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COE Campground Review – Ives Run Campground, Tioga, PA

June 16, 2017 by libertatemamo 19 Comments

Our “sitting area” at Ives Run. Oh so relaxing!

A lovely and oh-so relaxing green COE Campground on the shore of Hammond Lake in north-central PA

Link to campground here: Ives Run Campground, Tioga, PA
Link to map location here: Ives Run Campground, Tioga, PA

  1. Site Quality = 3.5/5
    Nice sites here with just a few specific inconsistencies. All sites are paved back-ins (mostly asphalt with a select few concrete) with nicely spacious “sitting areas” containing picnic table, lamp holder and fire-pit. Site separation is lovely everywhere and there is tons of open green/grassy views inter-dispersed with trees and select water views too. There are ~200 campsites and the majority (~170) are large enough to accept big rigs (45-foot), but a select few are too small so do pay attention to site size when booking. Main ding is site levelness and quality which does vary quite a bit across the campground, both by site and loop:

    • Hawthorn Loop (sites #1-43)  – This is a full hookup loop (50A/water/sewer) with generally quite large, flat sites as well as the nicest (newest) facilities in the campground. No water views here, but lots of green views. Sites here cost $40/night.
    • Aspen Loop (sites #46-64) – Also a full hookup loop (50A/water/sewer) with a mix of flat and some more uneven sites. No water views here, but lots of green views. Sites here cost $40/night.
    • Beech Loop (sites #65-84) – This loop has a mix of very new-looking, concrete full hookup sites near the beginning (50A/water/sewer), and water/electric only (50A/water) sites nearest the water. Mostly very nice, large sites here, and sites nearest the water do have very nice water views (particularly #70-77). Only ding is that this loop is also the main drive-way through to the boat launch so you do get more traffic along the road than other loops. However you also get the best/easiest access to the water from these sites. Sites here cost $40/night for FHU, $36/night for water/electric.
    • Birch Loop (sites #86-105) – Like the Beech Loop this is also a mix of mix of full hookup sites (50A/water/sewer) near the beginning with water/electric only (50A/water) sites nearest the water. Mostly flat but some uneven sites here. Sites nearest the water here have some of the nicest water views in camp, particularly #95-101! Sites here cost $40/night for FHU, $36/night for water/electric.
    • Hickory Loop (sites #107-131) – These are water/electric only (30A/water) in what look like an older part of the campground. Many sites are quite unlevel (bring leveling blocks!), and hookups are shared between two sites meaning many pedestals are quite far away (our electric/water hookups were ~25-ft away!). However these sites also have some of the very nicest green & water views in the campground (in particular sites #121-125, #115-#118, #129) thanks to their arrangement along a steeper hill overlooking the lake.  We stayed in this section and needed a 4-stack of leveling blocks to level (site #116), but we LOVED our green + slice of water-site view. Sites here cost $36/night.
    • Pine Camp (sites #132-180) – This is the primitive section of the campground (no hookups) and, apart from a few select sites, it’s the only area I wouldn’t really recommend for big rigs. It’s a 1-mile drive along a bumpy dirt road to camp and MANY of the sites here are grossly unlevel. For smaller rigs and tenters however it’s lovely and there are several sites with lovely water views and direct access to the water. Flattest/largest sites are #141-143 and #157-#159. Sites here cost $20/night.
    • NOTE/ This is a mostly-reservation campground, although there are a handful of sites that are marked on the map as non-reservable (walk-in only). Reservations are recommended, especially during busy summer months and week-ends.
  2.  Facilities = 3/5
    OK facilities here. There are 2 older facilities building (in Hickory Loop and Birch Loop) which have 2 large unisex walk-in bathroom/showers. The showers were fine (warm water, decent pressure) but the bathroom was dated with spots of mold. There is a newer facility in Hawthorn Loop which has separate male/female shower/bathroom facilities and looked a little more modern and cleaner. The Hawthorn building also has a laundromat with 2 washer and dryers for laundry ($3 per wash). On-site dump station.
  3. Location = 5/5
    Lovely location here just to hang and veg. The park has green, grassy hills with miles of hiking trails plus it’s centered right on Hawthorn Lake which offers opportunity for boating/kayaking/fishing etc. There is also a small swim beach area plus lots of places to picnic, as well as an on-site camp store (small selection of groceries, ice and deli). Only slight ding is that there is not much in the way of shopping/exploring closeby, so stock up before you come. There is a winery just down the road and a Super Walmart ~30 mins away. For more extensive exploring, the lovely town of Corning NY is ~30 miles north and well worth visiting for it’s fabulous Glass Museum, historic downtown and plenty more shopping/groceries.
  4. Pet Friendliness = 5/5
    Fabulous place for doggie. Lots of space in camp, plus miles & miles of grassy fields and dog-friendly trails to hike. No on-site poo bags however, and dogs are not allowed on the official swim beach (very small section of the shoreline). PLENTY of other spots to enjoy the green and grass however. Polly loved it here!

