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Estimated price based on 1 car and 2 persons with a tent, camper or caravan.

Campsite opened from 01 January till 31 December
This campsite can only be booked by telephone. 719-852-7074
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Tents
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4.5 / 5 (21 votes )

Old Spanish Trail Dispersed Camping

CR-27A
81144, Monte Vista
the United States

Old Spanish Trail Dispersed Camping is a campsite in Monte Vista, the United States, located in the Colorado region. Dogs are allowed on this campsite.

On Old Spanish Trail Dispersed Camping it's possible to camp with a tent.

Characteristics campsite

Photos

Reviews

Sebastian Kertzmann
English (US)
My spouse and I were traveling from the Great Sand Dunes to Pagosa Springs and opted to spend a night in the wilderness here, drawn in by the stunning images we had seen. We were not let down! We had the chance to take our 4Runner for some off-road adventures on the intricate network of trails in this region. It was pleasantly uncrowded in the early part of May 2023. We would certainly consider returning for another camping experience. You can find the entrance at the coordinates 37.62956ºN, 106.25170ºW. There's a complimentary waste disposal station about 12 minutes away in Del Norte, at coordinates 37.68408ºN, 106.35221ºW, as well as an RV park called Woods and River RV Park. They kindly allowed us to refill our water supply, as the municipal park's dump station had its water supply shut off for the winter period (May 2023). We have a Weboost with Verizon and are receiving 5LTE at this location. There's a visible cell tower here, so I would expect most, if not all, mobile networks to have at least 2 bars, if not 5.
11 months ago

Anonymous
English (US)
We stayed here in late September 2023 for 2 nights as we worked our way south through Colorado while avoiding I-25. This is right off the main highway we were traveling and offered a great place to observe some distance mountains, with 4 bars of cell service and few neighbors. It's an open area without many trees so when it is windy it's windy. I'd recommend checking the wind conditions so you park into it not sideways against it to minimize the annoyance of it. Several great hiking and mountain bike trails right out your camper in this area and amazing night skies. The only negative we had was that our spot had two previously used fire rings near it so we assumed it was a group camping area at one time and offered us a lot of space to spread out since no other campers were anywhere near us. What we did not realize was that the local mountain biking club used this area as a parking lot to go on rides every afternoon we were there from 430 to 730 pm. Public lands are public lands and this inconvenience would not keep us from staying here again but we would select a different site. Our site was on the right side of the road as you go in just past the power lines on the other side of the hill. The road in was washboard but slow and steady got us in just fine.
1 year ago

Anonymous
English (US)
Great dispersed camping with many sites on the access roads. Suggest you use the GPS in this review as the coordinates provided in the heading take you several miles away from the correct turn out. Also suggest reading the great review by Sue GG (at the bottom of this list of reviews) for some sites and distances from the access road. Some of the access roads can be a bit rough. We drive a 27ft Class A and had minor issues. Del Norte is about 10 minutes away, with diners, grocery stores, gas, and a free RV dump site with potable water in the City Park - GPS: 37.684087, -106.352198. Lastly, mobile reception based around seeing the local cell tower is good, but some sites don't have line of sight and the AT@T signal can be a bit patchy.
1 year ago

Anonymous
English (US)
I spent 7 days dry camping here August 4th -10th. I'd say it was a pleasant stay. There were a few other campers, but not many. This is also a day use area for locals, so you'll see people come and go, especially on the weekend. There are plenty of hiking, bike, and OTV trails in the area. I had great cellular service here. Something to note as well. The City of Del Norte (near by) has a FREE dump station with potable water for RVers. Also, in Monte Vista the Maverick Station has a dump station I believe is free. I say that because at Maverick's on other locations, they have free RV dumping. But also In Monte Vista, the Coop has a fee based dump station. The one in Del Norte is very easy to access, and quite handy. This area is beautiful, and I had a peaceful stay. I was there visiting family who live near. I'm sure I'll return.
1 year ago

Anonymous
English (US)
Easy access off 160. Lots of room and fantastic cell phone coverage.
1 year ago

isoseeker
English (US)
Over nighted while passing through. Found great wide spot at the first road split complete with small fire spits that we didn't use. Good input from other reviews that helped to find turn off driving west. If headed north up the San Luis valley to Saguache, easy to cross over highway 160 and use N CR 5W to access West CR 5N to get back to 285 north of Monte Vista. Nice view of the valley and Sangre de Cristo range. There is a posting of interesting history at the end of the road down the left fork at this junction along with wagon tracks worn in the rock as testimony to the past.
2 years ago

