Campgrounds, RV parks spend green to go ‘green’

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There’s a lot about Clay’s Park Resort that appeals to Janet Durtschi, including its ongoing effort to get “greener.”

She and her husband, Donald, have bought seasonal memberships to the northeastern Ohio campground for the past seven years. When there, she enjoys playing miniature golf, dining at Ralphie’s restaurant and cruising in a golf cart to look at wildflowers.

He spends much of his time at the indoor swimming pool, where the park is installing solar panels to help heat the water and changing the sanitization system from chlorine to saline. Before last winter, the resort replaced the propane heating system in its administrative offices with a wood-burning stove fueled by the park’s lawn and tree clippings.

“These are things that I feel are very good for the environment,” says Janet Durtschi, 57, of Wooster, Ohio.

Other resorts are making similar investments aimed at saving water and energy, with the encouragement of the National Association of RV Parks and Campgrounds. The Larkspur, Colo.-based trade association, which represents more than 8,000 private campgrounds and parks for recreational vehicles in the United States, launched a green-parks initiative two years ago called “Plan It Green.”

“A lot of parks were already doing things that helped the environment and I think a lot more of them are embracing the concept,” says Linda Profaizer, the group’s president and chief executive.

In southwestern Michigan, Sandy Pines, one of the nation’s largest RV resorts, is putting in solar panels that will warm up the water used at two of its heated swimming pools. The resort, which is about 25 miles south-southwest of Grand Rapids, also is putting in a geothermal heating and cooling system at a building that houses a country store, coin-operated laundry and coffee shop.

“The cost savings is tremendous,” says Max Gibbs, park director. He estimates that it will take about three years for the resort to recover its $32,000 expense for the solar panels and eight to 10 years to get back its $72,000 cost for the geothermal system.

While gray skies dominate the coldest months of the year, Michigan gets a lot of sunshine during the summer. Using arrays of solar panels instead of costly fossil fuels to heat pools “can easily extend the swimming season in Michigan by two months,” says Chuck Ammond, director of engineering for Bauer Power Inc.

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