RV Parks In Sooke, British Columbia
48.3746° N, 123.7276° W
Quick Overview
Sooke sits on the rugged southwest corner of Vancouver Island, about 45 minutes west of Victoria on Highway 14, where the suburbs give way to wild coastline, old-growth forest, and the start of the Pacific Marine Circle Route toward Port Renfrew. For RVers it is the gateway to some of the most beautiful and accessible wilderness on the island: surf-washed beaches, the glacial swimming pools of the Sooke Potholes, and the sweeping Coast Trail in East Sooke Park, all in a mild, green, Mediterranean-style climate. The town itself is a relaxed coastal community with the services you need, and most travelers base here to explore the beaches and trails before continuing west into the genuinely remote country toward the end of the road.
Camping around Sooke is mostly public and oriented to the coast, and it is dry camping, so come self-contained. French Beach Provincial Park, about 20 km west on Highway 14, has 69 drive-in vehicle sites, water taps, and a seasonal sani-station, and it reserves through BC Parks. China Beach Campground in Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, 35 km west, offers 78 forested sites near a fine-sand beach. Closer in, the CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes Regional Park has 67 first-come sites by the river. For hookups, the options are private: Sooke River Campground has a sani-dump and serviced sites, and Weir's Beach RV Resort toward Victoria is the nearest full-hookup private RV park.
Reservations for the provincial parks go through BC Parks and are needed for summer weekends, while the CRD potholes campground is first-come, so arrive early. Since the public parks lack hookups, plan to dump and fill water at the seasonal sani-stations, at Sooke River Campground, or back in Victoria. The season runs June through September, with mild but very wet, stormy winters. Between the wild beaches, the swimming pools, the coastal trails, and a couple of serviced private options, Sooke gives RVers a stunning, low-key base on the edge of the island.
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Gear for Your Trip to Sooke
All Dump Stations Near Sooke
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Otter Point Resort | 3.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pedder Bay RV Resort & Marina | 7.3 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Weir's Beach RV Resort | 8.5 mi | 3.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
| All Fun RV Park | 12.4 mi | 3.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tunnel Hill Campground And RV Park | 12.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Malahat Mountain Meadows RV Park And Campground | 14.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fort Victoria RV Park | 14.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Salish Seaside RV Resort And Marina | 15.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lyre River Campground | 16.3 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Twin Beach Campground | 17.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Otter Point Resort
3.2 miPedder Bay RV Resort & Marina
7.3 miWeir's Beach RV Resort
8.5 miAll Fun RV Park
12.4 miTunnel Hill Campground And RV Park
12.4 miMalahat Mountain Meadows RV Park And Campground
14.0 miFort Victoria RV Park
14.4 miSalish Seaside RV Resort And Marina
15.6 miLyre River Campground
16.3 miTwin Beach Campground
17.8 miTraveling to Sooke by RV
Sooke is reached via Highway 14, which leaves the Trans-Canada west of Victoria and winds along the coast for about 45 minutes to town, then continues as the Pacific Marine Circle Route some 70 km farther to Jordan River and Port Renfrew. The highway is paved but genuinely winding, with some narrow, single-lane sections, so take it at a relaxed pace in a large rig and allow extra time, especially in the rain. West of Sooke the road gets quieter and the services thin out sharply, so the town is your last reliable stop for fuel, groceries, and supplies before the remote coast. There are no special length limits, but the curves themselves are the main consideration for big rigs.
Provision in Sooke before heading west. Fuel and full groceries are available in the town centre, though RV repair is limited here and better handled in Victoria for anything major. Because the public parks are dry camping, plan your tank service carefully: there is a seasonal sani-station at French Beach and a dump at Sooke River Campground, and Victoria has full facilities. The big seasonal factor is rain; winters here are mild but very wet and stormy, with atmospheric-river systems that can down trees and flood roads, so this is firmly a summer destination. Check current conditions on Highway 14 through DriveBC before you travel, particularly in the shoulder seasons.
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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 Sooke, British Columbia, 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 Sooke
Sooke is an affordable place to camp if you embrace dry camping in the public parks. French Beach and China Beach charge standard BC Parks vehicle-site rates, and the CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes runs a modest nightly fee, all for unserviced sites in beautiful coastal and riverside settings. For self-contained RVers willing to manage their own power and water, this is excellent value for some of the most scenic camping on southern Vancouver Island, and the first-come potholes sites are especially economical.
