cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

Question for anyone familiar with Custer State Park in SD.

Atlee
Explorer II
Explorer II
Is there a particular campground inside the park you would recommend? Is it advisable to have reservations before hand? I normally don't like to make early reservations because it forces me to be at a certain place at a certain time.

How late can one wait before getting a reservation, if it is advisable? In other words, how crowded is Custer?
Erroll, Mary
2021 Coachmen Freedom Express 20SE
2014 F150 Supercab 4x4 w/ 8' box, Ecoboost & HD Pkg
Equal-i-zer Hitch
37 REPLIES 37

Atlee
Explorer II
Explorer II
For better or worse, I now have a reservation for a camping site at Game Lodge. It's a long way ahead of time (11 months) to reserve a spot. I selected site GL51E. It seemed to be within reasonable walking distance of the bath house. Main thing for me is it has electricity. My CPAP works better on electricity. ๐Ÿ™‚

Of course by the time I leave on our big trip next year, I plan to have changed out my Grp 24 12V battery for two GC 6V batteries. Then I'll get a device that allows me to hook the CPAP into the DC plug that's by the bed.
Erroll, Mary
2021 Coachmen Freedom Express 20SE
2014 F150 Supercab 4x4 w/ 8' box, Ecoboost & HD Pkg
Equal-i-zer Hitch

soren
Explorer
Explorer
CharlesinGA wrote:
The ripoff is the reservation fee. If you need money for the state, just charge more for the campsite, that doesn't bother me. Making me pay to make a reservation for what is essentially a walk up site is frustrating for the camper, just build that fee into the camping fee.

Charles


I agree it is a ripoff. Will probably stay at Spearfish City Campground and rent a car to get around. Will still have to pay the park entrance fees or buy the annual pass. arrgh!!!

Charles


Sure looks like you are complaining about entrance fees? As for the whole huge :R cost of the reservation fee, it looks to be $10 if you call the center, or $8 online. But, don't forget to figure in the fact that the site fees are unusually low for a park of that caliber. A modern site with water and electric is $25 a night. So, all in, a week of camping would run $185 with the onerous fee. Of course, you could avoid the reservation fee by staying at many nearby commercial campgrounds, but they are going to be close to double that a night, and more.

WE-C-USA
Explorer
Explorer
I have to agree that the reservation fee is a ripoff. It stops an overnighter from staying at a open SP site. I have no problems paying the entrance fee & the camping fee. But now you have to call in to reserve an empty site to overnite. Self check-in worked great for many many years.$$$
Frank & PJ
2022 2500HD GMC Duramax 4X4
2018 Grand Design-Refection 303RLS

CharlesinGA
Explorer
Explorer
The ripoff is the reservation fee. If you need money for the state, just charge more for the campsite, that doesn't bother me. Making me pay to make a reservation for what is essentially a walk up site is frustrating for the camper, just build that fee into the camping fee.

I guess the other way of looking at the reservation fee is kinda like the $1 toll on the bridges over to Santa Rosa Island at Pensacola, FL. It keeps a surprising amount of the rif-raf off the island, who don't want to pay a buck to come over and make trouble or trash the place. The reservation fee kinda assures the state that you REALLY want to come and stay at that park. But for a walkup it still stinks.

I work for an airline, and customers hate the fees for baggage, but in our situation, the market is competitive and you gotta make it look cheap to the consumer. In the camping business its different, just charge what you gotta charge and get it over with, don't nickel and dime me.

I'm not complaining about the park fees, we have virtually the same thing here in Georgia. I bought a park pass (senior version) for $35 and got a night free (they punch the pass when you use it). The site was $32, so for three dollars, I get a "pass" into every Georgia state park for free until next August.

