Salome KOA Journey

Salome KOA Journey Comfortable, clean, and fun camping with Salome KOA Journey located in Salome, Arizona

Welcome to Salome KOA Journey

Key Campground FeaturesRecreation & Entertainment: The park features a year-round heated pool and hot tub. Guests can play billiards and ping pong in "Diamond Jim's Game Room" (also referred to as Diamond Jim's Billiards Game Parlor).Clubhouse: A large facility used for group gatherings, including reunions, dances, and karaoke nights.RV Accommodations: Offers 125 f

ull hookup sites with 30 and 50 amp service. The maximum pull-thru length is 90 feet.Direct Trail Access: Located in the McMullen Valley, the site provides immediate access to over 300 miles of ATV and OHV trails that lead through desert washes and historic gold mines.Pet-Friendly: Includes a...

I am so blessed to have found a dove nest near the Salome KOA club house. I have never seen a bady dove before and so I'...
04/27/2026

I am so blessed to have found a dove nest near the Salome KOA club house. I have never seen a bady dove before and so I've been attempting to get a photo of this little squab (chickling). Here is the best photo do to the every unreachable nest that the dove and her baby were in.

Below is info of why we don't see baby doves, woodpeckers, bluebirds, chickadees, wrens, and swallows, along with larger birds like hawks, owls, and eagles.

Baby doves (and pigeons) are rarely seen because they stay in the nest for an extended period—often over a month—until they are nearly full-sized and fully feathered. By the time they leave, they look like slightly smaller, scruffy adults, making them hard to distinguish, while their nests are hidden high in trees, eaves, or tucked away in dense foliage.

Long Nesting Period: Unlike many birds that leave the nest quickly, baby doves stay in the nest until they are capable of flight, which can take 3-4 weeks.

Rapid Growth: They grow incredibly fast and appear almost adult-sized by the time they fledge, leaving the "ugly" bald stage entirely hidden from human eyes.

Hidden Nesting: They often build very small, flimsy nests in high-up, hard-to-see areas like thick trees, gutters, or hidden building ledges.

I believe this is the Gila Woodpecker.
04/22/2026

I believe this is the Gila Woodpecker.

I stand corrected this beautiful bird is a Gilded Flicker. The bird watching around the Salome Arizona is incredible. Th...
04/19/2026

I stand corrected this beautiful bird is a Gilded Flicker. The bird watching around the Salome Arizona is incredible.

The Gilded Flicker (Colaptes chrysoides) is a permanent, medium-to-large woodpecker resident in southern Arizona's Sonoran Desert, particularly in areas with saguaro cacti. They are recognized by their grayish-brown back, black-barred plumage, yellow underwings, and red mustache streak. They commonly nest in saguaro cavities and eat ants.

Key Facts & Behaviors:
Habitat: Desert scrub, especially saguaro forests.
Location: Found in areas like Tucson Mountain Park and Saguaro National Park, according to Tucson Bird Alliance.

Diet: Primarily forage on the ground, consuming more ants than most North American birds.

Nesting: They cut cavities in saguaro cactus, which provide habitat for other species in subsequent years.

Identification: They are often confused with the larger Northern Flicker, but Gilded Flickers show distinct yellow underwings in flight.

Distinction: They are specialized Sonoran Desert residents.

The weather in Salome Arizona has been amazing! The area is experiencing ideal, sunny riding weather with daytime high t...
04/17/2026

The weather in Salome Arizona has been amazing! The area is experiencing ideal, sunny riding weather with daytime high temperatures ranging from the mid-70s to low 80s, offering perfect conditions for long desert rides before the intense summer heat.

Why Choose Salome KOA for Riding:
Direct Trail Access: ATV riders can depart directly from the KOA into a network of desert trails, sandy washes, and historical sites, including routes to old gold mines.

Relaxing Amenities: After a day on the trails, enjoy the KOA’s heated pool and hot tub.

