RV Parks In Clarksville, Virginia
36.6240° N, 78.5569° W
Quick Overview
Clarksville is Virginias only town that sits right on Buggs Island Lake, the local name for the 50,000-acre John H. Kerr Reservoir, and for RVers that lakeside setting is the whole draw. The Corps of Engineers backed up the Roanoke River here in 1952, leaving 800 miles of wooded shoreline stretching across southern Virginia and into North Carolina. You can camp on the water, fish for bass, catfish, crappie, and walleye, then tie up at the free Town Dock slips and walk into town for lunch. The camping here leans heavily public and shoreline, with a couple of small private full-hookup parks filling the gap for anyone who wants sewer at the site.
The anchor is Occoneechee State Park, a Virginia DCR park one mile east of town on Route 58 with 48 sites, 50-amp electric pedestals, central water fills, showers, and a dump station, plus cabins, boat ramps, and a concession renting pontoons and paddleboards. Reservations run through the Virginia State Parks system up to 11 months out, though about half the sites are assigned on arrival. On the public side you also have two US Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds: Longwood Park, about 10 minutes south on Highway 15 with electric and water sites for rigs up to 45 feet, and North Bend Park across near the dam in Boydton, the largest park on the lake with more than 200 sites. Both book through Recreation.gov.
For full hookups and a year-round stay, the private parks deliver. Lake Country RV Park offers full-hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer close to the lake, and Lev @ Little Lake is a small full-hookup spot with 50-amp service, sewer, and WiFi about three minutes from Occoneechee, the Bluestone boat ramp, and downtown. Big rigs do best at the private parks and at Longwood, which takes rigs to 45 feet, while Occoneechee caps most sites near 35 feet, so confirm your length when you book. Whether you want an electric site on the shoreline of Buggs Island Lake or a full-hookup pad you can settle into for the season, Clarksville gives you the range at reasonable rates. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Clarksville.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Clarksville
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Gear for Your Trip to Clarksville
All Dump Stations Near Clarksville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Longwood Park | 3.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Buffalo Park And Campground | 4.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rudds Creek Campground | 6.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Unc Faculty Campground At Kerr Lake | 11.9 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Henderson Point Campground | 13.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| North Bend Park & Campground | 13.7 mi | 4.8 | RV Park | Varies |
| Newby's RV Park | 13.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| North Bend Park & Campground | 14.0 mi | 4.8 | RV Park | Varies |
| Kerr Lake, County Line Camping | 15.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Kimball Point Campground | 15.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Longwood Park
3.3 miBuffalo Park And Campground
4.8 miRudds Creek Campground
6.8 miUnc Faculty Campground At Kerr Lake
11.9 miHenderson Point Campground
13.2 miNorth Bend Park & Campground
13.7 miNewby's RV Park
13.8 miNorth Bend Park & Campground
14.0 miKerr Lake, County Line Camping
15.0 miKimball Point Campground
15.0 miTraveling to Clarksville by RV
Getting to Clarksville with a big rig is easy. The town sits at the junction of US-58, a scenic route running east to west across southern Virginia, and US-15, which runs north to south. Both are open two-lane highways that handle long rigs without trouble. Occoneechee State Park is a straightforward mile east of town right on Route 58, and Longwood Park is a short run down Highway 15, so neither approach involves tight mountain grades. North Bend sits across the lake near the dam in Boydton, reached off US-58 and the local county roads.
The nearest sizable hubs are South Hill and South Boston in Virginia, both a short drive on US-58, with Durham, North Carolina roughly an hour and a half south for a bigger-city supply run or a fly-and-rent trip. Fuel, groceries, and basic services are all available in and around Clarksville, and boat rentals are at the Clarksville Marina and at Occoneechee if you want to get on the water. Confirm your rig length when you reserve, since Occoneechee caps most sites near 35 feet while the private parks and Longwood, on the Recreation.gov system, take larger rigs.
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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 Clarksville, 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 Clarksville
Clarksville is an affordable place to camp, especially if you lean public. Occoneechee State Park charges roughly $35 to $45 a night for electric sites depending on Virginia residency, and the Corps campgrounds at Longwood and North Bend run in a similar low-to-moderate band, generally in the $20s to $30s for electric sites, with some premium waterfront pads higher. Those public parks give you shoreline scenery at budget rates, though they offer electric or electric-plus-water rather than full sewer, and they close for the cold months. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, cost more per night for full hookups but stay open year-round and often offer weekly or monthly discounts that lower the effective nightly rate for longer stays. Overall you can camp cheaply on the water in the warm season or pay a bit more for full hookups and winter access, and the small-town grocery and fuel prices keep the rest of your trip reasonable.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Clarksville
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Best Time to Visit Clarksville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
30F - 50F
Crowds: Low
Cold with occasional snow; the Corps campgrounds close and Occoneechee runs only Loop C, so lean on a year-round private park like Lake Country RV Park or Lev @ Little Lake.
