Equestrian Camping near Fernley, NV

9 campgrounds · Check availability for any dates.

Search destinations
    Add dates

    No horse-specific amenities or facilities appear to be available at campgrounds near Fernley, Nevada according to the provided data. While the area offers several camping options, none of the listings specifically mention horse corrals, equestrian trails, or dedicated horse facilities. The Churchill County Regional Park and other campgrounds in the region accommodate RVs and tent camping, but there are no indications of horse-friendly features like corrals, stalls, wash racks, or designated equestrian sites. The data shows "NO horse-corral" as a feature across all campgrounds.

    Visitors traveling with horses may need to explore other regions for dedicated equestrian camping facilities. Lahontan State Recreation Area offers dispersed camping with beach access and allows pets, but lacks specific equestrian accommodations. The Scout Camp at Fort Churchill provides a more natural setting with access to trails, though no horse-specific amenities are listed. When planning equestrian trips in this region, contacting campgrounds directly to inquire about horse policies or nearby horse-friendly areas would be advisable, as some locations may permit horses even without dedicated facilities.

    Best Equestrian Campgrounds near Fernley (9)

      1. Developed 7 — Lahontan State Recreation Area

      3.7(9)14mi from Fernley20 sitesTents

      "not close to amenities and no hookups- bring water"

      "We camped 2021 at beach 7 and it wasn’t to bad we were in a tent but the water was low in lake just Carson river running to dam."

      from $10 / night

      Check Availability

      2. River Camp — Lahontan State Recreation Area

      3.4(5)13mi from Fernley8 sitesRVs, Tents

      "The park has the lake and beaches. Great walking, access to all the lake amenities."

      from $10 / night

      Check Availability

      3. Dispersed Campgrounds — Lahontan State Recreation Area

      3.0(4)13mi from FernleyRVs, Tents

      "Shade might be limited around here, but play a little hide and seek, and you’ll find some cool spots to chill under."

      4. Washoe Lake State Park Campground

      4.7(23)38mi from Fernley25 sitesRVs, Tents

      "The lake and the surrounding area takes on a different appearance depending on the season you visit, and whether it's been a wet year or a dry one."

      "We stayed here for just under 2 weeks around Thanksgiving. Very beautiful area with hiking near the lake and mountains. The horses nearby were nice. Right between Reno and Carson City."

      from $10 - $75 / night

      Check Availability

      5. Churchill County Regional Park

      2.0(4)25mi from FernleyRVs

      6. Pyramid Lake Marina and RV Park

      4.4(7)32mi from FernleyRVs, Tents

      "Located just outside of Reno , this is where the locals play."

      "Many different spots from able to use the marina or at the boat launch still on pavement or just right down on the beach next to the water. Only biggest issue is there is no trees. So no shade."

      7. Logger Campground

      4.5(13)49mi from Fernley205 sitesRVs, Tents

      "Right next to the water, and close to town. Cell phone reception. is spotty ."

      "It was late and we couldn't find the owner so we ended up staying outside the park on the road. The manager got things worked out in the morning and refunded our money for the night before."

      from $23 - $75 / night

      Check Availability

      8. Lookout Campground

      4.4(7)45mi from Fernley19 sitesRVs, Tents

      "But most stay in other "dispersed" camping, and there aren't nearly as many vehicles as you might see, for example, in a Nevada dunes off-road park."

      "First, it's quite an adventurous (read: bumpy) drive to get to it from the nearest paved road. Once you arrive, you'll be amazed at how much space there is between the sites."

      from $20 - $60 / night

      Check Availability

      9. North Canyon Campground — Spooner Lake State Park

      3.0(1)48mi from FernleyTents

    2026 Explorer Giveaway

    Review Campgrounds. Win Prizes.

