If you are into off-road and overland camping, you’re probably aware of the challenges while out on the trails. Your 4x4 SUV can navigate these trails, but will your trailer hold you back?
No worries! The Axle-Less trailer suspension is made for even the wildest and roughest terrain, allowing you to take your trailer anywhere your tow vehicle can go.
Aroostook County ATV Trails, Maine
There are more than a thousand miles of marked ORV trails through Aroostook County, with some of the most rugged mountains in the Northeast. Consider using Katahdin Lodge as your base camp and you’ll have direct access to the heart of Aroostook’s trails, where backcountry lakes, waterfalls, and the occasional moose await.
Delancy Loops OHV Trail, Florida
Northern Florida’s Ocala National Forest is wild, packed with endless mazes of sand pine, natural lakes, and rivers fed by crystal clear springs. The trail system here has a mix of ATV and OHV trails, including more than 200 miles set aside for smaller vehicles enabling you to ride from lake to lake, spring to spring.
Windrock Park, Tennessee
You’ll find the most challenging trails at Windrock Park, a privately owned off-road system in eastern Tennessee with 300 miles of trails traversing some of the steepest, wettest, and rockiest mountains in the South. It’s a rainforest, so expect mud, rocks, and tight trails between towering hardwoods throughout the 73,000-acre playground.
Hatfield-McCoy Trail System, West Virginia
The beautiful Hatfield-McCoy Trails – 600 miles of marked paths through wild and wonderful West Virginia – offer you several hundred miles of 4x4 trails that connect with a handful of small towns, inns, and restaurants allowing you get wild on the trails during the day and civilized in town at night.
Drummond Island, Michigan
Tight trails in dense hardwood forest and open meadows provide an expansive system of trails overlooking Lake Huron with 60 miles of ATV-specific paths and 40 miles of wider ORV-friendly routes. Some loops will take you to the edge of the lake, where you can extend your adventures for miles because of the beauty of the landscape.
Bulldog Canyon, Arizona
Drive into the backcountry and camp. Wake up and drive deeper into the backcountry and camp. Repeat until you’ve exhausted the 34,000 acres of the Bulldog Canyon OHV Area, where 20 miles of marked trails cruise through the Sonoran Desert and the Goldfield Mountains, just an hour from Phoenix. The terrain is straightforward and suitable for beginners and families, but the scenery is off the charts. Primitive campsites along the trail make Bulldog Canyon an ideal multi-day destination for off-roaders looking to take their time and explore the non motorized trails within the canyon on foot.
Imperial Sand Dunes Recreation Area, California
The Imperial Sand Dunes – a 40-mile-long system of sand mountains in southeastern California is one of the largest collections of inland dunes in the country. Most of the off-road action happens around a palatial 300-foot-tall dune called Oldsmobile Hill, a social scene where you’ll find ATVs and UTVs of all kinds racing across the sand.
Ouray, Colorado
Enjoy exploring Ouray and its surrounding slice of the San Juan Mountains, where hundreds of miles of unimproved roads and trails extend from town, climbing the steep San Juan backcountry. The area is known as America’s Switzerland because of the towering peaks and picturesque meadows. It’s also an adventure playground with world-class fishing, rock climbing, hiking, and mountain biking in all directions.
Baumgartner Trails, Idaho
Backcountry is on the menu in this system, which has more than 200 miles of ATV and motorcycle trails ascending and descending the Sawtooth National Forest along the South Fork of the Boise River. Many of the trails are limited to vehicles no wider than 48 inches, perfect for the Polaris Sportsman 570, with its narrow footprint and True On-Demand all-wheel drive. Imagine singletrack with steep pitches, sheer drop-offs, narrow switchbacks, and lots of rock scrambling. Bring your camping and fishing gear—or set up at the Baumgartner Campground which has a hot, spring-fed soaking pool.