I try to keep the old fogy "this country is going down the tubes today" stuff to a minimum; I really do. But have you heard of "glamping"?
After typing "luxury" into a Google search along with "camping" and "Montana," the couple settled on The Resort at Paws Up, a 37,000-acre getaway in the heart of Big Sky country. It's a place for affluent travelers who want to enjoy the outdoors but can't fathom using a smelly outhouse, a place where paying someone to light the campfire is a badge of honor, not the mark of a Boy Scout flunky.
The Bondicks, who live in a sprawling home on the edge of a state park outside Boston and hire a personal chef at home, shelled out $595 a night -- plus an additional $110 per person per day for food.
It's a hefty price to sleep in a tent, but the perks include a camp butler to build their fire, a maid to crank up the heated down comforter at nightfall and a cook to whip up bison rib-eye for dinner and French toast topped with huckleberries for breakfast.
The number of visits to U.S. national parks is declining, but "glamping" -- glamorous camping -- is on the rise in North America after gaining popularity among wealthy travelers in Africa and England, where luxury tents come with Persian rugs and electricity to power blow dryers.
I bow to no one in fondness for the indoors. But if you're gonna do the outside thing, do it. No wonder Osama thinks we're weak and vulnerable.
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Exactly - if you are going to camp do it right and primitive, towing your home behind your SUV and setting it up in a wooded parking lot is not camping, nor is having everything done for you by a wait staff. The point is to get back to nature and get away from the hectic modern world.
Do the butler and maids give you privacy for glucking, glissing and glitting?
Shame, alex ...this forum is rated PG. Strange how this topic seems to always lead back to the letter "g."