This is a lovely mountain meadow with a bubbling (trout?) stream way off the beaten track, esp if coming from the north. The 10 RV sites are cheek to jowl in an un-charming, crowded row at the edge of a meadow, about two human arm spans apart. Surrounded by space and beauty, you are subjected to a complete lack of privacy and room. It was rainy when we visited, which made it worse, as there's plenty of mud to go around. Moving from our reserved, muddy, jammed-up site (5E) to a more gravelly site on the end that was available for our one-night stay (10E) took ages due to the combined lack of helpfulness, the long hold times, and the seeming policy inflexibility of many, from the park host to the Customer Care rep at reserve.gov, but someone finally made it happen after about an hour and a half. So we didn't have to look at our neighbor's trashed-out campsite, and we had some breathing room on one side and a meadow view from our window, but I'm not sure it was worth the frustration. If you want to book with electric, consider *only* 1E, 10E, or maybe the pull-thru oddball site under the trees (the ONLY shade) 12E. Showers were clean, and there is slow wifi, to my astonishment, though it violated every security certificate our Apple devices wanted to enforce. PS: The next morning, we had to drive up a muddy road uphill to the far end of the park for the RV dump, as far as possible from the RV camping spaces. It was pretty basic, and would be hard to access for a big rig on a hill like it is. On the way to the dump, we saw site #20, the lone Elec/Water site in the tent area and far and away the nicest RV site in the park, with a covered table, total privacy and a view of the meadow.
3 anni ago