* Camper check-in time: 4:00pm Tuesday after Labor Day - October 31 * Camper check-in time: 5:00pm Memorial Day Weekend - Labor Day * Camper check-in time: 4:00pm April 1 - Friday before Memorial Day If any of the four wind warning lights turn on, then boating will be prohibited and campers must make alternate plans hike to/from their sites or delay/extend their reservation. Campers boating to their sites need to bring their own boat and understand the wind warning system (details are provided in the Boating section). Wilderness campsites are only accessible by boating or by hiking/mountain biking 3-6 miles along the steep and rugged Cushetunk Trail. Check-in is required by 4:00pm* so that campers can obtain their permits, prepare for the trek ahead, and arrive at their campsite before dark. Round Valley Recreation Area is the only NJ state park that offers wilderness camping, each campsite is in a secluded clearing in the woods along the south-eastern shoreline of the reservoir at the base of the Cushetunk Mountain.Ĭampers must check-in at the Park Office. The population is closely monitored by the Bureau of Freshwater Fisheries and it the population is currently self-sustaining through natural reproduction in the reservoir and modifications in fishing regulations in response to changes in the population dynamics. The NJ Division of Fish & Wildlife historically stocked the reservoir with lake trout from 1977 through 1995. Today the New Jersey Water Supply Authority manages the reservoir, monitoring water levels and carrying out construction work as part of the Round Valley Reservoir Project. Interpretations of the name “Cushetunk” vary, within the Munsee language places that contain an “–unk” suffix often refer to mountains where as “–ink” or “–ing” names would refer to valleys. The name “Cushetunk” possibly comes from the Lenape meaning “place of hogs” in reference to the wild hogs that once lived here. The Cushetunk Mountain, lying on a bed of igneous rock at the reservoir’s east end, still stands over Round Valley, rising 500 feet above the reservoir’s shoreline and 834 feet above sea level. In 1960 the New Jersey Water Authority constructed three large dams and flooded Round Valley with water pumped in from the South Branch Raritan River, establishing the reservoir. The erosion of soft sedimentary rock carved the natural Round Valley out of the surrounding mountains. At full capacity the reservoir holds up to 55 billion gallons of water. Round Valley’s reservoir covers 2,350 acres and reaches approximately 180 feet deep, making it the second-deepest lake and largest reservoir in New Jersey.
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