RV Parks In Ceres, California
37.5949° N, 120.9577° W
Quick Overview
Ceres sits right on Highway 99 in the heart of California's Central Valley, a farm-country suburb just south of Modesto and surrounded by orchards, dairies, and two big county reservoirs. For RVers it works as a practical, well-served base: full-hookup parks in town and neighboring Modesto, plus lakeside camping a short drive out, all wrapped around one of the state's main north-south freeways. You can overnight here on a Highway 99 run between Sacramento and Bakersfield, or settle in for a week and day-trip to the reservoirs, Modesto, and even Yosemite. The camping mix runs public and lakeside on one side, private and full-service on the other.
The two standouts are both Stanislaus County parks on large reservoirs. Modesto Reservoir Regional Park, off Highway 132 near Waterford, spreads 197 sites around a 2,800-acre lake, with full hookups on the A and B loops, electric and water on C loop, and water-only on the smaller D loop. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park, north of Oakdale off Highway 120, offers 40 full-hookup sites among 115 developed spots on a 2,900-acre lake, takes rigs up to 75 feet, and has showers and a dump station. Both are strong for boating, fishing, and swimming, and both book through the county reservation system, with waterfront sites the first to go.
For a full-hookup city base right next to Ceres, Voyagers Cove RV Park in Modesto is the practical private pick, with 30 and 50-amp sites, water, sewer, and a dump station, open year-round and easy to reach off Hatch Road. It suits both a Highway 99 overnight and a longer valley stay. Big rigs do well on the reservoir full-hookup loops and at the private parks; just take the last park approaches slowly. So the plan is simple: lakeside county camping at Modesto or Woodward Reservoir, or a full-hookup pad in town at Voyagers Cove. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Ceres for the local options.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Ceres
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Gear for Your Trip to Ceres
All Dump Stations Near Ceres
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Golden Wheels Homestead Trailer Park | 0.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Terrace Trailer Park | 2.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sunrise Village Mobile Home & RV Park | 2.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Silver Spruce Trailer Park | 4.2 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Country Western Mobile Home Park | 4.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Countryside Mobile Home Estates | 4.9 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Olive Lane Trailer Park | 8.0 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Stanislaus County Fair RV | 8.4 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| North Mchenry RV Storage | 8.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Catfish Camp | 12.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Golden Wheels Homestead Trailer Park
0.9 miTerrace Trailer Park
2.7 miSunrise Village Mobile Home & RV Park
2.9 miSilver Spruce Trailer Park
4.2 miCountry Western Mobile Home Park
4.3 miCountryside Mobile Home Estates
4.9 miOlive Lane Trailer Park
8.0 miStanislaus County Fair RV
8.4 miNorth Mchenry RV Storage
8.8 miCatfish Camp
12.0 miTraveling to Ceres by RV
Getting to Ceres with a big rig is about as easy as valley driving gets. State Route 99 runs straight through town, a wide, big-rig-friendly freeway linking Sacramento to the north with Fresno and Bakersfield to the south, and Interstate 5 runs parallel roughly 25 miles west if you are coming up the west side. Ceres exits like Mitchell Road and Hatch Road put you within minutes of the private parks and city services, and there is no low-clearance drama on the freeway or the main surface streets.
The reservoir parks take a bit more driving. Modesto Reservoir is out Highway 132 toward Waterford, and Woodward Reservoir is up Highway 120 and 26-Mile Road north of Oakdale, both fine two-lane roads, though you will want to slow down for the final park entrances and campground loops. Fuel, propane, groceries, and RV service are all plentiful along the Highway 99 corridor through Ceres, Modesto, and Turlock. If you are heading to Yosemite afterward, Highway 120 out of Oakdale is the natural route east, which makes Woodward Reservoir a handy last valley stop before the climb into the Sierra.
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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 Ceres, California, 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 Ceres
Ceres-area camping is a good value by California standards, especially at the county parks. Modesto Reservoir and Woodward Reservoir charge around $60 a night for a full-hookup RV site, with a lower resident rate for Stanislaus County campers, plus a day-use vehicle fee, and both stay open year-round. That is a lot of lake for the money. The private option, Voyagers Cove in Modesto, lands in a similar mid-range nightly bracket for full hookups, and its year-round operation and Highway 99 convenience make it worth it for a city base or a travel-day stop. Weekly and monthly rates at the private parks can lower the effective cost for longer stays. To keep costs down, camp midweek or in the spring and fall shoulder seasons, when demand at the reservoirs drops and sites are easy to find.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Ceres
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Best Time to Visit Ceres by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
38F - 55F
Crowds: Low
Mild and wet with morning tule fog; the reservoir parks stay open but quiet, and a private full-hookup park makes the comfortable base while fog clears off Highway 99.
