You don’t need a backyard or a dining room table to celebrate Easter.

In fact, some of the sweetest, simplest Easter moments happen at a picnic table under the pines—with kids giggling over colorful eggs and sunrise coffee shared in camp chairs.

Whether you're in a travel trailer, van, or tent, here are a few Easter traditions that travel beautifully—and leave room for meaning, not just candy.


🧺 1. The Easter Egg Hunt—Campground Style

You don’t need a lawn. You’ve got the woods!

  • Use biodegradable or reusable eggs

  • Set boundaries to keep kids safe

  • Let neighboring kids join the fun for instant community

Bonus: pinecones and rocks make surprisingly fun decoys.


🍞 2. Simple Sunrise Breakfast

Skip the formal feast. Instead, start the day with:

  • Hot cross buns

  • Cinnamon rolls from the Dutch oven

  • Campfire coffee and cocoa

  • A moment of gratitude around the fire

It’s not about the spread—it’s about the stillness.


🐰 3. Nature-Inspired Crafts

Keep it light and packable:

  • Dye eggs with natural colors (beets, turmeric, blueberries)

  • Make pinecone bunnies

  • Paint rocks with spring patterns and hide them for others to find

Crafting outside just feels better.


🌅 4. A Quiet Morning Walk or Prayer

For many, Easter is about reflection and renewal. Start the day with a gentle tradition:

  • A sunrise hike

  • A shared reading

  • A moment of silence by the water

No need for pews or walls—the forest is enough.


🧡 Final Thoughts

Camping on Easter doesn’t mean skipping the celebration.
It means stripping it back to what matters:

  • Family

  • Quiet joy

  • New life

  • Time spent in a place that feels sacred—because it is

So if you're out there this Easter, surrounded by trees instead of tablecloths… you’re exactly where you need to be. 🏕️🌄🐣


🐟 Take a virtual tour of scenic, peaceful Easter weekend campsites at Campground Views. Plan a holiday escape that honors the season—and your style.

🔗 Follow us for seasonal celebration tips, family-friendly camp ideas, and outdoor traditions worth keeping.