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Rudys Cabins and Campground is a fifty year old family business quietly nestled in the northern New Hampshire mountains. Our 100 acres with a 30 acre flyfishing pond ensure the solitude and the peace and quiet lacking in today's busy world. Quaint housekeeping cabins, privately situated on the water, make the perfect setting for a relaxed escape.
Rudys is not far from all sorts of other activities. We are close to two summer theaters. We are only a short drive from big-lake and river fishing and boating, golf (9 or 18 hole), tennis, beach swimming, moose watching, hiking, and the shops and restaurants of three states and two countries.
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If quality flyfishing is your thing, Rudys is the place to be! Our exclusive ownership of Clarksville Ponds shorelinealong with our electric-motor-only policycreates the perfect atmosphere. We offer boat rentals for your convenience.
The Camping Experience
Self contained motor-home and travel trailers are welcome, no matter what size they might be. Our trailer park has a new state-of-the-art septic system and every site has 3-way RV hookups with power, sewer, and water for your added convenience. We have limited facilities for tenting.
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Rudys Cabins and Campground is open on a seasonal basis from Memorial Day weekend through the close of hunting season in November. To make reservations please call (603) 246-3418. Our rates are very reasonable, with special rates offered to families.
How To Find Us To find Rudys Cabins and Campground take your best route to Colebrook, New Hampshire, at the intersection of US Route 3 and NH Route 26.
In Colebrook turn onto NH Route 145 North (your landmark is Howards Restaurant, famous for its pies) and travel about 8.8 miles until you see the sign Rudys Cabins and Campground on your right, just past the sign marking the 45th parallelhalfway to the North Pole.
Another landmark is the old Clarksville Schoolhouse on the left just before Rudys sign. Turn right at the sign onto Old County Road, then an immediate left up the hill onto Clarksville Pond Road. In approximately 1.5 miles you will reach the next Rudys sign on your left; and you are there.
Make your reservations by phone, by post, or by email.
Rudys Cabins and Campground
For more information call
57 Rudy Lane
Clarksville, NH 03592 br>Joan Shatney
John or Kathleen Domanico
(603) 246-3418
Our email: rudyscabins@markosoftplus.net
Reservations and a two day deposit are required for a one-week stay or longer; a one day deposit for shorter stays.
Hope to see you this summer at Rudys
About
the name Rudys
From settlement times onward there have always been sporting camps on Clarksville Pond. During the WWII, a local boy put aside enough money to buy the camps. His name was Rudy Shatney, and he was destined to come home a hero. Twice decorated for valor and awarded the Silver Star for leading his embattled division to safety while severely wounded, Rudy came back from the war ready to make the Clarksville Pond camps a going concern. He and his war-bride Joan improved the camps, provided rustic accommodations and home-cooked meals and offered a Big Woods tenting experience and excellent trout fishing just as the postwar generation was ready to hit the outdoor scene with paid vacations and the means to get there. Rudy became a legend in his own time, justifiably famed for his ability to run down deer, find game when nobody else could, throw knives and hatchets with unerring accuracy and stand on the gunwales of a canoe to cast 75 feet to a rising trout. A man of medium stature but amazing strength and agility, he could stand on one hand and out-Indian-wrestle anyone he ever locked hands with. He could beat just about anybody at just about anything he ever tried, but always with a smile and never with a mean bone in his body. He was a dead-reckoning navigator of the woods who thought nothing of traveling through the wilds from Clarksville to Rumford, living off the land as he went. A natural-born carpenter and jack of all trades, he is responsible for the many creative uses of local woods, gnarls and roots one sees in the camps today. There was never one like him before and there will never be one like him again. Rudy Shatney died in 1992, but his legend, spirit and mark on the people who loved him live on. John Harrigan |