RV Parks In Chinook, Montana
48.5900° N, 109.2313° W
Quick Overview
Chinook sits right on US Highway 2, the Hi-Line, in the wide-open prairie of north-central Montana, with the Bear Paw Mountains rising to the south and the Milk River winding through town. For RVers this is high-plains, wide-sky country, the kind of stop where you fuel up, stretch out on an oversized full-hookup site, and use the town as a base to reach Bear Paw Battlefield, the fishing lakes in the mountains, and a genuinely good small-town museum. Camping here splits cleanly between a couple of tidy private RV parks in town and rustic public sites up in the Bear Paw range, so you can pick full hookups and services or quiet, off-grid nights depending on your rig and your mood.
The two in-town picks are private and both offer full hookups. Chinook Lodge RV Park runs 18 oversized sites set back off the highway, the majority 50-amp with some 30-amp, all with water and sewer, plus a seasonal shower house, laundry, a community fire pit, and even monthly potluck dinners; you book direct by phone or the online Book Now button, and it stays open year-round. Bears Paw RV Park, at 185 Cleveland Road West, is the other in-town option, with 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites, laundry, and restrooms, an easy overnight or a comfortable base for a few days in Blaine County. Both handle big rigs well since US Highway 2 through Chinook is flat and straight.
For public land and a mountain setting, head south to Beaver Creek Park, a Hill County park that is the largest county park in the country at over 10,000 acres, stretching 17 miles up into the Bear Paw Mountains south of Havre. It has more than 100 rustic sites with tables, fire pits, and vault toilets, no hookups, but a central RV dump station near mile marker 18, and most sites are first-come, first-served with a required park permit. Inside it, the Bearpaw Lake Fishing Access Site adds 22 primitive lakeside sites for quiet fishing and stargazing. It is public, outdoor-focused camping at its most basic, so top off your water and dump your tanks before you head up. You can read more about the park at Beaver Creek Park. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Chinook for the local options.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Chinook
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Chinook
All Dump Stations Near Chinook
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bears Paw RV | 0.3 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Zürich Park | 9.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hansen Family Campground & Storage Llc | 11.5 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Havre RV Park Emporium | 19.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Discover Fort Belknap RV Park | 23.0 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fort Belknap Pow-wow | 23.4 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Beaver Creek Park Campground | 25.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Evergreen Campground | 26.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| River Run Campground | 32.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fresno Beach Campground | 33.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Bears Paw RV
0.3 miZürich Park
9.7 miHansen Family Campground & Storage Llc
11.5 miHavre RV Park Emporium
19.9 miDiscover Fort Belknap RV Park
23.0 miFort Belknap Pow-wow
23.4 miBeaver Creek Park Campground
25.6 miEvergreen Campground
26.1 miRiver Run Campground
32.5 miFresno Beach Campground
33.2 miTraveling to Chinook by RV
Getting to Chinook is straightforward. US Highway 2, the Hi-Line, runs right through town and is a flat, straight, big-rig-friendly two-lane route across northern Montana, so a long rig has no trouble reaching either in-town park. Havre sits about 20 miles west with full services, fuel, and groceries, and it is the place to stock up since towns thin out fast east and west along the Hi-Line. Great Falls is roughly two hours south and is the nearest big city as well as your closest link to Interstate 15 if you are coming up from the south.
