for when we pack up - as everything can sit on the blanket. Also it is useful for when it’s raining - shoes off outside the tent on the picnic blanket.

Lighting - torches and fairy lights. Fairy lights are super useful for lighting up the tent so you can find it on the way back from late toilet trips!!!

Pick a site with decent facilities. It’s not the time to be roughing it when you’ve got kids. Also somewhere with space for games.

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Aroundtheworldin80moves · 14/08/2019 14:24

We have a four bedroom plus living area tent. One child bedroom (2/3 children), one adult, one clothes storage, one equipment storage. When they were toddler/preschool it was one adult plus the toddler in one bedroom, older child in another
and the second adult in the third with bags in the fourth and equipment piled up in living area.

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Piffpaffpoff · 14/08/2019 14:29

My main piece of advice is to realise you will get little sleep! But looking at the practicalities, here are my thoughts.

Yes to inflatable tent - much easier.

Look for one with the dark bedrooms - some sell themselves as using special fabric in the bedrooms that keep it darker in daylight.

Get one with sewn in groundsheet, not bathtub groundsheet. This means the groundsheet is fully attached to the tent, rather than just clipping on to it - less chance of creepy crawlies, mud and wet getting in.

Get a much bigger tent that you need. We have a 6 person Vango Icarus which I bought it on the basis that it would generally just be for 3 of us.

Think about what layout of tent you want - do you want to all be in one or two bedrooms at one end or do you want to have two beds at either end of the tent. With small DC, I didn't fancy the two bedrooms at either end as its so much easier to deal with any night time issue when they are right next to you.

Don't buy a huge camping kitchen double burner type of cooker. You can buy individual gas rings, just get a couple of them.

Go to Go Outdoors and try to pricematch everything you want - you can save a fortune. Simply find what you want cheaper online and they not only match the cheaper price but then knock another 10% off. I've saved a fortune on stuff over the years doing this - only works with branded stuff ovbiously, not their own brand.

For everything else, Decathlon is brilliant.

Make sure you can fit and carry everything in your car - some tents are huge and very heavy. I've been looking at buying a new one and some I couldn't lift and would have taken up all of the car boot!

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User07 · 14/08/2019 14:37

Thanks again. So the one we were looking at has 2 bedrooms and a large living area but from what everyone has said it might be a bit small for us...
Im making notes and adding everything to my list. This is really helpful!
Can anyone give me a rough figure of how much every thing will cost to buy that we might need?
We are hoping to go away at least 1 weekend a month then extra over school holidays, maybe even a week over the summer holidays! Its something we have thought about and wanted to do for a few years and now feel its about the right time for our family.

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Ylvamoon · 14/08/2019 14:46

We have a 6 man tent, 2 bedrooms & large living area, made from polycotton. It's great, but needs some maintenance, I would not go back to "plastic" tents ( too hot / cold) or caravan (very cramped).
I think, for your first trip, borrow if you can or by something smaller and cheaper.
I'd take sleeping bags (2 seasons) and extra blankets + pillows.
There are basic gas cookers for one pan / saucepan or use BBQ.
You can use a cool bag and buy some perishable food daily- just but some frozen foods like veg or stir fry to go with BBQ!!
I think it's important to choose your site carefully, by what is on offer for the children and also what the area has to offer for rainy days.
Most importantly, go with the flow and enjoy!

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stucknoue · 14/08/2019 14:55

I would see if you can borrow a tent but here's my list:

Tent, sleeping bags, inflatable mattress (double), self inflating rolls mats for kids, pillows, pump, water container, small stove (ours is a single), kettle, fry pan, cups, plates etc, mallet, spare pegs, wellies or crocs, warm sleeping clothes, a potty if you have little ones, screw in tether and long lead if you have a dog. Choose a site not too far from civilisation, a nearby McDonald's or supermarket with cafe is ideal if weather is too wet to cook breakfast - never cook inside unless you can completely open one side of the tent to avoid carbon monoxide poisoning!

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Tidypidy · 14/08/2019 14:58

Take lots of wet wipes!
Take kitchen things from home, only buy new if you really need to.
Take blankets, cheap fleece ones are good.
Take booze!
We buy a couple of massive bottles of water from the supermarket before we go, refill whilst away then recycle.
We find our children sleep just as well as they do at home, probably because they are outside the whole time!
DH and I share a double sleeping bag as we've found it's much warmer.
Keep food really simple, bbq lots!
If the weather's crap then come home and try again.
finally- just enjoy it!

