At Frisco Adventure Park, which includes Peak One Campground, you can enjoy riding over a dirt track filled with jumps and humps in the bike park, playing a round of disc golf, or honing your skateboarding skills on rails, ramps and jumps. Take a wagon ride, enjoy a chuck wagon dinner, hike trails or just relax and enjoy the view at the day lodge. When your day’s adventure is through, you can stay on-site at Peak One with views of Lake Dillon. More than 100 non-electric sites have back-in spots and pull-throughs suitable for the largest RVs. You’ll have access to drinking water, flush toilets and a boat ramp.
Treat yourself to all the amenities at Tiger Run RV Resort. Set among forested hills, Tiger Run is bordered by the Blue and Swan rivers which provide opportunity for fishing enthusiasts hoping to reel in some trout. The resort’s centerpiece is a 12,000-square-foot clubhouse with hot showers, restrooms, laundry, indoor pool, hot tub and TV lounge. Outdoor activities include volleyball, tennis, basketball and a children’s playground. Only hard-sided RVs and trailers are accepted at the resort, with full hookups including cable TV and Wi-Fi provided to each site.
White River National Forest provides campgrounds suitable for self-contained RVs less than 30 feet in length. These campgrounds have primitive amenities, including vault toilets, fire rings and picnic tables. Some, such as several campgrounds at Dillon Reservoir, can be reserved online, and others operate on a first-come, first-served basis. Two campgrounds at the reservoir, Lowry and Heaton Bay, provide electrical hookups as well as handicapped access to restrooms and tables. Prepare for the possibility of a site in full sun, as hazardous trees damaged by pine beetles are regularly removed from campgrounds in the White River National Forest.
If you want to get away from it all, head down one of the many forest roads in the area and park your RV at no charge. You may drive up to 300 feet off the forest road if you don’t damage the environment and if you keep your camp more than 100 feet from any waterways or trails. No fee is charged by the National Forest and no amenities are provided, so be sure to fill your water tank before heading into the forest. Motor Vehicle Use Maps showing areas where dispersed sites suitable for RV access already exist are available online or at a ranger station.