Spring
Mar - May
47F - 72F
Crowds: Medium
Warm, green, and pretty with blossoming orchards; one of the best windows to camp the reservoirs before summer heat and crowds arrive.
Summer
Jun - Aug
60F - 95F
Crowds: High
Hot and dry with 100F-plus afternoons; the reservoirs are packed with boaters on weekends, so reserve full-hookup sites early and run the air conditioner.
Fall
Sep - Oct
50F - 78F
Crowds: Medium
Warm, clear, and dry through harvest season; comfortable camping and thinner crowds at the lakes after Labor Day.
Explore the Ceres Area
Here is how we would plan a Ceres stay. Use Voyagers Cove in Modesto as a full-hookup base minutes from town, then day-trip out to the reservoirs, downtown Modesto, and the Sierra foothills. If your trip is about the water, camp right at Modesto or Woodward Reservoir, and book the waterfront hookup sites, the T-Island and Hackleberry Flats areas at Woodward go first, well ahead of summer weekends. Time your visit for spring or fall if you can, when the valley is mild and green and the reservoirs are far less crowded than the hot summer boating season. In summer, prioritize a full-hookup site so you can keep the air conditioner running through the 100F-plus afternoons that are normal here. In winter, watch for tule fog on Highway 99 and drive the mornings carefully, letting it burn off before you travel. And leave a day for the drive to Yosemite up Highway 120, which is one of the best reasons to base an RV in this part of the valley.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Ceres
What are the best RV parks in and near Ceres, California?
The best camping around Ceres splits between the county reservoirs and full-hookup city parks. Modesto Reservoir Regional Park, off Highway 132 near Waterford, has 197 sites on a 2,800-acre lake with full hookups on the A and B loops. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park, north of Oakdale, offers 40 full-hookup sites among 115 developed spots on a 2,900-acre lake and takes rigs up to 75 feet. For a full-hookup base right next to Ceres, Voyagers Cove RV Park in Modesto has 30 and 50-amp sites, water, sewer, and a dump station, open year-round off Hatch Road. Between the lakeside county parks and the private option, you can camp on the water or settle into a convenient full-hookup pad.
Do RV parks near Ceres have full hookups?
Yes, at several parks. Voyagers Cove RV Park in Modesto offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 30 and 50-amp service and a dump station, and it is minutes from Ceres. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park has 40 full-hookup sites with showers and a dump station, and Modesto Reservoir Regional Park has full hookups on its A and B loops, with electric-and-water on C loop and water-only on the smaller D loop. So if full hookups are a must, book Voyagers Cove, the Woodward full-hookup sites, or a Modesto Reservoir A or B loop site. Full hookups matter most here in summer, when you will want the electric to run the air conditioner through the valley heat.
How much does RV camping cost near Ceres?
It is a solid value for California. The county reservoir parks, Modesto Reservoir and Woodward Reservoir, charge around $60 a night for a full-hookup RV site, with a lower resident rate for Stanislaus County campers, plus a day-use vehicle fee, and both stay open year-round. The private option, Voyagers Cove in Modesto, lands in a similar mid-range nightly bracket for full hookups and offers the convenience of a Highway 99 city base. Weekly and monthly rates at the private parks can lower the effective cost for longer stays. To save money, camp midweek or in the spring and fall shoulder seasons, when demand at the reservoirs drops off and sites are easy to find at the lower end of the rate range.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Ceres?
For summer weekends at the reservoirs, reserve early. Woodward Reservoir's waterfront hookup sites in the T-Island and Hackleberry Flats areas fill first, so book them months ahead for July and August; other areas run first-come. Modesto Reservoir's full-hookup A and B loops also fill on hot-weather weekends through the county reservation system. The private Voyagers Cove is easier to grab on short notice for a travel-day overnight, though a few days' lead time is wise in peak season. Holiday weekends like the Fourth of July and Labor Day are the tightest of all at the lakes. On a spring or fall weekday, you can usually find a site at any of them with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Ceres?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots, when the Central Valley is mild and green and the reservoirs are far less crowded than in summer. Spring brings warm days in the 70s, wildflowers, and blossoming orchards, while fall stays warm and dry through harvest season with thinner crowds after Labor Day. Summer is hot and dry with 100F-plus afternoons and packed boating weekends at the lakes, so you will want a full-hookup site for air conditioning and early reservations. Winter is mild and wet with the valley's famous tule fog on still mornings, so drive Highway 99 carefully then. For the best mix of weather and elbow room, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Ceres?