    Enter to Win

    Drive Time


    Recent Equestrian Camping Photos near Fernley, NV

    8 Photos of 9 Fernley Campgrounds


    Equestrian Camping Reviews near Fernley, NV

    73 Reviews of 9 Fernley Campgrounds


    • amanda E.
      Apr. 19, 2019

      Washoe Lake State Park Campground

      Located in one of the oldest settled Valleys in Nevada

      If you like Bird Watching (or wildlife in general), Boating, Fishing, Hang Gliding, Paragliding, Equestrian Activities, Camping or BBQ's, or even history, then this is a place you might enjoy.

      The lake and the surrounding area takes on a different appearance depending on the season you visit, and whether it's been a wet year or a dry one. Sometimes when it has been extremely dry, the larger of the 2 lakes dries up either partially or entirely, leaving the smaller one as a valuable water source for Wild Mustangs who live in the area. (which is a great opportunity for photographers).

      When the larger lake bed dries up a little, it extends the hang gliding / paragliding landing zone. (take off point is up on the hill on Eastlake Blvd, which is also a good view point of the lakes).

      During the wetter years, the larger lake fills up, allowing water activities such as boating to take place on both lakes, and provides you with the opportunity to bird watch at any of the wildlife viewing areas provided. The smaller lake also provides bird watching opportunities (Osprey and other birds of prey like to fish there) You can also fish at the smaller lake, just don't eat them, the area was once used for the processing mills during the mining boom.

      Also if you are into wildlife, there is the occasional coyote hunting the area, owls, hawks, bald eagles, and if you want to see deer, take a little drive up Eastlake Blvd towards little Washoe Lake, and one of the fields on the right often has huge herds of Mule Deer, and the occasional wild horse. Talking of Wild horses, you are requested not to feed or harass the wild Mustangs anywhere in Nevada (Washoe lake park included). Horses can be defensive, especially when they have young foals. Also feeding them anything other than what they naturally eat in the wild, not only causes a high number of deaths in the herds, it also creates dangerous situations on the roadways when horses come to retrieve the food. (it can also cost you thousands of dollars in fines) There are people who regularly monitor the interaction visitors have with the horses. But if you want to interact with a horse, why not bring your own for a ride around too, people often bring their horses down for a trot around the grounds.

      There are restrooms available throughout the park, and facilities for camping. It is a good place for dogs, though it is requested that you clean up after them. There are doggie clean up stations available, and containers for waste.

      The land the park sits on was once owned by one of Nevada's wealthiest men Theodore Winters, who was a prominent businessman and politician in early Nevada history. He once owned some of the most famous racehorses in the world, and his cheese was world renown. His Ranch is still around, and you can find it located just on the other side of the lake (Old Route 395), not far from the Chocolate Nugget Candy Factory (which is great if you get a hankering for something sweet), and Old Washoe City.

      The lake's history goes back even further than that, the area was once inhabited by the local tribes people, and before the early pioneer's came and settled here, they used hunt ducks on the lake, and fished here. There is probably still the odd chance you might come across old Native tools and arrowheads, but the State of Nevada does ask you to leave artifacts where they are found. Check the local and federal laws before attempting to remove anything.

      It has some lovely sunsets here, the view can be spectacular at times and changes according to season and weather, and the wildlife seem to enjoy it. Nice place to go and hang out with family and friends, and if you happen to forget to bring anything, you are only a little drive from Carson City :)

    • PThe Dyrt PRO User
      Dec. 30, 2021

      Washoe Lake State Park Campground

      Quiet, clean park

      We stayed here for just under 2 weeks around Thanksgiving. Very beautiful area with hiking near the lake and mountains. The horses nearby were nice. Right between Reno and Carson City. Access to Casinos and Restuarants nearby(10 minute drive or so). The Park has showers and bathrooms as well as water and electricity hook ups. The camp host was nice and provides us with a huge bundle of firewood for only a $5 donation.

