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Kim Lipker - The Best in Tent Camping: Colorado: A Guide for Car Campers Who Hate RVs, Concrete Slabs, and Loud Portable Stereos

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Kim Lipker The Best in Tent Camping: Colorado: A Guide for Car Campers Who Hate RVs, Concrete Slabs, and Loud Portable Stereos
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The Best in Tent Camping: Colorado: A Guide for Car Campers Who Hate RVs, Concrete Slabs, and Loud Portable Stereos: summary, description and annotation

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The Colorado landscape is rich with opportunities for tent camping. Millions of acres of public lands are dotted with hundreds of campgroundsbut you probably only have a precious amount of limited time. Which campgrounds do you choose? Where should you go? When should you go? Thats what this book is forto help you make the wisest use of your time in the wilds of the Centennial State.

In the mountains of Colorado, the Rockies, camping is primarily a summertime activity. When the snow melts and the rivers run highthats when tent campers start longing for the crisp mornings, crystal-clear days, and cool nights by the campfire that are part of a Rocky Mountain camp out. Not to mention wilderness hiking, trout fishing, mountain biking, and whitewater boating.

In other parts of Colorado, the tent camping season is extended. You can pitch your tent year-round in the canyon country of the Western Slope, along the prairie lakes of the east, and in some of the lower elevation state parks. No matter where you go or when you go, the scenic beauty of Colorado will never fail to please the eye.

Before embarking on a trip, take some time to prepare. Many of the best tent campgrounds are at the far end of a gravel road. This isolationpart of their attraction for many campersmakes for a long supply or gear run if you are unprepared. Call ahead and ask for a park map, brochure, or other information to help you plan your trip. Make reservations wherever applicable, especially at popular state parks. Ask questions. Ask more questions. The more questions you ask, the fewer surprises youll get. There are other times, however, when youll grab your gear and this book, hop in the car, and just wing it. This can be an adventure in its own right.

Each campground has been rated on six criteria: beauty, privacy, spaciousness, quiet, security and cleanliness. In addition, campground profiles include vital statistics about each location (fees, restrictions, operating season, amenities, contact information, driving directions and reservation information, to name a few) that help campers plan the perfect trip without unwanted surprises. GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) users will also appreciate that each campgrounds precise latitude and longitude waypoints are included.

Tent campers will also enjoy a detailed map of each campground included in the site profile. Making reservations online or blindly over the phone can put a camper miles from the restroom, stranded with no shade, or in the middle of a busy campground trail. Maps will help campers avoid those pitfalls, and wherever possible the author has even recommended specific campsites for maximum privacy, spaciousness, or beauty.

Although theres never a shortage for things to do in Colorados outdoors, campground summaries in the book also suggest attractions and activities near each campground. Fishing, hiking, biking, paddling, and scenic drives in the immediate area are recommended to ensure that campers know the basic lay of the land and have a jumping-off point to plan their trip.

Whether its a large family looking to get away for the weekend, a scout troop that wants to try something new, or a serious outdoors enthusiast searching for a place to adventure for the day and crash for the night, The Best in Tent Camping:Colorado has done all the work in finding those special, out-of-the-way campgrounds, and gives campers the tools to plan an amazing, unforgettable camping trip.

Kim Lipker: author's other books


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MAP LEGEND OVERVIEW -MAP KEY Other Books by Kim Lipker 60 Hikes - photo 1

MAP LEGEND OVERVIEW -MAP KEY Other Books by Kim Lipker 60 Hikes within - photo 2

MAP LEGEND

OVERVIEW -MAP KEY Other Books by Kim Lipker 60 Hikes within 60 Miles - photo 3

OVERVIEW -MAP KEY
Other Books by Kim Lipker

60 Hikes within 60 Miles: Denver and Boulder

The Unofficial Guide to Bed and Breakfasts and Country Inns in the Rockies

Day & Overnight Hikes: Rocky Mountains National Park (2008)

Other Books by Johnny Molloy

Backcountry Fishing: A Guide for Hikers, Paddlers, and Backpackpackers

Beach and Coastal Camping in Florida

Beach and Coastal Camping in the Southeast

The Best in Tent Camping: The Carolinas

The Best in Tent Camping: Florida

The Best in Tent Camping: Georgia

The Best in Tent Camping: Kentucky

The Best in Tent Camping: The Southern Appalachian and Smoky Mountains

The Best in Tent Camping: Tennessee

The Best in Tent Camping: West Virginia

The Best in Tent Camping: Wisconsin (with Kevin Revolinski)

Canoeing & Kayaking Florida (with Liz Carter)

Canoeing & Kayaking Guide to Kentucky (with Bob Sehlinger)

Day & Overnight Hikes: Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Day & Overnight Hikes: Kentuckys Sheltowee Trace

Day & Overnight Hikes: Shenandoah National Park

Day & Overnight Hikes: West Virginias Monongahela National Forest

Exploring Mammoth Cave National Park

50 Hikes in the North Georgia Mountains

50 Hikes in the Ozarks

50 Hikes in South Carolina

From the Swamp to the Keys: A Paddle through Florida History

Hiking the Florida Trail: 1,100 Miles, 78 Days, and Two Pairs of Boots

The Hiking Trails of Floridas National Forests, Parks, and Preserves (with Sandra Friend)

Land Between the Lakes Outdoor Recreation Handbook

Long Trails of the Southeast

Mount Rogers Outdoor Recreation Handbook

A Paddlers Guide to Everglades National Park

60 Hikes within 60 Miles: Austin and San Antonio (with Tom Taylor)

60 Hikes within 60 Miles: Nashville

Trial by Trail: Backpacking in the Smoky Mountains

Visit Johnny Molloys Web site:

www.johnnymolloy.com

For John Bland who got it all startedJM Copyright 2007 by Johnny Molloy All - photo 4

For John Bland, who got it all started.JM

Copyright 2007 by Johnny Molloy

All rights reserved

Printed in the United States of America

Published by Menasha Ridge Press

Distributed by Publishers Group West

First edition, second printing 2010

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

The best in tent camping, Colorado: a guide for car campers who hate RVs, concrete slabs, and loud portable stereos. -- 4th ed./Kim Lipker and Johnny Molloy.

p. cm.

