<\/a>Why are all the gay campsites we looked into for Long Weekend so incredibly hideous?<\/p>\n Well it’s bitter time here at Dead Robot Industries! I’m going to review them and hopefully give you, dear readers, insight as to why gay campsite websites are uglier than drag queens left out in the rain. (SFW<\/strong> means Ok to open. MNSFW<\/strong> means “maybe not safe for work” – Stay out of the “Gallery” sections. NSFW<\/strong> means don’t open it at work, ok? Just don’t)<\/p>\n The Cedars<\/a> (SFW) It gets a 4 out of 5. No crap and no animated gifs makes me want to visit!<\/strong><\/p>\n Campit Resorts <\/a>(SFW) To it’s credit, the site is packed with lots and lots of info (I dare to say “dense”). Other than the riot of things going on, I’d have to say I feel comfortable scooting around this site, but the layout is brutal. I’ve been to Campit, and I can say that the website is like your crazy cousin you don’t talk about: nice to visit, but I wouldn’t want to live with it.<\/p>\n
\nWhat? A nice layout? A picture that doesn’t shy away from showing the camp area? Photos that are up to date and actually show people having fun? Google Earth map link? On every page? I’m in shock! Oh wait. The Event’s page is fucked – I knew it was too good to be true. Clicking on a date gets you nothing. Nice that they have a Forums and a Guestbook right out there for all to see – very Web 2.0.<\/p>\n
\nOkay first off: Frameset: the “Blink” tag of page layout. The Gallery page link at the bottom of the home page frame is dead so click away all you like, however the Gallery link in the nav bar frame leads to images 3 years old. Take that as you will. Table on the right side with the border set to “2”. Classy! The map is in the “links” section and buried within the About page. Whatever that means. I would think that you’d want your guests to find you easy. <\/p>\n