Overall Rating = 4.1
BONUS ALERT = Camp in a green/lush area by lovely Hawthorne lake!

Video Overview: Want to see it in living color? Check out our detailed ~20 min overview here (it was a BIG campground)! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idNGzkjzsuI

Summary: A lovely park! We always like COE parks because they’re centered around water, and this one was no exception. It’s a huge, green park with ~200 campsites located on a hill next to lovely Hawthorne Lake. A nice mix of campsites here from full hookup to primitive, all with great separation, spacious “sitting areas”, lots of greenery/grass and even some excellent water views (in select sites). Only dings are that some of the sites are rather unlevel, especially sites along the steeper hill (Hickory Loop) and in the primitive campground (Pine Loop) plus the facilities are rather old and dated. Also there’s not much close by. It’s ~30 mins to the nearest Walmart and ~30 miles to Corning NY (well worth seeing, especially for it’s Glass Museum!). Lastly cell signal was iffy/variable, although we were able to stabilize Verizon to a workable level with our booster. As a place to hang and veg however it’s fabulous! There are miles and miles of hiking trails in the surrounding hills, acres of grassy fields to romp on and a large lake for water activities. Both the pets and us truly enjoyed our stop here an we would certainly return.

Extra Info: Somewhat iffy cell signal. Verizon varied from 4G to 1-3 bars LTE and definitely benefited from a booster to stabilize/solidify the signal. ATT was poor and most voice-only (3G). Surprisingly T-Mobile worked great (Binge On worked). Total 200 water/electric sites, most of which are reservable on-line. Sites cost $40/night for FHU sites 50A/water/sewer (Hawthorne, Aspen, Beech & Birch Loops), $36/night for water/electric (either 50A/water or 30A/water in Beech, Birch & Hickory Loops), $20/night for primitive/no-hookups (Pine Loop). This is a Federal Campground so Senior Pass (America The Beautiful) does get you 50% off the price. On-site dump station.

