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Guide to England's 60 most stunning caravan sites. Best sites for scenic views, children, beach holidays, walking breaks, action adventure, and relaxation. Caravanning has seen a surge in popularity in the UK, driven by caravan design improvements and luxurious new camping facilities. This +£3bn a year industry is experiencing double-digit growth, with over 2 million people taking a UK caravan holiday each year. UK caravan bed/night accommodation is 13% higher than the equivalent hotel/motel rate.
'Cool Caravanning' presents a hand-picked selection of 54 great places to stay in England, featuring both places you can bring your own caravan and sites with static caravans for rent. It provides details of all the facitilities for each site, local activities, places to visit and special places to eat.
Presents a celebration of vintage campervans through photographs depicting their customization and refurbishment.
Discover over 40 different caravans of all vintages, from across the world Celebrating the wave of interest in modern-retro caravanning, this is a visual voyage into this stylish world and an idiosyncratic sourcebook for the design-conscious. Featured caravans include retro classics as well as mass-produced models from the 1960s onwards. "A beautifully shot celebration of classic vans from around the world...complete with style notes on how to achieve that period look." --Drive magazine
'Cool Camping - Scotland' features a hand-picked selection of the very best campsites and camping experiences Scotland has to offer, with in-depth reviews, useful practical information, hundreds of colour photos and a stylish, contemporary design.
'Cool Camping - England' is the first in a radical series of camping guides. Gone are thousands of dull directory listings - these are the best 40 camping experiences in England, hand-picked for a perfect weekend away. Every establishment has something special to offer and is brought to life with original colour photography.
Revealing a world beyond the stereotype, My Cool Campervan celebrates the new wave of interest in modern-retro campervans. When people think of campervans, they almost always recall the iconic VW T2, that familiar, happy-faced van that embodies the virtues of enjoying the journey and taking your time. However, there is a world of forgotten campervans out there and an idiosyncratic world of individual conversions to campers. Join Jane Field-Lewis and Chris Haddon as they set off on a 3,500-mile trip to locate campervans and their proud owners, who share their memories of family holidays and long road trips. Delve into the world of road-tripping as they reveal a succession of delightful campervans, memorable locations, and classic models, at times beautifully restored, and at others well-loved and well-used. My Cool Campervan reveals a world beyond the stereotype and is a celebration of campervans' evolving styles and designs.
In Exodus 3:33, the Jews searched for the land of milk and honey, as mentioned by the Lord. Silicon Valley began as a caravan with start-up companies wandering, looking for success, which became companies and, in time, grew into giants in their industry. How can a valley with the vision to create technology become myopic for some that failed to change with the evolution of technology? Silicon Valley began in the midsixties with companies like Memorex and Fairchild Camera that grew and fostered trail blazers like Lockheed, General Dynamics, Hughes, Rockwell, Litton, Varian, and Motorola with startups like Intel, AMD, and National Semiconductorall chasing the thought of great profits with no vision of what would it cost to get there. These were events that were witnessed by Joe Rios, a senior buyer for many Silicon Valley companies. Technology was developed over time and, by February 1999, with great expectations, created a frenzy to capture an elusive prize. It was a time when technologies converged, creating a potential for profit and an opportunity to seize market share from competitors. Only the quick and the resourceful would win the prize, and it was like the Oklahoma land rush; they saddled up, gathered the necessary materials and employees, and rode off toward a point on the horizon. Along the way, there were red flags, but they were ignored, while focusing on the treasure, not the path they were taking.
In Caravans, Hege Høyer Leivestad opens the caravan door to understand how daily life is organised among Britons and Swedes who have relocated, either seasonally or permanently, to mobile homes. Leivestad investigates how the caravan and campsite come to fit and challenge conventional domestic ideals, and how the static mobile caravan can nurture ideas of freedom even when it is standing still. With sensitivity and an awareness of the humour and pathos of the lives of her subjects, Leivestad closely examines the shaping of the European camping phenomenon and its day-to-day pleasures and pains, ranging from friendships ties to conflictive bingo nights, from nosy and noisy neighbours to fake fireplaces and rotten awning floors. As the first ethnographic study of caravan life in Europe, Caravans offers a refreshing take on contemporary mobility debates, showing how movement can best be understood by taking a detailed look at certain specific mundanities in material culture. This rich and topical ethnography is a must-read for students of anthropology, human geography and architecture, and for those with an interest in the possibilities and perils of a life on wheels.