Archive for March, 2009

CAMPINGAZ CAMPING KITCHEN GRILL

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

New design Two burner stove & die cast non-stick aluminium grill. Precise power adjustment and extreme stability even for big pots and pans. Push and Turn child safety knobs. Easy storage and carrying around with pan supports stored underneath the cook-top.

Power: 1,700 + 2,300 watts

Boil Time: 5min .20

Size: 53.5 x 33.5 x 12 cm

Weight: 6kg
for the latest price on this product please click here

High Street

Monday, March 30th, 2009

High Street from Mardale Head, is a challenging walk and in my opinion is one of the best walks I have ever done in the English Lake District. Starting from the free car park at Mardale Head at the top of Haweswater Reservoir, walking up Rough Crag & Eagle Crag which is famous as been the home of the only nesting Golden Eagle in England & Wales. Then the last climb up Long Stile to the summit, with on a clear day you can see fantastic views of the Helvellyn range
Snow on the mountains

Coleman & Campingaz from TGS

Monday, March 30th, 2009

TGS Direct announce the new outdoor range from Campingaz and Coleman

Once again our customers change and TGS provide the Products that evolve with them. The new trend is to view the garden as an extension of the home. Eating outside, living outdoors, making the most of enjoyable moments together.

Campingaz and Coleman products are therefore adapted bringing all of their experience of the outdoors to bear on a new range of products from heaters, stoves,Lanterns,Tents, Airbeds and Sleeping bags. Warm memories of teenage camping trips, coupled with an awareness of the brand’s 40 years’ experience, lead to more and more consumers seeing a the beneficial aspect of Campingaz and Coleman products and the joy they bring to family living.

The History of Coleman

Nearly 100 years ago, a young man with an entrepreneurial spirit and a better idea began manufacturing lanterns in Wichita, Kansas. His name was W.C. Coleman. And the company he founded would change life in America. A fascinating saga, if we do say so ourselves. One filled with historical significance, amazing innovations and delightfully fun things to know.

Our current catalog is thick with recently introduced products that make spending time outside a pleasure. There are products just for kids. A technologically-advanced, proven mosquito-defense system. Coolers that keep food and drinks cold for up to six days. A complete line of grills, lights, heaters and more for your backyard.

If you have a few minutes, the story is here. Most of it, anyhow. In bits and pieces and pictures. Settle back and discover how Coleman came to be a way of life in America. And why it still is.

A man with poor eyesight but remarkable vision.

It started as simply as this: In 1900, a young man bent on replenishing his educational funds so he could complete his last year of law school set out to sell lamps in what is now Kingfisher, Oklahoma. He had first encountered the lamp that would change the course of his life in a drugstore window in Alabama. Plagued with such poor vision he sometimes had to ask classmates to read aloud to him, the brilliant light from that window stopped W.C. Coleman in his tracks. He went in to inquire about it and discovered he was able to read even the small print on a medicine bottle by this light.

The lamps had mantles, not wicks, and were fueled by gasoline under pressure instead of coal oil. Their light was clean and white. And when Coleman heard the company was looking for salesmen, he used the funds he’d accumulated to buy inventory. He could sell these lamps in a flash to merchants who wanted to keep their shops open in the evening.

As it turned out, he couldn’t sell even one. Merchants in Kingfisher had just been stung by a lighting salesman with a less-than-stellar product. Shopkeepers would not be swayed. So, using the ingenuity and resourcefulness that would later build his company, W.C. decided to sell a lighting service instead of the lamps themselves. He drew up contracts with a “no light, no pay” clause and, with the risk removed, customers signed up.

Soon Kingfisher was a beacon on the prairie. The service eventually expanded to cities as far west as San Diego and Las Vegas. In 1902, Coleman relocated to Wichita, Kansas, reasoning it would be about the center of his potential territory. As it turned out, his territory would one day come to encompass the world.

The sunshine of the night.

Coleman was able to purchase the inventory and patents for the Efficient Lamp in 1901. After years of servicing the lamps, he knew he could design a better product. And he knew there would be a voracious market.

Electric service was undependable in urban areas and unavailable in rural areas – it would be for many years to come. In 1909, Coleman introduced a portable table lamp that became a staple in rural homes. And in 1914, the young company introduced the lantern that made it famous. At 300 candlepower, it could light the far corners of a barn and provided good light in every direction for 100 yards.