Spring
Mar - May
48F - 70F
Crowds: Medium
Mild and green before the summer crowds; Occoneechee Loop C is open from March and Longwood opens in early April, so shoulder-season sites are easy to find midweek.
Summer
Jun - Aug
68F - 88F
Crowds: High
Hot, humid, and the busiest lake season with afternoon thunderstorms; reserve shoreline sites well ahead for weekends and the bass tournaments the lake is known for.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48F - 72F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp and colorful with good fishing and quieter weekdays; one of the best windows to camp on Buggs Island Lake before the public parks close for winter.
Explore the Clarksville Area
Here is how we would plan Clarksville. Base at Occoneechee or Longwood for shoreline camping, then run into downtown by road or by boat, since the Town Dock has 20 free day-use slips at the foot of the bridge where you can tie up and walk to the shops and restaurants. Occoneechee assigns about half its sites on arrival, so grab the reservable half early through the Virginia State Parks system for summer weekends and the bass tournaments the lake hosts. The Corps parks, Longwood and North Bend, book through Recreation.gov and fill on holiday weekends, so plan a few weeks out in peak season. If you want full hookups or a winter stay, go private with Lake Country RV Park or Lev @ Little Lake, because the public campgrounds offer electric or electric-plus-water rather than sewer at the site, and the Corps parks close from late fall through early spring. Bring your fishing gear and check out the lighted bridge in town, which draws anglers for nighttime fishing you will not find many other places.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Clarksville
What are the best RV parks near Clarksville, Virginia?
Clarksville camping splits between public shoreline parks and small private full-hookup spots. The anchor is Occoneechee State Park, a Virginia DCR park a mile east of town with 50-amp electric sites, a dump station, cabins, and boat ramps on Buggs Island Lake. Two US Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds add hundreds more sites: Longwood Park, about 10 minutes down Highway 15 with electric and water hookups, and North Bend Park near the dam in Boydton, the largest park on the lake. For full hookups, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake are private parks with water, electric, and sewer at the site. Between them you can camp on the water cheaply or settle into a full-hookup pad.
Do Clarksville RV parks have full hookups?
Full hookups here come from the private parks. Lake Country RV Park offers full-hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer near Kerr Lake, and Lev @ Little Lake is a small full-hookup spot with 50-amp service, sewer, and WiFi about three minutes from Occoneechee and downtown. The public campgrounds are different. Occoneechee State Park has 50-amp electric pedestals with central water fills and a dump station rather than water or sewer at each site, and the Corps parks at Longwood and North Bend offer electric, with Longwood adding water hookups. So if full hookups are a must, book one of the private parks; if you are happy with electric and a dump station in exchange for shoreline scenery and lower rates, the public campgrounds are a great choice.
How much does RV camping cost in Clarksville?
It depends on public versus private. Occoneechee State Park runs roughly $35 to $45 a night for electric sites depending on Virginia residency, and the Corps campgrounds at Longwood and North Bend sit in a similar low-to-moderate band, generally in the $20s to $30s for electric sites, with premium waterfront pads a bit higher. Those public parks give you shoreline scenery at budget rates, but they close for winter and offer electric rather than full sewer. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, cost more per night for full hookups but stay open year-round and often offer weekly or monthly discounts that lower the effective nightly rate for longer stays. Overall, this is an affordable lake to camp on.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Clarksville?
It varies by season and park. Occoneechee State Park takes reservations up to 11 months out through the Virginia State Parks system, but only about half its sites are reservable and the rest are assigned on arrival, so book the reservable half early for summer weekends and the bass tournaments the lake hosts. The Corps parks, Longwood and North Bend, book through Recreation.gov and fill on holiday weekends, so a few weeks of lead time is wise in peak season. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, are smaller, so call ahead for summer stays. On a spring or fall weekday you can often find a shoreline site with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Clarksville?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots, with mild temperatures, green or colorful scenery, good fishing, and quieter midweek campgrounds. Summer is the busiest lake season and it is hot and humid with afternoon thunderstorms, so shoreline sites fill on weekends and you should reserve well ahead, especially around the tournaments Buggs Island Lake is known for. Winter is cold with occasional snow, and the Corps campgrounds close while Occoneechee runs only its Loop C from March through December, so cold-weather campers lean on a year-round private park. For the best mix of weather, fishing, and availability, target the shoulder seasons of April and May or September and October.
