Oregon
Cancellation alerts

Gull Point Campground

We watch every site at Gull Point Campground 24/7, then email you the moment a cancellation opens up.

84% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak Jul–Sep·80 sites
Set up an alert for Gull Point Campground

Pick your dates, pick the sites you want, we do the watching.

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at Gull Point Campground

The hardest sites to book at this park, reserving 84% of weekend nights in peak season (Jul–Sep). Set up an alert and we'll email you on cancellations.

Site 061

Best here
Ranked #1 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 075

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 062

Top pick
Ranked #3 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 074

Top pick
Ranked #3 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 081

Standout
Ranked #5 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 072

Standout
Ranked #6 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 059

Standout
Ranked #7 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 077

Decent
Ranked #8 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 079

Decent
Ranked #9 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 057

Decent
Ranked #10 of 80
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

These sites rebook within minutes of being cancelled. Set an alert at Gull Point Campground and we’ll email you the moment one opens up.

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About this park

The reservoir covers an area on the Deschutes River that was historically used by Native Americans during the fall. Several tribes throughout the area built "wickiups," shelters made from reeds, grass, or brush, while living in the area. At full pool, Wickiup is a beautiful, pine-edged reservoir, with some willows and sandy beach areas. At low water, steep soil and gravel banks drop abruptly to the water. This is one of central Oregon's best wildlife viewing sites, attracting a variety of nesting and migrating birds. Fantastic nearby peaks, lava flows and forests also provide visitors with a variety of landscapes. Wetlands, diverse forests, and rocky slopes near the campground provide a necessary habitat for shorebirds, porcupine, deer, bats and the occasional black bear.