Close to Attractions: The Kofa National Wildlife Refuge is a half-hour southwest, and the town is located between Wickenburg and the "rock hound paradise" of Quartzsite.

Visit the Salome KOA to experience top-tier desert riding.

How did Kampgrounds of America – also known as KOA – earn that spot in our hearts and in our collective history? Learn t...
04/16/2026

How did Kampgrounds of America – also known as KOA – earn that spot in our hearts and in our collective history? Learn the captivating story of KOA campgrounds.

In 2022, KOA celebrated 60 years of connecting people to the outdoors and each other. From Acadia to the Grand Canyon to Banff, if you’re road tripping in North America, you’ll pass many of those familiar yellow KOA signs along your journey. For most of us, Kampgrounds of America’s iconic black and red logo conjures up childhood memories of starry nights by the campfire and sunny days spent outdoors.

But how did KOA earn that spot in our hearts and in our collective history? It all started with one galvanizing Montana entrepreneur named Dave Drum.

The Idea Guy
It was around 1962 when KOA founder Dave Drum noticed an abundance of station wagons and early-model RVs overnighting on the side of the road or in church and retail parking lots. The Great American Road Trip was thriving, but campgrounds were nowhere to be found.

Dave owned some land in his hometown of Billings, Montana. He asked travelers what they were looking for in the way of overnight accommodations and created a commercial campground on his property, complete with electric hook-ups, central shower facilities, a convenience store, and views of the Yellowstone River. Two years later, the first KOA franchise was established in Cody, Wyoming. Success in Cody led to increased franchising efforts and soon KOAs were popping up all over the country.

KOAs were exactly what the traveling public was looking for—a clean place to spend the night and the security of knowing that they could leave their belongings to take day trips to nearby parks and attractions.

This philosophy of delivering what the customer wants based on feedback and market research continues at KOA today. “Dave was a data guy,” says KOA Vice President of Communications Michael Gast. “Early on, he established the philosophy that you better know what your campers want. There was no internet or computers, and everything was done by mail and telephone. But he was determined to make decisions based on the data.”

Dave collaborated with Billings artist Karlo Fujiwara (allegedly during a stroll along the banks of the Yellowstone River) to create the familiar and trusted KOA logo. Its simple use of dots and lines to signify a Native American teepee, with an open door and smoke rising from a welcoming campfire, hasn’t changed in the company’s 56 years of operation. Because they weren’t allowed to register the word “campground” as part of the name, Dave and Carlo replaced C with K and Kampgrounds of America was born.

Coast-to-Coast Campgrounds
Despite KOA’s early success, its entrepreneurial founder was already focused on his next big project. Dave recruited Billings Chamber of Commerce Director Darrell Booth to serve as KOA’s first president and eagerly handed off day-to-day management. Darrell, who knew operations inside and out, propelled franchise expansion forward at breakneck speed over the next decade. Expansion peaked in the 1980s to more than 900 active KOA franchises.

Today, there are 508 KOA campgrounds in North America, 33 of them in Canada. KOA continues to operate in expansion mode and is in the midst of a six-year record growth streak, fueled in part by unprecedented demand for RVs. “It’s kind of unusual to be having our best years 50 years after we were created,” says Gast. He attributes the company’s continued commitment to data-driven decision-making as another factor in KOA’s continued success. Using a proprietary reservation system to generate real-time data on where people are camping, they can make quick adjustments to guest experiences and changing market conditions. KOA also produces an annual North American Camper Report, identifying trends not just at KOAs, but throughout the camping industry as a whole.

The World Changes But Camping Continues
The most recent example of world events changing travel behavior still stings when we think back to the Great Recession, but global trends have been influencing campers for decades. Back in the 80s, KOA’s big footprint helped them to hold on during the Arab Oil Embargo and resulting gas shortage. “It became a survival game for a few years,” says Gast. “KOA was really the only survivor in the commercial camping business.” As the only game in town to meet the backlog of travel that came immediately after the embargo, the company came out of the crisis in growth mode once again.