    • S
      Jun. 17, 2021

      Lookout Campground

      The Campground... and The Road

      THE CAMPGROUND

      The campground is great. Many sites have lots of space between them, while a few are side-by-side with just a vehicle parking space separating them. Each has a level, wood-bordered dirt/gravel pad set up for a tent - usually placed in as quiet/remote corner of the site as possible. Each has a picnic table, some type of fire pit (some have a metal ring with nice flipping grate, some are just a circle of large stones), and some type of cooking setup (some have a standard campsite charcoal "grill" while others have a metal table to set your cooktop on.

      Very quite. Only noise is campground noise and one infrequently trafficked dirt road nearby (see below).

      Campfires are allowed. If you drive in from the south (via Verdi), there is currently a designated area to collect firewood - it is scheduled for a prescription burn and you can pick up any wood from the forest floor - bring an axe and saw.

      I visited mid-week during peak July season - there were two other campsites occupied (out of 20 total).

      The campsite is in the middle of Dog Valley. The area is used for off-road recreation, so you may run into a few off-road buggies or trucks, and some may stay at the campground. But most stay in other "dispersed" camping, and there aren't nearly as many vehicles as you might see, for example, in a Nevada dunes off-road park.

      The Crystal Mine is nearby… quick drive, bit longer walk. I didn't find many walking trails in the area, but may have missed them.

      Verizon cell service picked up one bar, intermittently. Enough to get out occasional status update texts and check the weather, but not enough to be able to read stuff off the internet unless… you…. are…. really…. really… really… patient. If you hike up the hill at the nearby Crystal Mine, Verizon gave 2 bars and 5G… you are line of sight to Cold Springs. 

      There is basically no radio reception at the campground, but one AM station came in during the drive.

      There are two 'vault' toilets, both of which were clean and well maintained… no real odor, no spiders, etc. I saw one water spigot but it required a keyed handle to open so it was inaccessible … no other sources of water (potable or otherwise) at the site.

      Trash cans are provide. No food/bear lockers provided (bear-safe food storage not required … but always a good precautionary measure).

      I give it four stars because it is a good campground, and may be a good base for off-roading or mountain biking, but doesn't have many major sites nearby (hiking trails, rivers, lookout points, etc.) and I didn't find a variety of hiking trails nearby (a major one does run through the general area). Would be tough to keep kids busy, but great for a 2 day getaway for a couple.

      Ok… let's talk THE ROAD….

      The road is one of the reasons this site generally isn't too packed. There are two main ways in…

      From The South (Verdi)

      This is the roughest path. It has a fairly good incline and then decline into the valley, so I can only speak to my summer experience, but I suspect this may present a challenge for winter/wet driving.

      For this route, you will spend 8.5 miles on a dirt road. I'd estimate this road is 10% "standard country dirt road, flat, fairly level, no major ruts, drivable by any vehicle at 25-30MPH." About 75% of the road is "unmaintained hill road, where you have to hug one side or another to avoid 6-inch+ ruts, loose rocks up to 5" in diameter, passable by a 2-wheel drive vehicle with reasonable ground clearance and not concerned about rocks on the paint, driving 10-15 MPH." The remaining 15% still probably doesn't require 4-wheel drive, but could benefit from it, involves going 5MPH to navigate deeper ruts or 'potholes'. The entire route is totally 100% passable by any truck/Jeep, even 2-wheel drive, driven slowly and carefully at times. Subarus would be fine. I *think* a standard sedan could make it, but you run a very good chance of bashing in the underside of your car… it is doable and I saw a little hatchback do it, but I personally wouldn't recommend.

      From the North (Cold Springs)

      For this route, you will spend 10 miles on a dirt road.

      The first 3.3 miles (about 33%) is "standard country dirt road, flat, fairly level, no major ruts, drivable by any vehicle at 25-30MPH." Very easy driving. About 65% is "unmaintained hill road, where you have to hug one side or another to avoid 6-inch+ ruts, loose rocks up to 5" in diameter, passable by a 2-wheel drive vehicle with reasonable ground clearance and not concerned about rocks on the paint, driving 15 MPH." The remaining 2% is the harder road, as described above… just a few specific spots/turns, not long sections.

