How you can turn your cabin fever into camping bliss at home

Here are some ideas to get the benefits of an overnight backpacking trip without leaving the house.

  • By Charlie Wakenshaw Washington Trails Association
  • Sunday, April 26, 2020 7:49am
  • Life

By Charlie Wakenshaw / Washington Trails Association

Has the comfort of your pillow-top mattress grown tiresome? Is the climate-controlled air inside your home starting to sour? Open wide your windows and doors and give camping at home a try. Whether you rearrange the furniture to make a tent pad in your living room or set up on the lawn, here are some ideas to get the benefits of an overnight trip without leaving home.

Set up camp

Start with the tent and build out from there. If you have a free-standing tent, it’ll be a breeze to set up inside or out. If it’s the kind that will only stand up when staked in the ground, you’re in luck. You don’t actually need dirt to stake a tent. Balconies, porches, patios, decks, hallways and living rooms all make for great camp spots.

Washington Trail Association’s Rachel Wendling made a YouTube video that demonstrates how to set up a tent in your living room. That video is titled “Turn Cabin Fever Into Camping Bliss at Home.”

Pack like you would for a backpacking trip and head out on a neighborhood adventure. (Emma Cassidy)

Pack like you would for a backpacking trip and head out on a neighborhood adventure. (Emma Cassidy)

Once you have your home within your home constructed, here are some other ideas for your camping staycation:

■ Make it lavish with lots of pillows and blankets.

■ Or think of this as a test run, and only use the camping gear you would bring on a real overnight

■ Hang a hammock between two sturdy trees or posts and hang out in the sun all day.

■ If you don’t have a tent, make one by hanging a blanket over some chairs and snuggle up inside.

Pitch a tent in your back yard or living room for a camping staycation. If you have a hammock, hang that up, too. (Getty Images)

Pitch a tent in your back yard or living room for a camping staycation. If you have a hammock, hang that up, too. (Getty Images)

Add ambience

If it looks like camp, smells like camp, sounds like camp and feels like camp, it must be camp. These additional tips will take your home-bound hideaway to the next level:

■ Arrange your tent so the door is facing a TV or computer. Play a wildlife documentary or set your screensaver to a photo from your favorite camping view.

■ Find a nature-inspired Spotify playlist for background music (e.g. rain falling on a tent, a rushing river, frogs around a lake).

■ Wind twinkle lights around your tent poles.

■ Arrange your houseplants into a forest outside your tent.

■ Light a scented candle that reminds you of the piney air of the forest.

Start a fire and make s’mores. It’s what camping’s really all about. (Getty Images)

Start a fire and make s’mores. It’s what camping’s really all about. (Getty Images)

Simulate the outdoors

For some, a fun living room hang out will be the perfect way to while away the hours; others may crave a more rugged experience.

If you’re one of the latter, fire up your imagination and mimic the rhythms of a backpacking trip while staying close to home. Here are some things to try:

■ Go backpacking around your neighborhood, and end back at your home campground for the night.

■ If you’re more into car camping, pull out all the bells and whistles and lounge away the day. Or if you’ve always been curious about literally sleeping in your car, give it a try for the night to see how it feels.

■ Unplug by stashing away all your devices and rely only on your headlamp for light when it gets dark.

■ Use this as an opportunity to test out all your gear and mend anything that needs it.

■ If you miss waking up to the sound of raindrops hitting your tent, fire up the sprinkler and see if that old rain fly still keeps you dry.

■ Break in a new pair of boots by going on long walks during the day and resting your feet at your home camp at night.

■ Live out of your backpack for the weekend to get familiar with all of its secret pockets and zippers and doodads. Only use what you would normally bring camping and see where you can lose weight — or what you need that you forgot.

Camp activities that work at home

Now that you’ve gotten your miles in and set up camp, it’s time to kick up those feet and enjoy the scenery by doing the things that make camp life so refreshing:

■ Test out a future backpacking meal and eat it out of your favorite camp bowl.

■ Practice proper food storage by rigging up a bear hang in your back yard or living room.

■ Have a race to see who in the family can set up their tent the fastest.

■ Grab a book and read by headlamp after the sun goes down.

■ Use a star-finder app on your phone to learn the constellations.

■ Start a fire and make s’mores.

■ Tell stories of past hiking adventures.

■ Learn how to tie some knots.

Washington Trails Association promotes hiking as a way to inspire a people to protect Washington’s natural places. Get inspired to go hiking and learn how you can help protect trails at www.wta.org.

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