This park is very well kept: clean and spaces well maintained and mowed. It does border I-95 so there is some road noise. The lot sizes are generous with plenty of room for slides and awnings. We camped here in a Motorhome.
Used as an overnight stop, we found level, grassy, mostly open sites. Park is conveniently located right off I-95 exit, so road noise is pronounced. Some seasonals mostly congregated on west side of park. The park is not a destination and there are parks (including Jetty Park and Manatee Hammock, both Brevard county parks) closer to the action in the Cocoa/Titusville area, but is a fine overnighter. No cable but reception of local stations was fine and open sites mean no satellite obstructions. We camped here in a Travel Trailer.
We stayed here for a week and did not sleep well at all. The campground is right next to the interstate and is noisy both day and night. As for the lake, it is more of a muddy pond and I never saw alligators or much of anything else in it. It did however, have some kind ovf muck floating on top of it. The place has no cableTV and the WiFi it does have, you have to pay seperately. With nothing to do but sit and watch traffic go by, one could go crazy here. To use the bathrooms you need to know the combination to the locks, where did they ever come up with that??? As for the owners, completely socially unskilled and he is totally anti- social and not someone who can engage someone else in conversation. The whole week that we stayed there neither ever spoke a word to us till the last day when we were leaving. All in all, I will not stay here again and do not reccommend this place. We camped here in a Motorhome.
We stayed for a month while we worked at the Daytona International Speedway and paid $421 for the month, including taxes and electricity. This was one of the few parks that did not raise the prices sky high due to the events at the race track. This is a great park with many pull throughs with full hookups. There is a lake where you can fish or just watch the gators swim, no kidding, we seen them several times. The showers and laundry rooms are kept clean and plenty of hot water. A recreation room with a pool table, ping pong table, and a place to exchange books, read or work on a puzzle. The owner was very helpful and knowledgeable of the area, if you want to do some sightseeing just ask him and he will tell you all the local wonders to visit and so far he is batting a thousand with all of his great recommendations. We camped here in a Motorhome.
A decent campground. This is a Passport park and the rate is good all year. We stayed two weeks so we could catch the shuttle launch. The owner (woman) was friendly - not really a "people person", but she worked constantly to keep the park clean and neat. The lake had several alligators in residence, an Anhinga (snake bird), and a Blue Heron. Some of the sites were larger than others, and they were level. Laundry has two washers and two dryers. The park has wifi that costs about $17 for the week. Landscaping is pleasant, with orange trees between some of the sites. Scottsmoor has nothing in the way of shopping (grocery or otherwise), but Titusville is within 15 miles and there is plenty of shopping there. We enjoyed our stay there and would probably return. We camped here in a Motorhome.
This should be named Muddy Pond RV park because that is more accurate. The couple who owns/runs it are a husband and wife team and she was very nice. He wasn't that friendly or helpfull. I would not choose to go back and stay here again if I could avoid it. We camped here in a Travel Trailer.
This campground was OK, but the owner/manager was severely lacking in social skills. I arrived at 7:45 p.m. and saw a large sign that read, "Arrivals after 8p.m. set up and pay in the morning." I went to the office and found the door locked. A large sign on the door read "Office hours 8a.m. to 8p.m." I figured the office was closed, so I proceeded to set up camp at the site immediately in front of the office, not 20 feet away. I got into my PJs and was settling in for the night when there came a knock at my door. It was the manager, who demanded to know why I had set up without paying. I told him I was following the directions on his signs. "You should have rung the doorbell," he said. "There's a sign that tells you to ring the doorbell. "News to me -- I hadn't seen any such sign. I'm in my PJs; can I pay you in the morning? I asked. "I GUESS you won't skip out without paying, BUT..." he said. With that, I got my wallet and followed him (still in my PJs) to the office. I looked for his "doorbell" sign and couldn't see it immediately because of the porch light shining in my eyes. Besides, I wouldn't have thought to ring a doorbell at what was obviously an empty office (what I didn't know was that he lived in the back). He charged me $31 and some cents (cash only, no credit card) for what he kept insisting was his "best discount." He made such a deal about it that now I wonder. I thought that was kind of steep for a 16-foot TT and the use of his electricity (I didn't bother to hook up water/sewage). How much more pleasant my visit would have been if he had just introduced himself and said we could settle the bill in the morning. I most definitely did not appreciate being treated as if I were a potential thief. When I gassed up at a nearby service station the next morning, I discussed this guy with the young woman working there. "You're not the first one to complain about him," she said. I'll never again stay in a campground that treats me so shabbily. Even though I was exhausted, I wish now I had packed up and gone down the road. We camped here in a Travel Trailer.