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AngelasAshes · 14/08/2019 15:20

We have done a lot of camping with kids over the years. Not going to repeat what others have said.
Personally, inflatable tents are not worth the extra cost. I prefer pole tents. They withstand wind ALOT better.

  • yes you will need an 8 man tent, or consider buying two tents and a dining fly and place the two tents facing each other with central covered area.
  • definitely get a dining fly. These are good in rain or for shade and give you a place to hang out when not in your tent.
  • clothesline and clothes pins- to hang swimsuits/towels and if going longer any laundry. Or even a wet sleeping bag in event of accident.

-consider a hammock! Kids love lounging in one outside.
  • buy extra heavy duty stakes and a stake hammer- not all sites have easy ground for staking out tent.

-take plastic tub for putting in dirty dishes and washing them...buy plastic reusable dishes and utensils for eating. Can get from any camp shop. Some sites provide fairy and washing up stuff, some do not. Check ahead.
  • torches for everyone...or at least 3 to share.
  • flip flops or crocs for shower blocks
  • cool box- the best are Coleman ones. You simply buy ice cubes in bags and use them to keep food cold. Don’t be tempted by cheapo tesco cool boxes they do not insulate well
  • portable fire pit- some sites do not allow campfires and only allow a fire pit. Usually they do sell kindling and firewood on site. Very few sites have firepits there so it’s good to have your own.
  • on the fairy lights you can get solar ones so you don’t have to have an electric hookup.


Look for sites near outdoor activity centers. Like in Norfolk Whitlingham Broads is a good one. It’s 5min walk to a Center with indoor climbing wall, canoe & kayak hire, also a boat ferry to Norwich to see the castle. Some Saturdays they have a roving pizza wagon with stone baked pizza for sale.
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AngelasAshes · 14/08/2019 15:23

It will probably cost you around £500 to get bare essentials.
We did also get a roof box and that made packing the car much easier!

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User07 · 14/08/2019 15:26

All fab advice. I have not heard of a dining fly will look now.
Our reason behind the inflatable was that it seemed easier to put together with having 3 young children to entertain at the same time? We will be looking and considering poles now as well and reading all reviews carefully.
What are peoples opinions on air beds/sims/camp beds with little legs?

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ODFOx · 14/08/2019 15:33

On berths:
most tents have sloping walls so if you use a camping mat or SIM the berths are usually pretty accurate but if you are using camp beds or airbeds you are effectively making the floor area smaller by making it taller, thus more of a squeeze.

We happily camped for years with 5DC across the 4-man bedroom of a vango 800 and then we used one of the 2-man bedrooms for us and had a spare for storage. Thus we could have accommodated 9 easily if we'd used all the rooms.

You have a toddler so leave the firepit for a couple of years. Keep it simple: gas stove (2 rings), buy food daily or use tinned stuff so you don't need to worry about storage except insects: use a sealed plastic tub.

Have some indoor games in case its wet.
Make it special: we have things we take camping that we wouldn't take to a hotel: certain toys and games which are just for camping (fire sticks, poi, diabolo etc for us now, but ours are older): when little we had I spy and miming games for example.
Keep yourselves warm, but don't waste energy trying to heat your environment: so woolly socks and hats in bed, don't bother about heating.
Wire coat hangers are great for drippy coats.
Juice boxes, pepperamis, primula squeezy cheese, crisprolls, cereal bars, tinned latte, iced tea crisps, ricecakes, mattesons smoked pork sausage; don't need refrigerating or cooking and won't go off.

waterproof tent, comfortable beds, warm sleeping bags. Everything else you can make do until you decide whether or not you want to be campers: for example the plastic crates you use for food etc can be a sit-on-the-floor table for kids meals.
Good luck!

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ODFOx · 14/08/2019 15:42

If you are planning on mostly weekends make it as simple and light as you can: your DC are still small so consider a 6-man tunnel, not vis-à-vis, so you are all in a line. beds and decent sleeping bags and pillows.
2YO can sit/nap in a buggy.
a single gas ring (handbag stove) for hot drinks and pot noodles/eggs/bacon (basically single cooked element meals); chopping board, sharp knife, spife, mug and plate each.
Your DC might like tripod stools (ours did at that age) and they used to sell them at poundland!.
Small kettle with a whistle, small frying pan, medium saucepan. wooden spoon/spatula, tongs.