Yes, and the setting is friendly to them. Highway 99 through Ceres is a wide freeway, and the private Voyagers Cove in Modesto has pull-through and back-in full-hookup sites minutes off the freeway. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park accommodates rigs up to 75 feet on its full-hookup sites, and Modesto Reservoir's A and B loops handle larger rigs too, though its small D loop is not recommended for trailers. The two-lane roads out to the reservoirs are fine for a big coach; just slow down for the final park entrances and campground loops. Confirm your length and site type when booking the reservoir hookup loops, and big-rig owners will find comfortable options both in town and at the lakes.
Can I camp on a lake near Ceres?
Yes, two big county reservoirs make lake camping easy. Modesto Reservoir Regional Park, off Highway 132 near Waterford, spreads 197 sites around a 2,800-acre reservoir, with full hookups on the A and B loops, and it is popular for boating, fishing, and swimming. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park, north of Oakdale off Highway 120, offers 115 developed sites including 40 with full hookups on a 2,900-acre lake, with waterfront sites at T-Island and Hackleberry Flats. Both are run by Stanislaus County Parks and stay open year-round, and both book through the county reservation system. Reserve waterfront and full-hookup sites well ahead for summer, when the lakes draw big boating crowds.
Is there a public park campground near Ceres?
Yes, the Stanislaus County reservoir parks are the main public option. Modesto Reservoir Regional Park and Woodward Reservoir Regional Park are both county-run, with developed campgrounds, full-hookup sites, dump stations, and showers on large recreation lakes. Modesto Reservoir sits off Highway 132 near Waterford with 197 sites, and Woodward Reservoir sits north of Oakdale off Highway 120 with 115 developed sites, 40 of them full hookup. Both charge a nightly camping fee plus a day-use vehicle fee, with lower rates for county residents, and both stay open year-round. Reservations run through the official Stanislaus County Parks system, and waterfront sites are the first to fill for summer boating weekends.
Are the RV parks near Ceres pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The Stanislaus County reservoir parks, Modesto Reservoir and Woodward Reservoir, allow leashed pets under county park rules, and the shoreline and open areas give dogs plenty of room to walk. Private parks like Voyagers Cove in Modesto typically welcome pets as well, as most transient RV parks do. Policies on the number of pets, leash rules, and designated areas vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the private parks. Always bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground and near the water, and clean up after them so the sites stay welcoming for the next camper. Summer heat is hard on dogs here, so plan shade and water on hot days.
What is there to do around Ceres while camping?
More than you might expect for a valley town. The two county reservoirs, Modesto and Woodward, offer boating, fishing, swimming, and waterskiing right at your campsite. In town, Ceres River Bluff Regional Park has trails and open space along the Tuolumne River. Neighboring Modesto is George Lucas's hometown and leans into its American Graffiti fame with a historic cruise route, the McHenry Museum, and more than 100 public murals downtown. About 30 minutes south near Atwater, the Castle Air Museum displays 80-plus historic military aircraft. And Highway 120 out of Oakdale makes the valley an easy western gateway to Yosemite National Park, roughly 90 minutes east. It adds up to a genuinely varied base.
Is winter RV camping possible near Ceres?
Yes, and it is easier here than in most of the country. The Central Valley has mild, wet winters rather than hard freezes, so the county reservoir parks and private parks like Voyagers Cove all stay open year-round. Winter is the quiet season at the lakes, so you will have room and lower demand, and full-hookup sites are easy to find. The main thing to watch is tule fog, the dense ground fog that settles on still winter mornings and cuts visibility on Highway 99, so plan travel for later in the day once it burns off. Days are cool and pleasant in the 50s, making winter a comfortable, low-crowd time to base an RV in the valley.
How do I get to Ceres RV parks in a big rig?
It is straightforward. State Route 99 runs right through Ceres as a wide, big-rig-friendly freeway linking Sacramento to the north with Fresno and Bakersfield to the south, and Interstate 5 runs parallel about 25 miles west. Ceres and Modesto exits like Mitchell Road and Hatch Road put you within minutes of the private parks. The reservoir parks take more driving on two-lane roads, Highway 132 to Modesto Reservoir and Highway 120 with 26-Mile Road to Woodward Reservoir, both fine for a coach if you slow down for the final entrances. Fuel, propane, and RV service are plentiful along the Highway 99 corridor through Ceres, Modesto, and Turlock, so provisioning and repairs are easy.
