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Eight offbeat campgrounds — leave the RV at home

Does your RV camping life need just a bit of a break? Want to go someplace and camp in an extraordinary way? Here’s a list of offbeat camping experiences that might be great for a break in your ordinary routine. To us, some of them look like that might really make the old RV look palatial, but you know, “everybody’s entitled to their own opinion.”

In alphabetical order by state, here’s thefamilytravelfiles.com list of unusual camping opportunities:

Arkansas: Diamond mining while teepee or cabin camping. Diamond John’s Riverside Teepees and Cool Cabins in Murfreesboro offers a little of everything to along with your teepee or cabin adventure. Your little ones can get to know goats, ducks, chickens, rabbits – even peacocks. The whole family can enjoy free use of water vehicles like a boat, canoe, or kayak. Borrow some mining equipment from the management and go chase after gems at the Crate of Diamonds State Park nearby. www.diamondjohns.com.

California: Revisit the days of the pioneers and sleep in a covered wagon at Rancho Oso. OK, they make it a bit less rough, the wagon comes with electricity for those modern must-haves. Meantime, take a trail ride with a horse, pony rides for the small fry, hay wagon rides for the nostalgic. Wagon sleeping not your speed? They’ve also got cabins, as well as tent and RV sites. www.rancho-oso.com.

Colorado: Rocky mountain high sleeping in a round tent called a yurt. Snow Mountain Ranch fans sleep in yurts, can take their pick of trail hiking, mountain biking, canoeing, archery, even a “disc” golf course. How about downhill tubing? Free to guests, and opens this July. snowmountainranch.org.

Idaho: Astronomer’s delight and snooze in a cabin at Bruneau Dunes State Park and Observatory. Friday and Saturday nights they break out some high-level telescopes to peep at the brilliant night skies. Swim, boat, fish, ride horseback by day. You can also work on your dune sledding skills!  parksandrecreation.idaho.gov/parks/bruneau-dunes

Maryland: Shades of J.R.R. Tolkien! Aim for some strange dreams when you sleep in the “Hobbit House” or one of several tree houses at the Maple Tree Campground. Close proximity to Antietam Battlefield and the Brunswick Railroad Museum. thetreehousecamp.com

Nebraska: Get into “training” when you sleep in a caboose at Two Rivers SRA near Venice. Ten cabooses (or is that caboosi?) to choose from. They’re real authentic, except that the trainmen who used them in times past didn’t have the benefit of air conditioning! Fishing, boating, swimming can take up your free time. http://outdoornebraska.ne.gov/parks/guides/parksearch/pdfs/brochure175.pdf.

New Mexico: Not sure if the original residents of New Mexico slept in tipis, but visitors to the Abominable Snow Mansion near Taos can today. If they don’t offer a soft bed in your tipi, you can always soak away your back pain in the hot springs next day. Pueblo tours are near at hand to brush up on your history. http://www.snowmansion.com.

Oregon: Snooze in the trees at Tree House Paradise at Cave Junction. Each themed treehouse has its own draws. With names like Calypso, Shitake, and “The Cottage,” you’ll have to visit the web site to get a better handle on the unique draw. Includes gourmet breakfast, served by high-climbing monkeys. OK, no monkeys, but good breakfast. www.treehouseparadise.com.

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Caution! Don’t confuse RV light bulbs

In this segment of an RVtravel.com live webcast Chuck Woodbury, Mike Sokol and Chris Dougherty discuss a common mistake: using

Near Glacier National Park — Montana’s St. Ignatius Mission, historic art

St. Ignatius Mission.

If you are traveling anywhere near Glacier National Park in northwest Montana this RVing season, plan a short cultural stop in the small town of St. Ignatius, about 50 miles north of Missoula, on Hwy 93.

The community of St. Ignatius, currently on the Flathead Indian Reservation, dates back to the mid-1800s when Jesuit missionaries founded St. Ignatius Mission.

By the early 1890s, Indian peoples and missionaries began construction on the building using local materials. The “million bricks were made with local clay, the lumber was cut in nearby foothills, and the striking interior murals” were created by the mission’s handyman … and extremely gifted amateur painter.
These incredible frescoes are 58 compelling reasons to pull off the highway.

58 frescos decorate inside of Mission.

“Brother Joseph Carignano (1853-1919), an Italian Jesuit who was the cook at the mission for many years, painted 58 frescoes on the walls and ceiling of the church, despite no formal art training and only being able to work on the murals in between his regular jobs,” wrote Jan Krause in the Lake Shore Country Journal out of Big Fork, Mont.

“The frescos depict scenes from the Old and New Testaments of the Bible, as well as portraits of several saints. Behind the main altar is a triptych of the three visions of St. Ignatius Loyola, and above that a mural of the Last Judgement. Pictures of Mary and Joseph adorn the side altars. These vibrant paintings throughout the church are awe-inspiring, appearing as fresh as if they had been painted yesterday.”

In addition, there are two very special paintings of the Salish Lord and Lord’s mother (in Native American form) located in the back of the mission. The grounds also feature a log cabin, now a museum, which was the original residence for the Sisters of Providence when they first arrived in the 1860s to start the girls’ boarding school.
The Mission Mountain Range is a beautiful backdrop to this “historically interesting” and “artistically dramatic” mission church.

Contact Information:
St. Ignatius Mission
300 Bear Track Ave.
PO Box 667
St Ignatius, MT 59865
Phone: (406) 745-2768
Hours: Daily 9 a.m. – 7 p.m. in the summer; 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. in the winter; Sunday Mass – 9:15 a.m.

Admission: Free, donations accepted.
Directions: Approximately 50 miles north of Missoula, just 2 blocks off Hwy 93 in St. Ignatius. Signs are on the highway, and the mission can be seen from Hwy 93.
Photos: St. Ignatius Mission; interior view with frescoes painted by Brother Josepha Carignano. Courtesy: St. Ignatius Mission. (Bottom) Statue of St. Ignatius (VisitMt.com)

This post has been updated from a previous post in 2011. For additional RV Lifestyle articles by Julianne G. Crane, go to RVWheelLife.com.

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