Ramona, California
Western Horizon's Ramona Canyon RV Resort


24340 Hwy. 78
Ramona, California 92065
(760) 788–3085
Pacific Time

 

Open year-round
High-Use Seasonal Period: December 15 to March 15, July 1 - 31.

Sites: 108 Full / 6 Tent Sites w/ water and electricity
Check in: 9 AM to 5 PM
Check out: 11 AM
Maximum Electrical: 50 amps
Maximum RV Length: 45 ft.

Directions:
Less than one hour from anywhere in San Diego County located 5 miles east of Ramona on Hwy. 78 on the left. (78 is the highway close to Julian.)
From 15 South, take Scripps-Poway Pkwy east to 67. Turn left on 67 and go through Ramona (turns into 78). From 8, take Hwy. 67 north through Ramona.


Accommodations   Facilities and Amenities
Park Model, Sleeps 6, $58
Reservation Requirements: Check in: 2 PM, Check out: 11 AM
Notes: No pets in cabins. Pets must be leashed. Linens required. No smoking. Modem available. Events on all national holidays.



 
This resort offers a clubhouse, outdoor heated swimming pool and spa, miniature golf, volleyball, hiking trail, pavilion, fishing in stocked lake, shuffleboard, BBQ’s, basketball, horseshoes, WiFi, and TV.


 

Resort Profile

Spanning 105 acres, with an abundance of Spanish Oak trees that provide shade for leisurely strolls or afternoon naps, Ramona Canyon Resort is less than an hour from San Diego and the Mexican border. This beautiful area of southern California is blessed with a near-perfect climate of year-round average daily temperatures near 70 degrees and an average rainfall of only nine inches. With an average 67 days of sunshine in each season, you can expect sun and beach weather about two-thirds of the time.

The resort is in San Diego County, and while much of the travel attention focuses on the beaches and bay, San Diego County offers a variety of attractions for visitors to the inland foothills around Julian and the desert surrounding Borrego Springs. Nearby Julian is a quaint old mining town whose claim to fame was its gold strike in 1870. Visitors can experience a turn-of-the-century town and tour the abandoned Eagle and Highpeak mines.

Borrego Springs is an oasis in the middle of the desert with golf courses, swimming pools, and tennis courts. The Anza-Borrego Desert State Park contains some of the finest desert wildflower fields in California. During the fall and spring the valley and canyons are painted with a rainbow of color.

Set between the mountains and the sea, the city of San Diego is, by itself, a multifaceted visitor destination where the history has given the city an abundance of historic attractions, from the restored Franciscan mission founded by Father Serra to the Old Town San Diego State Historic Park, a collection of early adobe buildings dating from the city’s founding, to the Cabrillo National Monument on Point Loma. Here you can visit the famous San Diego Zoo and the many other attractions of Balboa Park, plus Sea World, Presidio Hill, and much more. Tijuana, Mexico, popular with tourists for years, is just across the border.