Lewis & Clark Campground & RV Park
Lewis & Clark Campground & RV Park is located at 355 Evergreen Dr., North Bonneville, Washington 98648 with a total of 43 campsites. Some of the amenities you can enjoy there are Fishing, Golf, and more. Before your trip to Lewis & Clark Campground & RV Park, check out website at http://www.lewisandclarkcampground.com/ or contact them through 509-427-5559 to know their nightly rates and available discounts.
Amenities
Hookups | 30 Amp | 20 Amp | water | sewer | Full Hookups |
Recreation | rec hall | ||||
Site Amenities | fire ring | picnic table | pull thru | ||
Facilities | dump station | laundry | restrooms | ||
Pets | pets |
Overview of Lewis & Clark Campground & RV Park
Last Price Paid: $26
Reported by John T on 07.27.2019
Longest RV Reported: 21 feet
Reported by Cindy & Cristal F on 5.5.2022
Number of Sites:
43
Pad Type:
dirt
Elevation:
32 ft / 9 m
Tent Camping:
Yes
Cell Phone Coverage
Verizon 4G
Confirmed by 1 Users Last Reported 07/27/2019
Reviews of Lewis & Clark Campground & RV Park
1 people have reviewed this location.
Overall Rating
Access
Location
Cleanliness
Site Quality
Noise
Workmen’s camp, but clean and quiet
Reviewed 27/7/2019
Overall Rating
Access
Location
Cleanliness
Site Quality
Noise
Nightly rate: $26
Days stayed: 7
Site number: 24
This was a good location for sightseeing at the Oregon waterfalls and the Bonneville Dam, and for taking a sternwheeler trip from Cascade Locks. It would also be convenient for Portland via I-84. I chose to stay on the Washington side to get away from the crowds and the noise from I-84. Use I-84 and the Bridge of the Gods to get here. There is a $2 toll on the bridge for cars/pickups, plus $1 per axle for trailers. I came in on WA Hwy 14 from the coast, and it was windy and narrow with speeding drivers. To the east of Cascade Locks on Hwy 14, there are narrow tunnels, and a sign warns of one with 11’9” height clearance. When I arrived, the office was closed, and nobody answered the phone number posted on the door. I had not been asked to pay when I made my reservation, so after looking around and finding nobody, I was about to go on campendium and find somewhere else to go, when one of the residents walked by and offered to find someone. A woman subsequently appeared with a notebook, gave me my site number, and told me to put a check in the slot on the office wall. I never again saw any staff member other than the groundsman, and the office had a closed sign every time I passed. My $26 daily rate reflects a $180 weekly rate for a water/electric hookup.This turned out to be a workman’s camp. A notice outside the office with instructions on how to join the waiting list for permanent sites referred to recreational campers as “temps”. However, it was quiet, the place was scrupulously clean, and most of the RVs were recent models. The residents of the section I was in appeared to be migrant contractors rather than low-income permanents.My pull-through site was ridiculously narrow, to the extent that I found spiders’ webs draped between the trailer and the trees every morning. This was a huge campground, and I was three rows away from the train tracks. The train noise was not intrusive at that distance because of the trees, and there were no crossings in the vicinity for them to blow their horns at, but there was a railroad bridge being rebuilt nearby, at which they blew a few short blasts. Hwy 14 was some distance from the campground, and I never heard it.Voltage was normally 110-112 V, occasionally up to 116 V. This was in cool weather with no air conditioners running, so I expect there would a problem in hot weather.Verizon 4G was with 3 bars, -94 dB, with a variable data rate of 2-16 Mpbs down and 0.2-3 up.