“Throughout the afternoon, hunters returned to the camp with game that had been killed in the surrounding hills and valley.”
“I knew him when he was a young man, still a boy. He came to our hunter's camp outside Smith Harbour in 1940, only thirteen, on the sled of a traveling hunter.”
“They are descendants of Charles Cook, owner of the first private camp at Lake View.”
“A wedge of large men wearing leather and denim roared into the campground on Harleys.”
“Inner-city youths go up to a campground up north to learn how to canoe and camp.”
“And then, like a walking, unkempt buzzkill, the campground security showed up.”
camping
(uncountable) The recreational activity of temporarily living in a tent or similar accommodation, usually in the wilderness.
(countable) The act of setting up a camp.
campfire
A fire at a campground or on a campingtrip, often used for cooking, to provide light and heat, to drive away bugs, and as a focal point for sitting around in the evening and talking, telling stories, and singing.
“Throughout the afternoon, hunters returned to the camp with game that had been killed in the surrounding hills and valley.”
“I knew him when he was a young man, still a boy. He came to our hunter's camp outside Smith Harbour in 1940, only thirteen, on the sled of a traveling hunter.”
“They are descendants of Charles Cook, owner of the first private camp at Lake View.”