RV Parks In Portage LA Prairie, Manitoba
49.9728° N, 98.2926° W
Quick Overview
Portage la Prairie sits on the flat Manitoba prairie an hour west of Winnipeg, right on the Trans-Canada Highway 1, and it makes an easy, practical RV stop with more to do than a quick glance suggests. You get a full-service private resort by town, a genuine provincial park an hour south, world-class marsh birding to the north, and Lake Manitoba beaches, all reachable on fast, flat highways that make towing simple.
The serviced camping splits neatly into private and public. The convenient private choice is Miller's Camping Resort, about 10 km east of town just off Highway 1, with full-hookup 15/30/50-amp sites, pull-throughs for big rigs, an outdoor pool, and family activities. For a park experience, drive about an hour south to Kiche Manitou Campground in Spruce Woods Provincial Park, a large public campground near the Assiniboine River with electric sites, a beach on Kiche Manitou Lake, and the famous Spirit Sands dunes right there. Between them sits the Manitoba Agricultural Museum Campground in Austin, a simple serviced stop 25 minutes west.
Booking is straightforward. Miller's takes reservations directly and fills for the May long weekend and peak-summer Saturdays, while Manitoba Parks handles Kiche Manitou through manitobaparks.com, with the window opening in mid-April and the best dune-country sites going fast. Provincial-park stays add a park vehicle permit on top of the camping fee; the private resort bundles everything into the nightly rate. Midweek and shoulder-season dates are much easier to grab.
The camping character here is open, sunny, and distinctly seasonal. Summers are warm and long-dayed and best for the beaches and the river, early fall is quiet and great for Delta Marsh birding during migration, and the long, cold winters shut the campgrounds entirely. Come prepared for prairie mosquitoes in early summer, especially near the marsh and water. Need to empty your tanks? See our companion guide to RV dump stations in Portage la Prairie. Below we cover routes, costs, seasons, which parks fit big rigs, and everything worth doing across this handy corner of central Manitoba.
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All Dump Stations Near Portage la Prairie
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Portage Industrial Exhibition Campground | 0.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Portage Spillway Provincial Park | 2.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Miller's Camping Resort | 6.9 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Miller's Camping Resort | 6.9 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Creekside Camping & RV Park | 8.9 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Maple Ridge Mobile Home Community | 34.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Carman Pool & Campground | 34.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rubber Ducky Resort And Campground | 37.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Classic Trailers | 42.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Roland Campground | 44.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Portage Industrial Exhibition Campground
0.6 miPortage Spillway Provincial Park
2.4 miMiller's Camping Resort
6.9 miMiller's Camping Resort
6.9 miCreekside Camping & RV Park
8.9 miMaple Ridge Mobile Home Community
34.2 miCarman Pool & Campground
34.6 miRubber Ducky Resort And Campground
37.1 miClassic Trailers
42.6 miRoland Campground
44.8 miTraveling to Portage la Prairie by RV
Getting to and around Portage la Prairie is about as easy as towing gets. The divided, four-lane Trans-Canada Highway 1 runs right past the city, so you roll in from Winnipeg an hour east or Brandon to the west without a single tight turn, and PTH 16, the Yellowhead, branches northwest for the prairie route. Miller's Camping Resort sits just off Highway 1 about 10 km east, an easy pull-in for any rig. Fuel, diesel, propane, and full-size groceries are all in town, with RV and trailer service here and more in Winnipeg.
From a base near Portage you can range out in every direction. Head north on the grid roads to Delta Marsh and the Lake Manitoba beaches, or drive about an hour south to Spruce Woods Provincial Park and the Spirit Sands, where Kiche Manitou anchors the dunes and the Assiniboine River canoe route. Those gravel grid roads are fine when dry but soften after rain, so stick to the paved highways with a big rig in wet weather. Winnipeg's full amenities and the airport are an easy hour away for fly-and-rent trips.
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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 Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, 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 Portage la Prairie
RV camping around Portage la Prairie is fairly priced for the Canadian prairies. The private Miller's Camping Resort charges typical mid-range nightly rates for its full-hookup sites, a bit higher on July and August weekends and long weekends, and it offers weekly and seasonal rates that bring the per-night cost down for longer stays, popular with families who return each summer.
