Browns Park Campground Beauty: 4 stars / Privacy: 3 stars / Spaciousness: 4 stars / Quiet: 4 stars / Security: 3 stars / Cleanliness: 3 stars Browns Park abuts the old-growth forests and alpine lakes of the Rawah Wilderness near the Wyoming border. Key Information: Address: Browns Park Campground, Canyon Lakes Ranger District, 2150 Centre Ave., Building E, Fort Collins, CO 80526 Operated by: USDA Forest Service, Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests, Pawnee National Grassland Information: (970) 295-6700; www.fs.fed.us Open: May-September Sites: 28 Each Site: Tent pad, picnic table, fire grate, stand-up grill Assignment: First come, first served; no reservations Registration: Self-registration on site Facilities: Vault toilet (no water) Parking: At campsites only Fee: $11 per night Elevation: 8,400 feet Restrictions: Pets: On leash only Fires: In fire grates only Alcohol: At campsites only Vehicles: 30 feet Other: 14-day stay limit The lower Laramie River valley has a big-country-lonesome feel to it. There aren't too many folks around here, mainly just ranchers. Browns Park is tucked away in some woods on a side creek that feeds into the Laramie. If you want to get away from the people who are trying to get away from it all, come here. This pretty little campground is adjacent to the woods and lakes of the Rawah Wilderness, which covers a stretch of the Medicine Bow Mountains. You can hike and fish here, or just take it easy. Browns Park is great for relaxation. Summer afternoons are as slow as molasses. After passing the busy campgrounds of the Poudre Canyon and overcrowded Chambers Lake, you'll feel grateful for the peace and quiet here in the Laramie Valley. A couple of sites lie in the lodgepole and aspen woods to your right, then the main campground drive splits off to the right and you enter the outer loop. (There used to be one more split off to the right, but the beavers took care of that.) The outer loop turns away from Jinks Creek and runs alongside a slight slope. The campsites on the outside of the loop are higher than the road but have been graded and host tent pads for a level night of rest. The inner loop campsites lie in a mixed wood with a very grassy understory augmented by small conifers. Move away from the hill and pass the inner loop. These campsites are more open, but all are spread far apart, so privacy can be had by every camper. The inner loop splits Browns Park in half, but the roads are spread far enough apart that you won't be bothered by your fellow campers when they drive past. The county road leading in to Browns Park gets less traffic than some campgrounds I've seen. Complete your loop back to the campground entrance and the vault toilets. Browns Park has no water--I recommend bringing it with you. This campground has low usage. I met a man on my visit who had been coming to Browns Park for ten years and had only seen the campground full once. He and his wife were the only campers there on the day I met him. Weekdays can be desolate, which is great for those who love solitude. Summer weekends can be half to two-thirds full, except when the campground fills up for major holidays. For a nearby natural experience, check out the beaver pond and see if you find any of nature's architects plotting to flood the rest of the campground. Two hiking trails leave from the trailhead adjacent to Browns Park into the Rawah Wilderness, which is far enough from the metropolitan areas to receive little use also. The McIntyre Trail traces McIntyre Creek to Houseman Park, and then turns left to another meadow where beavers have again been busy flooding the trail. These upper beaver ponds offer excellent trout fishing. The Link Trail climbs through a lodgepole forest to a former burned area, where views of the Laramie River valley stretch into Wyoming. You can also see the Poudre Canyon below. If you want to access the high lakes of the Medicine Bows, take the Rawah Trail, which starts in the Laramie River valley south of Browns Park (you pass this trailhead on the way in). The Rawah Trail crosses several different environments. Leave the valley grasslands, wind your way from lodgepole to spruce-fir forest to tundra above the tree line, where there are many bodies of water collectively dubbed the Rawah Lakes. No matter what you do, bring some friends with you to Browns Park and the Medicine Bows because there might not be too many other people out here, especially during the week. Also, bring all the supplies you may need because the nearest store is not really near at all, though there is a guest ranch nearby down Larimer CR 103. Getting There From Fort Collins drive north on US 287 for 11 miles to CO 14. Turn left on CO 14 and follow it for 49 miles west to CR 103 (Laramie River Road). Turn right on CR 103 and follow it for 15 miles. At a T-intersection turn left on CR 80C and travel approximately 3 miles to Browns Park Campground. GPS Coordinates Latitude N 40° 47' 49.7" Longitude W 105° 55' 37" Excerpted from Best Tent Camping: Colorado: Your Car-Camping Guide to Scenic Beauty, the Sounds of Nature, and an Escape from Civilization by Monica Parpal Stockbridge All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.