Can big rigs camp near Clarksville?
Yes, with a little planning. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, handle big rigs with full-hookup sites, and Longwood Park, the Corps campground on Highway 15, takes rigs up to 45 feet with electric and water hookups. Occoneechee State Park is the tighter option, since most of its sites cap near 35 feet, so confirm your length when you book there. The approaches are friendly: Clarksville sits at the junction of US-58 and US-15, both open two-lane highways without tight mountain grades, and Occoneechee is a straightforward mile east of town. Confirm your rig length and site type at reservation and big-rig owners will find comfortable options.
Can I camp right on Buggs Island Lake near Clarksville?
Yes, shoreline camping is the whole point here. Occoneechee State Park sits on the lake a mile east of town with some sites right on the water, boat ramps, and a concession renting pontoons and paddleboards. Longwood Park, a US Army Corps of Engineers campground about 10 minutes south, is on the reservoir shoreline with electric and water sites, and North Bend Park near the dam is the largest park on the lake with more than 200 sites. Buggs Island Lake, officially the John H. Kerr Reservoir, spans 50,000 acres with 800 miles of wooded shoreline, so there is plenty of water for fishing, boating, and swimming. Reserve waterfront sites early for summer and tournament weekends, since they fill first.
Is there Corps of Engineers camping near Clarksville?
Yes, and it is a big part of the local camping scene. The US Army Corps of Engineers runs two campgrounds on the John H. Kerr Reservoir near Clarksville. Longwood Park, about 10 minutes south on Highway 15, offers 66 sites for RVs up to 45 feet with electric and water hookups, hot showers, flush toilets, and a dump station, open early April through late October. North Bend Park, near the dam and Visitor Assistance Center in nearby Boydton, is the largest park on the lake with more than 200 sites and similar amenities. Both book through Recreation.gov and put you right on the shoreline at reasonable rates, so they are a strong choice for warm-season lake camping.
Are Clarksville RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, welcome pets as most small full-hookup parks do, and the public campgrounds allow leashed pets under standard Virginia state park and Corps of Engineers rules. Policies on the number of pets, leash length, and where pets are allowed vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the state park where some areas may be restricted. The trails and shoreline at Occoneechee and around Buggs Island Lake give dogs plenty of room to walk. 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 who rolls in.
What is there to do around Clarksville while camping?
Plenty, and most of it is on or near the water. Buggs Island Lake offers bass, catfish, crappie, and walleye fishing, boating, water skiing, sailing, and swimming, with boat and pontoon rentals at the Clarksville Marina and at Occoneechee. The lighted bridge in town draws anglers for nighttime fishing, a genuinely unusual feature. Occoneechee State Park adds hiking, biking, and horseback riding, and downtown Clarksville has shops and restaurants you can reach by road or by tying up at the free Town Dock slips. History buffs can visit Prestwould Plantation, a National Historic Landmark north of town, and the MacCallum More Museum and Gardens in nearby Chase City. It is an easy base for mixing lake days with small-town wandering.
Is winter RV camping possible near Clarksville?
Yes, but your options narrow. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, stay open year-round with full hookups, making them the reliable cold-weather choice, and off-season rates are often lower. The public campgrounds mostly close: the Corps parks at Longwood and North Bend shut from late fall, and Occoneechee runs only its Loop C from March through December, so the state park is thin in the coldest months. Clarksville winters are cold with occasional snow, so if you camp then be ready to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose and plan travel around winter storms. For hookups and reliable services through winter, book one of the private parks; for shoreline camping, wait for the public parks to reopen in spring.
How do I get to Clarksville RV parks in a big rig?
It is an easy approach. Clarksville sits at the junction of US-58, which runs east to west across southern Virginia, and US-15, which runs north to south, both open two-lane highways that handle long rigs without tight mountain grades. Occoneechee State Park is a straightforward mile east of town on Route 58, and Longwood Park is a short run down Highway 15, so neither involves difficult driving. North Bend sits across the lake near the dam in Boydton, reached off US-58 and county roads. The nearest hubs for fuel and supplies are South Hill and South Boston in Virginia, with Durham, North Carolina about an hour and a half south. Confirm your rig length when booking, since Occoneechee caps most sites near 35 feet.
