


Parking a camper on bare ground or soggy grass is a headache. Mud gets tracked everywhere, the ground shifts under the weight, and after a few seasons you've got a rutted-up mess that's hard to fix. This customer in Church Hill, TN had a nice fifth-wheel and nowhere solid to put it.
Here's what we were working with - a standard grass yard right next to an existing asphalt driveway. No dedicated spot, no base, nothing to keep that big rig from sinking in during wet weather. We cut in a gravel pad sized to fit the camper, tied it right into the driveway edge, and gave it a clean finished border so it looks like it belongs there.
The gravel does a lot of work that people don't always think about. It compacts under the load, it drains water away instead of holding it, and it keeps the area from turning into a muddy pit every time it rains. For a camper this size, that kind of stable, well-drained base matters a lot - both for the parking setup and for the long-term condition of the ground underneath.
What you end up with is a functional, clean-looking spot that actually fits the property. No more worrying about mud season, no more wrestling with leveling blocks on soft ground. Just a dependable place to park and store that investment properly.