RV Parks In Castlewood, Virginia
36.8901° N, 82.2796° W
Quick Overview
Castlewood sits along the Clinch River in Russell County, deep in the mountains of far southwest Virginia, and for RVers it is a quiet, river-country base rather than a resort town. The Clinch here is one of the most biodiverse rivers in North America, and most of the good camping strings out along it and the surrounding ridges. You will find one solid year-round private park with full hookups plus a set of standout Virginia state parks within an easy drive, so you can pick between sewer at your site or a scenic gorge campground and still be paddling or hiking within minutes.
The private anchor is Clinch River Family Campground in nearby Duffield, a family-owned park right on the historic Clinch with 27 full-hookup 30-amp sites, a limited number of 50-amp sites, water and sewer at the site, a dump station, and free WiFi. It is big-rig friendly with room for slide-outs, stays open year-round, and you book direct through its online portal or by phone. That makes it the easy pick when you want reliable hookups and a home base for exploring the river.
On the public side, the state parks do the heavy lifting. Natural Tunnel State Park has two loops: Cove View offers electric and water sites at 20 and 30 amp for rigs up to 38 feet, booked first-come on arrival, and Lover's Leap adds 50-amp service for rigs up to 50 feet, which you reserve up to 11 months ahead at reservevaparks.com. Breaks Interstate Park, the Grand Canyon of the South on the Virginia-Kentucky line, runs 138 sites with 75 full-hookup sites carrying 30-amp and 50/30-amp electric, water, and sewer, plus a dump station, reservable through the park's Firefly portal with a handful of first-come sites left over. Between the year-round private park and these public campgrounds you get real range: full hookups and slide-out room at Clinch River, or gorge-rim scenery at Breaks and the famous limestone tunnel at Natural Tunnel. Big rigs do best at the private park and the developed 50-amp loops, since the roads dropping into the gorges get steep and winding, so take those grades slow. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Castlewood.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Castlewood
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Gear for Your Trip to Castlewood
All Dump Stations Near Castlewood
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Castlewood Mhc | 0.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ridge Runner Campground | 4.2 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Forestry Department | 10.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Flatwoods Campground | 10.2 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lonesome Pine RV Park & Campground | 12.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bark Camp Recreation Area | 13.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Riverside Campground | 15.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hwc Mhs Llc. Manufactured Housing Specialist | 15.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Brumley Cove Baptist Camp | 16.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Devils Fork Campground | 19.3 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
Castlewood Mhc
0.6 miRidge Runner Campground
4.2 miForestry Department
10.2 miFlatwoods Campground
10.2 miLonesome Pine RV Park & Campground
12.1 miBark Camp Recreation Area
13.7 miRiverside Campground
15.4 miHwc Mhs Llc. Manufactured Housing Specialist
15.7 miBrumley Cove Baptist Camp
16.9 miDevils Fork Campground
19.3 miTraveling to Castlewood by RV
Getting to the Castlewood area takes a little mountain driving, but the main routes are manageable. US-58 Alternate, the Trail of the Lonesome Pine, runs concurrent with SR-71 through the area and is the primary through route, with SR-65, SR-63, and US-19 branching off toward the river towns and the state parks. Coming from the interstate, you would drop off I-81 near Abingdon to the southeast, or come up from the Bristol and Kingsport area on the Virginia-Tennessee line, then follow the two-lane highways in.
Once you are close, the Clinch River Family Campground in Duffield sits near the main roads for an easy approach and is the friendliest option for a long rig with slide-outs. The state parks are more of a mountain haul: the roads into Natural Tunnel and down into the gorge at Breaks Interstate Park are steeper and windier, so slow down for the grades and switchbacks and double-check your rig length against the loop you are booking. Fuel, groceries, and propane are easiest to stock up on in the larger towns like Abingdon or over toward Bristol before you head into the smaller river communities, where services thin out. Give yourself daylight for the final approach so you are not threading a narrow gorge road after dark.
