Agree with other reviewers, horrible place, stay away 鈥 so there is more room for us.
Actually one of our favorite winter spots. Sonoran desert is green this time of yr and cool weather makes it a nice visit. Showers are solar heated, so we use them middle of pm, and they can be overly hot. You just need to time our visit.
206 spots. Top section allows generators between 8-10 and 3-6, middle section is RVs but doesn鈥檛 allow generators, and bottom section is for tents with some RV slots. All RV slots are paved and most very level. A few have ramadas. Water and trash well spaced thruout.
DougC
Posted Feb 19, 2025; Utah
We liked the camping very much and would have stayed the 2 days that we reserved but NO HOT SHOWERS at all which is a big deal breaker for us. Just stayed 1 night and left, no hot showers is unacceptable in my opinion. Will give it 2 stars only for that reason. Shameful!!!!
Dave Jussel
Posted Jan 29, 2025; New Jersey
Very nice National Monument campground but NO hot showers which, I think ,is unacceptable. Both my wife and I waited to see if shower would get hot but it stayed cold. Not good if you ask me.
Dave Jussel
Posted Jan 27, 2025;
Dry camping in a very nice campground in the green Sonoran Desert . Stayed in 40芒鈧劉 MH with TOAD. Limited generator hours, 8-10 am and 4-6 pm, to plan around. Hope to have solar next time we come. Drove Ajo Drive, hiked and enjoy evening ranger programs. Mostly solid Verizon signal in campground. Nice dump station with separate drinking water fill.
Hanson
Posted Mar 01, 2020;
Nice location in the Organ Pipe National Monument. No hookups but water spigots throughout the campground. Dump station located in the campground. Bathrooms were clean and well maintained. There are solar showers but we did not use them so I cannot comment on how effective they are. Sites are fairly close together but not a problem as all sites are pull throughs. One thing to be aware of is that generators are allowed from 8:00-10:00 in the morning and from 5:00-7:00 in the afternoon. And there are lots of generators running during those times which made the campground somewhat loud. If you have solar I would advise you to stay in the non generator part of the campground. If you need full hookups it is not that far to Why where there are a couple nice RV parks.
Eric
Posted Feb 15, 2020; Conroe, TX
The Twin Peaks Campground is located within the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument and just five miles from the international border with Mexico. Honestly, it is one of the most scenic campgrounds we芒鈧劉ve stayed at in over a decade of RV camping. The campground has flush toilets, drinking water fill stations throughout the campground, solar heated showers, trash receptacles, pull through sites, and a dump station. Verizon cellular service clocked in at 3.63 Mbps download speed and .051 Mbps upload speed. AT&T clocked in at 1.13 Mbps download speed and 3.34 Mbps upload speed. There are two dog friendly trails, but beware of the cactus, it is everywhere. The Desert View Trail is a must if you want sweeping vistas of several mountain ranges and the campground. There are no hookups at this campground, dry camping only. Generators are permitted with restrictions; see my related video. If you have a National Parks Access Pass or equivalent, this campground is currently affordable at just $10 per night. See my related YouTube video here: https://youtu.be/FLyuoOx5urw
Louis A Assaro
Posted Nov 26, 2019; WV
I was here in late May, 2019. The temperatures were unseasonably cool, but the campground was still nearly empty, and I had my pick of sites (#173). The campground is naturally landscaped with the most gorgeous saguaro and organ pipe cactus, as well as creosote bush and jumping cholla. The washrooms boast a solar shower, but I guess the solar part was shut off when I was there for 芒鈧搒ummer芒鈧 because of possible scalding temps. Cold showers are better than none, and it was clean. But the beauty of the Monument is best experienced on the hiking trails and the gravel road drives. I abused my Ram Promaster on some parts of the scenic drives, but it was worth it. The only downside was the lack of knowledge among the visitor center rangers. I wonder if they芒鈧劉ve even seen their own park.
Casey Liston
Posted Jun 09, 2019; NC
Beautiful well maintained campground. Restrooms are clean and well located throughout. Water and trash receptacles are convenient to the sites (water is also available at the RV dump station - potable to fill your tank, non-potable to rinse after dumping. Well laid out sites so that each is a pull-through. While sites are close to each other there is shrubbery to give a sense of privacy. Concrete pads with very little slope and room for rv and toad or vehicle and travel trailer. Separate section for non-generator area, plus separate section for tents with flat area for the tent itself. Some tent sites have ramadas. As of January 1, 2019 reservations through recreation.gov are required for January through March - use that site vs googling it or you may end up on an old page that no longer works and gives incorrect info.
Barbara
Posted Feb 05, 2019; CA
Great campground with campsites embedded in a cactus garden. Immaculately clean, remote with many attractive, level sites. Very close to Mexican border so some interactions with border patrol folks is likely. These interactions (consisting of traffic check points along roads) were very polite, professional and brief
Cato
Posted Jan 27, 2019; Ohio
Beautiful campground with vatiety of nature cactus. Super clean with level concrete pads and new facilities. The nicest fed campground we've encountered.
Bohdi
Posted Feb 16, 2018; California