Sunday February 15
Our drive for the day was headed to “Little Tallapoosa” county park. Man, these Georgia places have weird names!We had rain for the whole trip as we cruised up and down through little mountains. It was mostly light rain but there was one smart shower. It didn’t slow us down, and it stopped raining when we arrived. Yippee!
I was surprised to discover it was a full hookup site. (I really need to start writing down these details at the time of making the reservation instead of waiting until months later when I do trip details planning. It’s strangely hard sometimes to find out that information months after the fact. But in this case, I think Georgia’s park reservation system was just flaky. Actually it's a county park.)Molly and I went for a long meander on the little park trails, mostly concentrating on wide, paved bike trail. We got lost, but I suspected we’d been traveling in a big oval. And I was right! We ended up back at the RV campground. Sweet.
And shortly after returning it came a serious shower. Didn’t see that coming!
There was a good bit of traffic noise in the distance. But the campground itself was very quiet. No radios or traffic or stuff like that. See my review later for details. Nothing much else happened, but I did a bit of work for Brock.
Review: Little Tallapoosa Park
Sweet campground! And bring the kids
This seemed like an itty bitty little campground until I went walking around. The full-hookup area where we were had a couple of loops and plenty of lovely, large sites. I’d been told to “check in and choose any yellow site,” and that worked fine. I’d reserved a site and paid a deposit, asking for a full hookup site for a 35’ RV. And that’s exactly what the yellow sites were. The green ones were for smaller RVs and there were some tent sites mixed in, too. All this was explained by the nice lady at the front gate who gave us our tags.
There were two other camping loops, one with RV and smaller trailer sites, water/electric only, and one for tent campers. It would be a lovely place to tent camp—the sites were large and pretty private, under huge pine trees for shade.
We chose pull-thru site 6. The pad was asphalt, it was easy to get in and out, and the utilities worked just fine. It was more than long enough for us. The utilities were at the back of the site, so we unhooked our toad and parked it in front, which let us put the motorhome at the very back where it would be close to the sewer outlet.
There is a lovely, long bike trail next to the campground, plus lots of little walking paths winding in and out through the woods. All perfectly maintained. And there’s a basketball area, a splash pad and a couple of playgrounds for the kiddies. Plus a tiny little pond, containing a lone blue-winged teal. They had signs displaying local children’s poetry posted on the walking path around it. Nice!
If it had only had a dog park I’d have called it perfect.






















