So what did the Club ever do for Motorcaravanners?

StuartO replied on 02/03/2019 12:44

Posted on 02/03/2019 12:44

It’s a while now since the Club was renamed, to reflect that there are lots of motorhomers among Members - but apart from the name change, what has and does the Club plan to do to cater effectively for motorhomers?

Well there has been a programme of improving motorhome servicepoints, to provide drive-over grey water drains, but at the club Site I most recently stayed at there was no lighting at this service point (unlike the others) so using it after dark (and it was dark at 4.30pm that day) was a matter of struggling with a torch.  But I haven’t noticed anything else specifically for motorhomers and in response a suggestion that the Club should develop overnight parking stops for motorhome like the Aires on the continent, I read somewhere that the Club’s only response was to wonder whether a discussion about whether this was a more appropriate thing for the Government rather than the Clubs to be considering.

CAMC is of course a commercial operator of full scale caravan sites and jolly good they are too but these cater primarily for people who want to stay for quite a number of days, like caravanners do, while lots of motorhomers (certainly on the Continent) make lots of use of more basic overnight parking, to stay for one or two nights only and then move on.  Some motorhomers do use their vehicles like caravans and stay on a Site for a while but lots more enjoys their holidays by keeping moving along.

For holidaying in this mode motorhomers don’t need a toilet block, resident staff and manicured grass around them every night; on most nights they don’t need much more than parking, a supply of drinking water, a drain for grey water and somewhere to empty the chemical toilet.  CAMC should be just as capable of building good Night Halt locations as it is at building full scale caravan sites - and operating them profitably.  There are lots of Aires on the continent which charge good money (and use barrier entry operated with credit cards etc) as well as the free ones provided (as a tourist facility and an attraction) by many local authorities.

There may be an argument for local authorities to build Aires as tourist attractions etc but there is also, quite separately, an argument for CAMC showing initiative in building a network of Aires in UK as a service to it’s Motorhome Members.  I think a network of CAMC Motorhome Nightstops would compliment the network of Club Sites and serve to promote them too - for example each Night Halt could easily display advertising material about nearby Club Sites.  And motorhomers who use Aires also tend to use full scale caravan sites periodically as well, for example to have a ‘laundry day”.

Isn’t someone on the Club’s staff or committees already thinking about this avenue of development - and if so can we hear something about their ideas?

 

JVB66 replied on 19/03/2019 17:56

Posted on 19/03/2019 17:49 by brue

No it's not owned by the race course, everything is leased to Warwick Town Council including the race course and the golf club. It's all on common land. It's probably one of the most awkward motorhome drain points on the network! Not pleasant when water runs all over the adjoining roadway. 

 

Posted on 19/03/2019 17:56

But the race course must then sub lease the site to the club as it is them who have any say in what the club can do as far as any upgrade is concerned 

brue replied on 19/03/2019 18:01

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:01

I believe it's all been happening for a long time JVB, the set ups are all intertwined. I expect the club originally leased a part of the field there. I remember Warwick Common when things were much more rural, no golf club either. The council no doubt makes a lot of money from the leases etc which is fair enough as the people of Warwick have rights on the land.

Bit of a diversion from this lengthy thread. wink

edit       I suppose it shows the wheels within wheels of planning, how things are not always as straight forward and easy to do as some would hope. 

ABM replied on 19/03/2019 18:05

Posted on 19/03/2019 17:49 by brue

No it's not owned by the race course, everything is leased to Warwick Town Council including the race course and the golf club. It's all on common land. It's probably one of the most awkward motorhome drain points on the network! Not pleasant when water runs all over the adjoining roadway. 

 

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:05

Brue,  according  to  Warwick  racecourse's  own  website  The  Jockey  Club  bought  the  racecourse  in  1967.

JVB66 replied on 19/03/2019 18:05

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:01 by brue

I believe it's all been happening for a long time JVB, the set ups are all intertwined. I expect the club originally had a part of the field there. I remember Warwick Common when things were much more rural, no golf club either. The council no doubt makes a lot of money from the leases etc which is fair enough as the people of Warwick have rights on the land.

Bit of a diversion from this lengthy thread. wink

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:05

I understand the race course built the reception/facilities block at the site back in the 1990s

brue replied on 19/03/2019 18:09

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:09

I haven't posted on this thread before, I think I'll have my tea now and hand over to OH who is a Warwick lad....except he'll be having his tea too. laughingwink

replied on 19/03/2019 18:17

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:05 by JVB66

I understand the race course built the reception/facilities block at the site back in the 1990s

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:17

All too complicated. As a caravaner it is the worst grey water and black water disposal for caravanners in the club! IMO of course (no pun)

young thomas replied on 19/03/2019 18:19

Posted on 19/03/2019 16:50 by

you would suggest wrongsurprised  

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:19

perhaps they don't have these in Hertfordshire, Davidwink but I'd say with EHU, fresh water and waste adjacent, it was a Serviced Pitchsmile

we have one just like it at homewink

Takethedogalong replied on 19/03/2019 18:42

Posted on 19/03/2019 18:42

Warwick Racecourse is as far as we are concerned one of the best little sites going! Agree the MH dump point is possibly one of the most awkward we have seen, but it’s not difficult unless you cannot manoeuvre and cannot lift. It wouldn’t be half as difficult if those with MHs carried some form of dump pipe, forward planning does help. We love Racecourse Sites, ok they aren’t typical Club Sites, but they are still very nice, and usually a great price. Just looked at Fakenham coincidentally, guess what......you can book a specific pitch on there!😂 

 

mickysf replied on 19/03/2019 19:20

Posted on 19/03/2019 19:20

Please correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think you can book specific pitches as a tourer at Fakenham.  

What I think you can do is book grass or hard standing types but not a specific pitch. 

I'm all for this but would be very much against booking specific pitches on Club sites.

 

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