Is Clarksville a good base for exploring southern Virginia by RV?
It is a strong one. Clarksville puts you on the shore of the 50,000-acre Buggs Island Lake with public and private camping, easy access on US-58 and US-15, and a walkable small downtown you can even reach by boat. From here you can fish or boat the reservoir, explore Occoneechee State Park, and day-trip to historic sites like Prestwould Plantation or the gardens at MacCallum More in Chase City. South Hill and South Boston are close for supplies, and the North Carolina line and the rest of the Kerr Lake shoreline are just across the water. For RVers who want lake recreation, reasonable prices, and a genuine small-town base rather than a resort strip, Clarksville is an easy recommendation.
What are the best RV parks near Clarksville, Virginia?
Clarksville camping splits between public shoreline parks and small private full-hookup spots. The anchor is Occoneechee State Park, a Virginia DCR park a mile east of town with 50-amp electric sites, a dump station, cabins, and boat ramps on Buggs Island Lake. Two US Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds add hundreds more sites: Longwood Park, about 10 minutes down Highway 15 with electric and water hookups, and North Bend Park near the dam in Boydton, the largest park on the lake. For full hookups, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake are private parks with water, electric, and sewer at the site. Between them you can camp on the water cheaply or settle into a full-hookup pad.
Do Clarksville RV parks have full hookups?
Full hookups here come from the private parks. Lake Country RV Park offers full-hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer near Kerr Lake, and Lev @ Little Lake is a small full-hookup spot with 50-amp service, sewer, and WiFi about three minutes from Occoneechee and downtown. The public campgrounds are different. Occoneechee State Park has 50-amp electric pedestals with central water fills and a dump station rather than water or sewer at each site, and the Corps parks at Longwood and North Bend offer electric, with Longwood adding water hookups. So if full hookups are a must, book one of the private parks; if you are happy with electric and a dump station in exchange for shoreline scenery and lower rates, the public campgrounds are a great choice.
How much does RV camping cost in Clarksville?
It depends on public versus private. Occoneechee State Park runs roughly $35 to $45 a night for electric sites depending on Virginia residency, and the Corps campgrounds at Longwood and North Bend sit in a similar low-to-moderate band, generally in the $20s to $30s for electric sites, with premium waterfront pads a bit higher. Those public parks give you shoreline scenery at budget rates, but they close for winter and offer electric rather than full sewer. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, cost more per night for full hookups but stay open year-round and often offer weekly or monthly discounts that lower the effective nightly rate for longer stays. Overall, this is an affordable lake to camp on.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Clarksville?
It varies by season and park. Occoneechee State Park takes reservations up to 11 months out through the Virginia State Parks system, but only about half its sites are reservable and the rest are assigned on arrival, so book the reservable half early for summer weekends and the bass tournaments the lake hosts. The Corps parks, Longwood and North Bend, book through Recreation.gov and fill on holiday weekends, so a few weeks of lead time is wise in peak season. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, are smaller, so call ahead for summer stays. On a spring or fall weekday you can often find a shoreline site with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Clarksville?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots, with mild temperatures, green or colorful scenery, good fishing, and quieter midweek campgrounds. Summer is the busiest lake season and it is hot and humid with afternoon thunderstorms, so shoreline sites fill on weekends and you should reserve well ahead, especially around the tournaments Buggs Island Lake is known for. Winter is cold with occasional snow, and the Corps campgrounds close while Occoneechee runs only its Loop C from March through December, so cold-weather campers lean on a year-round private park. For the best mix of weather, fishing, and availability, target the shoulder seasons of April and May or September and October.
Can big rigs camp near Clarksville?
Yes, with a little planning. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, handle big rigs with full-hookup sites, and Longwood Park, the Corps campground on Highway 15, takes rigs up to 45 feet with electric and water hookups. Occoneechee State Park is the tighter option, since most of its sites cap near 35 feet, so confirm your length when you book there. The approaches are friendly: Clarksville sits at the junction of US-58 and US-15, both open two-lane highways without tight mountain grades, and Occoneechee is a straightforward mile east of town. Confirm your rig length and site type at reservation and big-rig owners will find comfortable options.
