RV Parks In Clarksville, Texas
33.6107° N, 95.0527° W
Quick Overview
Clarksville is the historic county seat of Red River County, a small Northeast Texas town where the Old South meets the frontier, sitting on US-82 about 40 minutes east of Paris and a short drive south of the Red River. For RVers the appeal is a quiet, recreation-minded corner of Texas with real lake camping close by and easy full-hookup parks right on the highway. The camping here splits cleanly: federal Corps of Engineers campgrounds on Pat Mayse Lake for water access and low nightly rates, and private full-hookup parks along US-82 for sewer at the site and year-round stays.
On the public side, Pat Mayse Lake, managed by the US Army Corps of Engineers northwest of Paris, is the standout. Pat Mayse West is the largest campground with 88 sites, water at every site and electric at 83 of them, a dump station, showers, and a boat ramp, and it handles big rigs up to about 90 feet. Sanders Cove adds 89 shaded electric-and-water sites with its own boat launch, and the smaller Pat Mayse East loop rounds it out with 26 sites and equestrian access. All three book through Recreation.gov, and the federal Senior and Access passes knock down the nightly rate. These sites offer electric and water rather than full sewer hookups, but the dump stations and lake scenery make them a strong value.
For full hookups and a year-round base, the private parks on US-82 deliver. Almost Home RV Park in Blossom is a newer full-hookup park with 30 and 50-amp service and daily, weekly, and monthly rates, and Live Oaks RV Parks at 4761 US Route 82, also in Blossom, offers 50-amp full hookups with laundry and storage, both an easy hop west of Clarksville. Further west in Paris, GTL Paris RV Park is the big-rig pick, with pull-through full-hookup sites, internet, a dump station, and laundry. Big rigs do well at the private parks and at Pat Mayse West, though the East loop caps around 40 feet and the county roads down to the lake run narrow, so take them slow. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Clarksville for the local options.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Clarksville
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
All Dump Stations Near Clarksville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forest Service | 0.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Langford Lake Park | 1.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dimple Quick Stop & RV Park | 6.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rykers Retreat RV Park | 19.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Almost Home RV Park | 20.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Live Oaks RV Parks | 21.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lincoln Road RV Park | 25.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ramblin Fever RV Park | 28.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| The Lazy Frog RV Park | 29.1 mi | 4.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pine Haven RV Resort & Storage | 29.4 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
Forest Service
0.3 miLangford Lake Park
1.2 miDimple Quick Stop & RV Park
6.5 miRykers Retreat RV Park
19.0 miAlmost Home RV Park
20.5 miLive Oaks RV Parks
21.2 miLincoln Road RV Park
25.4 miRamblin Fever RV Park
28.3 miThe Lazy Frog RV Park
29.1 miPine Haven RV Resort & Storage
29.4 miTraveling to Clarksville by RV
Getting to Clarksville with a big rig is straightforward. US-82 is the main east-west route through town and runs four-lane in stretches, an easy approach from Paris and US-271 to the west or from Avery and New Boston to the east. SH-37 heads north toward the Red River and south toward Mount Pleasant and I-30, which runs about 40 miles south. There is no interstate right at Clarksville, so most RVers roll in on US-82, and the private parks in Blossom and Paris sit right on that highway for a simple pull-in.
The drive out to Pat Mayse Lake is a bit more involved. The lake sits northwest of Paris, so plan roughly 40 minutes west from Clarksville, and the county roads down to the campgrounds are paved but narrower, so take the last few miles slowly with a long rig and watch for tight turns near the boat ramps. Pat Mayse West is the most big-rig-friendly with room for rigs up to about 90 feet, while the East loop is capped near 40 feet. Fuel, propane, and groceries are easy to find in Clarksville and in Paris, and Paris has the fuller RV service if you need parts or repairs on the road. For a longer look at the region, see the official City of Clarksville visitor pages.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Clarksville
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Texas
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Clarksville, TX
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 Clarksville, Texas, it's worth taking thirty minutes to check that the basics are in place — the four areas below are where unprepared RVers most often get stung.