The trade-off is the lack of hookups, which you absorb in propane, in the gear to camp off-grid, and in trips to a sani-station or into Victoria to dump and refill. If you want full hookups, the private options, a private RV resort like Weir's Beach toward Victoria or serviced sites at Sooke River Campground, cost more but add electric, water, and convenience. Free Recreation Sites and Trails BC options exist west toward Port Renfrew for the fully self-sufficient. Your other notable cost is fuel, since services west of Sooke are scarce, so fill up in town. A smart mix is dry-camping nights at the beaches with an occasional serviced night for laundry and dumping.
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Best Time to Visit Sooke by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
2C - 8C
Crowds: Low
Mild but very wet and stormy with atmospheric-river rain; downed trees and flooding possible.
Spring
Mar - May
5C - 14C
Crowds: Medium
Cool and showery, gradually drying; parks busy by late spring.
Summer
Jun - Aug
12C - 23C
Crowds: High
Mild, dry Mediterranean-style days; the beaches and Sooke Potholes are busy, so reserve French Beach early.
Fall
Sep - Oct
7C - 14C
Crowds: Low
Increasingly wet from October; the salmon run draws anglers to the Sooke River.
Explore the Sooke Area
Build your stay around the coast and the river. The Sooke Potholes, just north of town, are a series of deep, clear glacial pools in the Sooke River that are perfect for a summer swim, with the Galloping Goose Trail running alongside for walking and cycling, and the CRD campground right there. South of town, East Sooke Regional Park is a 1,474-hectare wilderness with a rugged 10 km Coast Trail, tide pools, and views across to Washington's Olympic Mountains, one of the best day hikes on the island. West on Highway 14, French Beach and the beaches of Juan de Fuca Provincial Park offer wild surf, driftwood, and excellent whale watching from shore during the gray-whale migration.
On the practical side, match the campground to your rig. The public parks, French Beach, China Beach, and Sooke Potholes, are all dry camping, so arrive with full water and empty tanks and plan to dump at a sani-station or in Victoria. French Beach reserves through BC Parks and is the most convenient base for the coast; Sooke Potholes is first-come, so arrive early on summer weekends. If you need hookups, base at a private RV park like Weir's Beach toward Victoria or use Sooke River Campground. Drive Highway 14 carefully, fuel up before going west, and time your trip for the dry summer months to enjoy the beaches at their best.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Sooke
Where can I camp with an RV in Sooke, BC?
Camping around Sooke is mostly public and coastal. French Beach Provincial Park, about 20 km west on Highway 14, has 69 drive-in vehicle sites with water taps and a seasonal sani-station, reserved through BC Parks. China Beach Campground in Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, 35 km west, offers 78 forested sites near a fine-sand beach. The CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes Regional Park has 67 first-come riverside sites. For hookups, the private options are Sooke River Campground, which has a sani-dump, and Weir's Beach RV Resort toward Victoria. The public parks are dry camping, so come self-contained.
Do Sooke campgrounds have hookups?
The public parks do not. French Beach, China Beach, and the Sooke Potholes CRD campground are all dry camping with cold-water taps and pit or vault toilets but no electric, water, or sewer hookups at the sites, so you camp self-contained. For hookups, you need a private RV park: Sooke River Campground offers serviced sites and a sani-dump, and Weir's Beach RV Resort, east toward Victoria, is the nearest full-hookup private RV resort with a marina. If you rely on hookups, base at one of those or in the Victoria area, and treat the beautiful public parks west of Sooke as scenic dry-camping stops, dumping and filling water as needed.
When is the best time to RV in Sooke?
June through September is the season. Southwest Vancouver Island has a mild, Mediterranean-style climate, and the summers are pleasantly dry and warm, with highs around 23C and July and August the driest months, ideal for the beaches and swimming at the Sooke Potholes. The shoulder seasons are cooler and showery. Winters are mild but very wet and stormy, with atmospheric-river systems bringing heavy rain, wind, downed trees, and occasional flooding, so it is not a comfortable RV season even though the temperatures stay above freezing. Plan a summer trip, pack rain gear regardless, and you will catch the coast at its best.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near Sooke?
Full-hookup options are limited and mostly private. Within the Sooke area, Sooke River Campground offers serviced sites and a sani-dump near the potholes. The nearest dedicated full-hookup private RV resort is Weir's Beach RV Resort, located east toward Victoria, which also has a marina. Beyond that, the Greater Victoria area has additional full-service private parks about 45 minutes east. The public parks around Sooke, French Beach, China Beach, and Sooke Potholes, are all dry camping. So if hookups are essential, plan to base at a private RV park near Victoria and day-trip out to the Sooke beaches and trails, or use Sooke River Campground for serviced nights.
