RV Parks In Clarksville, Arkansas
35.4715° N, 93.4666° W
Quick Overview
Clarksville sits right on I-40 in Johnson County, roughly halfway between Fort Smith and Russellville, and it makes a genuinely handy Ozark base camp for RVers. This is the gateway to the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest to the north and the Arkansas River / Lake Dardanelle to the south, so you get big-water fishing and boating on one side and forested mountains and trails on the other. The town itself is small and easy to move a rig through, with fuel, groceries and propane clustered near the interstate exits.
For RV parks and campgrounds, Clarksville leans on a couple of excellent public options plus a few private full-hookup spots. Spadra Park Campground, run by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, sits just south of town on Lake Dardanelle with 30-amp sites, water at many pads, a dump station and paved back-ins that handle rigs up to 65 feet. About 30 minutes east, Lake Dardanelle State Park adds 30 full-hookup sites and 40 more with water and electric, including 50-amp on Loop A. For private full hookups closer to the mountain biking and forest, Red Lick RV Park runs big 20x50 sites with 30/50-amp, water and sewer.
We like Clarksville because you can do the whole trip from here: paddle or fish Lake Dardanelle in the morning, walk the Spadra Creek Nature Trail downtown, then run up AR-21 into the national forest for hiking on the Ozark Highlands Trail. It is not a resort town, and that is the appeal. Most rigs stage near the interstate for fuel and groceries, then settle in at a lakeside site for a few nights. Reservations for the public parks are easy to make online through Arkansas State Parks or Recreation.gov, and the Corps sites in particular are a great value for the setting. If you time a visit for mid-July, the Johnson County Peach Festival adds a genuine small-town Arkansas draw right downtown.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Clarksville
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All Dump Stations Near Clarksville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Love's RV Hookup | 1.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lamar R.v. Park | 6.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ozark Ridge Campground | 8.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hickey Town RV Park | 9.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Piney Bay Campground | 10.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Horsehead Lake Campground | 11.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Spencer's Landing RV Park | 12.0 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hillbilly Haven RV Park | 13.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Grape Country RV Park | 15.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Primrose Farm RV & Camping | 15.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Love's RV Hookup
1.1 miLamar R.v. Park
6.1 miOzark Ridge Campground
8.7 miHickey Town RV Park
9.0 miPiney Bay Campground
10.0 miHorsehead Lake Campground
11.7 miSpencer's Landing RV Park
12.0 miHillbilly Haven RV Park
13.8 miGrape Country RV Park
15.5 miPrimrose Farm RV & Camping
15.8 miTraveling to Clarksville by RV
Getting here is simple. I-40 runs along the south edge of Clarksville, and exit 58 (US-64 / Rogers Ave) is the RV-friendly one, dropping you straight onto the commercial strip with the Walmart Supercenter, a Love's Travel Stop with high-flow diesel, and several fill-up stations. Exits 55 and 57 also work if you are heading to specific parks. The main routes through town are flat and wide, so a big fifth wheel or Class A moves through without drama.
The one route to plan for is AR-21 north toward the Pleasant Hill Ranger District and the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest. It climbs and narrows as it enters the mountains, so take it slow with a long trailer and top off fuel, water and propane before you leave town. Coming from the east, Russellville (about 30 minutes) has the fuller RV service and repair options if you need parts. For overnight staging, the Clarksville Walmart at 230 Market St allows perimeter parking with a manager OK. Check current conditions and forest access on the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest site before you head up.
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Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Clarksville, Arkansas, it's worth taking thirty minutes to check that the basics are in place — the four areas below are where unprepared RVers most often get stung.
Check your RV insurance coverage
A standard auto policy rarely covers a Class A, Class C, or travel trailer the way a dedicated RV insurance policy does. If you're financing a motorhome, lenders typically require comprehensive and collision; full-timers should additionally price in vacation liability and personal belongings coverage. Rates vary widely by state and travel pattern — compare quotes from multiple RV-focused carriers before each season.
Know your roadside assistance options
RV-specific roadside plans tow motorhomes and trailers that regular AAA coverage won't touch — flat beds, mobile mechanics, tire service for duallies, and even emergency lockouts at remote campgrounds. Good plans cover your spouse and trailer even if you're driving a separate vehicle, and some include trip interruption reimbursement if a breakdown costs you a reservation.
