Sunday, July 9, 2017

Free RV Camping - I-25/US 160 (Pueblo to Pagosa Springs)

This post includes Free or low-cost RV campsites from Pueblo along I-25, then west along US 160 through the San Luis Valley and over Wolf Creek Pass to Pagosa Springs.  US 160 from Pagosa to Cortez is in a separate post.
                       
If you are headed south on I-25 to US 160 between late April and mid-October and have a Federal Senior pass, you can stay at the only campground in San Isabel National Forest with electrical hookups for only $12/night ($24/night without a Senior Pass).  La Vista is one of our favorite Forest Service campgrounds in southeastern Colorado, as it is on little Lake Isabel, built by the CCC in the 1930s.  There are 8 water taps for 19 ponderosa pine-shaded RV sites that range from 25’ to 45’ long, but electricity is only 15A (summer nights are cool in the Wet Mtns.) and there is no dump.  Several adjacent campgrounds have non-electric RV sites.  From I-25 Exit 74 at Colorado City (between Pueblo and Walsenburg), take CO 165 12 miles west to CR 371, turn left, then follow the signs a mile to the San Isabel Recreation Area campgrounds.  There is a very nice CDOT rest area at Exit 74 where we frequently stop, but it unfortunately has no RV dump.

After leaving Lake Isabel, retrace your route to I-25 and stop for lunch in the little town of La Veta.  La Veta is located just south of US 160 on the Highway of Legends Scenic Byway (CO 12).  The Rio Grande Scenic Railroad is now in bankruptcy, but its eastern terminal was on the north side of town.  A few years ago, if you were lucky, a passenger train pulled by a 2-6-2 Prairie steam engine may have pulled in while you were there.  Hopefully, someone will buy the railroad and RVers can again have that experience.  There are also two CPW SWA reservoirs just east of town with great trout fishing, but no camping.  Two private RV parks are located in town. but pull-outs that RVers use for Free camping are located along “it-used-to-be-paved” Old La Veta Pass Road.  Turn south off US 160 on CR 443 two miles before the top of pass. There is a Free dump at the Cliff Brice food store on CO 12 at the south end of La Veta.


A steam freight train on the Rio Grande Scenic Railway, a standard-gauge line across La Veta Pass between Alamosa in the San Luis Valley and the tiny town of La Veta near Walsenburg



However, if you are like me and love back roads (even when they are gravel instead of paved), I highly recommend an alternative to US 160 over La Veta Pass.  I would not take a Class A or our Class C Mercedes Sprinter motorhome over the Pass Creek Pass road (use your toad to explore it), but the route follows the historic 1840’s Huerfano River trail between Bent’s Fort on the Arkansas River and Taos, NM.  Incidentally, "huerfano" is Spanish for "orphan" and you will see the "orphan"--the lava neck of an ancient cinder cone and a landmark visible for miles along the river--just east of I-25.  To access Pass Creek, leave I-25 at Exit 52 and take the first right onto CO 69.  At Gardner, turn left (west) onto CR 550 and then another left at Malachite to CR 570/572.  

An alternative route from Lake Isabel takes you through the scenic Wet Mountains and Wet Mountain Valley and passes one of Colorado's most unusual tourist sites--Bishop's Castle.  Go north from Lake Isabel on CO 165 and west on CO 96 to the twin towns of Westcliffe-Silver Cliff.  These two old mining/railroad towns have some great eateries and an annual music festival.  As of July 1, 2020, you can camp just outside town at the DeWeese Reservoir SWA for Free if you have a valid CPW SWA Pass or fishing or hunting license (see the "Introduction" section above).  After lunch or overnight camping, go south on CO 69, then turn west at Gardner and follow the previous directions.  If you have an RV that you don’t want to take over the gravel pass road, but would like to camp Free (with the appropriate SWA Pass or license) and take only your toad or tow vehicle over the pass, stay on CR 550/580 for 13 miles to the Huerfano SWA.  It has campsites with picnic tables, restrooms, cold-water fishing (no boating), and trails leading into the scenic Sangre de Cristo ("Blood of Christ") Mountains.
                       
After crossing La Veta Pass or Pass Creek Pass, you are in the high, dry, flat San Luis Valley.  See "US 285" above for information on camping around Great Sand Dunes National Park and Alamosa.   If the San Luis Lakes SWA is full, there is an alternative SWA nearer US 160.  The Mountain Home Reservoir SWA is southeast of the town of Ft. Garland (once commanded by Kit Carson, so stop and take a tour of the fort!).  Although this SWA has no hookups, it has a Free (with valid CPW SWA Pass or hunting or fishing license) campground with restrooms, water, a boat ramp, and a lake stocked annually with trout.  Access to the SWA is located 2.5 miles east of Ft. Garland, where you will turn south off US 160 onto Trinchera Ranch Road.  After 2 miles, turn west on Icehouse Road and go 1 mile to the north entrance to the SWA.

In late winter (mid-March) and late fall (late October or early November), you may want to camp near Monte Vista to visit the Monte Vista National Wildliife Refuge while the sandhill cranes are migrating.  The 2023 Monte Vista Crane Fest was March 10-12, so around that weekend each year would be a good time to see "big bird."  

