As some of my readers may have noticed, I haven't posted for some time. This is due to a recent vacation that I took with my family to Jellystone Park Campground in Ashland, New Hampshire! If you have kids, and enjoy camping, then this place is truly for you. Packed with family fun and chock full of activities for the kids, Jellystone is a great place to kick back, roast some marshmallows and enjoy your children. The nice thing about the Jellystone Park Campground family is the sheer number of locations all across the US and Canada ( over 70! ) and the variety of accomodations that are available. Whether you choose to sleep out under the stars, rent a fully equipped RV site or a cozy, comfortable cabin, you'll see that Yogi Bear's Jellystone Parks offer accommodations for every type of camper. If you think camping is all about sitting around your site, being bored out of your mind, and counting down the days until you get back home... Man, are you mistaken! With Jellystone in your corner, there are always plenty of things to keep ya busy! Being a technocrat, like myself, I found their website extremely helpful. The activities link is a great way to plan out the trip and get a taste of what awaits you in the land of Yogi and Cindy.
My experience there was great. We stayed for 5 days at a very reasonable price. We're tent campers and tend to come prepared for anything, so all we really spent was the fee for the site and a trip to Wal-Mart for various goods we didn't want to pack from home. The great thing about Jellystone Park Campground is that everyone there has kids! What this means is that your kids always have someone to play with. Your neighbors will most likely have children the same ages as, or at least close to, your kids! The whole campground was crawling with other rugrats, making our biggest worry getting our kids back to the site for dinner. The only real problem that we faced at our specific JP location was the lack of English speaking employees, making infomation exchange and basic directions/ questions an exercise in patience and tolerance. As some of you may remember I have issues with immigrants, whether legal or not, that work in the customer service industry that aren't proficient English speakers. I'm not racist or against people migrating from other countries... But if you're working with the general public in an informational/ service capacity, then get a better grip on the vocabulary.


Here is a comment.....time to write soemthing new or let the Mrs. post sometimes....
Posted by: Dad's sister | September 18, 2006 at 10:49 PM