Forum Discussion
- azdryheatExplorerWe've got some huge spaces in some of our state parks in AZ. The roomiest state park I've seen is in Georgia at Skidaway Island State Park in Savannah. Someone could easily park two diesel pushers, and their toads, end to end, the spaces are that long.
- mockturtleExplorer IISome national parks have length limits but there are very few state parks that do. There was one in Missouri--I think it was Lake of the Ozarks SP.
- navegatorExplorerThere are a couple of State Parks in California the do limit the size, not because they do not have space, you drive between the trees and that is the limiting factor a 24 or 25 foot C class will make the turns or an 18 or 19 foot pull trailer will, anything else they would have to cut a few trees we spent Christmas in one and when the park ranger came by on the 26th he was amassed that we were there with the 24 C and backed in, he asked me how I was going to get out, I told him same way I came in, very carefully!
Depends on the park and the State, call ahead and see the sticker on the side that states the size of the unit, mine is stated as a 22 footer but in reality it 24 bumper to bumper, it is 2 feet longer than the older models that I saw and measured, they added to the kitchen area in the rear and the bathroom, so when they ask I tell them it is a 22 foot unit.
navegator - DrewEExplorer IIAs others have said, it depends on the indivudual park and campsite. In my (quite limited) experience, very few parks have an overall limit that short. Such a limit might be due to a narrow, twisty access road. Many parks do have some sites that cannot accommodate a 30' motorhome and some that can. Here in Vermont, I find maybe half or fewer if the sites in the average state park comfortably fit my 32' class C. I have not had much trouble with finding suitable sites when I wish to, though it sometimes requires being flexible about destinations. Many of the Vermont state park campgrounds were developed by the CCC or in that era and so are laid out with tents in mind more than RVs.
Rather obviously, a larger unit will fit in fewer sites than a smaller one, and that's true at any size range. In practice, though, I don't think you'll see much difference there between 30 and 32 feet. - lj2654ExplorerWe have a 40' DP and usually camp at Florida State parks and COE parks. We are only limited to a very small percentage of parks in Florida because of length limits.
- TechWriterExplorer
susanka wrote:
We're looking at a 31'11" class A and have been told that most state parks have a 30-foot limit.
Not true. I'll bet whoever told you this is from CA or the East Coast -- both these areas tend to have state parks with a lot of small sites.
On average, about half the sites in all state parks are at least 40 feet.
See State Park Data for more info. - naturistNomadNot been my experience. What I've seen is that individual sites all have length limits for obvious reasons, but those vary all over the map. It is true that the older the park, the shorter the sites tend to be, again for obvious reasons, but I've never seen any justification for thinking "most" parks have the same limits.
- rk911Explorer
K Charles wrote:
In more them 30 years we have only see a length limit one time.
X2. seems that whomever measures the sites in most state and national parks needs a refresher on how to measure. - lawnspecialtiesExplorer30'? Wow. That would be terrible. Obviously this does not apply to you in Co. but the state parks we go to average around 100' length per site.
- wildtoadExplorer IIWhoever told you that is just wrong. They may have some sites that will be too short but most will have plenty that will be more than adequate.
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