With the enchanting Lake Tahoe as its centerpiece, D.L. Bliss State Park offers recreation year round. Play on the beach and splash in the water at Lester Beach and Calawee Cove. You can take a tour of Vikingsholm, a stone home built in 1929, to learn more about life in the area.
Be sure to pack your hiking boots because numerous trails wind through the park. Lighthouse Trail and Rubicon Trail are popular hiking trails offering stunning vistas. The park is home to American black bears. Give these park residents a lot of leeway, and don't pose for a family photo.
A myriad of camping exists in this state park. You can pitch your tent at one of the family or group campgrounds. Bring your RV and find access along with a dump station.
Feeling a little adventurous? Then choose one of the hike or bike campsites. The pa
With the enchanting Lake Tahoe as its centerpiece, D.L. Bliss State Park offers recreation year round. Play on the beach and splash in the water at Lester Beach and Calawee Cove. You can take a tour of Vikingsholm, a stone home built in 1929, to learn more about life in the area.
Be sure to pack your hiking boots because numerous trails wind through the park. Lighthouse Trail and Rubicon Trail are popular hiking trails offering stunning vistas. The park is home to American black bears. Give these park residents a lot of leeway, and don't pose for a family photo.
A myriad of camping exists in this state park. You can pitch your tent at one of the family or group campgrounds. Bring your RV and find access along with a dump station.
Feeling a little adventurous? Then choose one of the hike or bike campsites. The park also offers 20 primitive campsites that you can access only by boat. The bathrooms offer showers along with outdoor showers to rinse sand off of you.
You’ve made it to the beach! Located just a stone’s throw from the water, these are the golden tickets of campsite, and, of course, fill up the fastest. This campground offers easy access to both Lester Beach and Calwee Cove, which are also great spots to launch a kayak, canoe, or paddle board. There is also a campfire center nearby, meaning that Read more...
Getting up close and personal with Lake Tahoe is what this park is all about, and with more than 200 spots up for grabs (and they go fast!) there are plenty of opportunities to commune with nature.
Pine Campground is the largest in the park, and is located next to the ranger station. It is also about a mile away from the beach, so bring a wa Read more...
A nice halfway point between its two sister campgrounds, West Ridge is located, you guessed it, on a ridge. Slightly smaller in size than the Pine campground, this campsite is still sizable, so expect to be able to hear your neighbors, although sites 122 through 130 are more spaced out than 113- 121. This campground is a short walk to one of DL Bl Read more...
East Ridge is located just opposite its fellow ridge site, West Ridge. Also fairly sizable (although not as big as Pine campground), seclusion isn’t really its primary attribute. It is, however, steps away from Lighthouse Trail, which will take you on a lovely journey up along Lake Tahoe. Read more...
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D.L. Bliss State Park
Bask on the shore of Lake Tahoe and gaze in awe at the natural beauty.
With the enchanting Lake Tahoe as its centerpiece, D.L. Bliss State Park offers recreation year round. Play on the beach and splash in the water at Lester Beach and Calawee Cove. You can take a tour of Vikingsholm, a stone home built in 1929, to learn more about life in the area.
Be sure to pack your hiking boots because numerous trails wind through the park. Lighthouse Trail and Rubicon Trail are popular hiking trails offering stunning vistas. The park is home to American black bears. Give these park residents a lot of leeway, and don't pose for a family photo.
A myriad of camping exists in this state park. You can pitch your tent at one of the family or group campgrounds. Bring your RV and find access along with a dump station.
Feeling a little adventurous? Then choose one of the hike or bike campsites. The pa
With the enchanting Lake Tahoe as its centerpiece, D.L. Bliss State Park offers recreation year round. Play on the beach and splash in the water at Lester Beach and Calawee Cove. You can take a tour of Vikingsholm, a stone home built in 1929, to learn more about life in the area.
Be sure to pack your hiking boots because numerous trails wind through the park. Lighthouse Trail and Rubicon Trail are popular hiking trails offering stunning vistas. The park is home to American black bears. Give these park residents a lot of leeway, and don't pose for a family photo.
A myriad of camping exists in this state park. You can pitch your tent at one of the family or group campgrounds. Bring your RV and find access along with a dump station.
Feeling a little adventurous? Then choose one of the hike or bike campsites. The park also offers 20 primitive campsites that you can access only by boat. The bathrooms offer showers along with outdoor showers to rinse sand off of you.
Activities in the park
5 campgrounds in D.L. Bliss State Park
You’ve made it to the beach! Located just a stone’s throw from the water, these are the golden tickets of campsite, and, of course, fill up the fastest. This campground offers easy access to both Lester Beach and Calwee Cove, which are also great spots to launch a kayak, canoe, or paddle board. There is also a campfire center nearby, meaning that Read more...
Read more...
Getting up close and personal with Lake Tahoe is what this park is all about, and with more than 200 spots up for grabs (and they go fast!) there are plenty of opportunities to commune with nature. Pine Campground is the largest in the park, and is located next to the ranger station. It is also about a mile away from the beach, so bring a wa Read more...
A nice halfway point between its two sister campgrounds, West Ridge is located, you guessed it, on a ridge. Slightly smaller in size than the Pine campground, this campsite is still sizable, so expect to be able to hear your neighbors, although sites 122 through 130 are more spaced out than 113- 121. This campground is a short walk to one of DL Bl Read more...
East Ridge is located just opposite its fellow ridge site, West Ridge. Also fairly sizable (although not as big as Pine campground), seclusion isn’t really its primary attribute. It is, however, steps away from Lighthouse Trail, which will take you on a lovely journey up along Lake Tahoe. Read more...
Why can't I see these campgrounds when I search with dates?
Public campgrounds (book externally) —