This campground includes 20 single campsites, 3 double campsites (up to 16 people) and one group area. Goose Lake is a short distance away, which features a picnic area, restrooms, and accessible fishing piers. There is excellent fishing in the reservoir or try your luck in Goose Creek, next to the campground. The Goose Creek Trail #353leads to Goose Creek Falls and on to Brundage Reservoir. A special treat is to go huckleberry picking in late summer. There are handicapped accessible toilets, trail access, a day use area with a horseshoe pit, drinking water through a hand pump and an artesian well, extended spurs for longer RV's. No hook-ups. There is a Host on site.
Travel north of McCall on Hwy 55 seven miles and turn right onto Road #453. Go north two miles on a dirt road to the campground.
Great little camp ground. Super nice camp host. And there is a very nice trail that leads up to wonderful waterfalls
Beautiful campground with nicely kept vault toilets. Pretty chilly for tent camping the end of September/first part of October, but we made it through! Campground was almost deserted which made it super quiet, almost eerily so at times ha.
We saw lots of lovely fall foliage. And we found striped woolly bear caterpillars, and little grey squirrels and chipmunks that kept up the chattering and braving our campsite. We also picked up a ton of those little round, disc shaped prickly stickers from bushes on our campsite, but thankfully they were fairly easy to pick off.
Our family hiked to Goose Creek Falls from the trailhead at the end of the campground. We took our 9 year old, 5 year old and little dog. It took about 1.75 hrs on the way. It only took about 1 hr back as it was downhill. This was with lots of stops and going at what felt like a snail's pace sometimes, and pausing to let other groups pass us.
The waterfall itself was a little lackluster, but we knew this is the fall, so the water isn't as high as earlier in the year.
Still lovely and the whole camping trip was so much fun!
The restrooms are mostly new and are well-maintained. The popular trailhead means there is a lot of traffic through the campground and especially a lot of foot traffic. Some of the camp sites are pretty run-down with tables and fire pits badly in need of replacement. The 2.8 mile road in is frequently rough and has narrow spots and steep drop-offs that can be daunting, even frightening, for RVs.
Very nice campground. Nice and quiet. No ATV or side-by-sides. The camp host was nowhere to be seen all week. His 1960's uhaul truck was there, but no one cleaned or refilled the toilet paper. There are a couple of sites with what appears to be people living there, and not paying.
Pretty campground, probably would t stay again. Horrifying mosquitoes in June, almost unbearable! Rod up is quite narrow and difficult for anything larger than a pickup. Would rather find somewhere to camp east of town.