Check your RV insurance coverage
A standard auto policy rarely covers a Class A, Class C, or travel trailer the way a dedicated RV insurance policy does. If you're financing a motorhome, lenders typically require comprehensive and collision; full-timers should additionally price in vacation liability and personal belongings coverage. Rates vary widely by state and travel pattern — compare quotes from multiple RV-focused carriers before each season.
Know your roadside assistance options
RV-specific roadside plans tow motorhomes and trailers that regular AAA coverage won't touch — flat beds, mobile mechanics, tire service for duallies, and even emergency lockouts at remote campgrounds. Good plans cover your spouse and trailer even if you're driving a separate vehicle, and some include trip interruption reimbursement if a breakdown costs you a reservation.
Decide about an extended warranty early
Original manufacturer warranties on new RVs typically run 12–24 months — shorter than most buyers realize. An extended service contract (essentially a mechanical breakdown policy) covers the appliances, slides, levelling systems, and drivetrain components that can run $3,000–$10,000 to replace. The time to price one is before the factory coverage expires, not after something breaks.
Set up a travel rewards card for fuel and fees
A no-annual-fee travel or gas rewards card pays for itself on a single month of RV travel. Expect to spend $400–$800 per week combined on fuel, campgrounds, and propane — 3–5% cash back on gas alone covers the next oil change. For bigger trips, a sign-up bonus can offset campground fees for the whole season.
RVingLife is supported by advertising. Third-party ads on this page may include insurance quotes, roadside plans, warranty coverage, or financial products relevant to the topics above. We don't endorse any specific provider — compare multiple offers before you commit. Privacy policy.
Dump Station Costs in Clarksville
Clarksville is an affordable place to camp, especially if you lean public. The Pat Mayse Lake Corps of Engineers campgrounds, Pat Mayse West, Sanders Cove, and Pat Mayse East, are the budget picks, with electric-and-water sites at low federal nightly rates, and the Senior and Access passes cut those rates further. They offer electric and water with dump stations rather than full sewer at the site, and some loops reduce services in the off-season. The private full-hookup parks on US-82 run higher but stay reasonable for the region: Almost Home RV Park and Live Oaks RV Parks in Blossom and GTL Paris RV Park sit in the moderate nightly range, with weekly and monthly discounts that lower the effective cost for longer stays. Overall you can camp cheaply on the lake in the shoulder seasons or pay a mid-range rate for full hookups and year-round reliability, and grocery runs in Paris keep provisioning inexpensive.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Clarksville
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Clarksville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
34F - 54F
Crowds: Low
Mild but occasionally freezing; the private US-82 parks in Blossom and Paris stay open year-round while some lake services drop off, so plan a full-hookup site for cold snaps.
Spring
Mar - May
54F - 75F
Crowds: Medium
Green and pleasant, one of the best camping windows, though spring thunderstorms can leave lakeside sites wet, so watch the forecast near the Red River bottoms.
Summer
Jun - Aug
72F - 94F
Crowds: High
Hot and humid; Pat Mayse Lake fills on weekends and holidays, so reserve a 50-amp site through Recreation.gov well ahead for the air conditioning you will want.
Fall
Sep - Oct
54F - 77F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp, dry, and comfortable; a great stretch for lake fishing and the Red River backroads, with easier weekday availability at the Corps campgrounds.
Explore the Clarksville Area
Here is how we would plan Clarksville. Base at Pat Mayse Lake for water access, fishing, and low nightly rates, then drive into Clarksville for the historic square, the Old Jail Museum, and the PRIDE Historic Creek Walk, and run over to Paris for full grocery and service runs. If you want full hookups or a year-round site, book one of the US-82 private parks in Blossom, Almost Home or Live Oaks, or GTL Paris RV Park for pull-through big-rig space. Reserve Pat Mayse West and Sanders Cove months ahead through Recreation.gov for summer weekends and holidays, since the lakeside sites fill fast in the heat. Match your rig to the loop: Pat Mayse West takes up to about 90 feet, while the East loop is capped near 40 feet. The Red River is about 10 minutes north on SH-37 for fishing and ATV riding, and Lennox Woods Preserve protects a rare 275-acre old-growth forest worth a slow morning walk. Spring and fall are the most comfortable seasons, so aim for those if your schedule allows.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Clarksville
What are the best RV parks near Clarksville, Texas?
