ORV + ATV trails
Direct trail access. Street-legal or not.
Ride from your campsite into Oscoda County's ATV and ORV trail network without ever loading a trailer. That's the whole reason a lot of campers pick us.
How it works
From your site, you ride to our staging area, saddle up there, and head out to the trail. Inside the campground itself, ATVs and ORVs aren't ridden, quiet hours, kids on bikes, dogs on leashes, but the staging area is right there, and the trail is steps from it.
That means you don't trailer your rig out of the campground every morning. You roll out of bed, grab pizza or breakfast at the store, and start riding.
The trail network
You're connected to Oscoda County's regional ATV and ORV trail system, hundreds of miles of marked trail running through state and national forest land. From here you can ride single-day loops or string together multi-day routes.
Trail maps are available at the camp store. Conditions and seasonal closures change, check with the Michigan DNR ORV trail page before you head out.
Rules of the campground (for ORVs)
- No riding ATVs or ORVs inside the campground proper. Walk or drive your rig to the staging area first.
- Helmets and safety gear are your call, we'll point you to Michigan DNR's current law if you ask.
- Quiet hours start at 10 PM. Park your rig for the night.
- Be neighborly. Other campers' kids and dogs are around. Slow down near the campground entrance.
From the staging area
Riders on the property.
Photos from past seasons. Canadian groups crossing the border, ORV clubs out of Ohio and Indiana, family groups that have been doing this together for a decade.
Repeat ORV groups
We block sites for annual groups.
If you're running an annual ATV trip, we host them all season. Canadian groups, ORV clubs out of the Midwest, family groups that have been doing this together for a decade. Get in touch and we'll hold a block of sites.
Bring the rig. Book the site.
If you ride, this is the campground in Mio for you.