Once you are set up, the day-trips fan out from town. MT-240 heads 16 miles south to Bear Paw Battlefield, part of Nez Perce National Historical Park, on a good paved road. To reach Beaver Creek Park you drive to Havre and climb Secondary Highway 234 into the Bear Paw Mountains, where the road narrows and gains elevation, so take it slow with a long trailer or motorhome. Fuel, propane, and groceries are easiest in Havre, and Chinook itself covers the basics for a shorter stay.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Chinook
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Montana
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Chinook, MT
National Weather Service forecast
Recreation.gov campground search
Find emergency medical care nearby
Find grocery shopping nearby
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Chinook, Montana, 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 Chinook
Chinook is an affordable place to camp by either route. The private in-town parks are the mid-range picks: Chinook Lodge RV Park runs about $50 a night in the summer season with weekly and monthly rates that bring the effective cost down for longer stays, and Bears Paw RV Park is in the same neighborhood for a full-hookup site with laundry and restrooms. Those rates buy you 30 or 50-amp full hookups, water, and sewer right in town, which is a fair deal for the Hi-Line. If you want to camp cheaply, Beaver Creek Park up in the Bear Paw Mountains is the budget play: there are no hookups, but a day park permit is inexpensive and an annual permit covers a whole season of visits, with discounted senior passes available. Just remember you trade services for scenery there, so factor in a fill-and-dump in town. Groceries and fuel are cheapest in Havre, so provision there before you settle in.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Chinook
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Chinook by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
10F - 30F
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy Hi-Line winters, though the warm Chinook winds can spike temps. Public sites go quiet; lean on a year-round full-hookup private park and run heat tape on the water line.
Spring
Mar - May
32F - 55F
Crowds: Low
Windy and greening up, with mud possible at rustic Beaver Creek sites. A quiet shoulder window with the Milk River running high.
Summer
Jun - Aug
55F - 84F
Crowds: Medium
Warm, dry, and long days; prime Bear Paw Mountains and fishing season. Book the private parks ahead around the Blaine County Fair.
Fall
Sep - Oct
35F - 60F
Crowds: Low
Crisp and gorgeous, arguably the best time to camp here, with the Bear Paw backcountry drives at their peak and thin crowds.
Explore the Chinook Area
Here is how we would plan Chinook. If you want full hookups and services, base at Chinook Lodge RV Park or Bears Paw RV Park right in town, both flat and easy off US Highway 2, then day-trip the 16 miles south on MT-240 to Bear Paw Battlefield, where Chief Joseph surrendered in 1877; it is a moving, quiet stop with a groomed interpretive trail and summer ranger tours. Save an afternoon for the Blaine County Museum, which packs in Judith River Formation dinosaur fossils and the powerful "Forty Miles from Freedom" show on the Nez Perce. If you would rather camp in the mountains, plan Beaver Creek Park as a first-come, first-served, no-hookup stay, so fill your fresh water and dump your tanks in town first, and carry what you need since it is genuinely off-grid. Fuel up in Havre, not out on the Hi-Line, and if your trip lands around the Blaine County Fair or the late-summer Sugarbeet Festival, book the private parks well ahead because the town fills. Fall is our favorite window here, crisp and gold with the Bear Paw backcountry drives at their best.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Chinook
What are the best RV parks in Chinook, Montana?
Chinook keeps it simple with two solid private parks right in town and rustic public camping in the mountains nearby. Chinook Lodge RV Park is the standout, with 18 oversized full-hookup sites, the majority 50-amp, plus a seasonal shower house, laundry, and a friendly community feel. Bears Paw RV Park at 185 Cleveland Road West is the other in-town pick, offering 30 and 50-amp full hookups, laundry, and restrooms. For a public, outdoor-focused stay, Beaver Creek Park south of Havre is a huge county park with over 100 rustic, no-hookup sites and a central dump station. Between the two private parks and the county park, you can choose full services in town or off-grid quiet in the Bear Paw Mountains.
Do Chinook RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, both in-town parks offer full hookups. Chinook Lodge RV Park has full hookups on all 18 sites, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your spot, with the majority on 50-amp service and some 30-amp options. Bears Paw RV Park also provides full hookups with both 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer, along with laundry and restrooms. If full hookups are a must, either of these in-town parks will do the job. The public option is different: Beaver Creek Park in the Bear Paw Mountains has no hookups at all, just rustic sites with a table, fire pit, and vault toilets, plus a central RV dump station near mile marker 18. So plan on the private parks for hookups and the county park for scenery and off-grid quiet.
How much does RV camping cost in Chinook?