Hawthorn Loop (sites 1-45) -> entrance to loop. These are all full hookup sites. Nice sites but no water views in this loop.
Hawthorne Loop -> view of sites near beginning of loop. Site #7 on left with #5/3/1 behind.
Hawthorne Loop -> View towards end of loop. Empty site #39 on R with #37/35 on left.
Aspen Loop (Sites 46-64) -> view down beginning of loop. Site #64 on left with #63 behind. All sites here are full hookup, but no water views in this loop.
Beech Loop (sites 65-85) ->View down beginning of loop. This loop is a mix of full hookup (near top) with water/electric down (near water). Sites #85 on left with #83 behind.
Beech Loop -> View of water-view sites near the bottom of the loop. Site #71 on right with #72/73 behind. These were very nice, but get through-traffic from cars/trailers going down to the boat launch.
Beech Loop -> More water-view sites. Empty site #76 on left with #75/74 behind.
Beech Loop -> Upper site views. Site #80 on left with #79/78 behind.
Birch Loop (sites 86-106) -> View down beginning of loop. This loop is a mix of full hookups near the beginning with water/electric near the water. Site #106 on left with 105/104 behind. Site# 86 on right with 8788 behind.
Birch Loop -> Site 104 on right with 105 behind
Birch Loop -> view of “prime” water-view sites. Site #99 on left, #98 on right. These are water/electric only, but have full water views out the back.
Hickory Loop (sites 107-131) -> view of beginning of loop with site #131 on left. This is the hilliest loop in the RV section of camp. Only water/30A electric, plus hookup pedastals are shared between 2 sites so you it’s advisable to bring an extension cord to reach. Some great views here though.
Hickory Loop -> View of site #129 which has a slice of water-view out the back.
Hickory Loop -> View of “prime” water-view sites. Site #123 on left with #122 on right. These were lovely and have nice, full water views out the back.
Hickory Loop -> View of top of loop where we were camped. Site #117 on left with us in #116 behind. We had a very unlevel site, but fabulous green views (with slice of water view) out the back.
Pine Loop (sites 132-160) -> This is the primitive loop (no hookups) with the most hilly/uneven sites in the campground. Best-suited for smaller rigs here.
Pine Loop -> View near beginning of loop of site #132. You can see some of the lakefront sites in the rear.
Pine Loop -> view of site near the water. This is #149. RV in rear right in #163.
Pine Loop -> more waterfront sites. This is #154 and it was VERY unlevel indeed.
View of facilities building in Hickory Loop. This was pretty dated.
View of facilities building in Hawthorn Loop. This was more modern and had a laundromat inside.
View inside laundromat in Hawthorn Loop. Only 2 washers & driers, $3 per load
View of boat launch area.
View of one of many green areas & fields in camp
View of swim beach area (a very small slice of the lake and the only place where dogs are not allowed)
Ives Run COE Campground Map -> Click for larger size

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We LOooVE Comments, So Please Do

  1. Sue says

    June 16, 2017 at 12:59 pm

    As I’ve mentioned before, this was our first camping spot ever and we had our three “beluga boys” with us (one big Golden and two Labs). A special time for us all. Years later we stopped there on our way home, during a rain storm, and were oh so happy we had our Beluga instead of a tent! The people across from us were tenting with 3 small kids and a puppy. Their campfire (on which they tried to cook all their meals) smoked pitifully in the rain and the energetic kids and puppy ran around in the down pour then all packed into the small tent. We, on the other hand, pulled our cozy curtains closed, heated up some home made lasagna, cracked open a nice bottle of wine and had a lovely, dry evening. Gotta love this life!

    Reply
    • libertatemamo says

      June 17, 2017 at 2:09 pm

      Good memories, good memories….

      Nina

      Reply
  2. Carolyn Burelbach says

    June 16, 2017 at 1:18 pm

    Great write-up. Beautiful pictures, Nina! I love your videos. Thank you for all the information you provide.

    Reply
  3. Norm H. says

    June 16, 2017 at 1:38 pm

    Looks lovely! Thanks for the great write-up. Looking forward to watching the video. Think we might have to put my Senior Pass to work there! 🙂

    Reply
  4. Sue says

    June 16, 2017 at 5:03 pm

    OMG … I see you are at Sampson State Park! We are just around the corner from you at Sned-Acres near Ovid! Have always wanted to meet in person with you both. We have been in the area for a bit so could give you some helpful hints if you are interested 🙂

    Reply
    • libertatemamo says

      June 17, 2017 at 2:08 pm

      Oh Sue I’m so sorry but we’re just about to leave (tomorrow AM) so we’re at the very end of our time here. We’re headed to Rochester next, followed by Four Mile Creek. Any chance you’ll be close?

      Nina

      Reply
      • Sue says

        June 18, 2017 at 6:25 am

        Well, darn. Sorry we missed you! Unfortunately, we are not heading north when we leave. One day our stars will align 🙂 Have fun!

        Reply
  5. Gerri & Mike says

    June 16, 2017 at 9:24 pm

    You had me at “this is our sitting area!”
    I think I could spend the day there!! Good review of a very nice COE park. The Corp parks are among our favorites.

    Reply
    • libertatemamo says

      June 17, 2017 at 2:13 pm

      We LOVED our “sitting area” and spent a ton of time out there while we were here. Definitely recommend it!