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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 Castlewood, Virginia, 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 Castlewood
Castlewood is an affordable place to camp, especially if you mix a private base with public days out. Clinch River Family Campground runs a straightforward flat rate for its full-hookup 30-amp sites, around forty dollars a night, with a weekly deal where the seventh night is free and monthly rates for longer stays. The state parks are budget-friendly too: Natural Tunnel and Breaks Interstate Park price their electric and full-hookup sites at typical Virginia state-park rates, with Breaks starting low for primitive sites and climbing for the full-hookup and lodge options. Weekly discounts at the private park lower the effective nightly cost, and shoulder-season weekdays at the state parks are cheaper and far less crowded. Because this is a small-town river region, provisioning is reasonable if you stock up in Abingdon or Bristol first, and you can easily camp cheap here by leaning on electric sites and the private park's weekly rate rather than chasing resort amenities that this quiet corner of Virginia simply does not trade in.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Castlewood
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Best Time to Visit Castlewood by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
26F - 45F
Crowds: Low
Cold with occasional snow across the ridges; the state parks scale back, so the year-round Clinch River Family Campground is your reliable full-hookup base.
Spring
Mar - May
42F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Rivers run high and green returns to the hills; state-park campgrounds reopen in March and paddling is at its best.
Summer
Jun - Aug
62F - 84F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid with the busiest river-float and ATV season; reserve full-hookup and 50-amp sites well ahead on weekends.
Fall
Sep - Oct
44F - 68F
Crowds: High
Brilliant Appalachian color pulls crowds to Breaks and Natural Tunnel; book September and October weekends early.
Explore the Castlewood Area
Here is how we would plan Castlewood. Make Clinch River Family Campground your full-hookup base since it is open year-round and big-rig friendly, then day-trip out to the river and the state parks from there. For the scenery, book Lover's Leap at Natural Tunnel and a full-hookup site at Breaks well ahead for summer and fall color weekends, because those fill fast and Cove View at Natural Tunnel is first-come only. Get on the Clinch itself: outfitters like Clinch River Adventures and Clinch Life Outfitters rent kayaks, canoes, and tubes, and the Old Castlewood boat launch is an easy put-in for a lazy float on a river famous for its rare mussels and smallmouth. Hikers should head to the Sugar Hill Loop and the Clinch River State Park Sugar Hill Unit over in St. Paul, and if you ride, the Spearhead Trails ATV system runs more than 400 miles out of ATV-friendly St. Paul, so grab a permit online or in town first. Save an evening for Ma and Pa's Restaurant, a stop on the Crooked Road music trail with burgers and live mountain music. For big rigs, stick to the private park and the developed 50-amp loops and take the gorge roads slow.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Castlewood
What are the best RV parks near Castlewood, Virginia?
The best options split between a private full-hookup park and a set of scenic state parks. Clinch River Family Campground in nearby Duffield is the private anchor, with 27 full-hookup 30-amp sites, some 50-amp sites, a dump station, and year-round access right on the Clinch River. For public camping, Natural Tunnel State Park offers electric and water sites in its Cove View and Lover's Leap loops, and Breaks Interstate Park, the Grand Canyon of the South, has 138 sites including 75 full-hookup sites with sewer. Between them you can choose reliable hookups and slide-out room at the private park or gorge-rim scenery at the state parks, all within an easy drive of the river.
Do RV parks near Castlewood have full hookups?
Yes, at a few of them. Clinch River Family Campground offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 27 30-amp sites and a limited number of 50-amp sites. Breaks Interstate Park has 75 full-hookup sites with 30-amp and 50/30-amp electric plus water and sewer. Natural Tunnel State Park is a bit different: its Cove View and Lover's Leap loops provide electric and water hookups rather than full sewer at every site, with a dump station on the way out. So if full hookups are a must, book Clinch River Family Campground or a full-hookup loop at Breaks, and if electric and water are fine, Natural Tunnel is a great scenic pick.
How much does RV camping cost near Castlewood?
It stays reasonable. Clinch River Family Campground charges a flat rate around forty dollars a night for its full-hookup 30-amp sites, with a weekly deal where the seventh night is free and monthly rates for long stays. The Virginia state parks price their electric and full-hookup sites at standard state-park rates, and Breaks Interstate Park starts low for primitive sites and climbs for full-hookup and lodge options. Shoulder-season weekdays are cheaper and quieter at the state parks. Because this is a small-town river region, you can camp cheaply by leaning on electric sites and the private park's weekly rate rather than paying for resort amenities that this quiet corner of Virginia does not really offer.
How far ahead should I reserve an RV site near Castlewood?
It depends on the season and the park. For summer and fall color weekends, reserve Lover's Leap at Natural Tunnel and full-hookup sites at Breaks Interstate Park months ahead, since both take reservations up to 11 months out through reservevaparks.com and the park portals and the best sites go early. Cove View at Natural Tunnel is first-come only, so arrive early in the day on busy weekends. Clinch River Family Campground fills on warm-weather weekends too, so a week or more of lead time is smart, though it is open year-round and easier to grab midweek. On a spring or late-fall weekday you can often find a site with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Castlewood?