It is an affordable stop either way. The private in-town parks sit in the mid-range: Chinook Lodge RV Park runs about $50 a night in the summer season, with weekly and monthly rates that lower the effective nightly cost for longer stays, and Bears Paw RV Park is in the same neighborhood for a full-hookup site with laundry and restrooms. Those prices buy you 30 or 50-amp full hookups, water, and sewer right in town. Beaver Creek Park up in the Bear Paw Mountains is the budget route, with no hookups but an inexpensive day park permit and an even better-value annual permit, plus discounted senior passes. You trade services for scenery there. Provisioning in Havre keeps grocery and fuel costs down before you settle in.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Chinook?
For most of the year you can travel Chinook loosely. The in-town parks, Chinook Lodge RV Park and Bears Paw RV Park, both take direct bookings, and outside of peak weekends you can often grab a full-hookup site with little notice. The exceptions are events: book well ahead if your trip overlaps the Blaine County Fair or the late-summer Sugarbeet Festival, when the town fills and the private parks book up. Beaver Creek Park in the Bear Paw Mountains is mostly first-come, first-served, so arrive earlier in the day on summer weekends to claim a rustic site, and note it has no hookups. On a spring or fall weekday you will usually have your pick almost anywhere in the area.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Chinook?
Summer and fall are the sweet spots. Summers on the Hi-Line are warm, dry, and long, with highs in the mid-80s, making it prime season for the Bear Paw Mountains, fishing on the Milk River, and the Blaine County Fair. Fall is our personal favorite, crisp and gold, with the Bear Paw backcountry drives at their peak and thinner crowds. Spring is windy and can be muddy at the rustic mountain sites, though it is quiet and green. Winter is cold and snowy, though the warm Chinook winds the town is named for can spike temperatures quickly; most public camping goes dormant, so a year-round private park with full hookups is the realistic winter choice. For the best mix of weather and scenery, target July through October.
Can big rigs camp in Chinook?
Yes, and access is easy. US Highway 2, the Hi-Line, runs straight through Chinook and is a flat, big-rig-friendly two-lane route across northern Montana, so a long rig reaches town without drama. Chinook Lodge RV Park is built for big rigs, with 18 oversized sites set back off the highway and pull-offs designed to handle any length, and Bears Paw RV Park in town is also an easy in and out. Where you slow down is heading into the mountains: Secondary Highway 234 up to Beaver Creek Park narrows and gains elevation, so take it easy with a long trailer or motorhome and pick your sites carefully there. For hookups and easy maneuvering, the two in-town parks are the comfortable choice for larger rigs.
Is there public or state land camping near Chinook?
Yes, and it is a highlight. Beaver Creek Park, a Hill County park south of Havre, is the largest county park in the United States at over 10,000 acres, stretching 17 miles up into the Bear Paw Mountains. It has more than 100 rustic sites with tables, fire pits, and vault toilets, no hookups, but a central RV dump station near mile marker 18, and most sites are first-come, first-served with a required park permit. Inside the park, the Bearpaw Lake Fishing Access Site adds 22 primitive lakeside sites. This is public, outdoor-focused camping at its most basic, so top off your fresh water and dump your tanks in town before you head up, and carry everything you need for an off-grid stay.
What is there to do around Chinook while camping?
More than you would expect for a small Hi-Line town. Bear Paw Battlefield, 16 miles south on MT-240, is part of Nez Perce National Historical Park and marks where Chief Joseph surrendered in 1877 after a 1,300-mile retreat; a groomed interpretive trail and summer ranger tours tell the story. The Blaine County Museum in town is genuinely good, with Judith River Formation dinosaur fossils, marine reptiles, homestead history, and the moving "Forty Miles from Freedom" multimedia show. The Milk River offers fishing and easy paddling, the Bear Paw Mountains and Beaver Creek Park give you hiking, fishing lakes, and scenic backcountry drives, and community events like the Blaine County Fair and the Sugarbeet Festival round out a visit.
Is winter RV camping possible in Chinook?
