A visit to the RV Bookdocking Capital of
the Southwest — Quartzsite, Arizona
By Chuck Woodbury
Editor, RV Traveler
I am camped about four miles north of Quartzsite,
Arizona, on government land where camping is free. A few dozen other RVs are scattered about, but none within a stone’s
throw.
To get my campsite, I turned off the road into the
Hi Jolly Short Term Visitation Area and drove around until I found a plot of dusty earth that suited me. I can stay here for
up to two weeks, and then I must move away to another spot, or go up the road and pay $25 a week for long-term camping. But
if I really fall in love with Quartzsite, I can pay the U.S. government $120 and stay for up to 7 months its land. What a
deal!
For months now, I have been dreaming of Quartzsite.
Those of you who know this place must think that I’m off my rocker, for Quartzsite is hardly a top tourist destination.
Even though 3,000 folks live here year round, there is hardly a blade of grass in sight and no apparent building codes. Instead,
there are small homes and mobile homes, and official and unofficial flea markets everywhere offering new and used merchandise
of all kinds. At Bill and Billys, a banner advertises Millions of Bargains. A more appropriate banner would read, “Lots
of Junk.”
Quartzsite is famous for its mild winter temperatures,
when it’s the scene of giant gem and mineral showsm, flea markets galore and, in January, a huge RV show. Literally
hundreds of thousands of people show up in early February during the annual Quartzsite Pow Wow, most in RVs, "boondocking"
on public lands. In town, about 50 RV parks offer full hookup sites for $100 a month and up. Retirees, many living on Social
Security, hole up until it gets too hot, and then move on, to return next year.
In prime time, Quartzsite is Ground Zero for winter
snowbirds, who come to soak up sun (and lots of dust in the process), hunt for bargains at the flea markets, search for precious
rocks and gems in the desert, and mingle with more RVers that you will ever see gathered in one place at one time anywhere
else in America.
I like Quartzsite because it is so different from
where in live near Seattle. There, it's perpetual green. Here, it's perpetual brown. That might sound ugly, but to me it's
a wonderful change of scenery.
But, boy, is it fun to visit Quartzsite and just
roam around. You can stay a week and not see everything. With its tacky, circus-like atmosphere, Quartzsite is a visual smorgasbord
of people, places and things.
My dream of coming to Quartzsite and Arizona,
itself, is to be in the magnificent Mojave and Sonoran deserts with their dry air, warm winter days and
 Just outside town, RVers can stay for up to 7 months for $120 on government land.There are restrooms,
water and trash bins. A honey wagon makes a regular run to pump out waste tanks. |
abundant
sunshine. And it is all here, and for this reason alone, I am happy to be in Quartzsite, where in the front yard of one home
a sign proclaims Welcome to Camelot.
And I suppose it is Camelot to a lot of folks. In
the annual Snowbird Encyclopedia magazine, winter visitors Don and Donna of Tacoma, Wash., wrote, “Friends told us we’d
love Quartzsite and they were more than right. We told other friends, they told others, and now there are 16 of us who come
down to meet here and camp together for the winter. This is more fun than anyone could expect anywhere.”
Yesterday evening in the dark and lonely desert,
a couple in a spacious fifth wheel trailer about 40 yards from me sat by their campfire under a star-drenched sky, talking
quietly and enjoying the warm air and the solitude — not a bad life, I thought.
I suppose to a lot of people that’s what Quartzsite
is all about.