Florida
Cancellation alerts

Rodman Campground

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

100% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak Jan–Mar·65 sites
Set up an alert for Rodman Campground

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

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at Rodman Campground

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

Site 48

Top pick
Ranked #1 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 50

Top pick
Ranked #1 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 56

Top pick
Ranked #1 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 66

Top pick
Ranked #1 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 10

Standout
Ranked #5 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 11

Standout
Ranked #6 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 61

Standout
Ranked #7 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 63

Decent
Ranked #8 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 64

Decent
Ranked #9 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 1

Decent
Ranked #10 of 65
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

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

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About this park

This 67-site campground provides optimal access to some of Florida's finest freshwater fishing. The 9,500-acre Rodman Reservoir is perennially rated in the Top 10 Trophy Bass Lakes in Florida by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. The Rodman Reservoir provides a diverse and extensive habitat for not only trophy fish but numerous avian species as well. Many endangered and threatened species of wading birds, waterfowl, bald eagles and others use the reservoir, particularly during the cooler months. There are also numerous alligators, turtles and even manatees that inhabit and travel through the reservoir seasonally. The campground and reservoir were originally created during the 1960s-era Cross Florida Barge Canal project. The mammoth public works project was started in 1964 when President Lyndon B. Johnson flew into Palatka and started the project with a ground-breaking explosion at the nearby Rodeheaver's Boys Ranch. Almost 50 years later, the nearby Kirkpatrick Dam remains intact, impounding the Ocklawaha River and maintaining the reservoir. A political and environmental battle continues since the reservoir was first flooded in November of 1968 of whether to maintain and manage Rodman as it is, or to remove significant portions of the earthen dam and restore the "Free Flowing Ocklawaha River."