Late spring and fall are the sweet spots. Spring brings green hills and high water that is prime for paddling the Clinch, with the state-park campgrounds reopening in March. Fall delivers crisp days and strong Appalachian color across the ridges, which makes September and October weekends both beautiful and busy, so book early. Summer is the busiest river-float and ATV season and it runs warm and humid, so weekends fill and reservations help. Winter is cold with occasional snow, and the state parks scale back, so you would lean on the year-round Clinch River Family Campground. For the best mix of weather, scenery, and availability, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Castlewood?
Yes, with some care about which park you pick. Clinch River Family Campground is big-rig friendly with room for slide-outs and is the easiest approach, sitting near the main roads in Duffield. Natural Tunnel's Lover's Leap loop takes rigs up to 50 feet with 50-amp service, and Breaks Interstate Park has full-hookup sites that handle larger RVs. The catch is the mountain roads: the routes into Natural Tunnel and down into the gorge at Breaks are steeper and windier, so slow down for the grades and switchbacks and confirm your length against the specific loop when you book. Stick to the private park and the developed 50-amp loops and big-rig owners will do fine here.
Can I camp on the Clinch River near Castlewood?
Yes, and it is the main draw. Clinch River Family Campground sits right on the historic Clinch in nearby Duffield, with full-hookup sites, nature trails, and easy river access, and it is family-owned and open year-round. The Clinch is one of the most biodiverse rivers in North America, known for rare mussels and good smallmouth fishing, and outfitters like Clinch River Adventures and Clinch Life Outfitters rent kayaks, canoes, and tubes for a float. The Old Castlewood boat launch is a convenient public put-in. If you want to be right on the water with hookups, the Clinch River Family Campground is the pick, with the state parks a short drive away for scenery.
Is there state park camping near Castlewood?
Yes, two of Virginia's best are within reach. Natural Tunnel State Park, about 30 miles away near Duffield, camps beside an 850-foot natural railroad tunnel and offers electric and water sites in its Cove View and Lover's Leap loops, with a chairlift down to the gorge. Breaks Interstate Park, roughly 40 miles out on the Virginia-Kentucky line, is the Grand Canyon of the South, with 138 sites including 75 full-hookup sites, overlooks, and whitewater. Both reserve through their online portals up to 11 months ahead, with some first-come sites. The Clinch River State Park Sugar Hill Unit in St. Paul is day-use for hiking and paddling rather than camping.
Are RV parks near Castlewood pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Clinch River Family Campground is pet-friendly, as most private parks are, and the Virginia state parks at Natural Tunnel and Breaks allow leashed pets under standard state-park rules. Policies on where pets can go, leash length, and how many are allowed vary by park, so confirm the specifics when you book. There is plenty of room to walk a dog here, from the river paths near the campgrounds to the trails at the Sugar Hill Unit and the gorge-rim paths at Breaks. 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 Castlewood while camping?
Plenty, and most of it is outdoors. The Clinch River is the star, with kayaking, canoeing, tubing, and smallmouth fishing through local outfitters and the Old Castlewood boat launch. Hikers can tackle the Sugar Hill Loop and the trails at the Clinch River State Park Sugar Hill Unit in St. Paul, and ATV riders have the Spearhead Trails system, more than 400 miles of OHV trails based in St. Paul. Day-trip to Natural Tunnel State Park for its chairlift and gorge, or to Breaks Interstate Park for canyon overlooks and whitewater. Cap an evening at Ma and Pa's Restaurant, a Crooked Road music-trail stop with burgers, shakes, and live mountain music.
Is winter RV camping possible near Castlewood?
Yes, but your options narrow. Clinch River Family Campground stays open year-round with full hookups, making it the reliable cold-weather choice, and midweek stays are quiet. The state parks at Natural Tunnel and Breaks scale back their camping seasons, with Natural Tunnel generally running from early March into December, so they are not dependable winter options. Southwest Virginia winters are cold with occasional snow at these elevations, so if you camp then be ready to protect your water lines with heat tape or a heated hose and watch the forecast for mountain storms. For hookups and reliable services through winter, book Clinch River Family Campground and save the gorge campgrounds for the warmer months.
How do I get to the Castlewood RV parks in a big rig?
