Hot showers. Individual changing stalls just outside of personal shower. $ 17/night for walk in site. $ 24/night for RV hook up. C5 walk in site is ultra convenient. Camped here for 3 nights during our stay in the gorge. You can hear the train at night but after the first night, you don’t even mind it. Make sure you arrive and set up tent around 4pm or you will be SOL. This campsite fills up nightly. Don’t have exact change? Don’t worry! The rangers will give you change in the morning. Campers get showers included in fee. $ 7 extra per night for an extra automobile. A total steal of a deal here.
Kirsten H.
Place rating: 4 Houston, TX
Really enjoyed this well run park. Beautiful tree filled setting. Trains pass by often but not a nuisance on upper campsites, lower sites get a good dose but only added to camping experience to me. Great location for site seeing the area.
Cindy P.
Place rating: 3 San Leandro, CA
Walk in test site was excellent, we certainly thought we found mid-week camping nirvana! Close to hiking trails, private camp sites(only if you choose the hike in option). But the fantasy ended abruptly when the Union trains blew their horns incessantly throughout the night, about every hour! It feels like its coming right thru the campsite. Terrible night if sleep despite the gorgeous setting. What a shame. Camp if you must, and not really sure what the next option would be, but I hope to discover that answer on the next trip.
Kurt C.
Place rating: 3 Loomis, CA
This was a nice campsite, but you aren’t going to find complete seclusion here. Then again, anyone who thinks they could find it by turning off of a highway into a state park is a little crazy… There is a nice shower house and restroom in the main section of the park. There are only a handful of tent sites, but they are spread out from each other for privacy and space. The going rate for a primitive tent site was a pretty steep at $ 17 a night. For an extra $ 3, you could get a full RV site with water and electricity! It shouldn’t cost more than $ 10(and that’s even a little high) to set up a tent on an used piece of public ground with no facilities.
Chris E.
Place rating: 3 Portland, OR
If you are looking to escape the city noise, get away from people, find some peace and solitude in the wilderness, this is NOT the place to camp. If you want to car camp with all of the conveniences, including hot showers, super clean flush toilets, wood for sale, water and hook-ups in most of the camp sites, a convenient, close location to Portland and to fantastic hiking and waterfalls, then this is a good camground for you. On a busy summer weekend, you will experience the sounds of dogs, kids, generators, RV’s and Trucks, radios, and the train runs close-by around the clock. $ 20 per night for most sites is a little on the expensive side. It is super clean and the host and rangers were very friendly. Thumbs-up on their efforts to recyle, too, with bins for separating trash. Overall, a good place for car camping, but not a place to escape civilization!
Apollo L.
Place rating: 4 Sunnyvale, CA
Magnificent waterfalls easily accessible from I-84. Horsetail Falls was a real treat before continuing on to the much more popular Multnomah Falls. Spectacular scenery and very few tourists.