California
Cancellation alerts

HUME LAKE

We watch every site at HUME LAKE 24/7, then email you the moment a cancellation opens up.

100% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak Jun–Aug·71 sites
Set up an alert for HUME LAKE

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

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at HUME LAKE

Booked on virtually every weekend during peak season (Jun–Aug). They reserve months ahead and rebook within minutes when cancelled — set up an alert and we'll email you the moment one opens.

Site 067

Best here
Ranked #1 of 71
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 030

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 71
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 029

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 71
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 064

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 71
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 018

Top pick
Tied at #5 · 7 of 71 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 022

Top pick
Tied at #5 · 7 of 71 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 062

Top pick
Tied at #5 · 7 of 71 sites
TENT ONLY · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 027

Top pick
Tied at #5 · 7 of 71 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 026

Top pick
Tied at #5 · 7 of 71 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 020

Top pick
Tied at #5 · 7 of 71 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

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

Set up an alert →

About this park

The campground is situated among towering Incense Cedars and Ponderosa Pines on the northern end of Hume Lake, which was built to support a long-ago commercial logging operation. It once supplied water to the longest lumber flume transporting logs to the Central Valley. The elevation is 5,250 feet. Sequoia National Forest, located at the southern end of the Sierra Nevada in central California, is named for the Giant Sequoia, the world's largest tree, which grows in more than 30 groves on the forest's lower slopes. The forest comprises about 1.1 million acres. Elevations range from about 1,000 to 12,000 feet, creating precipitous canyons and mountain streams with spectacular waterfalls such as Salmon Creek Falls and Grizzly Falls.