Decide about an extended warranty early
Original manufacturer warranties on new RVs typically run 12–24 months — shorter than most buyers realize. An extended service contract (essentially a mechanical breakdown policy) covers the appliances, slides, levelling systems, and drivetrain components that can run $3,000–$10,000 to replace. The time to price one is before the factory coverage expires, not after something breaks.
Set up a travel rewards card for fuel and fees
A no-annual-fee travel or gas rewards card pays for itself on a single month of RV travel. Expect to spend $400–$800 per week combined on fuel, campgrounds, and propane — 3–5% cash back on gas alone covers the next oil change. For bigger trips, a sign-up bonus can offset campground fees for the whole season.
RVingLife is supported by advertising. Third-party ads on this page may include insurance quotes, roadside plans, warranty coverage, or financial products relevant to the topics above. We don't endorse any specific provider — compare multiple offers before you commit. Privacy policy.
Dump Station Costs in Clarksville
Clarksville is an affordable place to camp, mostly because the best sites are public. Spadra Park Campground, being a Corps of Engineers site, runs in the value range typical of federal campgrounds, and holders of the America the Beautiful Senior or Access pass get the usual discount on the standard nightly rate. Lake Dardanelle State Park is priced like other Arkansas State Parks, with full-hookup and 50-amp sites costing a bit more than the water-and-electric loops.
Private options like Red Lick RV Park sit in the mid range for a full-hookup site with 30/50-amp, and you book those direct. If you're watching the budget, the Walmart at 230 Market St is a free overnight option for a quick stop, and dispersed camping in the national forest north of town is free where allowed. Propane and diesel at the Love's are competitively priced for the corridor. Overall, a night here costs less than comparable lake or forest destinations in the region, and the public parks are where your dollar goes furthest with several dump-capable stops in the area for tank service.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Clarksville
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Best Time to Visit Clarksville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
Crowds: Medium
Short, cold and wet with January lows near 29F and highs in the upper 40s. Only about 2 inches of snow a year, but occasional ice storms happen. Lake Dardanelle State Park stays open year-round if you want a quiet off-season base with hookups.
Spring
Mar - May
Crowds: Medium
Green, pleasant and the wettest stretch of the year. Highs in the 70s, lows near 48F. Great for the lake and trails, but spring thunderstorms roll through the Arkansas River valley, so watch the radar and avoid low creek-side sites in heavy rain.
Summer
Jun - Aug
Crowds: Medium
Hot and muggy with July highs around 90F and high humidity. Reserve a 50-amp site if you can so the AC keeps up. This is peak season for the mid-July Peach Festival and for boating on Lake Dardanelle, so book Spadra Park and the state park early.
Fall
Sep - Oct
Crowds: Medium
The best RV season here. Warm days in the low 70s, cool nights around 50F, low humidity, and Ozark color through October. Ideal for hiking the Ozark Highlands Trail and fishing the lake without the summer crowds or heat.
Explore the Clarksville Area
A few things we'd pass along after poking around Clarksville. First, use exit 58 for everything commercial so you are not threading a rig through the courthouse square downtown. Second, if you're booking Spadra Park Campground, know the rail line runs parallel to the campground road and trains roll through roughly every 90 minutes day and night; ask for a pad farther from the tracks if you're a light sleeper.
Timing matters here. The Johnson County Peach Festival takes over Courthouse Square in mid-July and it is the oldest ongoing festival in Arkansas, which means the whole county books up that weekend; reserve the public parks weeks ahead. Our favorite window is fall, roughly late September into October, when the humidity drops, the Ozark hardwoods turn, and nights get cool enough to skip the AC. Before you drive AR-21 into the forest, fill propane and fresh water at the Love's on S Crawford St because services thin out fast once you're in the hills. And if you just need a quick full-hookup overnight, Red Lick RV Park or the travel-stop hookups off the interstate are the least fussy way to plug in.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Clarksville
Where are the best RV parks in Clarksville, Arkansas?
The two standout public options are Spadra Park Campground, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers park on Lake Dardanelle just south of town with 30-amp sites, water and a dump station, and Lake Dardanelle State Park about 30 minutes east near Russellville with 30 full-hookup and 40 water-and-electric sites. For private full hookups, Red Lick RV Park runs big 20x50 sites with 30/50-amp about 8 miles from downtown near the mountain biking trails. If you just need a fast overnight plug-in off the interstate, the travel-stop hookups off S Crawford St handle that. Between the public and private options you can match almost any rig size or budget in the Clarksville area.
