We stayed at Emigrant Lake – The Point RV Park in Ashland, Oregon. (Campground Reviews listing.)
A nice county campground, very convenient to Ashland.
Dates:
- Check in: 2024-08-31
- Check out: 2024-09-08
- 8 nights
Weather:
- Mostly sunny
- High temps 79-100°F, lows 51-64°F
- A little wind, gusts to 19 MPH
Noise:
- No road noise
- No train horn noise
- Negligible neighbor noise
Site:
- #19, back-in, asphalt
- Needed to disconnect toad, parked in front of coach
- Somewhat unlevel site; high on back and driver side; used hydraulic leveling and extra blocks under the front
- Asphalt driveway about 50 feet long by 15 feet wide
- 18 feet to neighbor on driver side
- No neighbor on passenger side
- Picnic table
- Fire pit
- Some trees
- Clean site
Utilities:
- 50 amp power, conveniently located
- 75 PSI water, conveniently located
- Loose sewer connection, conveniently located (1 10-foot pipe needed)
Internet (in usage priority order):
- T-Mobile: 57 Mbps down, 11-18 Mbps up, 32 ms ping
- AT&T: 35-72 Mbps down, 0.5 Mbps up, 100 ms ping
- Verizon: 5-22 Mbps down, 14-22 Mbps up, 70 ms ping
- Starlink: not used
- Campground Wi-Fi: none
Amenities:
Our review on Campground Reviews:
Perfect park close to Ashland
This is a great spot to stay and explore Ashland and the local area. It’s a shame the lake is so low, but that’s just the reality of the West these days. We still enjoyed the view from our site, regardless. Access to the campground is a little dicey for big rigs, but it is doable. Just watch out for the final turn into the campground, where you have to navigate between a rock wall and a barbed wire fence that comes close to the road. Our site (19) had a terrific view of the lake, and I think the only better view would be from site 21 (a pull-through site), which sits at the bottom of the loop. We camped at Emigrant Lake – The Point RV Park in a Motorhome.
Tip for Other Campers: Ashland has one of the best dining scenes in the PNW, so be sure to explore some options (Cocorico was our favorite this time). Take in a show at the OSF, even if it’s just the Green Show, which is free. The Oregon Cabaret is a fun experience as well. And don’t forget to tour the many different wine trails in the area. We’re partial to the Applegate Valley…
Campground map:
An interactive map:
Our site:
Utilities:
Other sites:
The very end of the point is site 21, a pull-through site; we would have preferred to have this site, but it wasn’t available:
Lake view from site 21:
Campground entrance, with a tight corner:
Bathrooms:
A view of the lake from behind the bathrooms:
From the website, much the same view from many years ago when the lake was full:
Another view now:
And the same view then:
Some more years-ago views of the full lake:
A similar view of the much lower lake now, from our site:
More lake views from our site:
Sunset:
A truck stuck in the mud (see a timelapse video of it getting stuck and unstuck):
A couple of shots of the same part of the lake, where people enter it; the first one taken soon after arriving, and the second towards the end of our stay; if you look closely, you can see a significant drop in the water level:
And an animated GIF of the water level dropping:
(Check out today’s timelapse video of the lake level dropping noticeably during our stay.)
A view from below our site, that should have been underwater if the lake were full:
Looking back up at our site:
The very low water level was rather sad; the lake would have been much nicer if full. But still a nice place to stay.
We plan to stay here again next year. Hopefully in site 21 next time, but site 19 would be a good second choice.