The best camping near Clarksville splits between Pat Mayse Lake and full-hookup private parks on US-82. On the lake, the US Army Corps of Engineers runs Pat Mayse West with 88 sites and a boat ramp, Sanders Cove with 89 shaded sites, and the smaller Pat Mayse East loop, all with electric or water hookups and dump stations. For full sewer hookups, Almost Home RV Park and Live Oaks RV Parks in Blossom offer 30/50-amp full-hookup sites right on the highway, and GTL Paris RV Park in Paris adds big-rig pull-throughs. Between the public lake sites and the private highway parks, you can camp cheaply on the water or settle into a full-hookup pad.
Do RV parks near Clarksville have full hookups?
Yes, at the private parks on US-82. Almost Home RV Park in Blossom offers full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer, Live Oaks RV Parks at 4761 US Route 82 provides 50-amp full hookups with laundry and storage, and GTL Paris RV Park in Paris has full-hookup pull-through sites with internet and a dump station. The public campgrounds at Pat Mayse Lake are different: Pat Mayse West, Sanders Cove, and Pat Mayse East generally offer electric and water at the site with central dump stations rather than full sewer. So if full hookups are a must, book one of the private highway parks. If electric, water, and a nearby dump station work for you, the Corps campgrounds deliver lakeside scenery at lower rates.
How much does RV camping cost near Clarksville?
It depends on public versus private. The Pat Mayse Lake Corps of Engineers campgrounds, Pat Mayse West, Sanders Cove, and Pat Mayse East, are the budget picks, with electric-and-water sites at low federal nightly rates, and the federal Senior and Access passes cut those further. They offer electric and water with dump stations rather than full sewer. The private full-hookup parks on US-82 run higher but stay reasonable: Almost Home RV Park and Live Oaks RV Parks in Blossom and GTL Paris RV Park in Paris sit in the moderate nightly range, and weekly or monthly discounts lower the effective cost for longer stays. Overall you can camp cheaply on the lake in shoulder season or pay a mid-range rate for full hookups and year-round reliability.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Clarksville?
It varies by season. For summer weekends and holidays, reserve Pat Mayse West and Sanders Cove months ahead through Recreation.gov, because the lakeside Corps sites fill fast in the Northeast Texas heat when boaters and anglers head out. The smaller Pat Mayse East loop and holiday weekends anywhere on the lake go early too. The year-round private parks on US-82, Almost Home, Live Oaks, and GTL Paris, are more flexible, but a few days to a week of lead time is wise in peak season and during local events. On a spring or fall weekday you can often find a site with little notice, especially at the private highway parks, which rarely fill outside peak weekends.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Clarksville?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots, with mild temperatures in the 70s, green scenery in spring and crisp, dry air in fall. Summer is hot and humid with highs in the 90s and afternoon storms, so the lake fills on weekends and you will want a 50-amp site for the air conditioning. Winter is mild but can drop below freezing, so the year-round private parks on US-82 are the safer bet then, since some lake services reduce in the off-season. Spring can bring strong thunderstorms and wet sites near the Red River bottoms, so watch the forecast. For the best mix of weather and availability, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Clarksville?
Yes, with a little planning. The private parks on US-82 handle big rigs well: GTL Paris RV Park has pull-through full-hookup sites built for larger rigs, and Almost Home and Live Oaks in Blossom offer 50-amp full hookups with easy highway approaches. On Pat Mayse Lake, Pat Mayse West is the most big-rig-friendly public option, with sites that accommodate rigs up to about 90 feet, and Sanders Cove handles rigs up to roughly 80 feet. The smaller Pat Mayse East loop is capped near 40 feet, so match your length to the loop. The county roads down to the lake run narrow, so take the last few miles slowly and confirm your site length when you book.
Can I camp on Pat Mayse Lake near Clarksville?
