(Because that wasn’t a pull-thru. That was a trap.)

You book a pull-thru site.
You picture a glorious, sweeping arc of gravel.
No backing. No stress. Just cruise in, unhook, and open a beverage.

But what you actually get?

A crooked sliver of dirt, wedged between two trees, at a 43° angle, requiring a 19-point correction and a blood sacrifice.

It’s time to admit the truth:
Pull-thru sites are marketing. Not geometry.


🧭 1. The Entrance Is Wide—Until It Isn’t

Sure, it starts wide.
But by the time you swing your rig in, you realize:

  • The “pull-thru” curve is tighter than your turning radius

  • There’s a picnic table exactly where your tow vehicle should go

  • The sewer hookup is on the wrong side. Again.

You’re not pulling through—you’re threading a needle in a thunderstorm.


🏕 2. It’s Technically Pull-Thru—If You’re Driving a Scooter

Some parks will label any vaguely linear patch of land as a pull-thru.

But let’s get real:

  • If your rear bumper is in the road

  • If your front end is touching a bush

  • If the “exit” path turns into a tree-lined maze

…it’s not a pull-thru. It’s a well-lit ambush.


🚫 3. “Pull-Thru” ≠ Easy Exit

You thought you'd wake up, pack up, and roll out smoothly.

Instead:

  • The person behind you parked too close

  • A rogue tent is now part of your tailpipe clearance

  • The “exit lane” is currently occupied by a toddler on a tricycle

So now you’re backing out of your “pull-thru” with the entire campground watching.


🤯 4. Every Pull-Thru Site Comes With Emotional Baggage

Because every time you book one, you hope.

  • “This time will be different.”

  • “Maybe it’s actually spacious.”

  • “Maybe the hookups will be where they’re supposed to be.”

But hope is a dangerous thing in campground logistics.

Especially when the pedestal is two feet forward of where it should be and you’re now straddling the fire ring.


🧠 5. Why We Fall for It Every Time

  • It says “pull-thru” on the booking site

  • The park map makes it look huge

  • The photo shows the one site that’s actually level

  • You believe

But RVers are nothing if not optimists with bad spatial awareness.


💬 Final Thoughts

Pull-thru sites are like unicorns with sewer hookups.

In theory? Magical.
In reality? Rare, awkward, and mostly just a longer place to park poorly.

So go ahead and book one—just don’t be surprised when you still need a spotter, three wheel chocks, and a full-body sigh.


🐟 Want to know if your “pull-thru” is actually doable before arrival?
Use Campground Views to preview site layout, slope, entry angles, and obstacle proximity—so you can plan accordingly (or bring backup).

🔗 Follow us for more campsite truths, booking myths exposed, and emotional support for people who just wanted an easy setup.