It is doable with some mountain driving. US-58 Alternate, the Trail of the Lonesome Pine, runs concurrent with SR-71 through the Castlewood area and is the main through route, with US-19 and the smaller state highways feeding the river towns. Most rigs come off I-81 near Abingdon to the southeast or up from the Bristol area. Clinch River Family Campground in Duffield sits near the main roads for an easy approach, while the roads into Natural Tunnel and down into the Breaks gorge are steeper and windier, so slow down and confirm your length against your loop. Fuel and propane are easiest in Abingdon or Bristol before you head into the smaller communities.
Is Castlewood a good base for exploring southwest Virginia by RV?
It is a solid one for river and mountain country. Castlewood puts you on the Clinch River with a year-round full-hookup park in Duffield and two standout state parks, Natural Tunnel and Breaks Interstate Park, within an easy drive. From here you can paddle or fish the Clinch, ride the Spearhead Trails ATV system out of St. Paul, hike the Sugar Hill Unit, and catch live music on the Crooked Road. It is a quiet, small-town region rather than a resort hub, so stock up in Abingdon or Bristol, but for RVers who want biodiverse rivers, Appalachian scenery, and uncrowded trails, Castlewood makes a genuine and affordable base.
What are the best RV parks near Castlewood, Virginia?
The best options split between a private full-hookup park and a set of scenic state parks. Clinch River Family Campground in nearby Duffield is the private anchor, with 27 full-hookup 30-amp sites, some 50-amp sites, a dump station, and year-round access right on the Clinch River. For public camping, Natural Tunnel State Park offers electric and water sites in its Cove View and Lover's Leap loops, and Breaks Interstate Park, the Grand Canyon of the South, has 138 sites including 75 full-hookup sites with sewer. Between them you can choose reliable hookups and slide-out room at the private park or gorge-rim scenery at the state parks, all within an easy drive of the river.
Do RV parks near Castlewood have full hookups?
Yes, at a few of them. Clinch River Family Campground offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 27 30-amp sites and a limited number of 50-amp sites. Breaks Interstate Park has 75 full-hookup sites with 30-amp and 50/30-amp electric plus water and sewer. Natural Tunnel State Park is a bit different: its Cove View and Lover's Leap loops provide electric and water hookups rather than full sewer at every site, with a dump station on the way out. So if full hookups are a must, book Clinch River Family Campground or a full-hookup loop at Breaks, and if electric and water are fine, Natural Tunnel is a great scenic pick.
How much does RV camping cost near Castlewood?
It stays reasonable. Clinch River Family Campground charges a flat rate around forty dollars a night for its full-hookup 30-amp sites, with a weekly deal where the seventh night is free and monthly rates for long stays. The Virginia state parks price their electric and full-hookup sites at standard state-park rates, and Breaks Interstate Park starts low for primitive sites and climbs for full-hookup and lodge options. Shoulder-season weekdays are cheaper and quieter at the state parks. Because this is a small-town river region, you can camp cheaply by leaning on electric sites and the private park's weekly rate rather than paying for resort amenities that this quiet corner of Virginia does not really offer.
How far ahead should I reserve an RV site near Castlewood?
It depends on the season and the park. For summer and fall color weekends, reserve Lover's Leap at Natural Tunnel and full-hookup sites at Breaks Interstate Park months ahead, since both take reservations up to 11 months out through reservevaparks.com and the park portals and the best sites go early. Cove View at Natural Tunnel is first-come only, so arrive early in the day on busy weekends. Clinch River Family Campground fills on warm-weather weekends too, so a week or more of lead time is smart, though it is open year-round and easier to grab midweek. On a spring or late-fall weekday you can often find a site with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Castlewood?
Late spring and fall are the sweet spots. Spring brings green hills and high water that is prime for paddling the Clinch, with the state-park campgrounds reopening in March. Fall delivers crisp days and strong Appalachian color across the ridges, which makes September and October weekends both beautiful and busy, so book early. Summer is the busiest river-float and ATV season and it runs warm and humid, so weekends fill and reservations help. Winter is cold with occasional snow, and the state parks scale back, so you would lean on the year-round Clinch River Family Campground. For the best mix of weather, scenery, and availability, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Castlewood?
Yes, with some care about which park you pick. Clinch River Family Campground is big-rig friendly with room for slide-outs and is the easiest approach, sitting near the main roads in Duffield. Natural Tunnel's Lover's Leap loop takes rigs up to 50 feet with 50-amp service, and Breaks Interstate Park has full-hookup sites that handle larger RVs. The catch is the mountain roads: the routes into Natural Tunnel and down into the gorge at Breaks are steeper and windier, so slow down for the grades and switchbacks and confirm your length against the specific loop when you book. Stick to the private park and the developed 50-amp loops and big-rig owners will do fine here.
