I think we should clarify some things in our FAQ, as far as what they mean (when we can edit our FAQ that is)
- Wild Camping
- Primitive Camping
- Car Camping
- Back Country Camping (am I missing any others?)
I think we should clarify some things in our FAQ, as far as what they mean (when we can edit our FAQ that is)
These are just my thoughts on how I would justify them as different.
Wild Camping - Back Country Camping - Camping at a non developed campsite. Sometimes not even a cleared area, no previous signs of campfire. Usually an area without a permanent toilet or table. Could be reached by pulling of the side of the road, or could be combined with backpacking, sled, or watercraft.
Primitive Camping - Camping without the use of man-made shelter. Camping where you build your own shelter out of natural available resources. Where you cook with an open fire.
Primitive Camp Site - One lacking the amenities of other campsites. When in an established campground, usually a campsite that doesn't have a picnic table.
Car Camping - Camping near your car where weight and bulk are usually of little concern. This would also include developed campgrounds from designated areas in a campground to a KOA.
Backpacking - Camping where everything you have must be carried in and back out. Developed trails are optional. Camping where weight is king. Sites used may or may not be previously established to minimize impact.
I personally would probably roll wild into back country or at least make them synonyms.
I would like to say this was an attempt at writing definitions for common terms already in use. The best way to really define the differences would be have an A + B (+ maybe C) definition.
For example A would be how you got there (Car, backpacking, biking, raft, dogsled, whatever) B would be what the campsite was like (Fully developed, no amenities but a designated area, no designated area).
I'm not sure what C would be, but I'm sure someone can think of something else to add.
The different camping terms are difficult to define. For example, what is wild camping?
A lot of those terms are redundant/overlapping and by their nature lack single, precise definitions. Meaning and usage vary from one group/context to another. e.g. What is winter camping? The Boy Scouts use a temperature-based definition. This may not fit the northern conception of winter camping.
There already exist tags for some of those 'camping types':
Many other terms are also in common use: luxury camping, stealth camping, cowboy camping, guerrilla camping, etc..
Ultimately leaving our definitions open will encourage people to ask questions and the community should be able to aid the filtering on a case per case basis. The power of tags is that they are additive: (greenland) (winter-camping) should be interpreted much differently than (florida) (winter-camping).