Death Valley RV Camping
Death Valley RV Camping has nine campgrounds with
varying seasons and facilities. The National Park Service campgrounds
do not provide hookups for recreational vehicles. RV hookups are only
available at the concession-run Stovepipe Wells RV Park and the privately
owned Panamint Springs resort. Due to the extreme heat during the long
summer, campgrounds in the low elevations close except the Furnace Creek
Campground. Several higher elevation campgrounds and camping areas in
the mountains stay open year round. Campgrounds that are open all year
are Furnace Creek, Mesquite Spring,
Wildrose, and for tent camping only there is the Emigrant campground.
Reservations for the Furnace Creek Campground can be made through the
National Recr
Furnace Creek is the main hub in Death Valley National Park
with the visitor center and lodging at the Furnace Creek Ranch and Furnace
Creek Inn. It was originally built as a working ranch in the 1880s and
today it is a complete resort in the middle of the desert. There is a
general store and gift shop, three restaurants and a saloon, a sandwich
shop, fuel, propane, ATM, post office, showers, natural spring-fed swimming
pool, the world's lowest golf course, tennis courts, picnic tables, a
paved airstrip, dump station, and the Borax Museum. At Stovepipe Wells
Village, Panamint Springs, and in the towns adjacent to the park there
are motels, camper stores, restaurants, dump stations, fuel and auto services
available.
Death Valley National Park is open year round. Peak visitor
season is through the winter and spring months. The weather is generally
sunny, clear, and dry throughout the year. From November through March
the temperatures are mild but there is an occasional winter storm. Summers
are extremely hot and dry with temperatures commonly above 120 degrees
Fahrenheit. In mid October the temperature begins to drop below 100 degrees
Fahrenheit and about the middle of April the temperature starts getting
above 100 degrees. No matter what time of the year you visit sun protection
is a must.
Click any picture to see a bigger
version.

The Borax Museum at Furnace Creek Visitor Center tells the
story of the twenty-mule teams and the valley's history. Outside behind
the museum in a fenced in area you can walk around farming, mining, machinery,
and railroad displays. These rusting remains are over 120 years old. All
over Death Valley there are mining tunnels. Some tunnels are right off
the road that you can just walk to. There are four distinct ecological
zones each determined by climate and elevation within Death Valley. Mustard
Canyon is 1.7 mile one-way dirt road surrounded by deep yellow colored
canyon walls.
Bicycles can be used in parking areas and on all park roads
that are open to public vehicular traffic. They can also be used on routes
that have been designated for bicycle use in developed areas such as the
path between the visitor center and the Harmony Borax Works. Death Valley
has more than 785 miles of roads including hundreds of miles suitable
for mountain biking. Bikes are not allowed on closed roads, service roads,
off of roadways, or on any trails. Some of the funnest
mountain biking we have done was in the Black Mountains of South Dakota.
Jason's thoughts - Pay attention
to the notes above about biking. Most people want to BIKE the prettiest
parts of the park but the only way to do that is to go on a TRAIL and
bikes are not permitted. Furnace creek is the only place I have ever been
that had a real GIANT normal looking swimming pool but was completely
free of chlorine. It is actually spring fed with fresh water and filtered
right out again and back into the water table. Gorgeous. Dry campers like
us can swim then shower for $5 with a shower pass purchased up front.
Sweet.
Kelly's thoughts - Thank goodness for Furnace
Creek Ranch. What a haven after the wind storm at the Sand Dunes and the
54 mile washboard drive to and from The Racetrack.
Travel Info - There are very few fuel stops in Death Valley and
fuel is condiderably more per gallon within the park. Some gas stations
may be closed or not in service anymore so fill up outside the park. Death
Valley National Park is located in southeastern California with a little
part of it in southwestern Nevada. Death Valley is located about 200 miles
NE of Los Angeles and 120 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Map location of
Death
Valley National Park - Death Valley RV Camping.
Click for more information on the Sand Dunes,
Zabriskie Point, and Salt Creek.
Click for information on backcountry
camping, driving, and hiking.
Click for information on Sand Dunes and Scotty's Castle.
Click for information on the wildflowers of Death Valley.
|