Can I camp on the Clinch River near Castlewood?
Yes, and it is the main draw. Clinch River Family Campground sits right on the historic Clinch in nearby Duffield, with full-hookup sites, nature trails, and easy river access, and it is family-owned and open year-round. The Clinch is one of the most biodiverse rivers in North America, known for rare mussels and good smallmouth fishing, and outfitters like Clinch River Adventures and Clinch Life Outfitters rent kayaks, canoes, and tubes for a float. The Old Castlewood boat launch is a convenient public put-in. If you want to be right on the water with hookups, the Clinch River Family Campground is the pick, with the state parks a short drive away for scenery.
Is there state park camping near Castlewood?
Yes, two of Virginia's best are within reach. Natural Tunnel State Park, about 30 miles away near Duffield, camps beside an 850-foot natural railroad tunnel and offers electric and water sites in its Cove View and Lover's Leap loops, with a chairlift down to the gorge. Breaks Interstate Park, roughly 40 miles out on the Virginia-Kentucky line, is the Grand Canyon of the South, with 138 sites including 75 full-hookup sites, overlooks, and whitewater. Both reserve through their online portals up to 11 months ahead, with some first-come sites. The Clinch River State Park Sugar Hill Unit in St. Paul is day-use for hiking and paddling rather than camping.
Are RV parks near Castlewood pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Clinch River Family Campground is pet-friendly, as most private parks are, and the Virginia state parks at Natural Tunnel and Breaks allow leashed pets under standard state-park rules. Policies on where pets can go, leash length, and how many are allowed vary by park, so confirm the specifics when you book. There is plenty of room to walk a dog here, from the river paths near the campgrounds to the trails at the Sugar Hill Unit and the gorge-rim paths at Breaks. 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 Castlewood while camping?
Plenty, and most of it is outdoors. The Clinch River is the star, with kayaking, canoeing, tubing, and smallmouth fishing through local outfitters and the Old Castlewood boat launch. Hikers can tackle the Sugar Hill Loop and the trails at the Clinch River State Park Sugar Hill Unit in St. Paul, and ATV riders have the Spearhead Trails system, more than 400 miles of OHV trails based in St. Paul. Day-trip to Natural Tunnel State Park for its chairlift and gorge, or to Breaks Interstate Park for canyon overlooks and whitewater. Cap an evening at Ma and Pa's Restaurant, a Crooked Road music-trail stop with burgers, shakes, and live mountain music.
Is winter RV camping possible near Castlewood?
Yes, but your options narrow. Clinch River Family Campground stays open year-round with full hookups, making it the reliable cold-weather choice, and midweek stays are quiet. The state parks at Natural Tunnel and Breaks scale back their camping seasons, with Natural Tunnel generally running from early March into December, so they are not dependable winter options. Southwest Virginia winters are cold with occasional snow at these elevations, so if you camp then be ready to protect your water lines with heat tape or a heated hose and watch the forecast for mountain storms. For hookups and reliable services through winter, book Clinch River Family Campground and save the gorge campgrounds for the warmer months.
How do I get to the Castlewood RV parks in a big rig?
It is doable with some mountain driving. US-58 Alternate, the Trail of the Lonesome Pine, runs concurrent with SR-71 through the Castlewood area and is the main through route, with US-19 and the smaller state highways feeding the river towns. Most rigs come off I-81 near Abingdon to the southeast or up from the Bristol area. Clinch River Family Campground in Duffield sits near the main roads for an easy approach, while the roads into Natural Tunnel and down into the Breaks gorge are steeper and windier, so slow down and confirm your length against your loop. Fuel and propane are easiest in Abingdon or Bristol before you head into the smaller communities.
Is Castlewood a good base for exploring southwest Virginia by RV?
It is a solid one for river and mountain country. Castlewood puts you on the Clinch River with a year-round full-hookup park in Duffield and two standout state parks, Natural Tunnel and Breaks Interstate Park, within an easy drive. From here you can paddle or fish the Clinch, ride the Spearhead Trails ATV system out of St. Paul, hike the Sugar Hill Unit, and catch live music on the Crooked Road. It is a quiet, small-town region rather than a resort hub, so stock up in Abingdon or Bristol, but for RVers who want biodiverse rivers, Appalachian scenery, and uncrowded trails, Castlewood makes a genuine and affordable base.
Are there free dump stations in Castlewood?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Castlewood.
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