Because KOA primarily serves domestic travelers, campgrounds didn’t feel 9/11’s impact the same way it was felt in the air and international travel industries. In fact, camping seemed to fill the national need to reconnect with family and spend more quality time with loved ones. The president and CEO at the time, Jim Rogers, a management trainee who joined KOA while working on his master’s thesis on family camping, realized there was going to be a high impact on the people living in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington, DC. An outreach program offered a free weekend to KOA campers in those areas. “There was a gratitude for acknowledging how tough it was to be living in that situation,” says Gast. “It wasn’t about publicity, it was about doing the right thing. People needed what camping had to offer.”

The recession of 2008 to 2010 had a dramatic effect on travel patterns, but people didn’t stop camping. What KOA quickly discovered during that time was that millions of campers continued to travel because of the investment they had made in the camping lifestyle. KOA campers continued to travel, but they replaced multi-state road trips with shorter itineraries closer to home.

Preserving Traditions, Adding Amenities
While those comforting touches of KOA tradition endure, like iconic 70s-era A-frame cabins, lakeside ice cream stands, friendly, yellow-shirted camp counselors, and putt-putt golf courses, KOA is constantly evolving to meet the needs of millennials and future generations of campers. Free WiFi to share outdoor adventures in real time is now standard. Campsites are larger and there’s a big push to increase cabin camping facilities for the exploding population of outdoor enthusiasts who want more amenities, like electricity, a bed, bathroom, and a kitchen.

With more than 520 modern campgrounds, Dave Drum’s Montana campground seems a distant memory. Yet throughout its history, KOA has continued to shape the camping experience around what campers want, just as Dave did back in 1956. “KOA is more than it used to be,” says Gast. “It’s not a place to stay on your way to an experience. KOA is the experience.”

This quartz walking path is a notable, locally crafted attraction located immediately behind the Salome Arizona Journey ...
04/12/2026

This quartz walking path is a notable, locally crafted attraction located immediately behind the Salome Arizona Journey KOA.

Location: The trail is located right out the back fence of the Salome KOA Journey, situated in the McMullen Valley between Wickenburg and Quartzsite.

Builder & Details: The path was built over five years by a local Salome resident. It is a roughly quarter-mile trail crafted from quartz rock, featuring intentionally placed rocks, small bridges, a picnic table, and various artifacts for viewing.

Environment: The trail features lush green grass in the winter and spring, highlighting the quartz stones, and provides direct access to the surrounding desert public lands and hundreds of miles of nearby ATV trails.

The Salome KOA is known for being a hub for rockhounds visiting during the winter and offers access to the nearby Kofa National Wildlife Refuge.

Limited Availability The Salome KOA Journey in Arizona is offering a monthly special, that is frequently utilized during...
04/11/2026

Limited Availability

The Salome KOA Journey in Arizona is offering a monthly special, that is frequently utilized during summer for extended stays. Featuring sites with full hookups (water, sewer, 30/50 amp), a heated pool/hot tub, clean bathrooms, a game room, clubhouse, and dog park. Situated near over 300 miles of ATV trails and local, scenic desert, it provides a convenient base for exploring.

Key Amenities & Details
Monthly Special: 30 Amp site $360 + electric and a 50 Amp site $400 (contact the campground to confirm current availability).

Site Features: Full hookups (water, sewer, electric) available.
Amenities: Heated pool and hot tub, clubhouse, game room (ping pong/billiards), laundry, and fenced dog park.

Location: 64812 Harcuvar Drive, Salome, AZ 85348.

Activities: Direct access to local ATV trails and a short drive to
Quartzsite for winter gem shows.

Contact Information
Phone: 1-800-562-7857 or 928-859-4639.
Email: [email protected].

Address

64812 Harcuvar Drive
Salome, AZ
85348

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+18005627857

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