Is Ceres a good base for exploring California's Central Valley by RV?
It is a practical and central one. Ceres sits on Highway 99 in the middle of the valley, so you can day-trip widely from a single full-hookup site. The county reservoirs give you boating and fishing minutes away, Modesto adds museums, murals, and its American Graffiti history, and Highway 120 makes Yosemite an easy day trip or launch point to the east. Base at Voyagers Cove for a convenient full-hookup city stay, or camp lakeside at Modesto or Woodward Reservoir, and you have year-round camping, good services, and quick freeway access in every direction. For RVers passing through on Highway 99 or using the valley to reach the Sierra, Ceres is an easy, affordable pick.
What are the best RV parks in and near Ceres, California?
The best camping around Ceres splits between the county reservoirs and full-hookup city parks. Modesto Reservoir Regional Park, off Highway 132 near Waterford, has 197 sites on a 2,800-acre lake with full hookups on the A and B loops. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park, north of Oakdale, offers 40 full-hookup sites among 115 developed spots on a 2,900-acre lake and takes rigs up to 75 feet. For a full-hookup base right next to Ceres, Voyagers Cove RV Park in Modesto has 30 and 50-amp sites, water, sewer, and a dump station, open year-round off Hatch Road. Between the lakeside county parks and the private option, you can camp on the water or settle into a convenient full-hookup pad.
Do RV parks near Ceres have full hookups?
Yes, at several parks. Voyagers Cove RV Park in Modesto offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 30 and 50-amp service and a dump station, and it is minutes from Ceres. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park has 40 full-hookup sites with showers and a dump station, and Modesto Reservoir Regional Park has full hookups on its A and B loops, with electric-and-water on C loop and water-only on the smaller D loop. So if full hookups are a must, book Voyagers Cove, the Woodward full-hookup sites, or a Modesto Reservoir A or B loop site. Full hookups matter most here in summer, when you will want the electric to run the air conditioner through the valley heat.
How much does RV camping cost near Ceres?
It is a solid value for California. The county reservoir parks, Modesto Reservoir and Woodward Reservoir, charge around $60 a night for a full-hookup RV site, with a lower resident rate for Stanislaus County campers, plus a day-use vehicle fee, and both stay open year-round. The private option, Voyagers Cove in Modesto, lands in a similar mid-range nightly bracket for full hookups and offers the convenience of a Highway 99 city base. Weekly and monthly rates at the private parks can lower the effective cost for longer stays. To save money, camp midweek or in the spring and fall shoulder seasons, when demand at the reservoirs drops off and sites are easy to find at the lower end of the rate range.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Ceres?
For summer weekends at the reservoirs, reserve early. Woodward Reservoir's waterfront hookup sites in the T-Island and Hackleberry Flats areas fill first, so book them months ahead for July and August; other areas run first-come. Modesto Reservoir's full-hookup A and B loops also fill on hot-weather weekends through the county reservation system. The private Voyagers Cove is easier to grab on short notice for a travel-day overnight, though a few days' lead time is wise in peak season. Holiday weekends like the Fourth of July and Labor Day are the tightest of all at the lakes. On a spring or fall weekday, you can usually find a site at any of them with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Ceres?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots, when the Central Valley is mild and green and the reservoirs are far less crowded than in summer. Spring brings warm days in the 70s, wildflowers, and blossoming orchards, while fall stays warm and dry through harvest season with thinner crowds after Labor Day. Summer is hot and dry with 100F-plus afternoons and packed boating weekends at the lakes, so you will want a full-hookup site for air conditioning and early reservations. Winter is mild and wet with the valley's famous tule fog on still mornings, so drive Highway 99 carefully then. For the best mix of weather and elbow room, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Ceres?
Yes, and the setting is friendly to them. Highway 99 through Ceres is a wide freeway, and the private Voyagers Cove in Modesto has pull-through and back-in full-hookup sites minutes off the freeway. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park accommodates rigs up to 75 feet on its full-hookup sites, and Modesto Reservoir's A and B loops handle larger rigs too, though its small D loop is not recommended for trailers. The two-lane roads out to the reservoirs are fine for a big coach; just slow down for the final park entrances and campground loops. Confirm your length and site type when booking the reservoir hookup loops, and big-rig owners will find comfortable options both in town and at the lakes.
Can I camp on a lake near Ceres?