Martinez_wa_family
English (US)
Site was amazing and quiet. Was very enjoyable for 1st time dry docking. Teenagers loved it as did the toddler. Road in was very well maintained. We were actually surprised by amount of traffic in/out. NOTE: disregard post on Alamosa rv park, accidentally posted to wrong site.
2 years ago

Jenna
English (US)
We had a great experience here! Apple Maps tried to take us to CR 44 which was the landfill road and it’s closed, that is the wrong one! Follow the mile markers from a previous review. There are multiple sites for big rv’s and a cool trail off to the left. It poured rain on us, but it was quite a lovey view and quiet.
2 years ago

VanTeam
English (US)
Overall there was not much traffic, just a few vehicles with mountains bikes coming in. Only say a few other vans or rvs staying the night but they didn't seem to stay too long. We stayed at the first turn off on the left and had a great view if the surrounding mountains.
2 years ago

Sue GG
English (US)
After our research on Campendium, still hit some bumps, so here are specifics I felt was lacking. The turn for OLD SPANISH TRAIL (OST) is between milemarker 208 & 209 off of 160, almost directly across from access to County Hwy 5 W labeled with a blue cty sign. If you are traveling westbound, there is not a left turn lane for this. We missed it in the dark despite seeing the OST signage. Let me start with we came here mid-March 2021 & it was dry weather, not muddy at all. After you turn off 160, there is a parking lot almost immediately on your R for the OST trailhead. The 1st boondocking site is 0.7 from the parking lot, on the L. The 2nd site is 0.9 from parking lot, on the R. It has an electric pole by the entrance to the site. The road gets slightly rougher but quite doable with our 30' travel trailer. This road splits at 1.4 & a large site is right there on R. We stayed R at the split & another large site on L just past this, still 1.4 or 1.5. Entrance to L site was a bit rutty but we were ok & stayed there. Another site is just down the road on L at 1.5, but has a bit of a slope. So now we have encountered 5 sites. The next day we decided to explore the left fork of the split. At 0.6 FROM THIS FIRST ROAD SPLIT is a site on R which is sloped a bit. Continuing on finds a 2nd road split. The R fork is more ATV trail & goes nowhere really except possible private land. The L fork from 2nd split goes to a 3RD ROAD SPLIT and another NICE, FLAT site which is technically 0.9 from the first road split. Once again R fork is rough & goes nowhere. Confused yet? Stick with it, more to come. Continue on L fork & it becomes US Forest Road 270 according to a post sign. On this section there is cool scenery & you are tucked away..so neat! One more good site at 1.4 from 1st road split & a sloped site at 1.9. As others say, cell tower is right there with 4 solid bars.
3 years ago

RoseRegan
English (US)
We couldn't find availability for any of the campgrounds in Alamosa so decided to boondock and found Campendium.com online and saw Old Spanish Trails. We pulled in at 9pm and set up for the night in the first site. No one here. Just us. Woke up next morning to an absolutely beautiful view of snow capped mountains, peace and quiet. The puppies were able to stretch their legs and sniff all they wanted since no one around us. No rattlesnakes, no menacing wildlife, just us and the pups enjoying the views. Thank you so much Campendium.com for having this site. Appreciate it so much.
3 years ago

Fun Or Not
English (US)
Not as windy as Sacred White Shell Mountain. A lot of locals coming and going. Quiet at night. I stayed at the second clearing that still have phone signal. The third clearing had no phone signal. Good for solar charging.
3 years ago

DesertGeckoAdventures
English (US)
Camped with the cell tower in site from my campsite. Was able to easily connect to work. Campsites are spaced far apart and usually you won't see your neighbor. Close to many locations in the San Luis Valley to off road and hike. Occasionally locals would do target shooting in a close by campsite, but not for long.
3 years ago

SometimesLost
English (US)
The large camping areas are in wide open and fairly gusty areas. They are also within line of sight to a cell phone tower. There are a few smaller sites on the trails that go into the canyons and foothills. The trails eventually become too rocky and require a Jeep. Not the most scenic area, but you can get away from the highway.
3 years ago