The Coleman® lantern extended the time farmers and ranchers could work, significantly increasing productivity. It changed life in rural America. And during WWI, the government declared it an essential item. Nearly 70,000 were distributed.

By the close of the decade, the company was a bona fide manufacturing concern. It had an organized sales force, a research and development department, and factory output had increased from 120 lamps in 1909 to 50,000 by the year 1920.

Coleman hits the road.

After the war, people had money and were ready to have fun. The automobile was no longer a novelty. Prices made cars affordable for many families, and with mobility came the urge to travel and explore. The vacation business was booming and Coleman took advantage of it.

Motor camping became the rage. Travelers lashed their belongings to their running boards and took off. Roadways were improving, but they weren’t dotted with accommodations. Vacationers made camp roadside.

The fold-up camp stove Coleman developed in 1923 quickly found favor with the auto camping crowd. To retailers, the two-burner was billed as a “keen cooker and a quick seller.” It found its way onto front porches and into hunting lodges, vacation cabins and camping trailers. Along with the lantern, which had suddenly found a new market, the camp stove made an ideal traveling companion.

During the next decade, Coleman would overtake its competitors and dominate the market.

A little industrial complex on the prairie.

W.C. Coleman surrounded himself with talented people, including son Sheldon who had a degree in mechanical engineering and firsthand production experience working in the company’s Canadian plant.

As markets evaporated due to widespread rural electrification, the younger Coleman lobbied for further product diversification. The company began turning out the gas floor furnaces and oil space heaters that would enable it to survive the Depression. Its manufacturing capabilities were now considerable. Coleman was said to have the largest number of working metal lathes west of the Mississippi. And they would soon see heavy action.

The heat of battle.

Coleman’s biggest customer became the U.S. military. During WWII, its Wichita plants cranked out projectiles for the Navy and parts for B-17 and B-29 bombers. But their most valuable contribution to the war effort was the development of the GI Pocket Stove. The specifications seemed impossible.

The stove had to be lightweight, no larger than a quart thermos, burn any kind of fuel, and operate in weather from -60? to 125? F. Fewer than 60 days after work commenced, Coleman demonstrated a working prototype. And in November 1942, 5,000 of Coleman’s little stoves went into battle when U.S. forces invaded North Africa. Credit for ramping up production so they shipped out with the troops goes to another Coleman son, Clarence.

The stoves burned for two hours on a cup of fuel from a jeep or plane. They were carried across every battlefield in Europe and the Pacific. They showed up in tents, foxholes and bombers. An article in the Los Angeles Times stated, “Many a huddle of soldiers got the warmth to survive and fight another day from a Coleman® Stove.” In all, over a million were produced.

Tapping into America’s outside interests.

The ability to sense trends and adapt to change, which had always characterized the company, would now propel it into the second half of the century. All signs said America was moving outdoors. And Coleman moved with it.

The lantern and the camp stove, both category leaders, became anchors for an expanded line of leisure products, beginning with a galvanized steel cooler introduced in 1954. Three years later, Coleman revolutionized the industry by developing a process to make a plastic liner for coolers and jugs.

With a clear focus on developing and marketing products to help people enjoy the outdoors, the company made several strategic acquisitions that allowed it to quickly add tents and sleeping bags to its growing recreation line.

By the time the ’60s drew to a close, the company that began as a one-man light utility had become the biggest name in the camping business.

Climbing mountains and fording streams.

A 1982 article in Southern Outdoors described Sheldon Coleman Sr. as a “blend of superlative sportsman and masterful businessman.”

By his own calculation, he had paddled some 5,000 lifetime miles. He knew as much about traversing various kinds of waterways as anyone and won the hearts of canoeists and fishermen alike with a line of Coleman-branded marine products. Made of a revolutionary petrochemical formulation, the RAM-X® canoe was nearly indestructible. And unlike a boat with an aluminum hull, the Coleman® craft scarcely made a sound if it clipped a rock or grazed a sand bar.

A small stove, descended from the GI Pocket Stove, was the first product in a line of lightweight, high-performance backpacking gear. The Peak 1® line grew to include sleeping bags, lanterns, tents, cookware and a pack with a revolutionary plastic frame as opposed to the traditional welded tubular aluminum. Other products would join the lineup. And another Coleman would join the company. In 1981, Sheldon Coleman Jr. became the third generation to be part of the business, which was turning out 15 million products a year by the end of the decade.

