But first, the obligatory campsite pic! We returned to site 54, the first site we ever had here, with its nice seclusion at the end of the park loop.
Moss Park campsite |
While we were at Moss Park, we visited Animal Kingdom and Epcot, and had beautiful days at both. We were at Epcot for the first day of the Festival of the Arts and witnessed (but did not participate in!) the unreal 7 hour lines for the Figment Popcorn Bucket!
The Lion King 50th anniversary statues |
Up close and personal with a giraffe on Kilimanjaro Safaris! |
We caught the Jungle Book version of the new KiteTails show |
Mickey and Minnie on the river! |
Painting Epcot's version of Starry Night |
Full view of the paint-by-number mural (background) with the expectation of the finished product on the bookmark (foreground) |
So, back to the promised content. You may or may not have noticed we're off our typical 2-week Thousand Trails 1-week County Park camping schedule for the Orlando winter. This is because 2 months ago, when I attempted to make a Thousand Trails reservation for the second week of January, NONE of the Thousand Trails parks in the Orlando area were available. NONE. We've had weeks in previous years where we had to settle for our least favorite of the Thousand Trails in the area, but we've never before experienced a time when we couldn't book ANYTHING. We *think* this was because the Disney marathon weekend occurred over the time frame we were trying to book. So, due to this, we ended up booking two weeks at Kelly Park. But then...we thought we'd be able to get into Thousand Trails for the third week of January but NO, again, EVERYTHING was booked. This time it seemed to be due to the Martin Luther King Jr holiday. So, maxed out at Kelly Park (we can only stay 2 weeks at a given county park), we had to move to another park. I tried to move just down the street to Trimble Park, but NO again, there was nothing available! This is particularly unreal - I've never had trouble booking a county park at the start of the booking window. So we ended up at Moss Park, even though it's the farthest away from Kelly Park, because (I assume) it has a lot more campsites available. Of course Moss Park is lovely and we enjoyed our stay, but this experience was a bit unnerving for both of us.
Campground crowding has been a hot topic in the RV podcasts, YouTube videos, etc. that we follow. Aaron has been quite concerned about what this means for our future for some time, but I adopted a more optimistic attitude... However this experience has got us both thinking. Our little 2-week/1-week schedule has worked really well for us the past two years, and with it challenged so strongly these past few weeks, we're thinking the lifestyle we hoped for - with a bit of spontaneity! - might not be possible for a while. Now, we're probably inappropriately extrapolating our 2 week experience in one location to year-round across the country, but as linked above we're not the only ones experiencing issues. I saw a headline flash by a few weeks ago that said you needed to book things now 6 months in advance, which is just much more advance planning than we usually have! So we will see how the rest of the season goes (we typically book 45/60 days in advance, so far so good on the next 45/60 days), but if we regularly find these kinds of issues, we may be dissuaded from this lifestyle. Having a 40-ft behemoth of an RV without a place to park overnight is quite a worry for me!!
The other thing I thought I'd mention is much less dramatic - looking at an interesting trend in the Orange County Parks. Now that we've stayed in Kelly Park, and with my memory refreshed on Moss Park, I noticed a couple things. I feel that you can group the Orange County Parks into two categories - Moss Park and Kelly Park have an entrance gate with an entry fee for general park use and do not allow pets. Trimble Park and Magnolia Park are free for day use and do allow pets. Moss Park and Kelly Park have more, larger, more private sites with nicer bathhouses (with actual shower stalls with doors, for example). Trimble Park and Magnolia Park have fewer campsites with less privacy and cheaper bathhouses (they're still nicer than many we've seen, but opt for shower curtains instead of doors and don't have as nice a changing area). There's an obvious correlation here if the parks have more money because they collect day use entry fees, so they have more money to spend on nicer accommodations, but it is interesting that there's not a difference in the actual cost to camp. I'm struggling to understand the difference in the pet policy. One thought I had is that it's hard to enforce a pet policy if you don't actually talk to each car on the way in at the entry gate. I suppose they might also want to avoid the pet waste issue in their 'nicer' parks. Not sure on this one but it's an interesting correlation!
Hope you enjoy my random musings! :-)
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