Charles
'03 Ram 2500 CTD, 5.9HO six speed, PacBrake Exh Brake, std cab, long bed, Leer top and 2008 Bigfoot 25B21RB.. previously (both gone) 2008 Thor/Dutchman Freedom Spirit 180 & 2007 Winnebago View 23H Motorhome.

patperry2766
Explorer II
Explorer II
We stayed at Stockade Lake South last summer. Summertime is generally hard to find a spot, as they book up well in advance. Sturgis is in August and the Buffalo Roundup on 9/29/17.
Courage is the feeling you have right before you fully understand the situation

soren
Explorer
Explorer
Mortimer Brewster wrote:
soren wrote:
CharlesinGA wrote:

I agree it is a ripoff. Will probably stay at Spearfish City Campground and rent a car to get around. Will still have to pay the park entrance fees or buy the annual pass. arrgh!!!

Charles


Yes, because clearly, as an out of state resident, you have a God given right to enjoy one of the greatest state parks in the nation, while contributing zero towards the massive burden of maintaining and improving it. Let the citizens of South Dakota pay for it, even it the vast majority of users are from out of state, or from another country. After all, it's all about you. I feel your pain.

Tourists added $2.5 BILLION to the South Dakota economy in 2016. If the parks is short on money the state has some responsibility to use an adequate amount of the taxes generated for upkeep.
No one is forcing you to go there.


Who is claiming that there is a shortage of funds? As for taxes, the state does not collect income taxes, and the overall population of the state is smaller than most larger, or even medium sized, cities in this country. The state collects a small tax on tourism related spending which generates a fairly low amount statewide, amounting to 11 million in 2015. Asking users to pay is completely fair, and hardly expensive at $20 for a weekly pass, or $30 for a yearly pass to all state parks. It doesn't matter if it's Yellowstone, or Custer SP, asking the taxpayers of a lightly populated rural state to foot the bill for hundreds of thousands to millions of out of state, or foreign visitors is wrong. Most of us have RVs that take hundreds of dollars, or more in fuel to go any significant distance. We dropped hundreds in camping fees, and other expenses in a week of travel, yet some want to whine when one of the greatest state parks in the country has a modest entry fee. Seriously?

Mortimer_Brewst
Explorer II
Explorer II
soren wrote:
CharlesinGA wrote:

I agree it is a ripoff. Will probably stay at Spearfish City Campground and rent a car to get around. Will still have to pay the park entrance fees or buy the annual pass. arrgh!!!

Charles


Yes, because clearly, as an out of state resident, you have a God given right to enjoy one of the greatest state parks in the nation, while contributing zero towards the massive burden of maintaining and improving it. Let the citizens of South Dakota pay for it, even it the vast majority of users are from out of state, or from another country. After all, it's all about you. I feel your pain.

Tourists added $2.5 BILLION to the South Dakota economy in 2016. If the parks is short on money the state has some responsibility to use an adequate amount of the taxes generated for upkeep.
No one is forcing you to go there.
If ethics are poor at the top, that behavior is copied down through the organization - Robert Noyce

2018 Chevy Silverado 3500 SRW Duramax
2019 Coachmen Chaparral 298RLS

soren
Explorer
Explorer
DutchmenSport wrote:
soren wrote:
CharlesinGA wrote:


One thing we did NOT do was pay to see Crazy Horse. Here is one attraction "I" personally felt was a ripoff. Besides, you can see the monument from the road.

Rip off? Well? only if YOU think so. If so, don't go! We made that choice on one attraction.


Sad to see that you missed a great stop. Crazy Horse is not only a monument to the Plain's Indian tribes, but to the unimaginable drive of one man who decided to build the world's largest monument, even though he knew he, and his children, would probably never live to see the completion. Not only is it an ongoing project, but it is a great place to spend a few hours while touring several museums, watching a short documentary of the project, and learning about how one man's vision and drive could literally move a mountain, and create a spectacular piece of art.