The public options are cheaper per night. Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods Provincial Park runs lower camping fees, but remember Manitoba Parks adds a park vehicle permit on top, available daily or as an annual pass that pays off if you visit several provincial parks. The Manitoba Agricultural Museum Campground in Austin is the budget pick. There is little free camping in this settled farm country. Budget-wise, choose the provincial park for value if you are fine with electric-and-water sites, or the private resort for full hookups and amenities, and plan a premium for peak-summer weekends either way.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Portage la Prairie
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Best Time to Visit Portage la Prairie by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-21°C - -11°C
Crowds: Low
Bitterly cold and snowy. RV campgrounds close for the season and there is no serviced camping locally; the area shifts to ice fishing and snowmobiling. Plan to keep moving to a year-round park elsewhere.
Spring
Mar - May
0°C - 12°C
Crowds: Low
A late, muddy thaw. Most campgrounds open for the May long weekend, and grid roads out to the marsh can be soft. Early-season camping is quiet, but mosquitoes ramp up fast once it warms.
Summer
Jun - Aug
13°C - 26°C
Crowds: High
Warm, sunny, and long-dayed, the prime camping stretch. Miller's Camping Resort and Kiche Manitou both fill for July and August weekends, so reserve ahead; the Lake Manitoba beaches and the Assiniboine draw crowds.
Fall
Sep - Oct
1°C - 12°C
Crowds: Low
Crisp days and cold nights make for quiet, pretty camping, and Delta Marsh birding peaks during fall migration. Campgrounds start closing after Labour Day, so confirm season dates before you roll in.
Explore the Portage la Prairie Area
A few pointers for RVing Portage la Prairie. First, for full hookups close to town and services, book Miller's Camping Resort east on Highway 1, and lock in the May and summer long weekends early since they fill. Second, for a park setting, drive the hour south to Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods and hike the Spirit Sands dunes and the Devil's Punch Bowl, one of the most unusual landscapes on the prairies.
Third, pack serious bug spray. Early-summer mosquitoes are heavy here, especially anywhere near Delta Marsh, Lake Manitoba, or the Assiniboine, so plan evening activities accordingly. Fourth, time an early-fall visit for Delta Marsh birding during migration, when the waterfowl numbers are remarkable and the crowds are gone. Fifth, remember Manitoba provincial parks need a vehicle permit on top of camping fees, so buy one when you reserve Kiche Manitou. Finally, use the flat, fast Trans-Canada to base once and day-trip to the beaches, the marsh, the dunes, and Winnipeg without long hauls.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Portage la Prairie
What are the best RV parks in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba?
Your two standouts sit at opposite ends of the spectrum. Miller's Camping Resort, about 10 km east of town just off the Trans-Canada Highway 1, is the convenient private option, with full-hookup 15/30/50-amp sites, pull-throughs for big rigs, an outdoor pool, and family activities. For a provincial-park experience, drive about an hour south to Kiche Manitou Campground in Spruce Woods Provincial Park, a large public campground near the Assiniboine River and the Spirit Sands dunes with electric sites, a beach, and a canoe route. The Manitoba Agricultural Museum Campground in Austin, 25 minutes west, adds a no-frills serviced option. Together they cover the private-resort and public-park bases within easy reach of Portage.
Do campgrounds near Portage la Prairie have full hookups?
Yes, at the private resorts. Miller's Camping Resort east of town has full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 15, 30, and 50-amp electric, so any rig can plug in, fill, and dump on site, and it offers pull-throughs for larger trailers and motorhomes. The public options are more limited: Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods has 21 electric (30-amp) sites plus basic sites, with a shared dump station and water fills rather than sewer at the pad, and the Manitoba Agricultural Museum Campground offers electric and unserviced sites. So if full hookups are a must, book Miller's; if you want the provincial-park setting, plan on electric-and-water with a dump station on your way out.
How much does RV camping cost in Portage la Prairie?
It is reasonable by Canadian standards. The private Miller's Camping Resort charges typical mid-range prairie-resort nightly rates for full-hookup sites, a little higher on July and August weekends, and offers weekly and seasonal rates for longer stays. Manitoba provincial-park sites like Kiche Manitou are cheaper per night but add a park vehicle permit on top of the camping fee, which you can buy daily or annually. The Agricultural Museum Campground in Austin is the budget end. There is little free camping in this settled farm country. Overall, expect fair mid-range pricing, with the provincial park the value pick if you are comfortable with electric-and-water rather than full hookups.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Portage la Prairie?
For summer weekends, book early. Manitoba Parks reservations for Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods open in mid-April through manitobaparks.com, and the popular sites near the beach and dunes go quickly for July, August, and the long weekends, so reserve as soon as the window opens. Miller's Camping Resort fills for the May long weekend and peak-summer Saturdays too, so a few weeks out is smart, and earlier for holiday weekends. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and often walk-up friendly. If your trip targets a summer weekend or a specific dune-country date, treat early reservations as essential; otherwise you have flexibility.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Portage la Prairie?