It is possible but your options narrow. Chinook Lodge RV Park stays open year-round with full hookups, so it is the reliable cold-weather choice, though the shower house and laundry run seasonally. Hi-Line winters are cold and snowy, with highs often around freezing and cold snaps well below zero, so if you camp then be ready to protect your water line with heat tape or a heated hose and plan travel around winter storms and wind. One local quirk: the warm Chinook winds the town is named for can spike temperatures quickly, briefly melting snow. The public camping at Beaver Creek Park effectively goes dormant in the cold months with no services running, so for a winter stay with hookups, book the year-round private park in town.
How do I get to Chinook RV parks in a big rig?
It is easy. US Highway 2, the Hi-Line, runs directly through Chinook and is a flat, straight two-lane route that big rigs handle comfortably. Both in-town parks sit right off the highway: Chinook Lodge RV Park is set back off US-2 with oversized, easy-access pull-offs built for any length, and Bears Paw RV Park at 185 Cleveland Road West is a simple in and out. Havre, about 20 miles west, is where you fuel up and provision, since services thin out along the Hi-Line. If you are coming from the south, Great Falls and Interstate 15 are about two hours away. Only slow down for Secondary Highway 234 into Beaver Creek Park, which narrows and climbs into the Bear Paw Mountains.
Are Chinook RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Bears Paw RV Park lists pets as allowed, as most small private parks in this part of Montana do, and Chinook Lodge RV Park is a relaxed, community-minded place that welcomes travelers and their dogs. Policies on leashing, number of pets, and cleanup vary by park, so confirm the specifics when you book direct. Out at Beaver Creek Park in the Bear Paw Mountains, leashed pets are welcome across the huge county park, and the open space, fishing lakes, and miles of quiet road give dogs plenty of room to walk. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, pick up after them, and never leave a dog unattended in a hot rig during summer.
Can I camp in the Bear Paw Mountains near Chinook?
Yes, and it is the scenic heart of camping here. Beaver Creek Park, south of Havre, runs 17 miles up into the Bear Paw Mountains and is the largest county park in the country at over 10,000 acres. It offers more than 100 rustic sites with tables, fire pits, and vault toilets, no hookups, but a central RV dump station near mile marker 18, all under a required park permit and mostly first-come, first-served. The Bearpaw Lake Fishing Access Site inside the park adds 22 primitive lakeside sites for fishing and stargazing. To get there you drive to Havre and climb Secondary Highway 234, which narrows and gains elevation, so take it slow with a long rig. Fill water and dump tanks in town first, since this is off-grid camping.
Is Chinook a good base for exploring the Hi-Line by RV?
It is a comfortable one. Chinook puts you right on US Highway 2 with two full-hookup private parks, easy big-rig access, and Havre 20 minutes west for fuel, groceries, and services. From here you can day-trip 16 miles south to Bear Paw Battlefield, spend an afternoon at the Blaine County Museum, fish or paddle the Milk River, and drive up into the Bear Paw Mountains and Beaver Creek Park for hiking and quiet lakes. The Hi-Line is flat, honest prairie country that rewards a slower pace, and Chinook is a friendly, low-key stop along it. For RVers crossing northern Montana or heading toward Glacier, it makes an easy, affordable base with real services and genuine history close at hand.
What are the best RV parks in Chinook, Montana?
Chinook keeps it simple with two solid private parks right in town and rustic public camping in the mountains nearby. Chinook Lodge RV Park is the standout, with 18 oversized full-hookup sites, the majority 50-amp, plus a seasonal shower house, laundry, and a friendly community feel. Bears Paw RV Park at 185 Cleveland Road West is the other in-town pick, offering 30 and 50-amp full hookups, laundry, and restrooms. For a public, outdoor-focused stay, Beaver Creek Park south of Havre is a huge county park with over 100 rustic, no-hookup sites and a central dump station. Between the two private parks and the county park, you can choose full services in town or off-grid quiet in the Bear Paw Mountains.