What is there to do in Sooke by RV?
Plenty of coast and forest. The Sooke Potholes, just north of town, are deep glacial swimming pools in the Sooke River, lovely on a hot summer day, with the Galloping Goose Trail alongside for walking and cycling. East Sooke Regional Park, south of town, is a wilderness park with a rugged 10 km Coast Trail, tide pools, and Olympic Mountain views. West on Highway 14, French Beach and the Juan de Fuca beaches offer wild surf, driftwood, and shore-based whale watching. Whiffin Spit near the harbour is an easy stroll, and the Sooke Region Museum tells the local story. Between swimming, hiking, and beachcombing, several days fill easily.
Do I need reservations for Sooke campgrounds?
It depends on the park. French Beach and China Beach provincial parks reserve through the BC Parks system, and summer weekends fill, so book ahead, especially for July and August. The CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes is first-come, first-served with no reservations and only 67 sites, so arrive early in the day during peak season to get a spot. The private parks, Sooke River Campground and Weir's Beach toward Victoria, book directly. Midweek and outside summer you can often find space more easily. For a guaranteed weekend site at the provincial beaches, reserve through BC Parks well in advance.
Is there public park camping near Sooke?
Yes, and it is the highlight. French Beach Provincial Park, 20 km west on Highway 14, is the most convenient public option, with 69 drive-in vehicle sites, water taps, and a seasonal sani-station. China Beach Campground in Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, 35 km west, has 78 forested public sites near a beautiful sand beach. The CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes Regional Park offers 67 first-come public sites right by the river's swimming pools. All are dry camping at standard public rates, generally less than a private full-hookup park. They put you on or near the wild Juan de Fuca coast, which is exactly why people come to Sooke.
Is Highway 14 difficult to drive in an RV?
It requires care but is manageable. Highway 14 west of Victoria winds along the coast through forest, with curves and some narrow, single-lane sections, particularly as it continues past Sooke toward Jordan River and Port Renfrew. It is paved and handles RVs, but you should drive it slowly, allow extra time, and be patient on the tighter stretches, especially in the rain when traction and visibility drop. There are no special length restrictions, so the curves rather than any signed limit are the main factor. For most RVers heading to the Sooke beaches, the drive is straightforward taken at a relaxed pace; just fuel up in Sooke before continuing west.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Sooke?
Because the public parks are dry camping, plan your tank service. French Beach Provincial Park has a seasonal sani-station, open spring through fall, and Sooke River Campground in town has a sani-dump. For full, year-round facilities, the Greater Victoria area, about 45 minutes east, has dump stations and full-service parks. Since China Beach and the Sooke Potholes campground have no dump on site, arrive with empty holding tanks and a plan to service them at one of these locations. Building your sanitation around French Beach, Sooke River Campground, or Victoria keeps a dry-camping trip on the wild Sooke coast simple and stress-free.
Can I see whales from Sooke?
Yes, the Sooke coast is excellent for whale watching, both from shore and on tours. The Strait of Juan de Fuca off French Beach and the Juan de Fuca Provincial Park beaches is a migration corridor for gray whales, which pass in spring, and resident and transient orcas, humpbacks, and porpoises are seen through the summer. Patient watchers with binoculars often spot whales right from the beaches and bluffs. Whale-watching tour operators also run from the Sooke and Victoria area for a closer look. Bring layers, since the open coast is cool and breezy even in summer, and a calm morning offers the best viewing conditions along this stretch.
How far is Sooke from Victoria?
Sooke is about 45 minutes, or roughly 35 to 40 km, west of Victoria via Highway 14. That proximity shapes how many RVers use the area: Victoria is where you find full RV services, dump stations, and full-hookup private parks, while Sooke and the coast west of it provide the wild beaches, swimming pools, and hiking. Some travelers base in the Victoria area and day-trip to the Sooke Potholes and French Beach, while others camp at the dry public parks near Sooke and return to town or Victoria for services. The short distance makes either approach practical, and Sooke is also the launch point for the longer Pacific Marine Circle Route.
Is winter RV camping possible in Sooke?