Does Clarksville have full-hookup RV sites?
Yes. Lake Dardanelle State Park has 30 dedicated full-hookup sites plus another 40 with water and electric, and Loop A offers 50-amp service, so a big Class A or fifth wheel can plug in comfortably. Red Lick RV Park, a private park about 8 miles from downtown, offers full hookups with water, sewer and 30/50-amp on large 20x50 pads. The Love's travel-stop hookups off I-40 also provide 30/50-amp electric, water and sewer for a quick overnight. Spadra Park Campground has 30-amp electric and water at many sites but not sewer at the pad, so plan a dump-station stop there. Reserve the state park and Corps sites ahead in summer.
Can you camp for free near Clarksville?
You have a couple of free options. The Clarksville Walmart Supercenter at 230 Market St allows overnight RV parking on the outer perimeter with a manager OK, which is handy for a one-night stop near the interstate. For a more scenic free stay, the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest north of town via the Pleasant Hill Ranger District allows dispersed camping in designated areas, including primitive spots along the Ozark Highlands Trail and the Mulberry River. Dispersed forest camping has no hookups or services, so arrive with full fresh water and empty tanks. Always follow posted rules and pack out everything, and check the forest service site for current access before heading up AR-21.
Is there a dump station in Clarksville?
There is no free municipal dump station in downtown Clarksville, but you have good nearby options. Spadra Park Campground, the Corps of Engineers park on Lake Dardanelle just south of town, has an RV dump station, and Lake Dardanelle State Park near Russellville has one as well. The Love's Travel Stop off S Crawford St also serves RVs. If you're staying at one of the public parks you can dump on your way out, which is the simplest approach. There are several dump-capable stops in the broader area, all paid or camp-fee based, so budget a few dollars for tank service rather than expecting a free in-town option.
What is the closest interstate access for RVs?
I-40 runs right along the southern edge of Clarksville, making access unusually easy. Exit 58 at US-64 / Rogers Avenue is the most RV-friendly, dropping you straight onto the commercial strip with the Walmart, a Love's Travel Stop with high-flow diesel lanes, and several fuel stations. Exits 55 and 57 also serve the town if you're heading to a specific park. The main roads through Clarksville are flat and wide, so a large motorhome or fifth wheel moves through without tight turns or low clearances. If you're continuing east, Russellville is about 30 minutes away and has fuller RV service, and Fort Smith lies about an hour west on I-40 for bigger-city supplies.
When is the best time to RV in Clarksville?
Fall is the sweet spot, roughly late September into October, when highs settle into the low 70s, nights cool to around 50F, humidity drops, and the Ozark hardwoods turn color. It is ideal for hiking the Ozark Highlands Trail and fishing Lake Dardanelle without summer heat or crowds. Spring is pretty and green but the wettest season, so watch for thunderstorms. Summer is hot and muggy with highs near 90F, though it is peak boating season and hosts the mid-July Peach Festival. Winter is short and cold with lows near 29F and little snow; Lake Dardanelle State Park stays open year-round for a quiet off-season base with hookups.
Are there RV-friendly roads into the Ozark National Forest?
Yes, but plan ahead. The main route north from Clarksville is AR-21 toward the Pleasant Hill Ranger District of the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest. It climbs and narrows as it enters the mountains, so take it slow with a long trailer and use lower gears on the grades. Before leaving town, top off fuel, fresh water and propane at the Love's on S Crawford St, because services thin out quickly once you're in the hills. The forest has OHV trails, primitive camping and access to the Ozark Highlands Trail and Mulberry River. Smaller rigs and vans handle the forest roads best; very large fifth wheels should scout turnarounds before committing to narrow spurs.
Can I reserve campsites in advance near Clarksville?
Yes, and you should in busy months. Lake Dardanelle State Park takes reservations through the Arkansas State Parks system online, and Spadra Park Campground, being a Corps of Engineers site, books through Recreation.gov. Both fill up on summer weekends and especially during the mid-July Johnson County Peach Festival, when the whole county gets busy, so reserve those weeks ahead. Private parks like Red Lick RV Park you book direct by phone. For a spontaneous trip in spring or fall midweek you can often find open sites, but the safe move is to lock in your dates online. Having a reservation also means you're not scrambling for a spot after a long driving day on I-40.
