This is the type of campground we normally love. Most sites are large and wooded.
If you sense a big “but” is about to surface, you are correct.
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Carolina Beach State Park Sign |
I wish we had scouted this park before we arrived with Rosie, our Airstream trailer. Some sites are great while others are difficult at best.
Our site required Becky to back Rosie, our Airstream trailer, uphill and between several trees. To make things more interesting, our site took a turn to the right about 20 feet in. Once we parked Rosie, we knew that it was going to be difficult to hook up when it was time to leave.
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Rosie in the campground |
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Another view of Rosie's site |
Several trailers in our caravan had to move to another site because they could not squeeze between the trees on their original assignments.
Our WBCCI Southeast Coast Caravan had a low country boil while at this campground. Several at our table thought these boils were a Louisiana Cajun thing. Others thought it was more of a South Carolina tradition. We ended up asking the caterer who said this was best described as a southern thing. The Louisiana version substitutes crawfish for shrimp. He added that locals call the boil we had “Frogmore Stew.” Whatever it was called, it was great.
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Cooking the Frogmore Stew |
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Time to eat! |
This park was billed as one of the few places Venus Flytraps are native. We didn’t see any while on a trail known as a habitat for these plants. It turned out that people love to pick these flowers and it was getting hard to find them.
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Some pitcher plants in this park |
Here are some specifics about this campground:
- Our site was a back-in
- Our site was difficult to back in because the site curved and had trees that wedged around Rosie
- Our site was paved with dirt and gravel
- Our site did not have any electrical service
- Our site did not have a water connection
- Our site did not have a sewer connection
- A few sites in this campground had electrical and water connections
- A few sites in this campground had sewer connections
- There was a dump station in the park
- The bathhouse in our camping loop was clean and functional. It was also very dated and appeared that it occasionally was underwater when hurricanes hit the Carolina coastline
- Without electrical power, we could not check on the reception of local TV stations
- AT&T placed one bar of service for unreliable voice and data over our site
- There was WiFi available at the park office and the marina
- The gate to the park was locked every night at 9 p.m. If you went out for the evening, you had to make sure you were back before 9 or you were locked out of the campground
- We wondered if there had recently been trouble in the campground. The ranger patrols through the campground were frequent and thorough
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Path to the beach |
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