Best Tent Camping: Colorado: Your Car-Camping Guide to Scenic Beauty, the Sounds of Nature, and an Escape from Civilization

Best Tent Camping: Colorado: Your Car-Camping Guide to Scenic Beauty, the Sounds of Nature, and an Escape from Civilization

by Monica Parpal Stockbridge
Best Tent Camping: Colorado: Your Car-Camping Guide to Scenic Beauty, the Sounds of Nature, and an Escape from Civilization

Best Tent Camping: Colorado: Your Car-Camping Guide to Scenic Beauty, the Sounds of Nature, and an Escape from Civilization

by Monica Parpal Stockbridge

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Overview

Discover 50 of the state’s best campgrounds for car campers, with the guide that offers essential details and easy-to-read maps.

The Centennial State provides a spectacular backdrop for some of the most scenic campgrounds in the country. But do you know which campgrounds offer the most privacy or the best lakeside views? Monica Parpal Stockbridge traversed the entire state—from the historic Mesa Verde National Park to the bird watcher’s paradise at Pawnee National Grassland—and compiled the most up-to-date research to steer you to the perfect spot!

With Best Tent Camping: Colorado, you’ll always know what to expect. The new full-color edition of this proven guidebook provides everything you need to know. Inside you’ll find:

  • 50 campgrounds in national parks, state parks, and other breathtaking locales, organized into five distinct regions
  • Selections based on location, topography, nearby activities, and overall appeal
  • Detailed maps of each campground and key information such as fees, restrictions, dates of operation, and facilities
  • Driving directions and GPS coordinates
  • Ratings for beauty, privacy, spaciousness, noise level, security, and cleanliness

Whether you seek a quiet campground near a fish-filled stream or a family campground with all the amenities, grab Best Tent Camping: Colorado. It's a keeper for all who wish to find those special locales that offer a true connection with nature.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781634043021
Publisher: Menasha Ridge Press
Publication date: 08/23/2022
Series: Best Tent Camping
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 34 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Monica Parpal Stockbridge is a writer and editor born and raised in Colorado. She attended college in Omaha, Nebraska, but always knew she wanted to end up back in the Centennial State. Although she grew up hiking at state parks and snowboarding in the mountains, she didn’t become a tent camper until adulthood when she started climbing fourteeners with friends. Now, she can proudly pitch her own tent and cook a good camp dinner on her Coleman stove. She hopes to share many more camping memories with her husband and young daughter.

Monica has written for numerous local, national, and international publications, including The Denver Post, Colorado Traveler Magazine, 5280, Colorado Parent, ColoradoBiz, and Preferred Travel. She contributed to the Moon Denver, Boulder & Colorado Springs guidebook. Today, she writes about travel and technology from her home in Denver.

Read an Excerpt

Amphitheater Campground
Beauty: 4 stars / Privacy: 4 stars / Spaciousness: 3 stars / Quiet: 4 stars / Security: 4 stars / Cleanliness: 4 stars

Pitch your tent at this campground in the Switzerland of America, where you’ll want to spend a few days soaking in the scenery, adventure, and local hot springs.

Key Information:

  • Location: Ouray
  • Information: U.S. Forest Service; Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre, and Gunnison National Forests; Ouray Ranger District; 970-874-6600; fs.usda.gov/gmug
  • Open: June 10–Oct. 5
  • Sites: 35
  • Each Site Has: Tent pad, fire ring, picnic tables
  • Wheelchair Access: Sites 16 and 17 are ADA-accessible.
  • Assignment: First come, first served; no reservations
  • Registration: On-site
  • Amenities: Vault toilets, treated and pressurized water
  • Parking: At campsites only
  • Fee: $24 per night
  • Elevation: 8,470'
  • Restrictions:
    • Pets: Must be leashed
    • Quiet Hours: 10 p.m.–6 a.m.
    • Fires: In fire rings only
    • Alcohol: Permitted
    • Vehicles: 30'
    • Other: 14-day stay limit

You won’t find many campgrounds with a view quite like the one you’ll get from Amphitheater Campground in Ouray. Ouray is named for Chief Ouray, a Ute leader in Colorado during the late 19th century. Situated on US 550 and part of the San Juan Skyway Scenic and Historic Byway, Ouray is among Colorado’s most beautiful places. The mountains rise up in all directions, and the town itself is overflowing with charm.

Amphitheater Campground is named for the rock formations that form a natural circular gallery over the town. The massive gray cliffs are the result of ancient volcanic explosions and glacial movement. Perched on a mountainside, the campground showcases incredible views of these cliff faces and the town below.

To get to the campground, you’ll leave town as though you’re headed onto the Million Dollar Highway. Make a sharp left onto County Road 16, then stay left on Amphitheater Campground Road. You’ll encounter Baby Bathtubs Trailhead, and shortly after, a pleasant picnic area with tables anchored on the slope among the trees.