What amenities does Spadra Park Campground offer?
Spadra Park Campground is a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers park on Lake Dardanelle just south of Clarksville. It has 24 campsites with 30-amp electric hookups, and many sites also include water. The paved back-in pads accommodate large RVs up to 65 feet, and amenities include restrooms, hot showers and an RV dump station. Two boat ramps give direct lake access, with an adjacent marina for fuel and fishing supplies. There are picnic shelters, playgrounds and day-use areas too. One thing to know: a rail line runs parallel to the campground road and trains pass roughly every 90 minutes around the clock, so light sleepers should request a pad farther from the tracks. It is an excellent value for a waterfront Corps site.
Is Clarksville a good base for exploring the area?
It is one of the better small-town bases in the Arkansas River valley. Sitting on I-40 in Johnson County, Clarksville puts you between two very different landscapes: Lake Dardanelle and the Arkansas River to the south for fishing, boating and paddling, and the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest to the north for hiking, mountain biking and dispersed camping. In town you can walk the Spadra Creek Nature Trail, catch an event at the University of the Ozarks, and stock up at the Walmart near the interstate. Russellville is 30 minutes east and Fort Smith about an hour west for bigger supply runs. From here you can do lake mornings and mountain afternoons without moving the rig, which is exactly what we look for in a base camp.
What RV services are available in Clarksville?
For fuel and propane, the Love's Travel Stop #822 at 1025 S Crawford St off I-40 has high-flow diesel lanes and propane, and AmeriGas plus U-Haul offer propane refills in the area. Groceries and general supplies are easy at the Walmart Supercenter at 230 Market St. In-town RV repair is limited, so for anything beyond basic parts, Russellville about 30 minutes east on I-40 has fuller service options, and Fort Smith an hour west is your bigger-city fallback. Fresh water fills are available at the Love's and at the public campgrounds. It is smart to handle any propane top-off, water fill or tank dump before heading up AR-21 into the national forest, where services drop off quickly.
How busy does Clarksville get for RVers?
For most of the year Clarksville is quiet and relaxed, which is part of its appeal. The public parks rarely feel crowded on spring and fall weekdays, and you can often find open sites on short notice. The big exception is mid-July, when the Johnson County Peach Festival, the oldest ongoing festival in Arkansas, takes over Courthouse Square and fills lodging and campgrounds across the county; book weeks ahead for that weekend. Summer holiday weekends also bring boaters to Lake Dardanelle, so Spadra Park and the state park sites go fast then too. Outside those peaks, this is an easygoing stop where you won't fight for a spot. Fall in particular offers great weather with light crowds, which is when we prefer to visit.
Are pets allowed at the campgrounds near Clarksville?
Yes, the main parks around Clarksville are pet friendly. Lake Dardanelle State Park welcomes pets as long as they are kept on a leash, and the campground stays open year-round so you can bring the dog in any season. The Corps of Engineers Spadra Park Campground also allows leashed pets, which is standard for federal recreation sites. The Spadra Creek Nature Trail downtown and the trails in the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest give you plenty of places to walk a dog, though you should keep pets leashed and pack out waste on public lands. Always clean up at your site and never leave a pet unattended in a hot rig during those muggy Arkansas summers. Confirm any breed or count limits with private parks when you book direct.
What is there to do around Clarksville besides camping?
Plenty for an outdoor-focused RVer. Lake Dardanelle is the big draw, with bass fishing, boating and kayaking right off the boat ramps at Spadra Park. Downtown you can stroll the Spadra Creek Nature Trail, a paved path following the creek through town, and check out Courthouse Square with its gazebo and veterans memorial. North of town the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest opens up the Ozark Highlands Trail, the Mulberry Wild & Scenic River for floating, and OHV riding. The University of the Ozarks hosts arts events at the Walton Fine Arts Center. If your timing lines up in mid-July, the Johnson County Peach Festival on the square is a fun, only-in-Arkansas stop with cobbler, a 5K and a peach-pit spitting contest.
Where are the best RV parks in Clarksville, Arkansas?
