Glamping Gear: Camp Casual

Whether its just a weekend getaway or a long camping trip, Camp Casual has all the supplies and accessories needed for the perfect trip.

The website, Camp Casual features unique products for the RV and camping enthusiast.

Camp Casual is a family company that features retro inspired items for the RV and camping lover, getting their start from a desire to create original products to celebrate the business in which they grew up.

The products featured on the website are geared toward RV fanatics, introducing a melamine 12-piece dish set tucked into a reusable box which adds a dash of retro style to any camping trip.

Whether you are camping, tailgating, RVing or just out for a quick picnic these retro-inspired pieces are the perfect accessory for any outing.

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Glamping Travel Trends: Demand for luxurious outdoor experience

As the demand for glamourous outdoor travel has increased, the desire for glamping has suddenly caught fire.

Glamour camping, known as glamping, is becoming a growing trend by allowing people to stay connected to nature with the comforts of home.

The search volume for the keyword “glamping” currently runs at more than 175,000 searches a month, a 30% increase from the past year, says Ryan Hutchings, general manager of Glamping.com.

Whether the experiences are in opulent tents or cabins, over the past six to eight years the demand across the globe for a true glamping experience has risen making wave for new properties and a new way to bring the comforts of home to the great outdoors.

For more information on Glamping and resorts check out Barron’s article, Lux Travel Trend: Glamping.

West Bali National Park Retreat – The Menjangan

Set on beholding Bali’s beauty outside of the major tourist zones, we traveled four hours from the buzzy South Isle to the woodsy West Coast. Our goal: To get away. Away from throngs of tourists. Away from same-same shops. Away from beat-pumping beach clubs.

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We were pining after an actual postcard setting. We found it at The Menjangan (Indonesian for deer).
Positioned in a part of Bali where a slower pace of life is de rigueur—case in point: Donkeys pull carts toting branches along the roadside—the jungle retreat occupying 950 acres of Bali Barat National Park rides the line between safari and savvy; beach and beyond.

the beach

At the shorefront, a small collection of villas built using traditional Javanese architecture sit on a private stretch of sand fronting a beach so blue it’s as if the sea is reflecting the sky. Outdoor bathrooms add a touch of rustic to the abodes, while air condoning and upscale minimalist design mingling white linens and a sturdy four-post bed remind you you’re in a villa.

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A mile inland from Sentigi beach the rest of the retreat lingers in the jungle’s shadows. At the Monsoon Lodge, 14 thatched-roof rooms and two suites invoke the glamping aesthetic courtesy of alang-alang grass roofs, Bengkirai wood floors, and the lush setting (read: It’s not abnormal for a gecko to scurry across your ceiling) hugging a glowing pool and hot tub lit by rays of midday sun sneaking through the thick foliage.

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Safari vehicles link the Beach Villas, the Monsoon Lodge, and the Bali Tower, a five-tier structure busting high above the bush. Most days, we chose to wake up with the jungle and eat our breakfast at the Bali Tower, one of two restaurants onsite. (For the record: Savoring fresh fruit on a perch peering over the lush landscape has made breakfast every day since, a tad lacklustre.)

breakfast at the bali tower

After breakfast we made our way to the beach; sometimes on foot, sometimes via safari truck. It’s in moments like this you’re reminded you’re glamping in a national park. Deer roam about freely, monkeys hang from trees, and birds provide the ultimate far-flung soundtrack.

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Aside from one mid-afternoon monsoon “forcing” us to read in our outdoorsy abode, we spent our days alternating between sand and surf. Each morning at 10 a.m. we’d plant ourselves in our preferred lounges under one of the many trees providing shade at the beach. From here our daily itinerary was simple: Snooze, drink Bintang Beer (the local brew), cool off in the Bali Sea, or walk to the resort’s nearby jetty to don our snorkel gear.

pantai beach restaurant

When the sun set, we didn’t long for a scene or street full of restaurants. At The Menjangan, you crave what’s there: A five-seat bar at the beach, and a 10-table restaurant resting above the water. Here, under the glow of blue lanterns we ate local fish, sipped fresh-fruit cocktails, and celebrated a place where everyone had come for the away-from-it-all setting (and nobody cared if your hair still sported an ocean-sculpted hairdo).