Rev. ed. of: Best in tent camping, Colorado/Johnny Molloy. 3rd ed. 2004.

Includes bibliographical references.

ISBN-13: 978-0-89732-645-2 (alk. paper)

ISBN-10: 0-89732-645-8 (alk. paper)

1. CampingColoradoGuidebooks. 2. Camp sites, facilities, etc.ColoradoGuidebooks. 3. ColoradoGuidebooks. I. Lipker, Kim, 1969II. Molloy, Johnny, 1961III. Molloy, Johnny, 1961Best in tent camping, Colorado.

GV191.42.C6M65 2007

917.88068--dc22

2007017800

Cover and text design by Ian Szymkowiak, Palace Press International, Inc.

Cover photo by J. C. Leacock/Alamy

Cartography by Steve Jones and Johnny Molloy

Menasha Ridge Press

P.O. Box 43673

Birmingham, Alabama 35243

www.menasharidge.com

COLORADO CAMPGROUND AWARDS

BEST FOR PRIVACY

BEST FOR SPACIOUSNESS

BEST FOR QUIET

BEST FOR SECURITY

BEST FOR CLEANLINESS

BEST FOR WHEELCHAIRS

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE FOLLOWING PEOPLE who helped with the fourth-edition update: Johnny Molloy, Bruce Becker, Russell Helms, Molly Merkle, Karen Lipker, Abby Balfany, Jen Janssen, Darcy Blaisdell, Alex, Anna, and Emma Lipker; Ruth and Roger Lipker; Diane Stanko and Marty Martinez; and finally, the helpful folks at the National Park Service, the USDA Forest Service, and the Colorado State Parks.

Kim Lipker

THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING FOR their help with the original editions of the guide: Joe Mayer, Sam Berry, Becky Anderson, Kate Brannan, Paul Welschinger, Susan Webster, Margaret Albrecht, Bryan Delay, James Herbaugh, Pat Molloy, Bill Armstrong, Keith Stinnett, Bryan Hatfield, Michael and Nan Wolfenbarger, Nelle Molloy, Larry of Castle Rock; Beverly, Wilbert, and Craig Spieker of Castle Rock, who made me feel at home; Regi Roberts, John Cox, and David Zaczyk, master of the semicolon.

Johnny Molloy

PREFACE

O H, WHAT A JOY IT WAS TO RESEARCH THIS BOOK! In the beginning, the task of finding the 50 best campgrounds in Colorado seemed daunting, for there are hundreds of campgrounds located among the millions of acres of national- and state-forest land, national parks and monuments, and other public lands. But the months of exploring Colorados varied landscape turned into a journey through a scenic wonderland. The Rockies come to mind first, where craggy, snow-covered mountains tower over verdant meadows, cool alpine lakes reflect deep forests and cobalt skies, and snow-fed mountain streams crash down narrow valleys. But there are other sides of Colorado: the amazing cliff dwellings of Mesa Verde, the chasm of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, the alluring reservoirs of the plains, the immense Great Sand Dunes backed against the Sangre de Cristo Range, the white water of the Arkansas River, the red-rock country of the Uncompahgre Plateau, and more.

After seeing this tremendous variation, I wanted the reader to be able to combine enjoying these sights and with having a quality camping experience at a good campground. I toured the states natural and historic features by day, then typed up on-site reports from the nearby camps where I stayed, using a computer powered by my car battery.

Each days experience left me looking forward to the next day, to see if I could find campgrounds to match the beauty of the landscape. Spells of cold and rain and wrong turns and long drives to campgrounds that failed to make the book could not overwhelm the sense of awe I felt while surveying the real Colorado. The subject material overwhelmed the actual physical process of finding the best campgrounds. In other words, researching Colorado was a blast!

And it can be for you, too, pitching your tent at 3,500 feet in the plains or 12,000 feet in the mountains, and just about every elevation and situation in between. Here, you can relax in attractive settings. Beyond the campgrounds you can hike canyons, climb fourteeners, raft wild rivers, fish remote trout streams, mountain bike tabletop mesas, boat reservoirs, go caving, and recall Colorados history. Combine this book and a slice of your precious time, then do a little exploring of your own.

Johnny Molloy

A NOTE ABOUT THE FOURTH EDITION

Revising something that is otherwise perfect is both an honor and a daunting task. I was approached as a Rocky Mountain expert to update existing profiles, delete old campgrounds, and add new ones. We also reorganized the book according to more commonly known regions (around these parts, at least), refined the maps, and wrote a more thorough introduction to tent campingall while keeping the same friendly tone and accuracy for which Johnny Molloy is known. We hope youll like the changes, and we encourage you to get out and find your favorite room with a view in Colorado.

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