The two standout public options are Spadra Park Campground, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers park on Lake Dardanelle just south of town with 30-amp sites, water and a dump station, and Lake Dardanelle State Park about 30 minutes east near Russellville with 30 full-hookup and 40 water-and-electric sites. For private full hookups, Red Lick RV Park runs big 20x50 sites with 30/50-amp about 8 miles from downtown near the mountain biking trails. If you just need a fast overnight plug-in off the interstate, the travel-stop hookups off S Crawford St handle that. Between the public and private options you can match almost any rig size or budget in the Clarksville area.
Does Clarksville have full-hookup RV sites?
Yes. Lake Dardanelle State Park has 30 dedicated full-hookup sites plus another 40 with water and electric, and Loop A offers 50-amp service, so a big Class A or fifth wheel can plug in comfortably. Red Lick RV Park, a private park about 8 miles from downtown, offers full hookups with water, sewer and 30/50-amp on large 20x50 pads. The Love's travel-stop hookups off I-40 also provide 30/50-amp electric, water and sewer for a quick overnight. Spadra Park Campground has 30-amp electric and water at many sites but not sewer at the pad, so plan a dump-station stop there. Reserve the state park and Corps sites ahead in summer.
Can you camp for free near Clarksville?
You have a couple of free options. The Clarksville Walmart Supercenter at 230 Market St allows overnight RV parking on the outer perimeter with a manager OK, which is handy for a one-night stop near the interstate. For a more scenic free stay, the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest north of town via the Pleasant Hill Ranger District allows dispersed camping in designated areas, including primitive spots along the Ozark Highlands Trail and the Mulberry River. Dispersed forest camping has no hookups or services, so arrive with full fresh water and empty tanks. Always follow posted rules and pack out everything, and check the forest service site for current access before heading up AR-21.
Is there a dump station in Clarksville?
There is no free municipal dump station in downtown Clarksville, but you have good nearby options. Spadra Park Campground, the Corps of Engineers park on Lake Dardanelle just south of town, has an RV dump station, and Lake Dardanelle State Park near Russellville has one as well. The Love's Travel Stop off S Crawford St also serves RVs. If you're staying at one of the public parks you can dump on your way out, which is the simplest approach. There are {{stationCount}} dump-capable stops in the broader area, all paid or camp-fee based, so budget a few dollars for tank service rather than expecting a free in-town option.
What is the closest interstate access for RVs?
I-40 runs right along the southern edge of Clarksville, making access unusually easy. Exit 58 at US-64 / Rogers Avenue is the most RV-friendly, dropping you straight onto the commercial strip with the Walmart, a Love's Travel Stop with high-flow diesel lanes, and several fuel stations. Exits 55 and 57 also serve the town if you're heading to a specific park. The main roads through Clarksville are flat and wide, so a large motorhome or fifth wheel moves through without tight turns or low clearances. If you're continuing east, Russellville is about 30 minutes away and has fuller RV service, and Fort Smith lies about an hour west on I-40 for bigger-city supplies.
When is the best time to RV in Clarksville?
Fall is the sweet spot, roughly late September into October, when highs settle into the low 70s, nights cool to around 50F, humidity drops, and the Ozark hardwoods turn color. It is ideal for hiking the Ozark Highlands Trail and fishing Lake Dardanelle without summer heat or crowds. Spring is pretty and green but the wettest season, so watch for thunderstorms. Summer is hot and muggy with highs near 90F, though it is peak boating season and hosts the mid-July Peach Festival. Winter is short and cold with lows near 29F and little snow; Lake Dardanelle State Park stays open year-round for a quiet off-season base with hookups.
Are there RV-friendly roads into the Ozark National Forest?
Yes, but plan ahead. The main route north from Clarksville is AR-21 toward the Pleasant Hill Ranger District of the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest. It climbs and narrows as it enters the mountains, so take it slow with a long trailer and use lower gears on the grades. Before leaving town, top off fuel, fresh water and propane at the Love's on S Crawford St, because services thin out quickly once you're in the hills. The forest has OHV trails, primitive camping and access to the Ozark Highlands Trail and Mulberry River. Smaller rigs and vans handle the forest roads best; very large fifth wheels should scout turnarounds before committing to narrow spurs.
Can I reserve campsites in advance near Clarksville?
Yes, and you should in busy months. Lake Dardanelle State Park takes reservations through the Arkansas State Parks system online, and Spadra Park Campground, being a Corps of Engineers site, books through Recreation.gov. Both fill up on summer weekends and especially during the mid-July Johnson County Peach Festival, when the whole county gets busy, so reserve those weeks ahead. Private parks like Red Lick RV Park you book direct by phone. For a spontaneous trip in spring or fall midweek you can often find open sites, but the safe move is to lock in your dates online. Having a reservation also means you're not scrambling for a spot after a long driving day on I-40.
