Forum Discussion
- boomersooner198ExplorerWe were just there in April. If you get a site that is off the sea wall then the wind is not bad at all. The sites on the sea wall allow you to sit and look down on the beach (about an 8-10 drop from sea wall to beach). We were lucky that nobody had the sites on the seawall in front of us so we took our lawn chairs and sat on the seawall and enjoyed the waves. If you like seafood, go the the Flagler Fish Company for dinner (I believe that is the name). Do not be fooled by the looks of the place, awesome food!!! I am not a seafood fan but I had the swordfish and it was delicious, my wife had to have the Alaskan King Crab. A little pricey, but a hidden gem for great food.
- CampincartersExplorerThank you to all for responding.
- ct1964upsExplorer
stripit wrote:
We stayed a month one winter, and the sites are really really close. We were in a site for a few days that would not let us open the slide completely, that is tight. We moved a few sites down where we could open all slides but no way could you even think about opening an awning. I don't know where your going to find room for a tent unless you out it out on the beach. It was a nice place to sit right on the ocean but not a lot of space for each rv.
If there is any wind at all those awning clamps won't help...we had 5 motorhomes there and put up 3 easy ups..tied together,tied to the motorhome wheels and picnic tables and concrete rebar stakes and one night wind started to blow and lost the whole mess...all went in the dumpster.....
Can use that easy up on the beach..the sea wall should cut the wind and give you shade on the beach
but it is really nice campground...right on the beach and ay night can sit and see the shrimp boats out at sea......have a great trip down..Chuck - JoeHExplorer IIII haven't bee there in a few years, but when we were there, the power/voltage was dangerously low. Please check it to avoid damage to your electronics.
- CampincartersExplorerHello and thank you for your responses. We have a class c no slide. I was not going to put a sleeping tent but a 10 x10 canopy tent. When we are on the beach I usually hold it down with 4 five gallon pails filed with water to battle the wind. We will be staying in a site that has a concrete pad and I want to put the canopy next to the awning. I figured it would be windy and I will use several awning clamps for the wind. Just trying to get some more shade outside the rev.
- stripitExplorerWe stayed a month one winter, and the sites are really really close. We were in a site for a few days that would not let us open the slide completely, that is tight. We moved a few sites down where we could open all slides but no way could you even think about opening an awning. I don't know where your going to find room for a tent unless you out it out on the beach. It was a nice place to sit right on the ocean but not a lot of space for each rv.
- Big_KatunaExplorer IIWe have camped there many times but not in years. Sites are tiny, you often have to turn sideways to walk between big rigs. They pack them in.
As far as wind it is directly on the ocean so if its nice not much wind. If a storm blows through it can be very windy.
The tent? May not be room if they allow them. Only shade are a few palm trees. I wouldn't want to be the one sleeping in the tent. - fla-gypsyExplorerNever camped there. I can tell you it's to windy to have one for the last few days. Probably too windy for an awning also. Anytime the northeast wind blows it can get dicey along the east coast beach.
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Recommendations, reviews, and the inside scoop from fellow travelers.14,716 PostsLatest Activity: Oct 15, 2013