What is a Lock Site Fee

What is a Lock Site Fee
And how does it work?
- It ensures campers like you get your favorite site every time
- It helps us ensure we can accommodate all of our guests by allowing the best fit for everyone and doing as much as possible to avoid saying the dreaded words: “Sorry, there are no sites available.”
Site Types
It’s Like Booking a Hotel Room
Conclusion:
Examples
Scenario 1:
Booking campers is like putting together a puzzle. Our many site types and amenities around the campground attract different guests. Our sites offer unique characteristics like the views and amount of grass or trees.
Some campers want all grass, some campers want all gravel. Some want to be near the shower house. Some want to be closer to the river. Then we have campers with different equipment types and lengths, extra tents, longer stays.
When we are trying to fill our campground, the lock site allows us to decipher which camper would not mind being moved in order for us to best fit guests into their campsite.
Scenario 2:
Because of the recent popular demand in camping, many campgrounds have been filling up to full capacity more frequently. Sometimes, only one or two sites are left open for a weekend. As a result, a group wanting to book those last 2 sites and wanting to be side-by-side are now separated on opposite sides of the park (think of a full movie theater, and you and a friend are stuck in opposite rows of the theater). With the introduction of the lock-site, campers are prompted to opt-out or opt-in to guaranteeing an exact site. The site type and amenities will never change, only the site number (so a multi-family site, electric site, river front site, etc. will be the same) but being moved up or down one site to allow other guests to stay together is what you are agreeing to when staying unlocked. (So a person at the movie theater doesn’t mind moving over one seat for your friend to sit next to you).