What amenities does Spadra Park Campground offer?
Spadra Park Campground is a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers park on Lake Dardanelle just south of Clarksville. It has 24 campsites with 30-amp electric hookups, and many sites also include water. The paved back-in pads accommodate large RVs up to 65 feet, and amenities include restrooms, hot showers and an RV dump station. Two boat ramps give direct lake access, with an adjacent marina for fuel and fishing supplies. There are picnic shelters, playgrounds and day-use areas too. One thing to know: a rail line runs parallel to the campground road and trains pass roughly every 90 minutes around the clock, so light sleepers should request a pad farther from the tracks. It is an excellent value for a waterfront Corps site.
Is Clarksville a good base for exploring the area?
It is one of the better small-town bases in the Arkansas River valley. Sitting on I-40 in Johnson County, Clarksville puts you between two very different landscapes: Lake Dardanelle and the Arkansas River to the south for fishing, boating and paddling, and the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest to the north for hiking, mountain biking and dispersed camping. In town you can walk the Spadra Creek Nature Trail, catch an event at the University of the Ozarks, and stock up at the Walmart near the interstate. Russellville is 30 minutes east and Fort Smith about an hour west for bigger supply runs. From here you can do lake mornings and mountain afternoons without moving the rig, which is exactly what we look for in a base camp.
What RV services are available in Clarksville?
For fuel and propane, the Love's Travel Stop #822 at 1025 S Crawford St off I-40 has high-flow diesel lanes and propane, and AmeriGas plus U-Haul offer propane refills in the area. Groceries and general supplies are easy at the Walmart Supercenter at 230 Market St. In-town RV repair is limited, so for anything beyond basic parts, Russellville about 30 minutes east on I-40 has fuller service options, and Fort Smith an hour west is your bigger-city fallback. Fresh water fills are available at the Love's and at the public campgrounds. It is smart to handle any propane top-off, water fill or tank dump before heading up AR-21 into the national forest, where services drop off quickly.
How busy does Clarksville get for RVers?
For most of the year Clarksville is quiet and relaxed, which is part of its appeal. The public parks rarely feel crowded on spring and fall weekdays, and you can often find open sites on short notice. The big exception is mid-July, when the Johnson County Peach Festival, the oldest ongoing festival in Arkansas, takes over Courthouse Square and fills lodging and campgrounds across the county; book weeks ahead for that weekend. Summer holiday weekends also bring boaters to Lake Dardanelle, so Spadra Park and the state park sites go fast then too. Outside those peaks, this is an easygoing stop where you won't fight for a spot. Fall in particular offers great weather with light crowds, which is when we prefer to visit.
Are pets allowed at the campgrounds near Clarksville?
Yes, the main parks around Clarksville are pet friendly. Lake Dardanelle State Park welcomes pets as long as they are kept on a leash, and the campground stays open year-round so you can bring the dog in any season. The Corps of Engineers Spadra Park Campground also allows leashed pets, which is standard for federal recreation sites. The Spadra Creek Nature Trail downtown and the trails in the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest give you plenty of places to walk a dog, though you should keep pets leashed and pack out waste on public lands. Always clean up at your site and never leave a pet unattended in a hot rig during those muggy Arkansas summers. Confirm any breed or count limits with private parks when you book direct.
What is there to do around Clarksville besides camping?
Plenty for an outdoor-focused RVer. Lake Dardanelle is the big draw, with bass fishing, boating and kayaking right off the boat ramps at Spadra Park. Downtown you can stroll the Spadra Creek Nature Trail, a paved path following the creek through town, and check out Courthouse Square with its gazebo and veterans memorial. North of town the Ozark-St. Francis National Forest opens up the Ozark Highlands Trail, the Mulberry Wild & Scenic River for floating, and OHV riding. The University of the Ozarks hosts arts events at the Walton Fine Arts Center. If your timing lines up in mid-July, the Johnson County Peach Festival on the square is a fun, only-in-Arkansas stop with cobbler, a 5K and a peach-pit spitting contest.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Clarksville?
The highest-rated station is U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Shoal Bay with a rating of 4.6/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Clarksville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Clarksville.
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