      This north route is easier, but either way you go, there will be tougher sections.

      To be fair - this isn't "off-roading." There are no boulders or 'technical' challenges. It is just an unmaintained (or rarely maintained) dirt road that has ruts, especially in uphill/downhill areas where the water runs across the road. Definitely not just a 'country dirt road', but a more typical mountain backroad.

      Pictures below show the most common sections - 75% of the south path and 66% of the north path look like that or a little bit worse. The pictures aren't the worst sections - just more of the 'typical' road you can expect for most of the way.

      Final comment: All of the above is about dry, summer driving. After rains, when the ground is wet, or in the winter - could be a very different experience.

    • DThe Dyrt PRO User
      Jun. 19, 2021

      Churchill County Regional Park

      Modest campground by the county fair grounds

      This is a modest little campground with not much here. The only bathroom available at the time I was there was a porta potty. They did not have showers. 

      They have 30 amp service and water available. Rates are only $20 with electricity. For a tent it’s only seven dollars. Yourself register and put your money in a box. Or a short stay like one night it was fine. Fairly quiet even though it was right along the highway.

      Horses are not allowed in this campground.

    • Debbie C.
      Apr. 27, 2018

      Washoe Lake State Park Campground

      Very well kept and clean

      This state park is a very nice park and campground. There's an abundance of space in each site with Cabana and fire ring. We even saw some wild horses.

    • Andrew R.
      Jan. 12, 2022

      Washoe Lake State Park Campground

      Great winter camping!

      Winter camping is available on Loop A with full power hookups on a first come, first serve basis. Bathrooms are open all winter. Hiking is nice right from the campground and wild horses graze not far away.

    • DThe Dyrt PRO User
      Nov. 23, 2022

      Washoe Lake State Park Campground

      Great stop over

      Spent the night here on a road trip. 30$ for non Nevada resident but includes full hookups except water was shut off for the season. Flat, wide spaces with mostly pull throughs, clean bathrooms and shower. Convenient credit card pay system. Also a dump station.

    • C
      Sep. 11, 2021

      Washoe Lake State Park Campground

      5 miles north of Carson City

      • 2 loops. Loop A has electric and water and loop B is dry camping *Loop A was $30, which included $10 nonresident fee. *large sites with a lot of space between sites!
      • no showers or toilets in loop A where we were. Loop B, ?
      • Some trees
      • covered picnic table. Fire pit at each site
      • bbq at some sites *beautiful view of the Sierras, although we couldn't see the lake from our site *Feral horses. Several came galloping towards us, which was a bit startling, but we move and they went around us.
      • When leaving, just past the dump station, there is a pull out where you can easily hitch the toad.
      • Glad we got there fairly early -2:30- because there were only 2 sites left and one was a handicap site. *Maybe 35 sites in each loop, but they are so spaced out, it is really nice

    Guide to Fernley

    The Fernley, Nevada area sits at an elevation of 4,200 feet in Nevada's high desert region. Located in Lyon County, this region experiences dramatic temperature shifts throughout the year, with summer highs reaching 95°F and winter lows dropping to 20°F. Camping opportunities surround the city within a 60-mile radius, including several state recreation areas and dispersed camping options on public lands.

    What to do

    Explore Crystal Peak: Just under 60 miles from Fernley, hike the trail from Lookout Campground to discover an area rich with quartz crystals. "The trail from the campground to Crystal Peak was great. It's more like Crystal knoll. The history of Crystal Peak is amazing, and the crystals are everywhere," reports Ray B.

    Water recreation options: Lahontan State Recreation Area offers water-based activities when reservoir levels permit. "We camped 2021 at beach 7 and it wasn't to bad we were in a tent but the water was low in lake just Carson river running to dam," shares Elsie B. Conditions vary significantly by season and drought conditions.