Yes, Pat Mayse Lake is the heart of public camping in the area, managed by the US Army Corps of Engineers northwest of Paris and about 40 minutes west of Clarksville. Pat Mayse West is the largest campground with 88 sites, water at every site and electric at 83, a dump station, showers, and a boat ramp. Sanders Cove adds 89 shaded electric-and-water sites with a boat launch, and Pat Mayse East is a quieter 26-site loop with equestrian access. The lake is known for bass and crappie fishing, boating, and swim areas. Reserve the developed sites through Recreation.gov, and book months ahead for summer weekends since the lakeside sites fill first.
Is there a state park or public campground near Clarksville?
The nearest developed public camping is Pat Mayse Lake, a US Army Corps of Engineers reservoir northwest of Paris, with three campgrounds: Pat Mayse West, Sanders Cove, and Pat Mayse East. All offer electric or water hookups, dump stations, and boat ramps, and they book through Recreation.gov. For primitive camping, the Pat Mayse Wildlife Management Area north of the lake allows tent camping with the proper permits during open seasons. There is no state park right at Clarksville, though the region connects to the Texas wildlife trails through the Red River Loop for birding. For most RVers, the Corps campgrounds at Pat Mayse are the practical public choice, offering lakeside scenery and low nightly rates within a short drive.
Are Clarksville-area RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The private parks on US-82, including Almost Home, Live Oaks, and GTL Paris, welcome pets, as most private parks in the region do, and the Pat Mayse Lake Corps of Engineers campgrounds allow leashed pets under standard federal rules. Policies on the number of pets and any breed restrictions vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the private parks. The lakeshore and the trails around Pat Mayse give dogs plenty of room to walk, and the Red River bottoms north of town are a good stretch for a leashed hike. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, and clean up after them so the sites stay welcoming for the next camper.
What is there to do around Clarksville while camping?
Plenty for a quiet corner of Texas. Clarksville itself has a walkable historic square anchored by the 1884 Red River County courthouse, the Old Jail Museum, and the PRIDE Historic Creek Walk along Delaware Creek. Pat Mayse Lake offers boating, bass and crappie fishing, and swim areas, and the Red River, about 10 minutes north on SH-37, is popular for fishing and ATV riding in the sandy bottoms. Lennox Woods Preserve protects a rare 275-acre old-growth forest with a cathedral-like canopy, and birders can follow the Red River Loop of the Texas wildlife trail. Paris, 40 minutes west, adds the famous Eiffel Tower replica and fuller shopping and dining. It is an easy base for mixing lake days with history and backroads.
Is winter RV camping possible near Clarksville?
Yes, though your options narrow. The private full-hookup parks on US-82, Almost Home and Live Oaks in Blossom and GTL Paris RV Park, stay open year-round and are the reliable winter choice, with full hookups and often lower off-season rates. The Pat Mayse Lake Corps campgrounds reduce some services in the colder months, so check current conditions before you count on a lakeside site. Northeast Texas winters are mild by national standards, with highs in the 50s, but temperatures can drop below freezing, so be ready to manage a heated hose or heat tape on cold nights. If you want dependable hookups and services through winter, book one of the US-82 private parks.
How do I get to Clarksville RV parks in a big rig?
It is manageable with some care. US-82 is the main east-west route through Clarksville and runs four-lane in stretches, an easy approach from Paris and US-271 to the west or from Avery and New Boston to the east. The private parks in Blossom and Paris sit right on US-82 for a simple pull-in. There is no interstate right at town, so most RVers roll in on US-82, with I-30 about 40 miles south. The drive out to Pat Mayse Lake heads northwest of Paris on narrower county roads, so take the last few miles slowly with a long rig and watch for tight turns near the boat ramps. Fuel, propane, and RV service are easiest in Paris.
Is Clarksville a good base for exploring Northeast Texas by RV?
It is a solid one for travelers who want history and low-key lake recreation. Clarksville puts you on US-82 between Paris to the west and the Arkansas line to the east, with Pat Mayse Lake, the Red River, and Lennox Woods Preserve all within easy reach. From here you can day-trip to Paris for the Eiffel Tower replica and shopping, run north to the Red River for fishing, or head toward I-30 for wider travel. Camp on the lake at Pat Mayse for scenery and low rates, or settle into a full-hookup site in Blossom or Paris for year-round comfort and services. For RVers who want a quiet, recreation-minded base off the interstate grind, Clarksville is an easy stop.
