Ohio Jellystone Park becomes first in the country with full-scale dog water park

If the surveys are true, then one Ohio RV park is playing the numbers in the right direction. A Renogy survey says almost 70% of RV owners travel with their pets, with 92% of them bringing dogs.

If your pup travels with you and loves the water, look out for suspicious credit card charges. The first-ever full-scale RV dog water park is up and running. Internet-savvy pooches may not think twice about putting in a reservation.

RV dog water park more than a splash pad

The new dog-friendly zone isn’t just a shallow splash pad. Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Uniontown, Ohio, is not just barking up any old tree. It’s packed with fun features tailored to canine campers: water-spraying fire hydrants, fountains that shoot out of giant tennis balls and dog bowls, plus an agility course and open space to run and play.

“We’ve never had anything like this before,” said Trent Hershenson, marketing VP for Camp Jellystone, which runs more than 75 Jellystone Parks across the U.S. and Canada.

The idea came from the park’s popular annual dog swim. It’s one day each season when the pool closes to people and goes to the dogs. “It kept getting bigger every year,” said activities director Maddie Hillyard. “Guests kept telling us it was their favorite event, so we thought—why not make something permanent for the dogs?”

While other Jellystone Parks offer pet-themed weekends and dog-friendly lodging, Uniontown’s new dog water zone is the first of its kind. It’s one more way Jellystone Parks are expanding what it means to camp with the whole family—furry friends included.

But what about the other RV pet travel group?

RV dog water parkBy the way, that same Renogy survey tells another “tail,” if you will. RVers also seem to have a feline commitment. Of RVers who travel with pets, 14% take a cat along for the ride. An RV dog water park probably has little interest to Fluffy. Don’t be surprised to see a petition circulating for RV parks with catnip filled bounce-houses.

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RVT1212

Russ and Tiña De Maris
Russ and Tiña De Maris
Russ and Tiña went from childhood tent camping to RVing in the 1980s when the ground got too hard. They've been tutored in the ways of RVing (and RV repair) by a series of rigs, from truck campers, to a fifth-wheel, and several travel trailers. In addition to writing scores of articles on RVing topics, they've also taught college classes for folks new to RVing. They authored the book, RV Boondocking Basics.

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2 Comments

Neal Davis
11 months ago

Thank you for the news, Russ and Tina! i will tell DW. She may find additional reasons to be in that area beyond letting dog #3 play in the water. Have a great day and safe travels!

Betty D.
11 months ago

Oh I wish I could bring my dogs here. They would love it. So would I.