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This kind of camping is widely known as dispersed camping (or boondocking for the RV crowd), and it’s accessible on many Bureau of Land Management (BLM) or United States Forest Service (USFS) lands.
The fees, regulations, infrastructure, and conditions of dispersed-camping areas vary greatly, so check your local jurisdiction before you pitch a tent on some random dirt road.
Sixty-seven percent of those campers are using public campgrounds. The Mountain Region ... campers have an option known as dispersed camping. This is camping in which there are no picnic tables ...
Dispersed camping (think free camping outside designated campgrounds) and boondocking (remote camping without hookups) are ...
Dispersed camping offers solutions to these problems, said Monica Stockbridge, author of the guidebook “Best Tent Camping Colorado.” Her book is geared toward established campgrounds, ...
Dispersed camping is important not just because many users prefer it over campgrounds, but because existing campgrounds are already overwhelmed, said Ben Lara, the recreation program manager for ...
Sixty-seven percent of those campers are using public campgrounds. And the Mountain ... campers have an option known as dispersed camping. This is camping where there are no picnic tables, fire ...
Thinking about dispersed camping in Colorado? Here are the basic rules to follow, resources available and where to pitch a tent.