Blake Ranch RV Park sits 12 miles east of Kingman, Arizona, along US-66/I-40 in the high desert country of Mohave County, providing full hookup accommodations with wide pull-through sites, paved roads, and year-round operations for travelers moving through the corridor between Las Vegas and the Arizona mountains. Positioned on the original alignment of Historic Route 66 in the high plateau country above the Colorado River canyon, the park serves both long-haul interstate travelers and Route 66 enthusiasts who prefer the two-lane heritage road's slower pace through a landscape of volcanic mesas, juniper woodland, and the dramatic western edge of the Colorado Plateau. The park's pull-through sites with full hookup utility connections accommodate the widest range of RV configurations, and the paved road access eliminates the dust and difficulty that gravel sites create for large rigs in dry desert conditions. A general store handles basic resupply, and a recreation center, cabin rentals, propane service, and clean restrooms and showers complete the practical infrastructure that long-distance travelers need at a reliable overnight stop. The park's year-round operations and consistent utility service make it a dependable choice in a region where extreme weather—both summer heat and occasional winter ice at elevation—can challenge less-maintained properties. The Kingman area's landscape occupies an unusual geographic position where the Hualapai Valley's flat desert floor meets the Cerbat Mountains to the north and the Hualapai Mountains to the south, creating a high desert terrain at roughly 3,300 feet elevation that provides cooler temperatures than the Colorado River valley below and a visual environment of volcanic mesas, scattered juniper, and the wide-open sky that characterizes the Mohave Desert's plateau zone. The surrounding BLM land extends in multiple directions from the park, providing access to desert hiking, wildlife observation, and the geological features of the Colorado Plateau's western margin. Kingman anchors the Mother Road's longest surviving continuous stretch of Historic Route 66, with sections of the original two-lane highway accessible through Hackberry, Peach Springs, and Seligman that preserve the roadside architecture, diners, and trading posts that made Route 66 the symbol of American road travel mythology. The Hualapai Mountain Park, operated by Mohave County approximately 15 miles south of Kingman, provides camping, hiking, and forest recreation at elevations up to 8,417 feet that offer a dramatic contrast to the desert valley below. Lake Mead National Recreation Area to the northwest and the Grand Canyon's South and Grand Canyon West rims to the north and northeast expand the regional day-trip options considerably for guests with time to explore. Blake Ranch RV Park operates year-round in Mohave County's high-desert climate, where the 3,300-foot elevation moderates the extreme summer heat of lower desert communities and delivers occasional winter snowfall that keeps conditions interesting without the prolonged cold of higher-elevation mountain parks. The park's consistent operations, quality paved infrastructure, and position on both the I-40 corridor and Historic Route 66 make it a reliable and practical choice for travelers who want both interstate convenience and the option to experience a section of the Mother Road's authentic heritage character during their Kingman-area stay.
Campground rules and policies
Check-In Procedure
- While each park attempts to accommodate your exact spot request, the on-site manager has the ultimate decision for spot placement.
Blake Ranch RV Park sits 12 miles east of Kingman, Arizona, along US-66/I-40 in the high desert country of Mohave County, providing full hookup accommodations with wide pull-through sites, paved roads, and year-round operations for travelers moving through the corridor between Las Vegas and the Arizona mountains. Positioned on the original alignment of Historic Route 66 in the high plateau country above the Colorado River canyon, the park serves both long-haul interstate travelers and Route 66 enthusiasts who prefer the two-lane heritage road's slower pace through a landscape of volcanic mesas, juniper woodland, and the dramatic western edge of the Colorado Plateau. The park's pull-through sites with full hookup utility connections accommodate the widest range of RV configurations, and the paved road access eliminates the dust and difficulty that gravel sites create for large rigs in dry desert conditions. A general store handles basic resupply, and a recreation center, cabin rentals, propane service, and clean restrooms and showers complete the practical infrastructure that long-distance travelers need at a reliable overnight stop. The park's year-round operations and consistent utility service make it a dependable choice in a region where extreme weather—both summer heat and occasional winter ice at elevation—can challenge less-maintained properties. The Kingman area's landscape occupies an unusual geographic position where the Hualapai Valley's flat desert floor meets the Cerbat Mountains to the north and the Hualapai Mountains to the south, creating a high desert terrain at roughly 3,300 feet elevation that provides cooler temperatures than the Colorado River valley below and a visual environment of volcanic mesas, scattered juniper, and the wide-open sky that characterizes the Mohave Desert's plateau zone. The surrounding BLM land extends in multiple directions from the park, providing access to desert hiking, wildlife observation, and the geological features of the Colorado Plateau's western margin. Kingman anchors the Mother Road's longest surviving continuous stretch of Historic Route 66, with sections of the original two-lane highway accessible through Hackberry, Peach Springs, and Seligman that preserve the roadside architecture, diners, and trading posts that made Route 66 the symbol of American road travel mythology. The Hualapai Mountain Park, operated by Mohave County approximately 15 miles south of Kingman, provides camping, hiking, and forest recreation at elevations up to 8,417 feet that offer a dramatic contrast to the desert valley below. Lake Mead National Recreation Area to the northwest and the Grand Canyon's South and Grand Canyon West rims to the north and northeast expand the regional day-trip options considerably for guests with time to explore. Blake Ranch RV Park operates year-round in Mohave County's high-desert climate, where the 3,300-foot elevation moderates the extreme summer heat of lower desert communities and delivers occasional winter snowfall that keeps conditions interesting without the prolonged cold of higher-elevation mountain parks. The park's consistent operations, quality paved infrastructure, and position on both the I-40 corridor and Historic Route 66 make it a reliable and practical choice for travelers who want both interstate convenience and the option to experience a section of the Mother Road's authentic heritage character during their Kingman-area stay.
Campground rules and policies
Check-In Procedure
- While each park attempts to accommodate your exact spot request, the on-site manager has the ultimate decision for spot placement.