Mid-May through late September is the season, and July and August are the sweet spot for warm, sunny prairie weather and the Lake Manitoba beaches. June is lovely but brings the heaviest mosquitoes, especially near Delta Marsh and the river, so pack repellent. Early fall is a quiet, pretty time with crisp days, cold nights, and excellent birding at Delta Marsh during migration, though campgrounds begin closing after Labour Day. Spring is cool, muddy, and late to green up. Winter is bitterly cold and closes the campgrounds entirely. For the best mix of weather and open sites, aim for July through mid-September.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft+) camp in Portage la Prairie?
Yes, comfortably at the private resort. Miller's Camping Resort offers pull-through full-hookup sites with 50-amp service that handle 40-foot rigs, and getting there is easy since it sits right off the divided Trans-Canada Highway 1, which is flat, four-lane prairie driving with no low-clearance worries. Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods can take larger rigs on many sites too, though the provincial-park loops are more wooded and you should confirm site length when you book. The grid roads toward Delta Marsh and Lake Manitoba are fine when dry but soften after rain, so stick to paved highways with a big rig in wet weather. For the easiest big-rig stay, choose Miller's.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Portage la Prairie?
Not many. This is settled farm country between Winnipeg and Brandon, so free dispersed camping is limited, and RV street camping is not allowed in the city. Some travelers overnight at the Highway 1 truck stops for a single night in transit, but that is a rest stop, not camping. The provincial and private campgrounds are reservation-based for peak dates, though Kiche Manitou and the Agricultural Museum Campground can have first-come sites midweek and in the shoulder season. For genuine boondocking and Crown-land camping, you would head farther into western Manitoba or the Interlake. Near Portage itself, plan on a serviced site at Miller's or the provincial park.
What is the difference between the public and private campgrounds here?
It comes down to hookups versus setting. The private Miller's Camping Resort is the full-service, amenity-rich choice, with full hookups, a pool, activities, and a spot right by town off the Trans-Canada, which is great for families and big rigs that want to plug in and relax. The public Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods trades full hookups for a genuine provincial-park experience, sand dunes, a river canoe route, beach swimming, and quieter, more natural surroundings an hour south, at a lower nightly rate plus a park permit. The Agricultural Museum Campground is a simple public option in Austin. Pick the private resort for convenience and services, the provincial park for scenery and value.
Can I camp near Delta Marsh?
Not directly at the marsh, but close by. Delta Marsh, on the south shore of Lake Manitoba about 25 minutes north of Portage, is one of North America's largest freshwater marshes and a world-class birding and waterfowl area, but it is a research and conservation landscape rather than a campground. The practical base is Miller's Camping Resort east of town or the Lake Manitoba beach areas like St. Ambroise nearby, from which you can day-trip to the marsh for birding, especially during spring and fall migration. Bring bug spray, binoculars, and a spotting scope, and go early or late in the day for the best bird activity along the dikes and shoreline.
What is there to do while camping in Portage la Prairie?
More than you might expect on the prairie. In town, Island Park sits on Crescent Lake, an oxbow of the Assiniboine, with trails, a splash pad, mini-golf, and a small zoo. North of the city, Delta Marsh offers exceptional birding and Lake Manitoba has sandy beaches for swimming and fishing. An hour south, Spruce Woods Provincial Park hides the Spirit Sands dunes and the Devil's Punch Bowl, plus the Assiniboine River canoe route right at Kiche Manitou. Add the Manitoba Agricultural Museum in Austin with its vintage machinery and summer Threshermen's Reunion, and you have a solid few days of birding, beaches, dunes, and prairie history from one base.
Are the campgrounds open in winter?
No. Portage la Prairie winters are long and bitterly cold, with deep snow and temperatures that regularly drop below minus 20 Celsius, so the RV campgrounds, both the private resorts and the provincial park, close for the season, typically from around Labour Day into fall through the May long weekend. There is no serviced RV camping locally in the cold months. The region turns to ice fishing on the lakes, snowmobiling, and winter trails instead. If you are traveling through in winter, plan to keep moving to a year-round park in a milder region, and treat mid-May through late September as the practical camping window here.
Where can I dump tanks and get water near Portage la Prairie?
At the campgrounds. Miller's Camping Resort has full hookups, so you can dump and fill right at your site, and it has a dump station for departing campers. Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods Provincial Park has a shared dump station and potable water fills, as does the Agricultural Museum Campground for its serviced campers. Since the provincial park runs electric-and-water sites rather than full sewer hookups, plan to service the rig at the dump station on your way out. In town, fuel and propane are easy to find. For a full rundown of local sani-dump options, see the companion dump-station guide linked on this page.
