Need advice on Summer RV trips to avoid heat and crowds
HI
We're from Las Vegas and just retired, so took our RV on the road this summer to beat the heat. We stopped at many places on our bucket list of US and Canada and had a great time.
Next summer, we'd like to find places that we can stay for a couple weeks or more. We'd like advice from seniors that seek activities but quiet atmosphere.
National Forest campgrounds
As a long-time Road Tripper who has recently re-discovered RV camping perhaps I can offer a few ideas:
Our RV is a hardside A-Frame popup (Rockwood A127TH). It's 19' long and the tow vehicle is also 19', so we're 38' nose to tail. A pull-through is nice, but we can back in to a conventional back-in space such as is the norm at National Forest campgrounds.
In July-August of this year, we spent 3 weeks traveling from NC to Montana and back. The majority of our time in Montana and Wyoming was spent in National Forest campgrounds.
It's fairly rare for a conventional NF CG to have even water hookups and electric is essentially unheard of. There are in some NFs dedicated RV campgrounds which will have hookups of various types, but the great majority of NF campgrounds don't have them. We only stayed at 2 NF CGs which had a camp host.
In one instance, we found a camp host at a NF campground and the couple had a generator to provide some juice. We assumed a honey wagon came by from time to time to tend to the vault toilets and hopefully the holding tanks on the camp hosts RV.
The typical NF CG is along a stream within a forested mountain range. Elevations vary greatly, but in general most NF CGs in Montana and Wyoming are at or above around 4,500'. The moderate elevations provide for generally warm, sometimes hot, daytime temps and cool nights, so running your A/C is not normally necessary. We overnighted at 7,700' in Wyoming and were quite cold on July 28.
Most of the NF CGs had pay-station fee drop-boxes requiring $7 to $9/night fees and posted a 14 day limit.
All of the NF CGs featured gravel driveways and parking pads--no pavement, and every one of them was on along a gravel road. As a result, and obviously depending upon the weather (wet vs dry), they can get dusty.
We found that reviewing the various NF units' websites provided good information as to the location and general setting of the NF's campgrounds. There is a free online locator, as well, and it's provided by a couple who have actually visited the CGs. Some of their reports are a few years old--there are hundreds and hundreds of NF CGs in the Lower 48, after all, but we found their descriptions to be helpful in terms of deciding where to stay.
Lastly, we had a couple of less satisfying nights at BLM and US Fish and Wildlife Service CGs. The vault toilet maintenance at those was not up to par with the NFs' pumpout and cleaning schedule and the settings were less scenic.
Foy