LODGING

Show them where they'll sleep.

On-site cabins, a wall-tent camp, or a rental down the road you point people to — with real photos. For a multi-day hunt or an out-of-town charter, where a guest stays is half the decision. Put it on the page and close it.

The lodging section is a place on your site to show where guests stay: your own cabins or bunkhouse, a canvas camp on the mountain, or a nearby Airbnb or VRBO you recommend, with a link straight to it. Add photos, a short description, and what's included.

For any trip that runs more than a day — an elk camp, a multi-day float, a client flying in for a charter — the first thing they wonder after 'is the guiding good?' is 'where do I sleep?' Answering it on the page removes the last excuse to keep shopping.

Sell the multi-day trip

A comfortable cabin or a well-run camp is a reason to book the three-day hunt over the day trip. Show it and the longer, higher-margin trip sells itself.

Show off your own lodging

If you run cabins or a bunkhouse, that's an asset — photos of a warm camp after a cold morning do more than any paragraph about the guiding.

Point to a place you don't own

No lodging of your own? Link the Airbnb, motel, or lodge you send clients to. You've answered the question without pretending to be a hotel.

Set expectations up front

Bunk beds and a wood stove, or a private room with a shower — say which. The right client books happy and shows up knowing exactly what they're getting.

How it works

  1. 1

    Add your lodging

    In your dashboard, open the lodging section and add each place a guest might stay — your cabin, your camp, or a rental you recommend.

  2. 2

    Upload photos and details

    Add a few real photos, a short description, what's included, and a link if it's a rental you're pointing to rather than your own.

  3. 3

    It shows on your site

    The lodging appears as its own section on your guide site, so a client weighing a multi-day trip sees exactly where they'll stay.

Why it matters

For an out-of-town guest, the trip is the whole package — the guiding and the roof over their head. A marketplace listing rarely has room for that, so the guest leaves to go figure out where to stay and sometimes doesn't come back. On your own site, it's all in one place.

Lodging is also a genuine differentiator you own: a great camp is a reason a client picks you over the guide down the road, and it's a reason they book the longer trip. That's margin and craft the grid can't show.

Straight answers.

What if I don't have my own lodging?

Then link the place you recommend — an Airbnb, VRBO, a local motel or lodge. You're answering 'where do I stay?' for the guest, which is what closes the trip, whether or not you own the beds.

Can I show more than one option?

Yes. Add your cabin and a nearby rental, or a couple of camps for different hunts. A guest picks the one that fits their trip and budget.

Does adding lodging cost extra?

No — it's part of your site, included in the flat $120/mo (or $1,200/yr). No add-on fee and no cut of anything a guest pays for a rental you link to.

More features: Your guide website · Photo gallery · All features

Where they sleep closes the trip.

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