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Sunday, September 29, 2013

How to camp when you have to rent *everything*

Last weekend, Ben and I went to Devil's Lake. We live in Chicago and don't own either a car or a tent, and only have a sleeping bag, but we both really wanted to go camping.

Camping is the perfect cheap vacation - no hotels, no meals out, and all your entertainment is found by visiting the local state parks - plus, it's a super head clearing way to really get away from it all. This was necessary given my lay-off in May and the 62-hours I worked the previous week at my temp job, which I was convinced was ending the day before we left.

So about a month before the trip, when I got that feeling of "I need to leave town before I go crazy," I did some research. One of the benefits of belonging to a gym attached to a university is that my gym just happens to rent outdoor equipment. For $34, we rented a two-person tent, two sleeping mats, a sleeping bag, and a lantern for up to four nights. Not having a car, I brought one of my giant wheeled suitcases - large enough to get me through ten weeks and then some on the other side of the world - and loaded everything in. It wasn't that difficult to get the suitcase onto the L at rush hour on a Friday. I had to transfer everything into the GIANT suitcase I've only used before for moving once I added the second sleeping bag and two pillows (yes, I brought pillows camping).

We had checked various travel options - taking a train or bus to Milwaukee or Madison before renting a car, for example - but the most time and cost-efficient way was to rent a car from O'Hare, even when factoring in the hour plus train-bus-train ride there. For three days, our Mazda 2 hatch-back (super fun to drive!) cost about $90, plus gas, and the car was the perfect size for everything. The GIANT suitcase fit nicely under the hatch, and everything else (a cooler and two backpacks) went on the back seat.

I didn't get a picture of our tuff in the car, but here it is on the train


One thing to remember: you probably have rental car insurance through your auto insurance or your credit card. Ben confirmed this by calling Visa Signature - the policy is even on the first page of website! This saved us $30 for the weekend - a third of the price of the car!



Ben negotiating with the rental car representative about car insurance


We purchased all our groceries up in Barraboo, WI (including a delicious case of Spotted Cow beer, not available outside of Wisconsin), and we had to purchase firewood within 25 miles of the state park we were staying in. Add in the $5/day vehicle permit to bring the car in and some tolls (note: way cheaper just to pay the tolls, even if they're more expensive, than to pay $7/day on the rental car's ipass. We didn't spend $7 a day on tolls), and there you have it!

The worst part of the train-bus-train-car, car-train-bus-train part was construction we faced Monday on I-90 that seemed to go on forever. It actually was about 25 miles, but in 90-degree weather in slightly pre-rush hour traffic, this kind of sucked, especially knowing that we had to drag all of the stuff back to the gym via the train in rush hour.

Review of the rental system: not a bad way to go. We spent approximately $400 between us, which was a little more than I'd hoped (damn you, gas prices!) but we also made stops in Milwaukee and Madison for breakfast Saturday and lunch Monday. I'm hoping that when we go camping next year, we'll have a tent (either one we buy or one used from family). As far as the car, I decided that I'll wait until I have a job that needs one before purchasing, so maybe next year we'll still be making that trek out to O'Hare.

Until next time, cheers!

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