      Nina

      Reply
  6. Penny says

    June 17, 2017 at 3:29 pm

    Many people have recommended this Park to us. We drove up to see it last year and I have to agree with your reviews. We tried to get a site this month but everything is booked. We are new to camping again since 25 years we have been on Lake Ontario. Loved loved it but sold to but a Motorhome and travel. Our problem that we r finding is everything is booked! Hope you are having good luck. I enjoy your blogs. We also tried Samson this weekend. Booked. We are on Oneida lake instead.

    Reply
    • libertatemamo says

      June 17, 2017 at 4:17 pm

      Reservations do indeed start to get tight this time of year and once school gets out, it becomes even more difficult to find sites. This particular park does keep around 6-8 walk-in sites (non reservable) for folks coming in without reservations so you might get lucky if you drive in. But generally I get the frustration. We reserved all our summer sites back in Jan/Feb.

      Nina

      Reply
  7. Kim says

    June 18, 2017 at 10:14 am

    I enjoy your video reviews and tours of the places you stay, very helpful for people to get a sense of what each campground feels like. Especially liked kitty going to play in the grass at the end!! Too cute….

    Reply
  8. chas anderson says

    June 21, 2017 at 6:45 pm

    Longtime reader.I live in Wellsboro which is 10 miles from Ives Run.We retired here and used to camp there while building our house.The Pine Creek rail trail from Ansonia to Blackwell near Wellsboro is one of the prettiest rail trails in the US and it goes through the Little Grand Canyon of PA.Wellsboro is a cute town known for its hundreds of vintage gaslights.

    The Wellsboro house Brewery/Restaurant has some of the best brews in these parts.Tell Chris that Charlie sent you if you get there.

    We love it here and snowbird in our RV during the winter.

    Reply
    • libertatemamo says

      June 22, 2017 at 4:08 pm

      Wonderful tips for the area. Thanks so much!

      Nina

      Reply
  9. kerry says

    June 22, 2017 at 6:26 pm

    You may of written the only review of Ives Run in history that listed Corning as a nearby town to visit, and ignores Wellsboro, the wonderful town, right down the road. Wellsboro is a beautiful place that looks like something out of a Rockwell painting. Gaslights on the main streets, stunning Victorian architecture and enough things to keep you busy for a week, including everything from a professional grade theater company, to white water rafting to thousands of miles of true wilderness nearby. I love following your blog, but I fear that you have left some poor soul at the Tioga county visitor’s bureau suffering chest pains, LOL

    Reply
    • libertatemamo says

      June 22, 2017 at 6:31 pm

      Clearly we missed a gem! I have to admit we’re usually pretty good at our sightseeing research, but we completely bleeped on this one! You’re the second person to mention Wellsboro, so it’s certainly well known by the folks in the know. Something to come back for, which is always a good thing I guess. Thanks for the comment and the very apt reminder that we don’t always catch it all. Hope the local visitors bureau will eventually forgive me 🙁

      Nina

      Reply
  10. Jim S. says

    May 11, 2018 at 11:29 am

    Thanx for the in depth review. On our out going journey eastward we are going to be stopping at Worlds End State park just east of Ives Run. Maybe we’ll stop at Ives Run on the return. I will comment that the few COE campgrounds we have stayed at the last 20 years, out dated, not exactly clean restrooms seems to be a common theme.

    I’ll assume you arrived without a reservation, mid-week?

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Finger Lakes Adventures Part I – Ithaca, NY – Wheeling It says:
    June 22, 2017 at 4:05 pm

    […] The city of Corning is located just over 1/3 of the way between Tioga (where we stayed at the COE park) and Ithaca, and it’s well worth a visit either from wherever you’re staying, or as a […]

    Reply
  2. Ives Run Campground – The Road Slowly Traveled says:
    July 25, 2017 at 5:33 pm

    […] Our RV fit nicely in site 141, which we chose based on the review from another RVing blog. The campground review on the Wheeling It site is very detailed and covers everything you might want to know about […]

    Reply

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