Being able to visit a website and reserve a campsite in the National Park System six months before your visit helps take the anxiety away of wondering where you'll stay. Unless you're thinking of camping in Canyonlands and Arches national parks in Utah, and no doubt some other units of the system.
The problem arises in campgrounds with a relatively small number of campsites. While the Watchman Campground at Zion National Park boasts 176 campsites, the Bridge Bay Campground in Yellowstone National Park lists 432 sites, and Tuolumne Meadows Campground in Yosemite National Park shows 304 sites, at Devils Garden Campground in Arches there are just 51, and at Needles Campground in Canyonlands there are just 26, of which only a dozen can be reserved, with the remainder first-come, first-served.
On recreation.gov you can reserve a campsite six months out from your travel...unless, of course, you plan to spend more than one night in that site. While individual campsites don't technically open for reservations until six months ahead of your desired date, if you claim a site six months out, you can extend your stay for a number of days. In the case of Needles Campground, you can book a seven-night stay, and that's where problems of securing a campsite intensify.
Recreation.gov releases sites for reservations at 10 a.m. Eastern, six months out. So if you live in the Pacific Time Zone and wanted to stay in Needles Campground on March 23, 2020, you needed to be ready to reserve your site at 7 a.m. on September 23, 2019. But your initiative wouldn't have been rewarded, unfortunately.
That's because at Needles you can relax in a campsite for seven consecutive days. And so folks who were able to latch onto a site on September 22, 2019, for March 22, 2020, arrival, could, in theory, reserve it through March 29, 2020. And so if you logged onto recreation.gov on September 23, as I did, you would have found each of the 12 sites booked through March 23, 2020, and some beyond that date. While there was one site available for March 24, you'd have to wait until September 24 to reserve that...if it was still available.
"If someone reserved for 3/22, they are allowed to book several days out," the chat room folks at recreation.gov told me when I mentioned all the sites had been reserved for March 23, 2020, before September 23, 2019. "The next available date is for site 27 and only for 03/24/2020. For 03/25/20, sites 18, 24, 25, 26, 27. I do apologize the sites were taken for today."
"But if you can't make a reservation until six months out," I replied, and someone reserves for a block of dates, how does one lock down a reservation?
"It is a relatively small camping area," came the reply. "I can only advice to check on the recreation.gov website to see which dates may come available 6 months out."
Now, there are those 14 first-come, first-served sites at Needles Campground, but the campground is a far drive for most folks, lying about 75 miles from Moab, Utah. From Salt Lake City, it's about a 5-6 hour drive.
Would you gamble on finding one of those 14 sites vacant after a long drive, knowing that if they were all filled you would 1) have to see if the private campground just outside the Needles District had space, 2) you had to drive 49 miles to Monticello, Utah, and hope there was a motel room available, or 3) drive all the way back to Moab with hopes of finding a vacancy?
What's the solution? Is there a solution? Do small national park campgrounds need to move to a lottery system? Do parks with just one small campground need to build more?
The answer, for now at least, concerning Needles Campground is to be flexible and broaden your search, Karen Garthwait at Canyonlands National Park told me. There currently are no discussions to enlarge the campground, she said.
"What I typically encourage people to do is plan ahead for something for their first night when in the area," she said. "Whether a private campground that you can book in advance, or a hotel room, or whatever people feel comfortable with as their lodging option. But having a reservation for that first night then lets you travel here with the security that you have a place to land, you can pop into whichever visitor center of whichever unit who are wanting to go to, find out the lay of the land, and then find out how early you need to be there the next day in order to get one of those first-come, first-served available sites."
Garthwait also noted that, in terms of Needles Campground, there are a number of campgrounds along Utah 211 just outside the Needles District that are managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, "(A)ll of which are first-come, first served, and they have been adding to them practically every other year the last couple of years."
Those BLM campgrounds are the Hamburger Rock Campground (10 sites), Creek Pasture Campground (32 sites), and Super Bowl Campground (37 sites). Those campgrounds are more rustic than the Needles Campground, with no running water and offering vault, not flush, toilets.
If your heart is set on Needles Campground and you are blocked from landing a site during the popular spring and fall seasons, there's always the brutally hot (100°+) days in the heart of summer or the cold (lows of 0°-20° Fahrenheit possible), short days of winter when all sites are first-come, first-served.
Comments
That exact problem happened to me this morning Two ossible sites were going to be open today but when I checked prior to 7:00 a.m. they were both booked one additional day. I thought that maybe the people with the reservation ending yesterday could get on after midnight and extended one more day. Have you learned anymore about the problem?
Every American should have an opportunity to stay at a national park at least once in their life. Clearly the reservation must be changed. 2 night stay then your out for the year during peak season. Didn't realize this system was so F'd up. I think it's actually rigged.
Recreation.gov is a thorough mess. Went to make reservations yesterday in RMNP- showed 4 nights available for site A52, last week of May.
Then it would not let me reserve more than 3 nights of that block of 4. Could not figure out why. Gave up and reserved the 3, a Mon,Tues,Weds.
Came back later and the 4th night, a Thurs, was still shown as available- so I made a 1 night reservation for it.
Why could I not reserve all 4 nights in the same site when it clearly showed an A (available) for 4 nights? Don't see anything about a 3 day limit.
Thanks to Covid 19 I just canceled reservations for 11 National Parks this year. It took hours of work and preperations to get these sites, not always the ones I wanted.... hopefully I will have the patience and good fortune to do it again next year.... Good bye Covid!
Several of us have been trying to modify our reservations since our park is not opening until June 1st. It won't let us make the modifcations--just defaults back to the original dates which were all in late May. Anyone else having this problem?
We were so fortunate to get a site in Yosemite May 10- 16, but it was canceled by the NPS due to Covid 19. In summer 2018 our Yosemite reservations were canceled by NPS because of fires and poor air quality. I guess we are not one of the lucky ones. Getting the reservation is only half the battl.
Cancelation charges should escalate rapidly for "serial" cancellers. In my experience, some corps campgrounds near Nashville are full every weekend with locals who game the system. The sites are nearly empty Sunday through Thursday, but full of local repeaters every weekend. They reserve when first available, then cancel with a low penalty. It puts the hosts in a difficult position. Surely with a little computer effort, abusers can be identified and face high cancellation fees. The concessionaires have no incentive to change this system. Their contract would make an interesting read.
It doesnt work that way.
Canceled days become First come First serve campsite