Never a dull moment on our drawing board.

The Coleman Company has been on a roll for a hundred years. The present decade is no exception.

Our current catalog is thick with recently introduced products that make spending time outside a pleasure. There are products just for kids. A brand-new generation of lanterns and stoves that runs on Coleman’s innovative Powermax® fuel system. Coolers with wheels and electric coolers with lights. Dual Fuel? appliances. An accessory line with 300 separate items. And a backpacking stove featuring technology so remarkable and so relevant that Backpacker Magazine named it Editors’ Choice in 1997.

“Don’t let life put you back on your heels. Lean into it.”- Sheldon Coleman Sr.

That mantra still guides the Coleman Company. We continue to lean into the future. Ours is a company with an uncanny ability to adapt to change. A company with an intimate understanding of the consumer. A commitment to research and development that breathes vitality into every aspect of the business. A company that sets industry standards.

We are defined by our heritage. And excited about our future.

The Snowdon Mountain Railway

Monday, March 30th, 2009

On a recent trip to Wales we set up camp near a place called Betws y coed about a 20mins drive away from Mount Snowdon. There is a car park in Llanberis where you start the walk from. If you decided that the walk was to hard for you then you can take the train to the summit.

Since the year 1896, visitors from around the world have travelled on the Snowdon Mountain Railway. Trains climb up the highest mountain in Wales which is1085m in height where once you reach the top Snowdon boasts dramatic landscape and scenery. This unique railway is proven to be one of the most popular visitor attractions in North Wales and offers great value. The Summit of Snowdon, at 3,560ft (1085m), is the highest mountain in England and Wales. The Snowdon Mountain Railway offers a fantastic day out for all of the family.

Hafod Eryri, the new building on the summit of Yr Wyddfa (Snowdon) is opening this spring, however, the date is dependent on the weather.  The formal opening will be on the 12th June 2009 although the building will be in use before then. Trains are expected to reach the Summit from 2nd May 2009 onwards. The new Snowdon visitor centre is a unique designed structure built of granite with large views from the “window on the world” the wall of glass which makes up the front of the centre.It acts as a terminus for the Snowdon Mountain Railway providing refreshment facilities, toilets and interpretation of the mountain, its history and ways to enjoy it

Photo of Snowdon Railway

20LTR DELUX PORTABLE TOILET BY ROYAL

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

new for the 2009 camping and caravaning season the Royal Delux portable toilet

Relief Valve
Automatic push button for ventilation – which ensures a clean emptying of the waste water tank
Tiltable emptying pipe of the waste water tank
Waste tank capacity – 19.4L
Fresh water tank capacity -18L
Dimensions – 36.7cm (H) x 38cm (W) x 44.6cm (D)
Weight – 4.1Kg

to buy the portable toilet please visit our royal page on our main website

photo of Royal 20ltr Delux Portable Toilet

photo of Royal 20ltr Delux Portable Toilet

RENO FOUR MAN CAMPING TENT

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

190T Polyester Flysheet with Taped Seams
New cube design provides the maximum amount of internal living space and height
Semi geodesic structure providing strength and stability
Sewn in groundsheet throughout to fully protect against the elements
Large front door can be used as a sun canopy (poles supplied)
Large clear Panoramic windows for increased visibility
Pitches flysheet first
Maxi-flo vent & view system for enhanced comfort
11mm fibre-flex poles

to buy this tent please visit our Reno Tent page

 

photo of 4 man Reno tent

photo of 4 man Reno tent

CALGARY THREE MAN CAMPING TENT

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

185T Polyester Flysheet with taped Seams
Unique hexagonal shape providing increased living area space compared to traditional structures
Small pack size ideal for motor cycle campers
Semi geodesic structure providing strength and stability
Storage compartment for additional storage space
Auto-flo ventilation system for enhanced comfort
8.5mm fibre-flex poles
compact carry bag for easy transportation

to buy this tent please visit our Calgary Tent  page

 

 

photo of Calgary three man tent

photo of Calgary three man tent

New Camping & Caravan Website

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

we are now busy at the moment working on our new camping and caravanning website, not only will you be able to buy your camping and caravanning goods at great prices you will also be able to find many great camping sites and caravan parks to stay at that have been recommended by our members, we will be also adding places to walk and maps etc so please check it out in the near future