About Little Pine State Park
I have been making the yearly trek to Little Pine State Park (or as we so lovingly shorten it to Pine Creek) since I was an infant. In fact, my family trips each year to the campground are what inspired my love of camping. We used to be way less glamorous with just a tent and a cooler full of food but the memories that I made over the many years make Pine Creek my absolute favorite place to camp – ah, nostalgia, my dear old friend.
Even though Little Pine is a relatively small campground, it’s vast in regards to the property and adventurous things to do. There are only around 100 sites and not many are dog sites (which is such a huge whomp whomp) so we don’t always drag the puppers with us. There are many trails to hike, including the Mid-State and Lakeshore Trails. Of course there are lots of streams to fish, tube down, take epically long canoe trips on, or swim in. More on that in a bit.
Taken directly from DCNR’s page, “The 2,158-acre Little Pine State Park is surrounded by a beautiful mountain section of Tiadaghton State Forest in the PA Wilds. The 94-acre Little Pine Lake, hiking trails, campground and nesting bald eagles are prime attractions to the park.”
Since we ordinarily make the trip annually, we have stories galore from the shenanigans that take place at Pine Creek. In 2019, we hit a wayward wild turkey on our voyage, which ripped off our truck mirror, I almost burnt the camper down with a grease fire involving my induction cooktop, The Explorer had a major bike accident with head injury that resulted in a trip to the ER, and The Explorer narrowly missed being bitten by a copperhead snake. Other crazy antics include a 6-hour canoe trip, a 10-mile bike trip where The Explorer’s brake was stuck on for the first 5 miles (oops), and giant family style meals to serve an army.
One major thing to note: Pine Creek is not for everyone. There is zero cell service for about 20-30 minutes in every direction. If you are looking to disconnect and go off the grid, this is your place; however, if you can’t go a few days without having to check email, receive messages, or search the world-wide web, then I would not recommend a stay at Pine Creek. They used to allow you to log into their wi-fi at the Happy Acres store but word is that they discontinued that so now you are truly cut off from the world when you camp at Pine Creek. This is one of the reasons we love it so much since The Engineer is in sales and it’s the only time I don’t have to say “shhhhh, daddy’s on the phone” constantly.