I've done just about everything there is to do in the Hills, and it's pretty rare to find any real rip-offs. I've never had the urge to try out the Cosmos Mystery area, or the Presidential busts up in Lead (apparently I'm not alone on that one, since it closed) I wasted a bit of money on the National Woodcarving Museum, which was awful, and a bit more on the Borglum story, in Keystone, which isn't as good as the free museum and film at Rushmore. The interesting part of the area is that you can spend a few weeks there every summer and still not cover it all. This past year we rented a UTV and end up deep in the back woods of the northwestern hills, in areas few tourists will ever see. Nothing but cows, old gold mines and ghost towns. Just Beautiful.

ChuckV1
Explorer
Explorer
Alabama Jim wrote:
When we go there we like to stay at Chris's RV Park in Spearfish. It is an hour drive to Custer, which is an awesome park to visit. Spearfish is also convenient to Spearfish Canyon and the waterfalls as well as Deadwood.


I'll second it ๐Ÿ˜„ Chris's is a really nice Rv Park, nice folks an great sites ๐Ÿ™‚ Stayed there a couple of times an always friendly an helpful an lead you to you site and make sure your happy with such ...

Safe Travels

DutchmenSport
Explorer
Explorer
soren wrote:
CharlesinGA wrote:

I agree it is a ripoff. ...

Charles


...the vast majority of users are from out of state, ...


One thing I've learned over the years, if you REALLY want something, you've got to pay the price to get it. It may be monetary, time, or one's resources and energy, but anything of value costs!

When we were in the Black Hills - Custer area the first 2 weeks in July this year, we did not find prices of anything overly extravagant. Actually, compared to some other parts of the country, prices for everything were pretty much right in line.

We stayed at Buffalo Ridge Campground. It's a Good Sam associated campground. Their prices, in my opinion, were right in line with other Good Sam campgrounds we've stayed at, all the way from Florida, to Indiana, to Virginia, to Southern Missouri, to South Dakota. We made reservations early, got a good deal, paid well in advance, so it was not taxing on the finances one little bit. We also paid for our daughter's campsite, about a month after we made our reservations, and we got lucky and was able to rent one of the TP's for one night. Even the TP's rents were reasonable. Considering the amenities at the park, the close proximity to virtually everything, and a once-in-a-lifetime experience, the price was well ... WELL within reason!

Yes, the campgrounds and attractions have their overhead expenses. But consider entrance fees to Disney World or Six Flag amusement parks, at over $100 a day for a single person, and $40 a night at a campground for an entire family and full hook-ups at that, is .. well ... chicken feed.

How about the various attractions?

The pass into Custer State Park is $20 and good for 7 days. I thought the price was a little high at the Reptile Zoo, especially when adding the cost of 4 adults and 4 kids. But, call it customer "gouging"!??? No! They have their costs and if you are not willing to pay, well ... simple ... go away! NOTHING is twisting your arm to go there, no one is putting a gun to your head to go. It's YOUR choice. If the cost is too high, you can walk away.

For us, it was an experience of a life-time! We knew there would be costs, we save for it, planned for it, and then enjoyed spending it!

What about other costs in the ENTIRE area? We ate out a lot as we were on the road. We purchased a ton of gifts and trinkets for friends and family back home. From the Custer State Park sweatshirt, to the Corn Palace T-shirt, or the buffalo purse for my wife, or the stuffed buffalo plush toy for my grandson at home, or the local craftsman sign maker who made us our "Love Shack" sign for the camper, we so nothing extravagant with prices for anything, anywhere while there.

We left with $1200 spending money --- cash --- and returned with $700 still in our pocket! That included all attractions, food on the road, and every other crazy thing we ended up doing on some of those spur of the moment events, totally unexpected 2 weeks of, not having a clue what to expect, because we've never been there before experinece.

Should the citizens of South Dakota foot the bill for all of this stuff so tourists, like myself, expecting everything to be handed out? Absolutely not! As a consumer, I have the responsibility to pay the price, support the cause, and pay the bill. Otherwise, I have the option to go somewhere else.