It is possible but not pleasant. Thanks to the mild coastal climate, temperatures stay above freezing most of the winter, and French Beach Provincial Park technically stays open year-round with reduced services. However, winters here are very wet and stormy, with atmospheric-river systems bringing heavy rain, strong wind, downed trees, and occasional road flooding on Highway 14, so conditions are challenging and the experience is soggy. The seasonal sani-stations close, too. For practical, enjoyable RVing, treat Sooke as a June-through-September destination. If you do camp here off-season, choose a sheltered private park with hookups, monitor DriveBC for the highway, and be ready for serious rain.
Can I camp for free near Sooke?
Yes, if you are self-contained and willing to head out of town. Recreation Sites and Trails BC maintains rustic recreation sites, and forest service roads in the hills and west toward Port Renfrew offer dispersed camping suited to self-contained rigs, though you should check access and any fire restrictions before committing a large RV on these narrow roads. These free sites have no services, so arrive with full water and a plan for waste, and pair them with a sani-station at French Beach or a dump in Victoria. For budget travelers comfortable camping rustic between serviced nights, free sites west of Sooke help stretch a trip on the island's wild coast.
Where can I camp with an RV in Sooke, BC?
Camping around Sooke is mostly public and coastal. French Beach Provincial Park, about 20 km west on Highway 14, has 69 drive-in vehicle sites with water taps and a seasonal sani-station, reserved through BC Parks. China Beach Campground in Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, 35 km west, offers 78 forested sites near a fine-sand beach. The CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes Regional Park has 67 first-come riverside sites. For hookups, the private options are Sooke River Campground, which has a sani-dump, and Weir's Beach RV Resort toward Victoria. The public parks are dry camping, so come self-contained.
Do Sooke campgrounds have hookups?
The public parks do not. French Beach, China Beach, and the Sooke Potholes CRD campground are all dry camping with cold-water taps and pit or vault toilets but no electric, water, or sewer hookups at the sites, so you camp self-contained. For hookups, you need a private RV park: Sooke River Campground offers serviced sites and a sani-dump, and Weir's Beach RV Resort, east toward Victoria, is the nearest full-hookup private RV resort with a marina. If you rely on hookups, base at one of those or in the Victoria area, and treat the beautiful public parks west of Sooke as scenic dry-camping stops, dumping and filling water as needed.
When is the best time to RV in Sooke?
June through September is the season. Southwest Vancouver Island has a mild, Mediterranean-style climate, and the summers are pleasantly dry and warm, with highs around 23C and July and August the driest months, ideal for the beaches and swimming at the Sooke Potholes. The shoulder seasons are cooler and showery. Winters are mild but very wet and stormy, with atmospheric-river systems bringing heavy rain, wind, downed trees, and occasional flooding, so it is not a comfortable RV season even though the temperatures stay above freezing. Plan a summer trip, pack rain gear regardless, and you will catch the coast at its best.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near Sooke?
Full-hookup options are limited and mostly private. Within the Sooke area, Sooke River Campground offers serviced sites and a sani-dump near the potholes. The nearest dedicated full-hookup private RV resort is Weir's Beach RV Resort, located east toward Victoria, which also has a marina. Beyond that, the Greater Victoria area has additional full-service private parks about 45 minutes east. The public parks around Sooke, French Beach, China Beach, and Sooke Potholes, are all dry camping. So if hookups are essential, plan to base at a private RV park near Victoria and day-trip out to the Sooke beaches and trails, or use Sooke River Campground for serviced nights.
What is there to do in Sooke by RV?
Plenty of coast and forest. The Sooke Potholes, just north of town, are deep glacial swimming pools in the Sooke River, lovely on a hot summer day, with the Galloping Goose Trail alongside for walking and cycling. East Sooke Regional Park, south of town, is a wilderness park with a rugged 10 km Coast Trail, tide pools, and Olympic Mountain views. West on Highway 14, French Beach and the Juan de Fuca beaches offer wild surf, driftwood, and shore-based whale watching. Whiffin Spit near the harbour is an easy stroll, and the Sooke Region Museum tells the local story. Between swimming, hiking, and beachcombing, several days fill easily.
Do I need reservations for Sooke campgrounds?
It depends on the park. French Beach and China Beach provincial parks reserve through the BC Parks system, and summer weekends fill, so book ahead, especially for July and August. The CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes is first-come, first-served with no reservations and only 67 sites, so arrive early in the day during peak season to get a spot. The private parks, Sooke River Campground and Weir's Beach toward Victoria, book directly. Midweek and outside summer you can often find space more easily. For a guaranteed weekend site at the provincial beaches, reserve through BC Parks well in advance.
Is there public park camping near Sooke?
