(But the site had other plans.)

You pull in feeling capable. Confident. Professional, even.
You’ve parked before. You’ve backed up before. You’ve watched at least three YouTube videos on “easy campsite positioning.”

And then the campsite hits you with:

  • a weird slope

  • a tight turn

  • a tree placed by someone with enemies

  • and a picnic table positioned like a practical joke

You park. You step out. You look at the angle of your rig and think:
“We meant to park better than this.”

Same. Every time.


🚐 1. It Looked Simple From the Road

From the driver’s seat, the site appears:

  • wider

  • flatter

  • less crowded

  • and emotionally supportive

Then you get out and realize it’s actually:

  • angled

  • uneven

  • full of obstacles

  • and designed to test your turning radius

The site didn’t change. Your perspective did. Cruelly.


📐 2. The Ground Is Never Level, Just Convincing

You can’t truly see slope until:

  • the door swings shut like it’s haunted

  • the fridge starts side-eyeing you

  • the bubble level begins its judgement

At that point, you’re already parked.
And “repositioning” feels like admitting defeat.


🌳 3. The Tree That Matters Is Always in the Wrong Place

Campgrounds are full of trees.
But there’s always one tree that’s positioned precisely to interfere with:

  • the slide

  • the awning

  • the roofline

  • or your mirror’s will to live

You didn’t choose to park near it.
It chose you.


🔌 4. Hookups Are Never Where Your Rig Wants Them

You get a near-perfect angle… and then realize:

  • power is behind you

  • water is on the wrong side

  • sewer is practically under your neighbor's chair

Now you’re deciding between:

  • a clean setup

  • or a cleaner conscience

You choose chaos, because the hose will reach… probably.


🤝 5. If You’re Parking With a Partner, It Becomes a Team Sport

One person says:

  • “Keep coming!”

  • “No, stop!”

  • “Turn left!”

  • “YOUR other left!”

The driver can’t see.
The spotter can’t explain.
Both are trying their best and failing in real time.

This isn’t conflict. It’s coordination under pressure.


🪑 6. The Awkward Angle Becomes Permanent Immediately

You think: “We’ll fix it after we unhook.”

Then you unhook.
Then you put down stabilizers.
Then you roll out the mat.
Then you set up chairs.

At that point, you’re not adjusting the rig.
You’re moving out.

The parking may be bad, but you’re committed now.


👀 7. The Worst Part Is Being Perceived

No one is actually watching you.
But it feels like everyone is.

You do one extra pull forward and suddenly you’re convinced the entire loop is whispering: “They don’t know what they’re doing.”

In reality, the other campers are either:

  • not paying attention

  • or remembering their own parking trauma

Still—being perceived makes it emotional.


✅ 8. The Fix: Do the Two-Minute Walk Next Time

This is the one habit that saves everything:

  • walk the site

  • check slope and obstacles

  • visualize slide and awning clearance

  • locate hookups

Two minutes now prevents 45 minutes of regret later.

You won’t always do it.
But when you do, you’ll feel like a genius.


💬 Final Thoughts

You meant to park better than this.
But campsite geometry, fatigue, and overconfidence got involved.

The good news?
A slightly crooked park job doesn’t ruin the trip. It just becomes part of the story—one you’ll tell later with confidence and selective memory.

And if the rig is safe, stable, and your door opens without hitting the picnic table?
That counts as a win.

🐟 Want fewer parking regrets? Use Campground Views to preview site layout, slope, trees, and hookup placement before you arrive—so you can plan your approach like a pro (even if you still do a three-point turn for character-building).

🔗 Follow us for more RV life truths, campsite setup humor, and tips for people who’ve absolutely said, “It’s fine,” while staring at a very not-fine parking angle.