| PHOTOGRAPH BY CHASE JARVIS, GETTY IMAGES | |
| By George Stone, TRAVEL Executive Editor
Should you go camping this summer? The short answer: Sounds fun! But the longer answer—in this season in which nothing is simple—is “definitely maybe, but only after determining that your outdoor outing will not contribute to the spread of COVID-19.”
Sigh. August used to be so easy.
We worked with reporter Aryana Azari to offer safety tips, secrets, and everything you need to know about sleeping under the stars. “Camping has evolved quite a bit since the time of William H.H. Murray, who is considered to be the popularizer of modern camping in the U.S. after his 1869 bestseller (the first guidebook for recreational camping), Adventures in the Wilderness, launched an outdoor craze,” Azari told us. Her article points to present-day camping resources, including the website The Dyrt, which are seeing huge spikes in interest among would-be campers, many of them first-timers.
Spoiler alert: You will not be the first person to discover the wilds this summer. In a recent article about the challenges schools are facing as they aim to reopen, National Geographic’s Michael Greshko cites a CDC report on a COVID-19 outbreak among attendees of an overnight camp. “It says that 44 percent of people at an unnamed overnight camp in the state of Georgia—260 of the 597 campers and staff—have tested positive for COVID-19,” he writes. The camp required staff to wear masks and took disinfecting precautions, but did not have proper ventilation in buildings or require campers to wear masks.
Situations like that either make you want to hide under your bed or head for beautiful and isolated camp sites any way you can—as a tent camper, car camper, backcountry camper, RV camper, or even a glamper. The allure of the outdoors is real—and you should follow it. Our article offers tips on where to camp, what to bring, what to eat, who to bring, and how to keep safe (be sure to practice social distancing from bears, for instance).
While some U.S. national parks are experiencing record-breaking tourism, many less-visited spots are not. “Lake Clark, North Cascades, and Great Basin all have low visitation numbers when compared to their popular neighbors—Denali, Mount Rainier, and Zion, respectively, though it is worth noting that even the most popular of national parks are experiencing a drop in numbers right now,” Azari writes. “Using the data available on the virus to see where cases are rising is crucial to making decisions on where to avoid and where to go.”
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