Accuracy verified by Hipcamp's on-the-ground team.
Creature comforts
Enjoy the comforts of home in nature at some pitches — including real toilets, showers, and kitchen.
Noah's Ark Campground is a FOUR-SEASON, peaceful, family-oriented campground and RV park located just outside of Revelstoke, British Columbia, where all the natural beauty is still intact.
You will find us halfway between Revelstoke and Sicamous, just off the scenic Trans-Canada Highway. Revelstoke is naturally a small ski town nestled in the big Selkirk and Monashee mountain ranges. With such nature around, other activities like mountain biking, climbing and hiking started to flourish as well.
We can accommodate vehicles up to 35ft in length and the sites are flat. Electrical, water and sewage hookups are available.
The place is crowded.
If you don’t arrive in office hours, they send you an e-mail in the late afternoon (18:00) to tell you your spot, so I you don’t have wifi (or you don’t receive it because you are in a remote park) you don’t know the spot. It is pretty difficult to figure out the numbers of lots of the plots, they don’t have a map of the camping anywhere (neither in the website) , and they don’t leave a letter or something in the office, like other places do.
Way too close to the highway. Very loud. Train whistle throughout night as well. Very crowded. We came in late, after the office was closed. Very hard to navigate in the dark.
Really nice campsite. The staff are all so friendly and helpful. The only thing is the WiFi doesn’t reach the spots in the back.
Would highly recommend anyway!
It had been raining a lot so we couldn’t camp in our tent in the original spot we booked. They helped us to find a grass spot instead as it would have been a mud pit. Bathrooms were spotless and lovely.
Location
Malakwa, Columbia Shuswap, British Columbia, CanadaTraditional, ancestral territory of Ktunaxa ɁamakɁis, snʕickstx tmxʷúlaʔxʷ (Sinixt), Ĩyãħé Nakón mąkóce (Stoney), Secwepemcúl’ecw (Secwépemc), and Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation First Nations according to