What are the best RV parks near Clarksville, Texas?
The best camping near Clarksville splits between Pat Mayse Lake and full-hookup private parks on US-82. On the lake, the US Army Corps of Engineers runs Pat Mayse West with 88 sites and a boat ramp, Sanders Cove with 89 shaded sites, and the smaller Pat Mayse East loop, all with electric or water hookups and dump stations. For full sewer hookups, Almost Home RV Park and Live Oaks RV Parks in Blossom offer 30/50-amp full-hookup sites right on the highway, and GTL Paris RV Park in Paris adds big-rig pull-throughs. Between the public lake sites and the private highway parks, you can camp cheaply on the water or settle into a full-hookup pad.
Do RV parks near Clarksville have full hookups?
Yes, at the private parks on US-82. Almost Home RV Park in Blossom offers full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer, Live Oaks RV Parks at 4761 US Route 82 provides 50-amp full hookups with laundry and storage, and GTL Paris RV Park in Paris has full-hookup pull-through sites with internet and a dump station. The public campgrounds at Pat Mayse Lake are different: Pat Mayse West, Sanders Cove, and Pat Mayse East generally offer electric and water at the site with central dump stations rather than full sewer. So if full hookups are a must, book one of the private highway parks. If electric, water, and a nearby dump station work for you, the Corps campgrounds deliver lakeside scenery at lower rates.
How much does RV camping cost near Clarksville?
It depends on public versus private. The Pat Mayse Lake Corps of Engineers campgrounds, Pat Mayse West, Sanders Cove, and Pat Mayse East, are the budget picks, with electric-and-water sites at low federal nightly rates, and the federal Senior and Access passes cut those further. They offer electric and water with dump stations rather than full sewer. The private full-hookup parks on US-82 run higher but stay reasonable: Almost Home RV Park and Live Oaks RV Parks in Blossom and GTL Paris RV Park in Paris sit in the moderate nightly range, and weekly or monthly discounts lower the effective cost for longer stays. Overall you can camp cheaply on the lake in shoulder season or pay a mid-range rate for full hookups and year-round reliability.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Clarksville?
It varies by season. For summer weekends and holidays, reserve Pat Mayse West and Sanders Cove months ahead through Recreation.gov, because the lakeside Corps sites fill fast in the Northeast Texas heat when boaters and anglers head out. The smaller Pat Mayse East loop and holiday weekends anywhere on the lake go early too. The year-round private parks on US-82, Almost Home, Live Oaks, and GTL Paris, are more flexible, but a few days to a week of lead time is wise in peak season and during local events. On a spring or fall weekday you can often find a site with little notice, especially at the private highway parks, which rarely fill outside peak weekends.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Clarksville?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots, with mild temperatures in the 70s, green scenery in spring and crisp, dry air in fall. Summer is hot and humid with highs in the 90s and afternoon storms, so the lake fills on weekends and you will want a 50-amp site for the air conditioning. Winter is mild but can drop below freezing, so the year-round private parks on US-82 are the safer bet then, since some lake services reduce in the off-season. Spring can bring strong thunderstorms and wet sites near the Red River bottoms, so watch the forecast. For the best mix of weather and availability, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Clarksville?
Yes, with a little planning. The private parks on US-82 handle big rigs well: GTL Paris RV Park has pull-through full-hookup sites built for larger rigs, and Almost Home and Live Oaks in Blossom offer 50-amp full hookups with easy highway approaches. On Pat Mayse Lake, Pat Mayse West is the most big-rig-friendly public option, with sites that accommodate rigs up to about 90 feet, and Sanders Cove handles rigs up to roughly 80 feet. The smaller Pat Mayse East loop is capped near 40 feet, so match your length to the loop. The county roads down to the lake run narrow, so take the last few miles slowly and confirm your site length when you book.
Can I camp on Pat Mayse Lake near Clarksville?