Yes, two big county reservoirs make lake camping easy. Modesto Reservoir Regional Park, off Highway 132 near Waterford, spreads 197 sites around a 2,800-acre reservoir, with full hookups on the A and B loops, and it is popular for boating, fishing, and swimming. Woodward Reservoir Regional Park, north of Oakdale off Highway 120, offers 115 developed sites including 40 with full hookups on a 2,900-acre lake, with waterfront sites at T-Island and Hackleberry Flats. Both are run by Stanislaus County Parks and stay open year-round, and both book through the county reservation system. Reserve waterfront and full-hookup sites well ahead for summer, when the lakes draw big boating crowds.
Is there a public park campground near Ceres?
Yes, the Stanislaus County reservoir parks are the main public option. Modesto Reservoir Regional Park and Woodward Reservoir Regional Park are both county-run, with developed campgrounds, full-hookup sites, dump stations, and showers on large recreation lakes. Modesto Reservoir sits off Highway 132 near Waterford with 197 sites, and Woodward Reservoir sits north of Oakdale off Highway 120 with 115 developed sites, 40 of them full hookup. Both charge a nightly camping fee plus a day-use vehicle fee, with lower rates for county residents, and both stay open year-round. Reservations run through the official Stanislaus County Parks system, and waterfront sites are the first to fill for summer boating weekends.
Are the RV parks near Ceres pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The Stanislaus County reservoir parks, Modesto Reservoir and Woodward Reservoir, allow leashed pets under county park rules, and the shoreline and open areas give dogs plenty of room to walk. Private parks like Voyagers Cove in Modesto typically welcome pets as well, as most transient RV parks do. Policies on the number of pets, leash rules, and designated areas vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the private parks. Always bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground and near the water, and clean up after them so the sites stay welcoming for the next camper. Summer heat is hard on dogs here, so plan shade and water on hot days.
What is there to do around Ceres while camping?
More than you might expect for a valley town. The two county reservoirs, Modesto and Woodward, offer boating, fishing, swimming, and waterskiing right at your campsite. In town, Ceres River Bluff Regional Park has trails and open space along the Tuolumne River. Neighboring Modesto is George Lucas's hometown and leans into its American Graffiti fame with a historic cruise route, the McHenry Museum, and more than 100 public murals downtown. About 30 minutes south near Atwater, the Castle Air Museum displays 80-plus historic military aircraft. And Highway 120 out of Oakdale makes the valley an easy western gateway to Yosemite National Park, roughly 90 minutes east. It adds up to a genuinely varied base.
Is winter RV camping possible near Ceres?
Yes, and it is easier here than in most of the country. The Central Valley has mild, wet winters rather than hard freezes, so the county reservoir parks and private parks like Voyagers Cove all stay open year-round. Winter is the quiet season at the lakes, so you will have room and lower demand, and full-hookup sites are easy to find. The main thing to watch is tule fog, the dense ground fog that settles on still winter mornings and cuts visibility on Highway 99, so plan travel for later in the day once it burns off. Days are cool and pleasant in the 50s, making winter a comfortable, low-crowd time to base an RV in the valley.
How do I get to Ceres RV parks in a big rig?
It is straightforward. State Route 99 runs right through Ceres as a wide, big-rig-friendly freeway linking Sacramento to the north with Fresno and Bakersfield to the south, and Interstate 5 runs parallel about 25 miles west. Ceres and Modesto exits like Mitchell Road and Hatch Road put you within minutes of the private parks. The reservoir parks take more driving on two-lane roads, Highway 132 to Modesto Reservoir and Highway 120 with 26-Mile Road to Woodward Reservoir, both fine for a coach if you slow down for the final entrances. Fuel, propane, and RV service are plentiful along the Highway 99 corridor through Ceres, Modesto, and Turlock, so provisioning and repairs are easy.
Is Ceres a good base for exploring California's Central Valley by RV?
It is a practical and central one. Ceres sits on Highway 99 in the middle of the valley, so you can day-trip widely from a single full-hookup site. The county reservoirs give you boating and fishing minutes away, Modesto adds museums, murals, and its American Graffiti history, and Highway 120 makes Yosemite an easy day trip or launch point to the east. Base at Voyagers Cove for a convenient full-hookup city stay, or camp lakeside at Modesto or Woodward Reservoir, and you have year-round camping, good services, and quick freeway access in every direction. For RVers passing through on Highway 99 or using the valley to reach the Sierra, Ceres is an easy, affordable pick.
Are there free dump stations in Ceres?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Ceres.
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