VICTORIA — Caretaker Peter Murphy says every camper asks the same question about staying at Kitty Coleman Provincial Park, and he never gets tired of gleefully providing the same answer: Yes, it's oceanfront.
"Everybody says we'd like to be on the ocean, and I say, 'They're all on the ocean.' We've got five (sites) up in the woods. Other than that, the rest are on the water," said Murphy about the 65-site campground located six kilometres north of Courtenay on central Vancouver Island.
The 10-hectare park, on the south side of the Strait of Georgia, is popular for swimming, fishing and boating. Wild onions grow throughout the area and huge cedar and fir trees stand tall on the park's upland areas.
But it's the ocean that brings the campers.
"It's just a beautiful spot," says Murphy. "It's one of the best spots you want to be. All of our sites are right on the ocean. The cruise ships go through all the time, and there's the whales."
Another unique feature of Kitty Coleman Provincial Park is that it's one of the few campgrounds remaining on the Island and British Columbia that does not require reservations to pitch a tent or set up a trailer. Every spot is booked on a first-come, first-served basis — no government websites to deal with.
"The reservation system makes it busier for us now, but if you say you're coming from Victoria and you call me at 8:30 in the morning when we open, and if we have a site, we'll hold it until you get here," said Murphy.
The camping fee at Kitty Coleman is $15 per night.
Reservations for B.C.'s campsites has ignited a political controversy this summer with Environment Minister Mary Polak and Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan addressing issues about tour companies hogging campsites, rising camping fees and declining numbers of sites.
Polak says that of the 131,000 campsite reservations made so far this year, the government has received fewer than a dozen complaints of people attempting to resell the reservations.
Horgan says camping fees increased again this summer and since 2001 the Liberal government has closed more than 3,000 drive-in campsites.
Polak says the province is open to making changes to the camping reservation system every year to ensure it's fair and loophole-free. She says there are about 10,700 vehicle-accessible campsites in B.C., but there are too many people looking for too few campsites.
On Vancouver Island, there are 5,833 provincial campsites, of which 2,386 are available without reservations.
Schoen Lake Provincial Park, 140 kilometres northwest of Campbell River, is one of the few campgrounds that does not require reservations.
It is a wilderness campground, with only nine vehicle-accessible campsites at $11 per night that are available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Walk-in campers are welcome to make camp within the boundaries of the 8,775-hectare park, known for its Vancouver Island mountains, old-growth forests, meadows, waterways, small lakes and deer, Roosevelt elk and fish habitat.
Salt Spring Island's Ruckle Provincial Park, about 30 minutes from Victoria by ferry, offers 78 walk-in campsites located on a grassy meadow that offers breathtaking ocean and pastoral views. Campers are urged to set up their tents in the field overlooking the ocean.
The fee is $20 per night. The province started taking reservations for 10 walk-in sites and four recreational vehicle spots this year, but the remaining campsites are available on a first-come, first-served basis.