Avg. Customer Review
(3.0 Stars): Number of Reviews: 1
Product Description
Admission Fees
No Admission Fees and the camping is great!
Park open 24 hrs.
Camping Availability
Motels and commercial campgrounds in the nearby towns. Camping in the park: Cedar Canyon, Bugbee, Blue West, Blue Creek Bridge, Sandford-Yake, Fritch Fortress, Harbor Bay, McBridge Canyon
Terrain
The Rosita ORV Area in the south, and the Blue Creek Bridge ORV Area in the North, make up the park.
Rosita offers quads a plethora of challenges; sand, hill climbs and it covers some of the most diverse land in Texas.
Blue Creek Bridge covers 275 acres of land. It doesn't offer quite as much variety in terrain as Rosita, but it does offer plenty of riding time. Drier and much more desolate, the BCB area lets quads cruise all day long without ever repeating their tracks. Just be sure to bring ample supply of drinking water and food for the day.
If hill climbs and cliffs are your fancy, then this area is for you. But remember, with the added excitement of this type of terrain comes the need for experience conquering it as well.
No hiking trails; paved roads to boat launch ramps and campgrounds; dirt roads beyond west end of the lake
Directions
30 miles north of Amarillo, Texas, on Hwy. 136
Access to the developed areas (east end of lake) by Texas Hwy 136; access to the undeveloped areas (west end of lake) by U.S. Hwy 287 North of Amarillo, Texas (where HW287 and the Canadian River cross)
(806)857-3151 - Lake Meredith Federal Recreation Area
Administrative Offices: 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Email Lake Meredith at: LAMR_Interpretation@nps.gov
Rosita was fun with lots of hill climbing available, the ER (where we took my mother when she rolled her ATV) said that Rosita was the most dangerous place in the panhandle on the weekends, they have lots of ATV wrecks.
Blue Creek was fun but very flat and you are very constricted. Pretty much limited to the riverbed and that is it