Is Portage la Prairie a good base for exploring central Manitoba?
Yes, it is well placed. Portage sits on the Trans-Canada Highway 1 about an hour west of Winnipeg and roughly halfway to Brandon, so from a campground base you can day-trip to the city, the Lake Manitoba beaches to the north, Delta Marsh for birding, and Spruce Woods Provincial Park and the Spirit Sands to the south. The flat, fast four-lane highway makes towing between these spots easy. It works especially well as an overnight or a few-nights stop on a cross-Canada Trans-Canada trip, letting you break the drive with beaches, dunes, birding, and prairie history rather than just parking at a truck stop. For central Manitoba, it is a genuinely handy hub.
What are the best RV parks in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba?
Your two standouts sit at opposite ends of the spectrum. Miller's Camping Resort, about 10 km east of town just off the Trans-Canada Highway 1, is the convenient private option, with full-hookup 15/30/50-amp sites, pull-throughs for big rigs, an outdoor pool, and family activities. For a provincial-park experience, drive about an hour south to Kiche Manitou Campground in Spruce Woods Provincial Park, a large public campground near the Assiniboine River and the Spirit Sands dunes with electric sites, a beach, and a canoe route. The Manitoba Agricultural Museum Campground in Austin, 25 minutes west, adds a no-frills serviced option. Together they cover the private-resort and public-park bases within easy reach of Portage.
Do campgrounds near Portage la Prairie have full hookups?
Yes, at the private resorts. Miller's Camping Resort east of town has full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 15, 30, and 50-amp electric, so any rig can plug in, fill, and dump on site, and it offers pull-throughs for larger trailers and motorhomes. The public options are more limited: Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods has 21 electric (30-amp) sites plus basic sites, with a shared dump station and water fills rather than sewer at the pad, and the Manitoba Agricultural Museum Campground offers electric and unserviced sites. So if full hookups are a must, book Miller's; if you want the provincial-park setting, plan on electric-and-water with a dump station on your way out.
How much does RV camping cost in Portage la Prairie?
It is reasonable by Canadian standards. The private Miller's Camping Resort charges typical mid-range prairie-resort nightly rates for full-hookup sites, a little higher on July and August weekends, and offers weekly and seasonal rates for longer stays. Manitoba provincial-park sites like Kiche Manitou are cheaper per night but add a park vehicle permit on top of the camping fee, which you can buy daily or annually. The Agricultural Museum Campground in Austin is the budget end. There is little free camping in this settled farm country. Overall, expect fair mid-range pricing, with the provincial park the value pick if you are comfortable with electric-and-water rather than full hookups.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Portage la Prairie?
For summer weekends, book early. Manitoba Parks reservations for Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods open in mid-April through manitobaparks.com, and the popular sites near the beach and dunes go quickly for July, August, and the long weekends, so reserve as soon as the window opens. Miller's Camping Resort fills for the May long weekend and peak-summer Saturdays too, so a few weeks out is smart, and earlier for holiday weekends. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and often walk-up friendly. If your trip targets a summer weekend or a specific dune-country date, treat early reservations as essential; otherwise you have flexibility.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Portage la Prairie?
Mid-May through late September is the season, and July and August are the sweet spot for warm, sunny prairie weather and the Lake Manitoba beaches. June is lovely but brings the heaviest mosquitoes, especially near Delta Marsh and the river, so pack repellent. Early fall is a quiet, pretty time with crisp days, cold nights, and excellent birding at Delta Marsh during migration, though campgrounds begin closing after Labour Day. Spring is cool, muddy, and late to green up. Winter is bitterly cold and closes the campgrounds entirely. For the best mix of weather and open sites, aim for July through mid-September.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft+) camp in Portage la Prairie?
Yes, comfortably at the private resort. Miller's Camping Resort offers pull-through full-hookup sites with 50-amp service that handle 40-foot rigs, and getting there is easy since it sits right off the divided Trans-Canada Highway 1, which is flat, four-lane prairie driving with no low-clearance worries. Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods can take larger rigs on many sites too, though the provincial-park loops are more wooded and you should confirm site length when you book. The grid roads toward Delta Marsh and Lake Manitoba are fine when dry but soften after rain, so stick to paved highways with a big rig in wet weather. For the easiest big-rig stay, choose Miller's.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Portage la Prairie?
