Bare in mind the minimum wage in Poland is approx £800 a month compared to the new minimum wage for the same hours in the uk going to be approx £1800 a month soon and you can see how the perspective might differ a little in other locations. Let's not even start on Albania or Bulgaria where the minimum wage is much lower. The impacts to people from these places is obviously going to be much more felt in terms of additional costs being added to a trip.I'm not disputing that there were issues in the forest, just simple stating that the poorest are once again the ones who will feel this most, and it's the people in positions of relative privilege shouting loudest about this generally.For sure people should dispose of their waste better, and be more responsible but dismissing those less fortunate who may not get to experience the few places like font as much or at all anymore seems pretty harsh to me.Edit added relative
By that logic you may as well say no poor rational person takes up climbing. It’s always cheaper not to have enjoyable pastimes.
no poor and rational person stays in a van. I've done the math more than once. It's always cheaper to stay in budget hotels the first 100 days per year.
But most people seem to be somewhere in the middle buying a van as their second vehicle for £10-20k, spending more £££ or DIY time to convert it. So it needs to be used a fair bit over consecutive years to break even over using hotels/rental cottages, which just isn’t the case for a lot of people. Even most climbers if they’re being honest probably.
Paul - could your view be biased by having had two very positive experiences selling on vans (one in the US after a road trip)?On the flip side I know several people who’ve bought vans and either had no end of trouble with them before they died, or spent a lot of time and money converting before selling on at considerable loss.
Jwi’s numbers are based on his circumstances so make sense to him, not the UK certainly.