Yes, and it is the highlight. French Beach Provincial Park, 20 km west on Highway 14, is the most convenient public option, with 69 drive-in vehicle sites, water taps, and a seasonal sani-station. China Beach Campground in Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, 35 km west, has 78 forested public sites near a beautiful sand beach. The CRD's Spring Salmon Place at Sooke Potholes Regional Park offers 67 first-come public sites right by the river's swimming pools. All are dry camping at standard public rates, generally less than a private full-hookup park. They put you on or near the wild Juan de Fuca coast, which is exactly why people come to Sooke.
Is Highway 14 difficult to drive in an RV?
It requires care but is manageable. Highway 14 west of Victoria winds along the coast through forest, with curves and some narrow, single-lane sections, particularly as it continues past Sooke toward Jordan River and Port Renfrew. It is paved and handles RVs, but you should drive it slowly, allow extra time, and be patient on the tighter stretches, especially in the rain when traction and visibility drop. There are no special length restrictions, so the curves rather than any signed limit are the main factor. For most RVers heading to the Sooke beaches, the drive is straightforward taken at a relaxed pace; just fuel up in Sooke before continuing west.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Sooke?
Because the public parks are dry camping, plan your tank service. French Beach Provincial Park has a seasonal sani-station, open spring through fall, and Sooke River Campground in town has a sani-dump. For full, year-round facilities, the Greater Victoria area, about 45 minutes east, has dump stations and full-service parks. Since China Beach and the Sooke Potholes campground have no dump on site, arrive with empty holding tanks and a plan to service them at one of these locations. Building your sanitation around French Beach, Sooke River Campground, or Victoria keeps a dry-camping trip on the wild Sooke coast simple and stress-free.
Can I see whales from Sooke?
Yes, the Sooke coast is excellent for whale watching, both from shore and on tours. The Strait of Juan de Fuca off French Beach and the Juan de Fuca Provincial Park beaches is a migration corridor for gray whales, which pass in spring, and resident and transient orcas, humpbacks, and porpoises are seen through the summer. Patient watchers with binoculars often spot whales right from the beaches and bluffs. Whale-watching tour operators also run from the Sooke and Victoria area for a closer look. Bring layers, since the open coast is cool and breezy even in summer, and a calm morning offers the best viewing conditions along this stretch.
How far is Sooke from Victoria?
Sooke is about 45 minutes, or roughly 35 to 40 km, west of Victoria via Highway 14. That proximity shapes how many RVers use the area: Victoria is where you find full RV services, dump stations, and full-hookup private parks, while Sooke and the coast west of it provide the wild beaches, swimming pools, and hiking. Some travelers base in the Victoria area and day-trip to the Sooke Potholes and French Beach, while others camp at the dry public parks near Sooke and return to town or Victoria for services. The short distance makes either approach practical, and Sooke is also the launch point for the longer Pacific Marine Circle Route.
Is winter RV camping possible in Sooke?
It is possible but not pleasant. Thanks to the mild coastal climate, temperatures stay above freezing most of the winter, and French Beach Provincial Park technically stays open year-round with reduced services. However, winters here are very wet and stormy, with atmospheric-river systems bringing heavy rain, strong wind, downed trees, and occasional road flooding on Highway 14, so conditions are challenging and the experience is soggy. The seasonal sani-stations close, too. For practical, enjoyable RVing, treat Sooke as a June-through-September destination. If you do camp here off-season, choose a sheltered private park with hookups, monitor DriveBC for the highway, and be ready for serious rain.
Can I camp for free near Sooke?
Yes, if you are self-contained and willing to head out of town. Recreation Sites and Trails BC maintains rustic recreation sites, and forest service roads in the hills and west toward Port Renfrew offer dispersed camping suited to self-contained rigs, though you should check access and any fire restrictions before committing a large RV on these narrow roads. These free sites have no services, so arrive with full water and a plan for waste, and pair them with a sani-station at French Beach or a dump in Victoria. For budget travelers comfortable camping rustic between serviced nights, free sites west of Sooke help stretch a trip on the island's wild coast.
Are there free dump stations in Sooke?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Sooke.
All Dump Stations Near Sooke (62)
RV ParkOtter Point Resort
RV Park with Dump StationsPedder Bay RV Resort & Marina
RV ParkWeir's Beach RV Resort
RV ParkTunnel Hill Campground And RV Park
RV ParkMalahat Mountain Meadows RV Park And Campground
RV ParkAll Fun RV Park
RV ParkLyre River Campground
RV Park





