The Ultimate Car Camping Music Festival Packing List

Happy Wednesday! I’m so amped up this morning because I just worked a ton of hours over the past few days and now I get to look forward to a music festival this weekend! On Friday, I am headed to Shakori Hills. It’s a grassroots music, dance, and yoga festival held in the woods here in North Carolina. It’s a car camping festival in the sense that you get to drive relatively close to the campground, but you eventually have to park and hike all your gear into the forest and find your own campsite. Nothing is designated for you. How cool, right?

Our Live Seasoned theme this month is travel so while I was sitting here typing out a list for myself and my friends, I realized this could be helpful for other summer festy goers. Here is my ultimate car camping festival packing list. I feel this list is a fair mix of basic and over the top. For instance, cooking. It’s really not necessary to go all out, but there something about cooking at camp that makes my heart happy, so I take a lot in that department. If there is anything you deem essential that’s not on this list, let me know!

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Fall Camping

If you’d like to see more of our Colorado adventures, click here.

Once the calendar turned to September, we leapt into fall with all of our hearts. Granted the days have still been warm, but we’ve found that if you climb high enough into the mountains, then the evenings are cool, the leaves are changing colors, and the mornings are perfectly crisp.

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Here are a few snapshots from our recent weekend camping trips. If you feel inspired to hop in the car this weekend, at the very bottom of the post, I link to a few posts to hep you get started, including some of our favorite/essential gear.

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Camp Kitchen Snafu

Sarah recently shared detailed lists for setting up your camp kitchen and your backpacking kitchen. I think we can all agree that one of the most essential items on those lists is the stove. It’s essential for hot coffee in the morning, teas at night, eggs for breakfast, ramen for dinner. Should I go on?

We spent many years backpacking with our homemade beer can stoves (thanks, pop!). When we started car camping more regularly, the mini burner on a gas canister was a great option. Sarah’s a recent convert to the Jetboil system. The nice thing about each of these stoves is that they’re relatively small! They can easily fit in your camp box/bag, ensuring that you never leave home without them (bit of foreshadowing there).
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Now that we’re a family of four, we’ve made the leap to a Coleman camp stove. It’s definitely not an option for a backpacking trip, but it’s perfect for car camping, especially with a group. You can use larger pots and pans, have multiple items cooking at once, and you don’t have to worry about balancing a tippy pot, which is clutch with a couple of crazy kids.

Unfortunately, we FORGOT THE STOVE on our last trip. I can’t remember when we realized our mistake. Maybe on the drive? Maybe when setting up the van that first night? Either way, with little hesitation we knew we could rise to the occasion and camp without the stove.

Whenever we’ve mentioned this blunder to people, they’ve all asked or assumed that we would run out and buy another stove. Admittedly it crossed our minds, and that’s because it’s so hard to imagine a weekend without a stove.

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But really, it’s not that bad, and here’s how we handled it. The first step was to decide what we could live without and then find alternatives to the items that were absolutely necessary.

The Essentials:

  • coffee : we can’t live without it. Sure, there’s the ritual of a warm cup of coffee in the mornings. That’s nice, but for us, caffeine was our main concern. We bought a bottle of free-dried coffee crystals and made Nescafe Frappes all weekend. Knowing this recipe is up there with knowing how to escape a grizzly bear attack or how to cut off your arm in an avalanche. Life or death.
  • hot breakfasts : again, nice, but there are options. We bought a variety of yogurts and called it a day. This was particularly a hit with the kids because the sweetened yogurts are an indulgence that they rarely get at home.
  • dinners : this is where we had to do a bit more thinking, but were still able to make it work. Almost all campsites that we visit have a removable grill that fits over the fire ring. We grilled hotdogs one night and chicken thighs another. With the chicken we heated up a can of baked beans, and together that was one of those dinners that tastes gourmet because you’re eating it in the woods have a long day outside. Other nights we made tasty picnic platters with hummus, salami, cheese, etc.

We often pack no-cook lunch options, so that was always an easy meal. The boys didn’t get their regular hot chocolates for breakfast, but they were just as happy with cold chocolate milks.

At the end of the trip, it was fun to have this little snafu success under our belt. On a personal note, it was nice to work through this situation in front of the boys, giving us a real-life “problem” to solve together.

And now we’ll always travel with a jar of instant coffee in our camp bag.

Go To Grocerys for Camping

Interested in car camping? Here’s a great van camping packing list created by Katie.

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Hey, happy campers! Last week, a friend asked me what my favorite camping meals were. Like always, I came to Live Seasoned and searched ‘camping meals’ and was so surprised to see I hadn’t created a post with that information yet. What the heck? What am I doing with my time? Probably camping and eating honestly.

What makes a meal a camping meal? A few things. Meals meant for camp should have one, or better yet most of these attributes: few ingredients, easy to store, mostly nonperishable, easy to prepare, very little cleanup, and very little waste whether in the form of trash or compost. Continue reading

Camping on BLM Land

This May we’ve been doing a series of travel posts as both a kick-off to summer and as a bit of inspiration to get out there and explore. This June, we’re continuing the travel theme, but with a focus on camping!
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Have you camped on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land? If you’re from the east coast (like us), you may have no clue what I’m talking about. If you’re from the west, this plethora of camping awesomeness may be nothing new to you.  Continue reading

Gift Guide : Kids’ Camping Gear

This month, in anticipation of summer vacations, we’re doing a few travel-related posts. You can see our full archive of travel posts here. And here are some of our basic tips for camping with young kids.

If you haven’t been following the blog regularly, let’s just throw it out there that we love to go camping. And we’re hoping to instill that same love in our two little guys (ages 5 & 3).

We’ve documented quite a few family trips on the blog. You can see a hike from our most recent spring trip here. Last summer we took a little road trip to Great Sand Dunes and the San Juan Mountains. And one of our most memorable camping trips was the winter weekend in Rocky Mountain National Park.

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While the kids were babies, we packed almost no gear for them. As long as we remembered the carriers for hikes, what else did we need?

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Postcards from the Rockies

If you’d like to see more of our outdoor adventures, here’s a post from another car-camping trip with the boys, and here are a few of the hikes we’ve documented.

This past weekend we went on a short one-night camping trip near Rocky Mountain National Park (RMNP) and had such a great time. We didn’t do any major planning or packing, just a couple of hours Saturday morning, and then we started driving during nap time, and by the afternoon we found a campsite (more on that below), then we woke up Sunday and took off for a hiking destination that was in the direction of home, and we made it back to our house by late afternoon. It was a short but sweet trip that left everyone happy and tired.

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One thing that still overwhelms me since moving to Boulder is how crowded hiking and camping areas are in this area. I understand that it’s the confluence of living near a large urban area (with a high percentage of people that like to get outside) and living near some of the most beautiful scenery in the country (I may be biased), but wow – there seem to be crowds at every campground, on every hiking trail, and on every road. I’ll get used to it eventually. The problem is that it makes it hard for non-planners like us to go for an adventure on a whim.

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