Climbing the steep road to the campground can be intimidating, which is why the area is predominantly occupied by tents and small campers. (There are also no water, sewer, or electric hookups.) However, RVs can park at sites 3, 4, 16–18, 30, and 31, which you’ll see if you take the second right and follow the trailer signs.

Instead, look for one of the designated tent-only sites. I especially liked site 33, near the campground entrance, as it was tucked away from the rest of the sites. In the farthest loop, sites 10–14 are all tent-only and offer a lovely and quiet camping experience. Just beyond sites 20 and 21 is a paved parking area with a stunning overlook. The campground host is usually stationed across from site 30. I’d stay away from sites 28 and 29 because of their lack of privacy. Most of the other sites are nicely shaded by the forest of Gambel oak trees and mixed conifers.

There are many excellent hiking trails in the immediate area. Perhaps the most popular is the Upper Cascade Falls Trail, which begins right at the campground and ends at the Chief Ouray Mine. You’ll get incredible views of the amphitheater as well as Hayden Mountain and Potosi Peak, two thirteeners in the area. Baby Bathtubs Trail is another trail that begins at the bottom of Amphitheater Campground Road. It is a popular choice for families and a good connector to the Portland Trail and the Ice Park Trail. To see Ouray from all angles, hike the Perimeter Trail. This 6.5-mile loop begins across from the Ouray Visitor Center on the east side of US 550 (park behind the visitor center), but you can also hop on it from Box Canyon Falls, a great stop if you’re into waterfalls.

Be sure to book enough time in Ouray to take advantage of the historic Ouray Hot Springs, a public facility open year-round. With geothermal soaking pools, cold-water pools, waterslides, and lap swimming, you can elevate your tent camping experience with a luxurious soak. A nice benefit is that there’s no sulphur smell.

The campground is also a favorite among Jeep and off-road enthusiasts, as this area is known for off-road adventures. If you camp here, you can rent a Jeep in Ouray or go on a guided 4x4 tour of local ghost towns or scenic Imogene Pass.

Getting There

From the Ouray Visitor Center, travel south on US 550 for 1.8 miles. Turn left at the Amphitheater Campground sign and travel about 1 mile to the campground.

GPS Coordinates: N38° 01.320' W107° 39.673'

Table of Contents

Colorado Campground Locator Map

Acknowledgments

Preface

Best Campgrounds

Map Legend

Introduction

Eastern Colorado

  • Jackson Lake State Park Campground
  • John Martin Reservoir State Wildlife Area: Lake Hasty and The Point Campgrounds
  • Pawnee National Grassland: Crow Valley Family Campground
  • South Republican State Wildlife Area Dispersed Camping

North Central Colorado

  • Buffalo Campground
  • The Crags Campground
  • Elbert Creek Campground
  • Pinewood Reservoir Campground
  • Gold Park Campground
  • Golden Gate Canyon State Park Campgrounds
  • Guanella Pass Campground
  • Hermit Park Open Space: Hermit’s Hollow Campground
  • Rocky Mountain National Park: Longs Peak Campground
  • Lost Park Campground
  • The Narrows Campgrounds: Lower
  • Peaceful Valley and Camp Dick Campgrounds
  • Rainbow Lakes Campground
  • Robbers Roost Campground
  • Rocky Mountain National Park: Aspenglen Campground
  • Weston Pass Campground
  • Staunton State Park Campground

Northwest Colorado

  • Cold Springs Campground
  • Colorado National Monument: Saddlehorn Campground
  • Dinosaur National Monument: Echo Park Campground
  • Fulford Cave Campground
  • Irish Canyon Campground
  • Rifle Falls State Park Campground
  • Shepherds Rim Campground
  • Pearl Lake State Park Campground
  • Weir and Johnson Campground

South Central Colorado

  • Alvarado Campground
  • Bear Lake Campground
  • Great Sand Dunes National Park & Preserve: Pinon Flats Campground
  • East Ridge Campground
  • O’Haver Lake Campground
  • Mueller State Park Campground
  • North Crestone Creek Campground
  • Trujillo Meadows Campground

Southwest Colorado

  • Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park: North Rim Campground
  • Burro Bridge Campground
  • Cathedral Campground
  • Lost Lake Campground
  • Lost Trail Campground
  • Mesa Verde National Park: Morefield Campground
  • Mirror Lake Campground
  • Ridgway State Park Campgrounds
  • Silver Jack Campground
  • Amphitheater Campground
  • Stone Cellar Campground
  • Transfer Park Campground

Appendix A: Camping Equipment Checklist

Appendix B: Sources of Information

Index

About the Authors

From the B&N Reads Blog

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