Reservations are available at Shades State Park Campground, and they're worth making, especially given that the single shower house serves the entire campground. Sites run $16-$28 per night for the April through October season, with a park admission fee on top of that. No cell signal reaches the campground, so download maps and trail information before arrival. The park road into the family campground can be rough, and sites tend to get muddy after rain, so checking the forecast before heading out is practical advice.
The roughly 100 non-electric sites sit in a forested loop, most separated by trees that provide moderate privacy, though some are positioned close enough to toilets or dumpsters to make site selection matter. Site numbers have faded over time on many of the concrete parking blocks, which makes locating your assigned spot genuinely difficult, particularly after dark. Timothy notes that "campsites are close but most have trees separating them for privacy," and the tree canopy is dense enough that at least one camper kept a fire going through a thunderstorm. The Whitetail Loop has the closest access to the shower house and flush toilets.
Hiking is the main draw. Shades has some of the most rugged trails in Indiana, including trails with ladders and the Devils Backbone route, which requires careful footing. Sugar Creek, which Timothy describes as cutting "through the ancient sandstone floor creating canyon walls," runs through the park and has a canoe launch. The adjacent Pine Hills Nature Preserve adds backpacking options and rock formations. A covered bridge sits on the property as well.
RVs are limited to 32 feet, and while a dump station is on site, at least one reviewer found no water hookups at individual sites despite what listings suggest, so confirming hookup availability before arrival is worth a call to the park. Crawfordsville, about 20 minutes away, has full resupply options. For campers who want full hookups or a different setup, Sugar Mill Lake and Campgrounds is another option in the region.
Description
If you’re looking for the perfect camping destination to tell spooky stories around the campfire, Shades State Park is the place to do it. Just 16 miles southwest of Crawfordsville, the area’s original name was Shades of Death. This harkens to some of the grizzly legends from early settlement years that originated under the area’s dark and foreboding forests. In the late 1800s, a health resort named “The Shades” was built on the site, taking advantage of the many natural springs in the area. Today, Shades State Park offers a pleasant and serene outdoor getaway among 3,000 acres of beech and oak woods and sandstone ravines, where Sugar Creek flows through and spills over small waterfalls.
Open from April through October, the campground in Shades State Park offers 105 drive-in campsites, 7 hike-in sites, and 10 boat-in sites. The main sites are equipped with tent spaces, picnic tables and fire rings, and can accommodate trailers and RVs up to 55 feet. Hookups are not available in this park, but there is a dump station. A limited number of sites are ADA accessible. Facilities in the campground include drinking water, flush restrooms, hot showers, picnic areas and playgrounds, and sports fields. An amphitheater hosts seasonal nature programs, and ice and firewood are available to purchase onsite. Campsite rates range from $10–$24/night; hike-in and boat-in sites are first-come, first-serve.
For exploring the area, more than 10 miles of hiking trails are available for exploring the Shades’ woods, waterways and canyons. Take a short, easy stroll along Red Fox Ravine, or more moderate hikes around Devil’s Punchbowl and Silver Cascade Falls. For more adventure, hike into the adjacent Pine Hills Nature Preserve on the east side of the park. Or, for a fun nighttime alternative, take a guided, full-moon hike with one of the park’s naturalists. Swimming and wading in Sugar Creek is not permitted, but you can cast a line for bass and bluegill, or visit one of the canoe outfitters outside the park to take a float down the creek.
Warning 1 Alert is In Effect
There is 1 alert for this campground. Camp safely!
Warning 1 Alert is In Effect
There is 1 alert for this campground. Camp safely!
Trails 7 and 8 at Shades State Park are currently closed due to damaged trail structures.
RV Road Trip Guides
Map & DirectionsShades State Park Campground is located in Indiana near Alamo
Directions
FROM THE NORTH: U.S. 41 S. TO SR 234, THEN EAST ON SR 234 TO THE ENTRANCE. FROM THE SOUTH: U.S. 41 N. TO SR 234, THEN EAST ON SR 234 TO THE ENTRANCE. FROM THE EAST: I-74 W. TO EXIT 52 (JAMESTOWN / ADVANCE). S. ABOUT 3 MILES TO SR 234. CONTINUE W. FOR APPROX. 25 MILES TO THE ENTRANCE. FROM THE WEST: I-74 EAST TO EXIT 15 (VEEDERSBURG/U.S. 41). S. ON U.S. 41 ABOUT 12 MILES TO SR 234, THEN E. ON SR 234 APPROX. 18 MILES TO THE ENTRANCE.
Address
7751 S. CR. 890 W.
Waveland, IN 47989
Coordinates
39.94802803 N
87.02401482 W
Connectivity
- T-MobileNo Coverage
- VerizonLTESome Coverage
- AT&TLTESome Coverage
Connectivity
- T-MobileNo Coverage
- VerizonLTESome Coverage
- AT&TLTESome Coverage
Access
- Drive-InPark next to your site
- Walk-InPark in a lot, walk to your site.
- Hike-InBackcountry sites.
- Boat-InSites accessible by watercraft.
Site Types
- Tent Sites
- RV Sites
- Standard (Tent/RV)
- Group
Features
For Campers
- Picnic Table
- Reservable
- Showers
- Drinking Water
- Electric Hookups
- Toilets
- Alcohol
- Pets
- Fires
For Vehicles
- Sanitary Dump
- Sewer Hookups
- Water Hookups
- Pull-Through Sites
- 30 Amp Hookups
- 50 Amp Hookups
- Big Rig Friendly
Drive Time
- 52 min from Lafayette, IN
- 59 min from Terre Haute, IN
- 1 hr from Indianapolis, IN
- 1 hr 33 min from Kokomo, IN




























