Do Chinook RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, both in-town parks offer full hookups. Chinook Lodge RV Park has full hookups on all 18 sites, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your spot, with the majority on 50-amp service and some 30-amp options. Bears Paw RV Park also provides full hookups with both 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer, along with laundry and restrooms. If full hookups are a must, either of these in-town parks will do the job. The public option is different: Beaver Creek Park in the Bear Paw Mountains has no hookups at all, just rustic sites with a table, fire pit, and vault toilets, plus a central RV dump station near mile marker 18. So plan on the private parks for hookups and the county park for scenery and off-grid quiet.
How much does RV camping cost in Chinook?
It is an affordable stop either way. The private in-town parks sit in the mid-range: Chinook Lodge RV Park runs about $50 a night in the summer season, with weekly and monthly rates that lower the effective nightly cost for longer stays, and Bears Paw RV Park is in the same neighborhood for a full-hookup site with laundry and restrooms. Those prices buy you 30 or 50-amp full hookups, water, and sewer right in town. Beaver Creek Park up in the Bear Paw Mountains is the budget route, with no hookups but an inexpensive day park permit and an even better-value annual permit, plus discounted senior passes. You trade services for scenery there. Provisioning in Havre keeps grocery and fuel costs down before you settle in.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Chinook?
For most of the year you can travel Chinook loosely. The in-town parks, Chinook Lodge RV Park and Bears Paw RV Park, both take direct bookings, and outside of peak weekends you can often grab a full-hookup site with little notice. The exceptions are events: book well ahead if your trip overlaps the Blaine County Fair or the late-summer Sugarbeet Festival, when the town fills and the private parks book up. Beaver Creek Park in the Bear Paw Mountains is mostly first-come, first-served, so arrive earlier in the day on summer weekends to claim a rustic site, and note it has no hookups. On a spring or fall weekday you will usually have your pick almost anywhere in the area.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Chinook?
Summer and fall are the sweet spots. Summers on the Hi-Line are warm, dry, and long, with highs in the mid-80s, making it prime season for the Bear Paw Mountains, fishing on the Milk River, and the Blaine County Fair. Fall is our personal favorite, crisp and gold, with the Bear Paw backcountry drives at their peak and thinner crowds. Spring is windy and can be muddy at the rustic mountain sites, though it is quiet and green. Winter is cold and snowy, though the warm Chinook winds the town is named for can spike temperatures quickly; most public camping goes dormant, so a year-round private park with full hookups is the realistic winter choice. For the best mix of weather and scenery, target July through October.
Can big rigs camp in Chinook?
Yes, and access is easy. US Highway 2, the Hi-Line, runs straight through Chinook and is a flat, big-rig-friendly two-lane route across northern Montana, so a long rig reaches town without drama. Chinook Lodge RV Park is built for big rigs, with 18 oversized sites set back off the highway and pull-offs designed to handle any length, and Bears Paw RV Park in town is also an easy in and out. Where you slow down is heading into the mountains: Secondary Highway 234 up to Beaver Creek Park narrows and gains elevation, so take it easy with a long trailer or motorhome and pick your sites carefully there. For hookups and easy maneuvering, the two in-town parks are the comfortable choice for larger rigs.
Is there public or state land camping near Chinook?
Yes, and it is a highlight. Beaver Creek Park, a Hill County park south of Havre, is the largest county park in the United States at over 10,000 acres, stretching 17 miles up into the Bear Paw Mountains. It has more than 100 rustic sites with tables, fire pits, and vault toilets, no hookups, but a central RV dump station near mile marker 18, and most sites are first-come, first-served with a required park permit. Inside the park, the Bearpaw Lake Fishing Access Site adds 22 primitive lakeside sites. This is public, outdoor-focused camping at its most basic, so top off your fresh water and dump your tanks in town before you head up, and carry everything you need for an off-grid stay.
What is there to do around Chinook while camping?
