I went camping with a friend.This is an empty-handed plan that includes a 2-day hot spring bathing ticket, all camping goods, and ingredients.This is a service for camping beginners.I also have camping goods, but I used them for my friends who didn't have them. I only brought my own bonfire stand.For those who want to try camping for the first time, I'm sorry, but I cannot recommend it. It's not really for beginners. Gather your own supplies and learn how to use them before heading to the campsite.If you have camping experience, I don't think this is an option in the first place, but please go to another normal campsite.There is a free site next to this, so I think it's a good idea to aim there first thing in the morning. It is recommended as it is close to public baths and toilets.[Good points]It is very nice that the bathing ticket for the adjacent public bath comes with two days worth of bathing, one for the night and one for the morning. It also comes with a towel. There are many local people who come here to relax in the area.Garbage and ash can be disposed of within the facility, so it's easy.The toilet was the type you would find in a park, but it was clean. You can also use the clean toilets at public bathhouses.[Bad points]I was not left with a good impression of the products, services, and site provided.As for the food that comes with it...well...there's enough for each person, but there's no drinking water, so I have to buy some. It's not like you can expect any special ingredients or dishes because they serve yakiniku meat like you would find in a regular supermarket. If you are going camping and are expecting delicious food, you will need to buy some food after all.I didn't think it would be easy to avoid the hassle of shopping, so I thought it would be better to have a service that doesn't require ingredients.By the way, for drinking water, you either get water from the outdoor kitchen or buy it from a vending machine inside the bathhouse. If you don't like it, drive to the supermarket.Rental camping goods, this one is just crap.A frayed and smelly sleeping bag, a tent full of mold, a bunch of bent pegs and a hammer that was deformed, that GENTOS light whose battery was about to run out, a folding table and chairs that were covered in oil and deformed and difficult to assemble, just plain shaky. Dirty cooking utensils, a rickety Coleman wagon with the rubber tires falling off, tattered maps and instruction manuals, etc.It's unreasonable to expect cleanliness at a camp, but I was disgusted by the lack of proper management.Even if the item is broken, torn, deformed, dirt does not come off, or if it cannot be used normally, it is difficult to decide whether to repair or replace it.It's basically a self-service restaurant where customers wash their cooking utensils in the outdoor kitchen, but I can't help but wonder if they don't wash them twice.Do you wash and dry your sleeping bags yourself?According to the staff, there has been a series of thefts of goods for a long time. I'm wondering if it's difficult to manage financially. I guess the customer base is also terrible.As for the staff's response, well, I guess they are tired of various things. Even if you are trying to provide good service, it is difficult to do so with a small number of people. There is no staff at night.When a staff member is explaining the tents etc. to us as customers, I think it's a bad idea to interrupt the conversation and say, ``Can I go in the afternoon? After that, please stay over here.''Lastly, the website, this is what bothered me the most. It hasn't been taken care of at all.Most of the site is not flat and has slopes, weeds are overgrown, cut weeds are piled up on the site and left unattended (one site area has been reduced), the lines that mark the division of the site are disappearing and are difficult to understand, there are trees on the site The trees are growing thickly and encroaching on the site (again, the area is decreasing), there is not enough light but it is dark at night, there is no time to turn off the lights, and the outdoor kitchen is dirty.I think it was around 6,000 yen with various accessories. It seemed like an unbelievable price for a normal campsite, but for one night I could see why it was such an unbelievable price. It may be cost-effective if you bring all your own goods and only use the ingredients and bath. There's a free campsite next door.The glamping site next door is neat and clean, and the reviews seem to be good.Glamping sites, not just here, are comfortable spaces, so I think there are many customers who make a fuss until late at night. I don't know if they are misunderstanding it as a hotel or something, but it is a site where someone who cannot follow the basic etiquette of being quiet at night may come next door.