Can I camp right on Buggs Island Lake near Clarksville?
Yes, shoreline camping is the whole point here. Occoneechee State Park sits on the lake a mile east of town with some sites right on the water, boat ramps, and a concession renting pontoons and paddleboards. Longwood Park, a US Army Corps of Engineers campground about 10 minutes south, is on the reservoir shoreline with electric and water sites, and North Bend Park near the dam is the largest park on the lake with more than 200 sites. Buggs Island Lake, officially the John H. Kerr Reservoir, spans 50,000 acres with 800 miles of wooded shoreline, so there is plenty of water for fishing, boating, and swimming. Reserve waterfront sites early for summer and tournament weekends, since they fill first.
Is there Corps of Engineers camping near Clarksville?
Yes, and it is a big part of the local camping scene. The US Army Corps of Engineers runs two campgrounds on the John H. Kerr Reservoir near Clarksville. Longwood Park, about 10 minutes south on Highway 15, offers 66 sites for RVs up to 45 feet with electric and water hookups, hot showers, flush toilets, and a dump station, open early April through late October. North Bend Park, near the dam and Visitor Assistance Center in nearby Boydton, is the largest park on the lake with more than 200 sites and similar amenities. Both book through Recreation.gov and put you right on the shoreline at reasonable rates, so they are a strong choice for warm-season lake camping.
Are Clarksville RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, welcome pets as most small full-hookup parks do, and the public campgrounds allow leashed pets under standard Virginia state park and Corps of Engineers rules. Policies on the number of pets, leash length, and where pets are allowed vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the state park where some areas may be restricted. The trails and shoreline at Occoneechee and around Buggs Island Lake give dogs plenty of room to walk. 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 who rolls in.
What is there to do around Clarksville while camping?
Plenty, and most of it is on or near the water. Buggs Island Lake offers bass, catfish, crappie, and walleye fishing, boating, water skiing, sailing, and swimming, with boat and pontoon rentals at the Clarksville Marina and at Occoneechee. The lighted bridge in town draws anglers for nighttime fishing, a genuinely unusual feature. Occoneechee State Park adds hiking, biking, and horseback riding, and downtown Clarksville has shops and restaurants you can reach by road or by tying up at the free Town Dock slips. History buffs can visit Prestwould Plantation, a National Historic Landmark north of town, and the MacCallum More Museum and Gardens in nearby Chase City. It is an easy base for mixing lake days with small-town wandering.
Is winter RV camping possible near Clarksville?
Yes, but your options narrow. The private parks, Lake Country RV Park and Lev @ Little Lake, stay open year-round with full hookups, making them the reliable cold-weather choice, and off-season rates are often lower. The public campgrounds mostly close: the Corps parks at Longwood and North Bend shut from late fall, and Occoneechee runs only its Loop C from March through December, so the state park is thin in the coldest months. Clarksville winters are cold with occasional snow, so if you camp then be ready to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose and plan travel around winter storms. For hookups and reliable services through winter, book one of the private parks; for shoreline camping, wait for the public parks to reopen in spring.
How do I get to Clarksville RV parks in a big rig?
It is an easy approach. Clarksville sits at the junction of US-58, which runs east to west across southern Virginia, and US-15, which runs north to south, both open two-lane highways that handle long rigs without tight mountain grades. Occoneechee State Park is a straightforward mile east of town on Route 58, and Longwood Park is a short run down Highway 15, so neither involves difficult driving. North Bend sits across the lake near the dam in Boydton, reached off US-58 and county roads. The nearest hubs for fuel and supplies are South Hill and South Boston in Virginia, with Durham, North Carolina about an hour and a half south. Confirm your rig length when booking, since Occoneechee caps most sites near 35 feet.
Is Clarksville a good base for exploring southern Virginia by RV?
It is a strong one. Clarksville puts you on the shore of the 50,000-acre Buggs Island Lake with public and private camping, easy access on US-58 and US-15, and a walkable small downtown you can even reach by boat. From here you can fish or boat the reservoir, explore Occoneechee State Park, and day-trip to historic sites like Prestwould Plantation or the gardens at MacCallum More in Chase City. South Hill and South Boston are close for supplies, and the North Carolina line and the rest of the Kerr Lake shoreline are just across the water. For RVers who want lake recreation, reasonable prices, and a genuine small-town base rather than a resort strip, Clarksville is an easy recommendation.
Are there free dump stations in Clarksville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Clarksville.
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