More than you would expect for a small Hi-Line town. Bear Paw Battlefield, 16 miles south on MT-240, is part of Nez Perce National Historical Park and marks where Chief Joseph surrendered in 1877 after a 1,300-mile retreat; a groomed interpretive trail and summer ranger tours tell the story. The Blaine County Museum in town is genuinely good, with Judith River Formation dinosaur fossils, marine reptiles, homestead history, and the moving "Forty Miles from Freedom" multimedia show. The Milk River offers fishing and easy paddling, the Bear Paw Mountains and Beaver Creek Park give you hiking, fishing lakes, and scenic backcountry drives, and community events like the Blaine County Fair and the Sugarbeet Festival round out a visit.
Is winter RV camping possible in Chinook?
It is possible but your options narrow. Chinook Lodge RV Park stays open year-round with full hookups, so it is the reliable cold-weather choice, though the shower house and laundry run seasonally. Hi-Line winters are cold and snowy, with highs often around freezing and cold snaps well below zero, so if you camp then be ready to protect your water line with heat tape or a heated hose and plan travel around winter storms and wind. One local quirk: the warm Chinook winds the town is named for can spike temperatures quickly, briefly melting snow. The public camping at Beaver Creek Park effectively goes dormant in the cold months with no services running, so for a winter stay with hookups, book the year-round private park in town.
How do I get to Chinook RV parks in a big rig?
It is easy. US Highway 2, the Hi-Line, runs directly through Chinook and is a flat, straight two-lane route that big rigs handle comfortably. Both in-town parks sit right off the highway: Chinook Lodge RV Park is set back off US-2 with oversized, easy-access pull-offs built for any length, and Bears Paw RV Park at 185 Cleveland Road West is a simple in and out. Havre, about 20 miles west, is where you fuel up and provision, since services thin out along the Hi-Line. If you are coming from the south, Great Falls and Interstate 15 are about two hours away. Only slow down for Secondary Highway 234 into Beaver Creek Park, which narrows and climbs into the Bear Paw Mountains.
Are Chinook RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Bears Paw RV Park lists pets as allowed, as most small private parks in this part of Montana do, and Chinook Lodge RV Park is a relaxed, community-minded place that welcomes travelers and their dogs. Policies on leashing, number of pets, and cleanup vary by park, so confirm the specifics when you book direct. Out at Beaver Creek Park in the Bear Paw Mountains, leashed pets are welcome across the huge county park, and the open space, fishing lakes, and miles of quiet road give dogs plenty of room to walk. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, pick up after them, and never leave a dog unattended in a hot rig during summer.
Can I camp in the Bear Paw Mountains near Chinook?
Yes, and it is the scenic heart of camping here. Beaver Creek Park, south of Havre, runs 17 miles up into the Bear Paw Mountains and is the largest county park in the country at over 10,000 acres. It offers more than 100 rustic sites with tables, fire pits, and vault toilets, no hookups, but a central RV dump station near mile marker 18, all under a required park permit and mostly first-come, first-served. The Bearpaw Lake Fishing Access Site inside the park adds 22 primitive lakeside sites for fishing and stargazing. To get there you drive to Havre and climb Secondary Highway 234, which narrows and gains elevation, so take it slow with a long rig. Fill water and dump tanks in town first, since this is off-grid camping.
Is Chinook a good base for exploring the Hi-Line by RV?
It is a comfortable one. Chinook puts you right on US Highway 2 with two full-hookup private parks, easy big-rig access, and Havre 20 minutes west for fuel, groceries, and services. From here you can day-trip 16 miles south to Bear Paw Battlefield, spend an afternoon at the Blaine County Museum, fish or paddle the Milk River, and drive up into the Bear Paw Mountains and Beaver Creek Park for hiking and quiet lakes. The Hi-Line is flat, honest prairie country that rewards a slower pace, and Chinook is a friendly, low-key stop along it. For RVers crossing northern Montana or heading toward Glacier, it makes an easy, affordable base with real services and genuine history close at hand.








