Sounds good, I will check it out. Thinking we will stick to UK and Ireland this year and then further afield into the rest of Europe next year. Any other good campsites with activities for kids (and a bar nearby for husband) would be greatly appreciated
We have a 4 and 2 year old. We also got our van late summer. (Glasto next month will also be our first trip without the kids!)
Hopefully some of the info below on how we started using the van might help.
It took us about 6 weekend trips and countless days messing with the van at home before we felt like we knew what we were fully doing. (We have since spent about 40 nights in the van).
I would recommend “Masons Campsite” in Appletreewick in the Yorkshire Dales. Or if it’s too far look for something similar closer to you.
This was our first and favourite campsite as a family. Beautiful views. Next to a river with footpath (easy to take the kids for 10 mins to throw stones in the river if one of you needs to sort the van or cook without the kids about). Lots of animals about for the kids to look at. No playground but a huge field for playing on.
They have a coffee & bread shed (so an easy breakfast is Croissants and coffee. And I think they may do Pizza some nights now too)
It’s only about a 10 min walk from a great pub which does good food (Craven Arms).
If you stay somewhere with breakfast / meal options your learning how to adapt to being in the van you can easily eat out whilst you get the hang of things. Then introduce cooking on a later trip.
How we currently do weekend trips in the UK is below (we have a 3 seater Beach)
Friday: Just about getting there and setting up after work. (Easy picnic style tea taken from home). We throw a lot of stuff which doesn’t live in the van in a pop up toilet tent (car seats, kids bikes / backpack carrier / pushchair etc depending on what you take). We only spin the passenger chair. Drivers chair is moved as far forward it goes but it’s where we put all clothes
Let the kids have a quick explore of the campsite to get their bearings. Then get them to bed around 8pm.
(Both kids sleep ‘sideways’ upstairs. But it took about 8 nights before the kids were comfortable upstairs)
Once the kids are asleep we sit outside if the weather is good with a firepit and a drink. If the weather is bad we get in bed and read / watch something on the tablet.
Saturday: Lazy start to the day. With a short walk before lunch (or walk to a pub). After lunch our 2 year old naps upstairs and the 4 year old usually has some quite play time, Lego, sticker books etc (sometimes watches a film / cartoons if he is shattered from a walk whilst his sister naps. We have an iPad mount which goes on the drivers headrest)
After nap time we stay close to the campsite and start thinking about tea. Time seems to fly when camping because everything takes forever with the kids being young. If we manage 3 meals and a short walk in a day it’s a success.
If it’s a rainy day we leave downstairs in bed mode with the ceiling pushed up. As the kids can mess about on the bed it feels like more space. Take some toys from home incase the weather isn’t great. At first the kids played with their toys from home outside. But after a few trips we found they use the ‘home’ toys less and play with balls, buckets and sticks etc.
Sunday: Quick breakfast then tag team having the kids so we can get packed up (initially it took hours). If the kids get fussy when packing up we put them in their car seats and let them watch cartoons.
Once leaving the campsite we usually have a kid / family friendly activity planned for the Sunday. (Hesketh Farm Park is great if you do make it to the dales).
We let the kids have a good play / run about then some food and drive home. They usually sleep most of the way back because they are shattered.
Our 4 year old feels travel sick sometimes when he is tired. So we do our best to get him napping in the van on the way home. On the way there he never seems to feel as bad.
We have a Cinch Hub which we use instead of the ‘toilet tent’ if we take more stuff. (The first few times we went away the Cinch Hub was full because we took way too many things).
In terms of essentials what
@Lambeth Cali describes above is very similar to what we take.
Even once you and the kids have got used to the van sometimes it will feel like hard work!
We packed up and went home one Saturday night because our little girl was teething and wouldn’t stop screaming.