Not many. This is settled farm country between Winnipeg and Brandon, so free dispersed camping is limited, and RV street camping is not allowed in the city. Some travelers overnight at the Highway 1 truck stops for a single night in transit, but that is a rest stop, not camping. The provincial and private campgrounds are reservation-based for peak dates, though Kiche Manitou and the Agricultural Museum Campground can have first-come sites midweek and in the shoulder season. For genuine boondocking and Crown-land camping, you would head farther into western Manitoba or the Interlake. Near Portage itself, plan on a serviced site at Miller's or the provincial park.
What is the difference between the public and private campgrounds here?
It comes down to hookups versus setting. The private Miller's Camping Resort is the full-service, amenity-rich choice, with full hookups, a pool, activities, and a spot right by town off the Trans-Canada, which is great for families and big rigs that want to plug in and relax. The public Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods trades full hookups for a genuine provincial-park experience, sand dunes, a river canoe route, beach swimming, and quieter, more natural surroundings an hour south, at a lower nightly rate plus a park permit. The Agricultural Museum Campground is a simple public option in Austin. Pick the private resort for convenience and services, the provincial park for scenery and value.
Can I camp near Delta Marsh?
Not directly at the marsh, but close by. Delta Marsh, on the south shore of Lake Manitoba about 25 minutes north of Portage, is one of North America's largest freshwater marshes and a world-class birding and waterfowl area, but it is a research and conservation landscape rather than a campground. The practical base is Miller's Camping Resort east of town or the Lake Manitoba beach areas like St. Ambroise nearby, from which you can day-trip to the marsh for birding, especially during spring and fall migration. Bring bug spray, binoculars, and a spotting scope, and go early or late in the day for the best bird activity along the dikes and shoreline.
What is there to do while camping in Portage la Prairie?
More than you might expect on the prairie. In town, Island Park sits on Crescent Lake, an oxbow of the Assiniboine, with trails, a splash pad, mini-golf, and a small zoo. North of the city, Delta Marsh offers exceptional birding and Lake Manitoba has sandy beaches for swimming and fishing. An hour south, Spruce Woods Provincial Park hides the Spirit Sands dunes and the Devil's Punch Bowl, plus the Assiniboine River canoe route right at Kiche Manitou. Add the Manitoba Agricultural Museum in Austin with its vintage machinery and summer Threshermen's Reunion, and you have a solid few days of birding, beaches, dunes, and prairie history from one base.
Are the campgrounds open in winter?
No. Portage la Prairie winters are long and bitterly cold, with deep snow and temperatures that regularly drop below minus 20 Celsius, so the RV campgrounds, both the private resorts and the provincial park, close for the season, typically from around Labour Day into fall through the May long weekend. There is no serviced RV camping locally in the cold months. The region turns to ice fishing on the lakes, snowmobiling, and winter trails instead. If you are traveling through in winter, plan to keep moving to a year-round park in a milder region, and treat mid-May through late September as the practical camping window here.
Where can I dump tanks and get water near Portage la Prairie?
At the campgrounds. Miller's Camping Resort has full hookups, so you can dump and fill right at your site, and it has a dump station for departing campers. Kiche Manitou in Spruce Woods Provincial Park has a shared dump station and potable water fills, as does the Agricultural Museum Campground for its serviced campers. Since the provincial park runs electric-and-water sites rather than full sewer hookups, plan to service the rig at the dump station on your way out. In town, fuel and propane are easy to find. For a full rundown of local sani-dump options, see the companion dump-station guide linked on this page.
Is Portage la Prairie a good base for exploring central Manitoba?
Yes, it is well placed. Portage sits on the Trans-Canada Highway 1 about an hour west of Winnipeg and roughly halfway to Brandon, so from a campground base you can day-trip to the city, the Lake Manitoba beaches to the north, Delta Marsh for birding, and Spruce Woods Provincial Park and the Spirit Sands to the south. The flat, fast four-lane highway makes towing between these spots easy. It works especially well as an overnight or a few-nights stop on a cross-Canada Trans-Canada trip, letting you break the drive with beaches, dunes, birding, and prairie history rather than just parking at a truck stop. For central Manitoba, it is a genuinely handy hub.
Are there free dump stations in Portage la Prairie?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Portage la Prairie.
All Dump Stations Near Portage la Prairie (12)
RV ParkPortage Industrial Exhibition Campground
RV ParkPortage Spillway Provincial Park
RV ParkMiller's Camping Resort
RV ParkMiller's Camping Resort
RV ParkCreekside Camping & RV Park
RV ParkMaple Ridge Mobile Home Community
RV ParkCarman Pool & Campground
RV Park