You'll need more for longer holidays but for weekends, less is more.

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awsomeDean · 14/08/2019 16:06

Decent sleeping matts are a must.
Go somewhere you can try them out.

We take;
Sleeping matts, sleeping bags, pillows and blankets-

Two burner stove with a grill option, griddle that fits over the two burners, folding stand that has a wind break and storage, shelter tunnel to use as kitchen.
Folding washing up bowl, kettle and colinder. Sharp knife and chopping and board. Pan set
Good camping chairs- again try them out.


Try going glamming a few times before committing to buying lots.

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Yogagirl123 · 14/08/2019 16:18

Can you borrow some equipment OP? It will be a considerable outlay to buy everything you need. Or consider hiring a tent, ready set up to give it a try? As if camping doesn’t suit you and your family, you could waste a lot of money.

I do admire your optimism though, I genuinely do.

I have only camped once, hated it TBH. I hope it works out better for you, I know a lot of people enjoy it.

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Misty9 · 14/08/2019 16:36

I don't know - our first camping experience with kids was in a four man tent with 2 year old dd in a travel cot in one bedroom, ds (5ish) on a ready bed in the other, and H and I on an airbed in the middle Grin
We had chippy tea at the site, brought a bottle of wine and plastic glasses, and packed the kids bowls and cereal. Oh and used our duvet. It wasn't the most comfortable night as the airbed went down overnight, but it gave us a taste of camping without the massive outlay. And we did go again. It was only one night I should say! I overheard a bit say to his dad as they walked past our tent - how do they all fit in that?! Grin

Went more recently when they were 4 and 6ish and definitely do need a bigger tent (but we've separated now anyway!).

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Misty9 · 14/08/2019 16:37

Boy not bit...

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trilbydoll · 14/08/2019 16:44

We have a 6 man tent I think and it's comfortable for us and 2dc sleeping in a row across the back. Living area for games, chairs, general crap. All kitchen related stuff, and the table and chairs are outside under a Trespass mini shelter. It would be very cramped having the table inside and simply not possible to cook I don't think. We use the one ring things powered by a gas aerosol thing that slots in, I was way too intimidated by the thought of a proper cooker with a regulator and huge gas canister.

You don't need to take as much stuff as you think. We are in France, there's a play park, a pool and a beach so the only things we have brought are small games like top trumps and a few activity books.

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User07 · 14/08/2019 17:17

Thanks again Im still keeping note.

We have actually been given a tent with poles but never used it as we read reviews and pretty much every single one said it leaked.
My husband decided we shouldn't risk it as it would more than likely put me off for life.
After reading all the advice though we may get that old tent out, buy beds and sleeping bags or even take our own pillows and duvets then borrow all other bits we might need from friends and family to just see and check we will actually like it....we live in york and would love any advice on nice family camp sites if anyone knows of any. Thank you all again for all your advice I really do appreciate it.

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Atalune · 14/08/2019 17:30

We pretty much glamp as I am a reluctant camper, so with a full boot, 2 children and a double roof box we have

Bell tent- £500
Camping kitchen-Aldi £40
Cadac double stove- g outdoor £90
Self inflating thermal air mats- AlpKit- £300 for 4
Duvets and pillows from home
Heavy wool blankets from home
Hot water bottles- iron monger store, one each
Fairy lights for the tent- tiger tiger £5
Good lantern light- go outdoors £20
Head torches
Wooden trunk- fancy wine box left over from Christmas, we use this as a little table in the tent to put stuff on
Flat foldable boxes- Ikea £10/2 we have one each for our stuff
Straw baskets- IKEA £10/ each for our toilettes
Bell tent carpet
Fold out table with benches- go outdoors £90
Camping chairs- go outdoors £30/each they are very comfy
Little table- amazon, folds to nothing and handy for kitchen prep
Camping pot/pan set- Hi Gear £30
Plates and cups and cutlery. An assorted lot that we have accumulated
Icey Tek cool box- £100. Worth it as it stays cool forever!
Cushions- nice for sitting around on. From home.

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heath48 · 14/08/2019 17:39

Camped for many years,when our 3 were little.The only piece of advice is make sure you get a big enough tent.

Made the mistake of buying a five berth tent for 5 of us!!! A never to be forgotten disaster of a first family camping trip.Laugh about it now,but it was no fun in Wales and it poured with rain the entire time!

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