One thing we did NOT do was pay to see Crazy Horse. Here is one attraction "I" personally felt was a ripoff. Besides, you can see the monument from the road.

Rip off? Well? only if YOU think so. If so, don't go! We made that choice on one attraction.

soren
Explorer
Explorer
CharlesinGA wrote:

I agree it is a ripoff. Will probably stay at Spearfish City Campground and rent a car to get around. Will still have to pay the park entrance fees or buy the annual pass. arrgh!!!

Charles


Yes, because clearly, as an out of state resident, you have a God given right to enjoy one of the greatest state parks in the nation, while contributing zero towards the massive burden of maintaining and improving it. Let the citizens of South Dakota pay for it, even it the vast majority of users are from out of state, or from another country. After all, it's all about you. I feel your pain.

BTW, if you do decide to crack your wallet open, and pay your fair share, chances are, you will be handing your money to a volunteer. One of hundreds from around the country that donate hundreds of hours of their time, every summer, to make sure that you enjoy your visit.

soren
Explorer
Explorer
Alabama Jim wrote:
When we go there we like to stay at Chris's RV Park in Spearfish. It is an hour drive to Custer, which is an awesome park to visit. Spearfish is also convenient to Spearfish Canyon and the waterfalls as well as Deadwood.


Maybe an hour in a helicopter? More like 1-1/2 to 2 hours, depending on traffic. It's seventy miles of twisty roads between them. Having spent many months there, camping, for the last twenty years, one thing that is obvious is that a through visit to the Hills really needs to be divided into two parts, northern and southern. Custer, Custer State Park, Hot Springs, Hill City, the big caves, Crazy Horse, Rushmore, and Keystone, are best enjoyed while camping in the area. OTOH, Deadwood, Lead, Spearfish, Sturgis, Bear Butte, and maybe even a day trip to the Devil's Tower, are great from locations like Chris's. Rapid City is an easy trip from both ends of the Hills, and if you are coming from the east, it's best to do a stop, even overnight, in the Badlands, before you get to the hills, instead of staying in the Hills and backtracking for a day trip.

zigzagrv
Explorer
Explorer
DutchmenSport wrote:
Good luck!

Can you find my wife in this crowd in Sturges?



Bottom, front and center?

Ron



2003 Gulf Stream Ultra Supreme 33'
F53 Class A
2013 Ford Edge toad

CharlesinGA
Explorer
Explorer
Center Lake Campground is a "same day reservation" meaning walkup, but you get ripped for the reservation and fees you have to make. Center Lake has no hookups, just a faucet here and there and showers and toilets. You cannot reserve Center Lake sites in advance.

Everywhere else in Custer you must have a reservation and you can reserve a year in advance. Other SD state parks you may only reserve 90 days in advance.

I agree it is a ripoff. Will probably stay at Spearfish City Campground and rent a car to get around. Will still have to pay the park entrance fees or buy the annual pass. arrgh!!!

Charles
'03 Ram 2500 CTD, 5.9HO six speed, PacBrake Exh Brake, std cab, long bed, Leer top and 2008 Bigfoot 25B21RB.. previously (both gone) 2008 Thor/Dutchman Freedom Spirit 180 & 2007 Winnebago View 23H Motorhome.

Roadpilot
Explorer
Explorer
We have stayed at the KOA in Custer, the Rafter J Bar in Hill City and Elkhorn in Spearfish. These cover the range from the south to the northern areas you're likely to want to see.

Custer State Park is beautiful and if you can get a site that suits you I'd do it, but realize you'll be on the southern end of a very interesting area. 3 weeks ago we were at Elkhorn, which is a beautiful campground north of everything.

I'd recommend looking at the Rafter J Bar, which is in the middle of everything. There's also a KOA near the Rater J Bar that others have liked.
Tiffin Wayfarer 25TW
15 Mini Cooper S