    Historic exploration: Visit Fort Churchill State Historic Park near Scout Camp to see preserved ruins from Nevada's territorial period. "Site had a pre-made fire pit. There's a few spots here to choose from... Lots of ATVs here. Overall pretty good for a nights stay, especially if you're in to history!" notes Julianne N.

    What campers like

    Natural riparian habitat: Scout Camp offers shaded camping in a cottonwood forest. "Scout camp is on the Carson river and within the tall cottonwoods. Camp in the shade or out in the open if it's very windy as the trees can shed branches," explains Virginia D., highlighting a rare desert oasis setting.

    Lakeside beach camping: Dispersed Campgrounds at Lahontan provides direct waterfront sites. "We're regulars at this spot, pitching our tent on the south side, though there's plenty of room for the RV crowd too. The best part? You can camp right by the water!" writes Sabrina D., though noting weekend crowds can bring noise.

    Wildlife viewing opportunities: Washoe Lake State Park provides opportunities to see wild horses. "Beautiful campground! Flush toilets and showers," reports Randee S., while Jayne N. adds, "Beautiful spot 1/2 mile walk to lake, wild horses roaming camp, quiet & clean."

    What you should know

    Variable water levels: Lahontan Reservoir water levels fluctuate dramatically, affecting camping options. "Camped overnight on the beach, but could not fully access location due to water conditions. The reservoir is completely full this year and the water has flooded out the established campground area," reported Katie S. during a high-water year.

    Road conditions: Some campgrounds require navigating rough roads. "The road is one of the reasons this site generally isn't too packed... Definitely not just a 'country dirt road', but a more typical mountain backroad," explains S K. about accessing Lookout Campground.

    Sand challenges: Beach camping at Lahontan State Recreation Area requires careful vehicle positioning. "Be careful!!! Almost got stuck in the sand while trying to find a spot level enough to park. Many people had dug out around their trailer to get the slides out," warns Richard M.

    Tips for camping with families

    Timing considerations: School season affects campground availability and experience. "Midweek and mid September- plenty of sites even in the non primitive campsites. Beautiful view- very quiet; clean bathrooms," shares Carol & Ed V. about Lahontan.

    Weather preparation: Be ready for wind at lakeside locations. "I enjoyed this spot though beware, you can get stuck in the sand. Many spots may be difficult to maneuver with a larger rig... It did get windy at the night I was there but calmed down by 10PM," Teresa M. notes about Lahontan.

    Limited equestrian facilities: While searching for horse campgrounds near Fernley, Nevada or equestrian camping options near Fernley, understand facilities are limited. Pyramid Lake Marina and RV Park and other nearby campgrounds lack dedicated horse facilities. "Camping here was great. Many different spots from able to use the marina or at the boat launch still on pavement or just right down on the beach next to the water. Only biggest issue is there is no trees," reports Juan.

    Tips from RVers

    Alternative to RV parks: Churchill County Regional Park provides basic RV accommodations. "This is a modest little campground with not much here. The only bathroom available at the time I was there was a porta potty. They did not have showers. They have 30 amp service and water available," notes David B.

    Site selection for size: Larger rigs must consider specific campgrounds and sites. "Electric and water for $35 and extra $10 for dump at entrance. Nothing special place very bare bones. But it was very quiet despite being close to the road," reports Debra E. about Churchill County Regional Park.

    Spacing between sites: Some campgrounds offer more separation between RVs. "Large sites with water and electricity (loop A). Beautiful views of the mountains. Lots to do in the area," shares Rich J. about Washoe Lake State Park, which offers more developed options for RVers.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Which is the most popular equestrian campsite near Fernley, NV?

    According to TheDyrt.com, the most popular equestrian campground near Fernley, NV is Developed 7 — Lahontan State Recreation Area with a 3.7-star rating from 9 reviews.

    What is the best site to find equestrian camping near Fernley, NV?

    TheDyrt.com has all 9 equestrian camping locations near Fernley, NV, with real photos and reviews from campers.