If you don't mind a gravel parking lot with a restroom for a Free overnight stay (with valid CPW SWA Pass or license), the Rio Grande SWA allows camping in one parking lot between July 15 and February 15 (it is closed to the public the rest of the year).  If you are traveling east, turn off US 160 at the eastern edge of Monte Vista on Sherman Avenue and go 3 miles east to the Home Lake SWA. Turn left on Soldiers Home Road, cross the irrigation canal, turn right immediately after crossing the canal onto the gravel road into the Rio Grande SWA, and go east for another 0.4 mile to the parking lot.  If you are traveling west on US 160, you can turn right on CR 3E and go one mile north to Home Lake, then follow the previous directions.  When you leave, you can stop at Monte Vista Co-op, two miles east of Monte Vista on US 160, to use their big-rig friendly RV dump ($8.00 without Co-op membership).  The Co-op also has good prices for gas, diesel, propane, and a car/truck service department for those who might have those needs.  

The city park in Del Norte no longer has designated campsites.  However, Free overnight RV parking is allowed at any city park, with water and an RV dump just north of the old train depot.  It is located on the northwest side of town just off CO 112, the short cut between US 285 and US 160. Incidentally, you will cross railroad tracks next to the depot, but there are no more trains. The tracks west of town all the way to South Fork are just used for railroad car storage, so there will be no noisy trains during the night!

There is a Free big-rig friendly RV dump behind the Rainbow Grocery in South Fork.  We saw it being used last fall during a lunch stop, but did not not need it ourselves.  The USFS campgrounds near South Fork and on Wolf Creek Pass are very popular during the summer.  If you just need a place for a single Free (with valid CPW SWA Pass or license) boondocking night, you might want to drive through the parking lot of the Wolf Creek Ski Area to the Alberta Park Reservoir SWA.  It is 1.7 miles past the ski area on FR 391.  Non-motorized boating and catch-and-release trout fishing are allowed on the lake and camping is not prohibited, although no designated campsites exist.  Keep in mind that Wolf Creek consistently has the greatest snowfall of all Colorado ski areas, so at 10,200 ft., this SWA opens late and closes early. 


Treasure Falls at the US 160 rest area
 on the west side of Wolf Creek Pass
If the SWA is unavailable, try the USFS West Fork Campground at the west end of Wolf Creek Pass.  First, however, stop at the Treasure Falls parking area and take the short hike to the falls to relieve the stress of having just driven over the pass.  Then drive another mile down the highway and turn north on FR 648.  After two miles of gravel-dirt road, you will reach 27 well-spaced, gravel-apron sites with 9 pull-thrus, grills and tables at each site, two hand pumps for drinking water, and pit toilets.  The price is $18 ($9 for those with the Senior pass). 

There are no SWAs allowing camping in Archuleta County.  In addition to West Fork, the 8 other USFS campgrounds (totaling over 200 campsites) within 25 miles of Pagosa Springs cost at least $18-$29/night.  Of course, 3 of those campgrounds--Bridge, Teal, and Cimaronna--are among the “100 Best Campgrounds in Colorado.”  

The only Free campsites we have found around Pagosa Springs are dispersed ones off Fourmile Road (N. 5th  St. to CR 400) after it crosses into San Juan National Forest about 5 miles north of town.  Eight miles south of town and east of US 84, we have also seen campers along the Forest Roads branching off Blanco Basin Road (CR 326).  And there is a Free RV dump (with fuel fill up) at the Speedway gas station just west of downtown at 2537 West US 160.

There is great fishing near Pagosa, hot springs for those who don’t mind the smell, and beautiful aspen in the fall.  But the not-to-be-missed attraction is located 16 miles west of town on US 160. Turn south off US 160 at CO 151 and go 3 miles to the new Chimney Rock National Monument.  We attended an equinox sunrise tour at Chimney Rock several years ago and highly recommend the new monument to anyone interested in an Anasazi lunar observatory.  Very different than Mesa Verde, but only open from May 15 to September 30!

A great place to camp near the new monument is Capote Lake Recreation Area on the Southern Ute Reservation at the intersection of US 160 and CO 151.  The price is $25/night for one of the ten 30A electric/water RV sites, with a shower house and a dump at the office/store.  That price is the same as the nearby USFS Ute campground (1 mile west on US 160) that has no electricity, one (summer-only) water spigot, no dump, and a pit toilet.


Chimney Rock National Monument just after dawn on a September equinox.  More than 1000 years ago, the Anasazi watched the moon rise in the exact center of the two sandstone monoliths once every 18 years and, at the instant it occurred, lit signal fires on peaks along a 90-mile line to Chaco Canyon.


There are some wide spots and pull-outs on very slow CR 166/FR 622 north of the USFS Lower Piedra campground that are used for dispersed camping, but much of that road is on a steep cliff above the river.  In the fall, outfitters set up hunting camps at the northern end of the road east of the old bridge across the river.  These camps come with horses and OHV's that create very muddy river water and very unattractive campsites.  I personally wouldn't waste my time and fuel driving our motorhome those extra 20 round-trip miles.  Now it's on to Durango!

1 comment:

  1. Awesome and interesting article. Great things you've always shared with us. Thanks. Just continue composing this kind of post. the lost ways 2 book

    ReplyDelete

Free RV Camping - Introduction

Despite some critics who say there is no more free camping in Colorado, there are a number of FREE or inexpensive camping areas that are co...