Here are some ideas for a campgound in Canada that you would want some of us Yanks to come to.
DW and I went up to New Brunswick, PEI, and Nova Scotia. Here is what we went through.
Our internet access wouldn't work and if it did it would cost us an arm and a leg. I had to go to a library at 11pm to talk to my family and some friends on MS Instant message. The campground did not have internet access and those that were near by didn't work very well. Marco Polo Campground in PEI is one. Nice place but I had to go to the laundry to use the internet and it didn't work very well there.
Had a problem as to what was going on in the news and such. No Satellite service and the over the air TV was terrible. All we could get was one station and it was blurry. The only thing we could see was the Olympics and it was hard on the eyes. We ended up getting CD's and watching movies in the evening after we got home from a Day Trip.
Cell Phone no good. AT&T would cost me $2 a minute if I did not take their global service then it was $0.56 per minute. Tried to use my Skype phone but the campground didn't like it and it was to slow. Drove to the library or a public access point to use the skype phone.
These were the main inconvenience that we found.
We like wide sites so we can put out the awning and set with others and have room to park the truck beside or behind the trailer and not have to worry if we can get our slides out.
We like the site to be level side to side and front to back.
We like the sewer pipe to be at ground level and at the same height as the site the trailer is sitting on. Went to one campground where the sewer pipe was about the same height as the sewer pipe on the trailer.
We like the power panels to be up off the ground enough that you can plug in a surge suppressor and it not be laying on the ground.
We like water faucets sturdy and above ground. Make your main cutoff under ground with a drain to prevent freezing. We were at a campground in Tennessee that had the valve 18" down inside a 10" PVC pipe.
We like Concrete pads, but good gravel area and good grass is good. Level is more important.
We like to back in or pull thru without having to maneuver around rocks, trees, poles and such.
We like cable service of some kind to get daily information about the world, country and local.
For others, rest rooms, showers, laundry, club house, swimming pool, and such are important. If you want to host rallys these are important but for people like us we want a nice place to stay while we are out running around these are not normally used.
I would like to see you succeed. However remember. This is going to be 3 times more difficult than you might think. Not trying to discourage you. We met an owner of a campground that found out how much work there is to running one. Always something going on and the public (not us LOL) are hard to please sometimes. He wished he had never bought the campground.
Good luck and keep in touch.
BC