![]() ![]() It is sloped both on the approach and the departure but not nearly as bad as site #4 and thus will accommodate a larger RV without the drama of #4. #8 Pull-through site with partial hookups and above the road. The nose and tail of the RV will be lower than in the middle. After parking, at the apex of the turn, the driver’s side will be lower. #7 Pull through the site below the road, sloped gradually toward the apex of the turn. #6 has a hill directly beyond the parking area eliminating the ability to overhang the site. RVs longer than 30 feet may high center after the first two wheels are beyond the apex of the hill. #6 Back in site with partial hookups and a large slope for the first twenty feet unusable to park an RV. After leveling, the nose and tail of the RV will be lower than in the middle. After parking, at the apex of the turn, the driver’s will be lower than the passenger side. #5 Pull through the site with partial hookups, sloped toward the apex of the turn each way. After leveling the center will be lower than the front and the back. After parking, the driver’s side will be about 10 inches lower than the passenger side. The hill does not flatten at the apex thus the center of the RV will be lower than the front or back. Both are steeply inclined toward the top of the hill. The first 30 feet are too steep to park a long RV, as is the last 50 feet. #4 Pull-through site uphill from the road with partial hookups. #3 Pull-through site on the inside of the turn that doesn’t have hill problems. The first part of the site is sloped and not suitable for RVs. #2 This is a very large back-in site with partial hookups that is nearly at road level. If you back with an RV that only has brakes on the rear wheels, be careful not to level so much as to raise the rear wheels off the ground. #1 This is a large back-in site and plenty wide enough but the slope of the site is towards the water. Owners of trailers will have to interpret. My notes are written pertaining to a motorized RV. Sites 7 and 24 are not available via Reserve America. Once we parked there was plenty of room for our car.ĭisregard the Reserve America maximum RV length numbers and use these descriptions instead. We are in a more than one-hundred-foot-long site and it was nearly impossible to find a location on the driveway to fit our 40-foot RV. Site 4 sections outlined in red are steep. Had we turned the front of the RV to the left, the left front tire would have gone down the hill making leveling all that much harder. We backed out of the site because of the slope associated with the turn. The crest of the hill is about at the center point of where we parked. ![]() Our RV occupies the only spot that is kind of flat. I wish I had a drone picture to show where we parked but will try with a drawing on the satellite view. You couldn’t tell this from the satellite view. Our Site (#4) is not only steep it is steep in two directions. There is a large drop-off from all the campsites to the water level - especially in the fall. Potable Water: Yes, not at all the campsites.Ĭell service: Verizon – Strong Signal / AT&T – Strong Signal ObservationsĬampsite Review: Quail Creek Campground insider info: Hook-ups: electric & water, not all sites Temperatures in the four summer months would be very hot. Mild in the morning, hot in the late afternoon until the sun went behind the mountain about two hours before sunset. Reservations are nearly mandatory.Ĭomfort: Temperatures were hot. The high season for this location starts about now and extends through the end of April. The park was nearly full for our entire stay, during the middle of the week, during the second week of October. Reservations are highly recommended well in advance for weekends. Phone Number/Reservations: Reserve America Link to Google Map for the area: Quail Creek State Park Most sites, including our site, are really steep. Quail Creek State Park is a nice campground with one big problem. All the campsites with electricity are “pull-through” except for two. The campsites with electrical hookups are on the outside of the loop. The campsite has 23 campsites for RVs, nine of the campsites have partial hookups. The nearest city with multiple grocery stores is Saint George. The best way to get here from Interstate 15 is to exit on Utah Highway 9 eastbound then turn north on State Road 318 also known as 5300 West. Campsite Review: Quail Creek Campground is on the west end of Quail Creek Reservoir, near Saint George Utah. ![]()
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