RUN BY: Nat’l Park
Service
LOCATION: 29.137144
-103.523068
Last Visited: 12/16/2018
UTILITIES: None
COST: $14
DISCOUNTS: 50% with
Senior card
OUR RATING (1-5):
Category I. Score 4.
NOTES: This lovely
campground is right on the Rio Grande but you can’t see the river from any of
the sites. By the gate there is a place
open to the river. One time we met a big black cow from Mexico. It took one
look at us and waded back to Mexico.
There is a canyon on this side of the park that is worth seeing. When
you go looking for water in the campground you will find a sign on all of the
taps saying that the water is not potable. Don’t panic. The only potable water
is at a building near the entrance. Even the hosts have to go there for their
water. (I apologize. I didn't take a picture of the campground.)
Environment:
Desert.
Amenities: None
Dump: None
Public Water: Yes
(see notes)
Toilets: Yes
Showers: No
Laundry: No
Phone Service: None
Nearest Propane: Study,
TX - a good 40 miles
Location: Starting
from Alpine, TX, take Texas-118 south to the park where the road becomes
Panther Junction Rd. Turn south (right) on Ross Maxwell Scenic Dr. to
Castolon. The campground is just past
the Castolon Visitor Center. You can
also enter from Marathon. From Marathon, TX turn south on US-385. At Panther Junction (Park HQ) turn right and
go to Ross Maxwell Scenic Dr to Castolon where you will turn south (left).
Proximity to shopping:
You are a good 80-100 miles from any serious shopping. There is a camp
store at Castolon Visitor Center. No gas
here. You must go about 40 miles to Study.
Camping Population:
Eclectic. Typical national park. We met some really nice people and
exchanged contact info and information.
Sites: Very
nice. Good sized and level.
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RATING KEY:
category - score
Categories: I -
established campgrounds where one might spend a vacation or several days
II
- boondocking, dry camping where there
are no designated sites and no amenities but one might choose to stay for more than a night.
III
- over-night areas
You must remember that we are scoring 1 thru 5 according to
things which are important to us: the environment, cost, amenities,
location, safety, camping population, site, phone service
* There are people who are not full-timers and van-dwellers
by choice. We try hard not to be demeaning or assume that they are bad people
but sadly, as you find in the poorer parts of a city, there seems to be more
crime. Many call these people van-dwellers. That isn’t really accurate even
though they do often live in vans. We know quite a few van-dwellers who have
good incomes, are full-timers by choice and prefer a van to other types of
vehicles. To try to show some respect for people who have a difficult lot in
life, I’m calling them ‘residential
campers’. It is only when you get a
high proportion of residential campers in an area that you find an increase in
petty theft, etc.