Yes, Pat Mayse Lake is the heart of public camping in the area, managed by the US Army Corps of Engineers northwest of Paris and about 40 minutes west of Clarksville. Pat Mayse West is the largest campground with 88 sites, water at every site and electric at 83, a dump station, showers, and a boat ramp. Sanders Cove adds 89 shaded electric-and-water sites with a boat launch, and Pat Mayse East is a quieter 26-site loop with equestrian access. The lake is known for bass and crappie fishing, boating, and swim areas. Reserve the developed sites through Recreation.gov, and book months ahead for summer weekends since the lakeside sites fill first.
Is there a state park or public campground near Clarksville?
The nearest developed public camping is Pat Mayse Lake, a US Army Corps of Engineers reservoir northwest of Paris, with three campgrounds: Pat Mayse West, Sanders Cove, and Pat Mayse East. All offer electric or water hookups, dump stations, and boat ramps, and they book through Recreation.gov. For primitive camping, the Pat Mayse Wildlife Management Area north of the lake allows tent camping with the proper permits during open seasons. There is no state park right at Clarksville, though the region connects to the Texas wildlife trails through the Red River Loop for birding. For most RVers, the Corps campgrounds at Pat Mayse are the practical public choice, offering lakeside scenery and low nightly rates within a short drive.
Are Clarksville-area RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The private parks on US-82, including Almost Home, Live Oaks, and GTL Paris, welcome pets, as most private parks in the region do, and the Pat Mayse Lake Corps of Engineers campgrounds allow leashed pets under standard federal rules. Policies on the number of pets and any breed restrictions vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the private parks. The lakeshore and the trails around Pat Mayse give dogs plenty of room to walk, and the Red River bottoms north of town are a good stretch for a leashed hike. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, and clean up after them so the sites stay welcoming for the next camper.
What is there to do around Clarksville while camping?
Plenty for a quiet corner of Texas. Clarksville itself has a walkable historic square anchored by the 1884 Red River County courthouse, the Old Jail Museum, and the PRIDE Historic Creek Walk along Delaware Creek. Pat Mayse Lake offers boating, bass and crappie fishing, and swim areas, and the Red River, about 10 minutes north on SH-37, is popular for fishing and ATV riding in the sandy bottoms. Lennox Woods Preserve protects a rare 275-acre old-growth forest with a cathedral-like canopy, and birders can follow the Red River Loop of the Texas wildlife trail. Paris, 40 minutes west, adds the famous Eiffel Tower replica and fuller shopping and dining. It is an easy base for mixing lake days with history and backroads.
Is winter RV camping possible near Clarksville?
Yes, though your options narrow. The private full-hookup parks on US-82, Almost Home and Live Oaks in Blossom and GTL Paris RV Park, stay open year-round and are the reliable winter choice, with full hookups and often lower off-season rates. The Pat Mayse Lake Corps campgrounds reduce some services in the colder months, so check current conditions before you count on a lakeside site. Northeast Texas winters are mild by national standards, with highs in the 50s, but temperatures can drop below freezing, so be ready to manage a heated hose or heat tape on cold nights. If you want dependable hookups and services through winter, book one of the US-82 private parks.
How do I get to Clarksville RV parks in a big rig?
It is manageable with some care. US-82 is the main east-west route through Clarksville and runs four-lane in stretches, an easy approach from Paris and US-271 to the west or from Avery and New Boston to the east. The private parks in Blossom and Paris sit right on US-82 for a simple pull-in. There is no interstate right at town, so most RVers roll in on US-82, with I-30 about 40 miles south. The drive out to Pat Mayse Lake heads northwest of Paris on narrower county roads, so take the last few miles slowly with a long rig and watch for tight turns near the boat ramps. Fuel, propane, and RV service are easiest in Paris.
Is Clarksville a good base for exploring Northeast Texas by RV?
It is a solid one for travelers who want history and low-key lake recreation. Clarksville puts you on US-82 between Paris to the west and the Arkansas line to the east, with Pat Mayse Lake, the Red River, and Lennox Woods Preserve all within easy reach. From here you can day-trip to Paris for the Eiffel Tower replica and shopping, run north to the Red River for fishing, or head toward I-30 for wider travel. Camp on the lake at Pat Mayse for scenery and low rates, or settle into a full-hookup site in Blossom or Paris for year-round comfort and services. For RVers who want a quiet, recreation-minded base off the interstate grind, Clarksville is an easy stop.






