The RV Atlas Podcast

Death Valley National Park: Spring Desert Camping (Pt. 2)

04.25.2022 - By RVFTA Podcast NetworkPlay

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These are the show notes for the second of three guest appearances by Lauren Eber, from @afamwithavan about spring desert camping in the great American west. In this three part trilogy Jeremy interviews Lauren about Joshua Tree National Park, Death Valley National Park, and Valley of Fire State Park in Nevada.

Lauren Eber and her family enjoying a visit to Death Valley National Park.

 

To listen to Lauren give an overview of Joshua Tree National Park and recommend campgrounds inside and outside of the park, click here.

Lauren loves all three of these locations dearly and she has extensive dry camping experience in all three locations with her family and their beloved van. To listen to Jeremy interview Lauren about Death Valley National Park, click on the media player above. Or subscribe to the The RV Atlas wherever you get your podcasts. Or just read on for Lauren's extensive show notes about Death Valley National Park--in them she includes recommendations for camping inside and outside of the park. She also includes great recommendations for activities and a few options for great food. She will be back again with an overview of Valley of Fire this week! Stay tuned for the last episode in the trilogy!

Guest Show Notes by Lauren Eber

Death Valley National Park

Getting There: About a 2 hour drive from Las Vegas and a 4.5 hour drive from Los Angeles. The central area in the park is the Furnace Creek Visitor’s Center. Start here with a pass through the visitor’s center to get your bearings and pick up a map before heading out to the park’s top sites.

Overview: Death Valley is literally one of the hottest places on earth, and drier than the Sahara desert, with almost zero humidity. It hit a record high of 130 degrees in 2020. It contains the lowest point in North America, Badwater Basin, at -282 feet. It’s only a couple hours drive from Badwater to the highest point in the Continental U.S., Mt. Whitney, at 14,505 feet. Death Valley is the largest National Park outside of Alaska, with many different regions. It is beautiful and other-worldly. It definitely deserves a spot on your bucket list.

Campgrounds

Furnace Creek Campground is the largest and most centrally located campground in the park, reservable from October 15-April 15 (so that’s when you should go), and it has 18 full-hookup sites, but they book up almost instantaneously, 6 months in advance. Some spots have some vegetation for a little privacy, but the landscape doesn’t really lend itself to privacy, so expect to see your neighbors, even with relatively spacious sites. (150 sites; water; flush toilets; some full-hookup sites)

Texas Springs is also located at Furnace Creek and is a good place to stay. 

If all of the other campgrounds in the park are full, there is overflow at Sunset Campground in Furnace Creek. It is just a big parking lot, not at all scenic, but it is centrally located for sightseeing. Try to avoid this option, but it’s better than nothing as a base for seeing the park.

NPS campgrounds outside of Furnace Creek - some of these are at higher elevations and may have cooler temps (distances from Furnace Creek in parentheses): Stovepipe Wells (30 mins, very basic campground, in the Stovepipe Wells area), Mesquite Spring (1 hr 15 min, Northern part of the park, near Scotty’s Castle, which is closed until further notice), Emigrant (tent only, 40 min), Wildrose (1 hr 15 min, vehicles under 25 feet, in Emigrant Canyon, at 4,100 feet elevation), Thorndike (1 hr 30 min, high clearance vehicles under 25 feet, in Emigrant Canyon, 7,400 feet elevation), Mahogany Flat (1 hr 45 min, in Emigrant Canyon, high clearance vehicles under 25 feet, 8,400 feet elevation, shady)

Stovepipe Wells RV Park is a small, privately owned option inside the park with hookups, restaurant, saloon,

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