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San Mateo Campground
near San Clemente California
The San Mateo Campground we stayed in is part of San Onofre
State Beach which has 4 sections covering 3,000+ acres of land along the
gorgeous San Diego Counties northern coast. California leases the area
from the U.S. Marine Corps. to give people a chance at the outstanding
beaches, cool topography, and a wetlands preserve for studies and hiking.
All sections are open year-round: Trestles Beach, San Onofre Bluffs Campground,
San Mateo Campground, and San Mateo Wetlands Natural Preserve with San
Onofre Surf Beach.
We stayed at the San Mateo Campground in August and the
temperature was perfect for camping. You can hike, bike and beach near
the famous surfing spot called Trestles Beach. We walked to the beaches
during the day though the beach sand is so grainy it is rough walking
the sand further than say a mile. Don't leave kids unattended on these
beaches even for a minute. The campground is totally uncrowded with each
spot being fairly large with huge trees and foliage everywhere. It has
69 sites complete with electrical, sewage and water hook-ups, picnic tables,
fire rings, dump station and a limit of 8 visitors per site.
You can do all sorts of things from the campground &
beach like bicycling, sunbathing, bird watching, bunny chasing, swimming,
kite flying, surfing, hiking, fishing and more. There are ranger talks
in the summer at San Mateo's 200 seat amphitheater. Trestles Beach &
San Mateo Wetlands Natural Preserve offers some of the finest surfing
in all of California. There are 125 parking spots near intersection of
Cristianitos Road and El Camino Real in South San Clemente. From here
you can walk a 1/2 mile to Trestles Beach through the Wetlands Natural
Preserve. There were a lot of birds in the preserve but it is day-use
only: In fact from Trestles all the way south to the San Onofre Surf Beach,
there is no overnight camping.
Jason's thoughts - San Mateo campground
in San Clemente had the same expensive price and general rules as other
state beach campgrounds but a much better experience than most. Huge campsites,
hot showers for $.25 for 2.5 minutes, clean facilities, and ranger sessions
make it fun. Be prepared to hear LOUD helicopter traffic and bombs exploding
during the day from local military base. We took a dirt path right from
the campground up a steep hill for 1.2 miles directly to the ocean. The
beaches are really just for surfers and boogie boarders though because
the entire first 50 feet of shore is solid milk jug size to 55 gallon
drum size boulders and sharp rocks. You definitely need water shoes. Be
prepared for crowded surfing in this popular area. In town there is great
pier, typical shops, showers, and a much better beach for swimming along
with the usual local color.
Kelly's thoughts - The San Mateo Campground is
better than Silver Strand, by far, but summer is still full of locals
partying till late. It is more remote looking giving you the feeling that
you are really away from it al,; especially when there are warnings that
you are in Cougar country. Interesting walk along the service road to
Trestles. There are warnings from the locals that this beach is for local
surfers only and no kooks allowed. Basically, this break is like 1st peak
at Sebastian Inlet in Florida. Really, if you don't know how to surf don't
get in the line up. Go to the San Clemente Pier where the attitudes are
more mellow and the waves more abundant.
Travel Info - San Mateo Campground is one mile east of I-5 on
Cristianitos Road, just south of the city of south San Clemente. I-5 exit
Cristianitos on the border of USMC Camp Pendleton. Map location of San
Clemente.
Click for California beaches
or full-time rv diary.
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