NIall,
I was only trying to ask the question, that if Scotland has enough golf courses, does it also mean they have enough caravan parks?Although I don't know if they are in high demand or sit half empty most of the time.
P.S. Seems like they are a UK thing, as the US and Canada, covering a far larger swath of area only have 500 total KOA sites...
I think that number is a bit misleading, as KOA parks are a pretty limited subset of places people "vacation" in housing that is either mobile or semi-mobile.
I've been to a number of the caravan parks that are in the area of links golf courses because they are just about the only place in Scotland where you can reliably find coin-operated laundry facilities. FWIW, all of the ones I've been in are filled to capacity during the busy season. I've also asked about renting one of these places for a golf trip and found that B&B lodging was a much better deal for us.
In addition, my wife and I live full-time in a 40-foot motor home, so I have been to more than a handful of KOA parks, and other similar parks that aren't affiliated with KOA and I can tell you without reservation that Scottish caravan parks do not resemble a KOA.
What they do resemble is the place in Mesa, AZ, where my wife and I are parked right now. It's an Arizona RV resort that has most sites occupied by what we call "park models." They arrive on wheels, but they are installed like the mobile homes in a typical mobile home park. Likewise, the majority of caravan parks I've visited are full of more-or-less permanently installed lodging that is more like a mobile home than a caravan (what we call RVs).
For what it's worth, the "resort" I am in has 1,700 spaces, and within 2-3 miles there are roughly a dozen similar parks ranging in size from 200 sites to 2,000 sites. The city of Mesa has almost 40 such parks.
So the question you asked about whether Scotland has enough caravan parks is difficult to answer.