Winter camping — in the cold and snow — more popular every year

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By CARL STODDARD
Capital News Service
LANSING — On any given weekend this winter, a half dozen hearty souls will venture into the backcountry of Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore near Munising, pitch a tent and go camping.
They are joining an increasing number of winter campers at state, national and private campgrounds around Michigan. Some go off the grid in small backpacking tents while others brave the elements in fully equipped RVs plugged into the internet and cable TV.
Winter camping has “taken a while to gain some traction,” said Jason Fleming, chief of resource protection and promotion for the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Parks and Recreation Division.
“Overall, I’d say it’s something that is slowly expanding.”
More than a dozen state parks offer some type of winter camping, according to the DNR.
Two national parks in Michigan are open during the winter months.
Also open all year are at least 15 of the nearly 90 private campgrounds that belong to the Michigan Association of Recreation Vehicles and Campgrounds, based in Okemos.
“Camping in Michigan doesn’t necessarily end in the fall,” said Bill Sheffer, the group’s executive director.
Sheffer said private campgrounds around the state offer year-round accommodations, and they are reporting an increase in “winter recreation enthusiasts.”
Fleming said winter camping at state parks has always been popular for people who use cabins, and the state has added yurts and lodges for people who may not have suitable camping gear for the cold winter.
Last January and February, campers booked 2,502 nights at state campgrounds, according to the DNR. That was up from 1,962 nights in the first two months of the previous year. In the same two months of 2014, bookings totaled 1,682.
“So there is a growing interest in this time of the year, but small compared to peak times,” Fleming said.
Ten years ago, Muskegon State Park wasn’t even open in the winter, he said. Now, one loop at the park is plowed for campers who come for cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, ice fishing, snowmobiling and the park’s luge track.
The luge run is 850 feet long, and riders can reach up to 30 miles an hour.
Fleming said he plans to take his own sons to stay in the park’s canvas-sided yurt. The yurt is 20 feet in diameter and heated by a wood stove. It has no electricity or running water. “However, an outhouse is located nearby,” according to the DNR.
Fleming said state parks open all year see some tent campers, but mostly self-contained travel trailers and motor homes. Fees vary depending on services. Electricity generally is available at the state parks but usually not water.
However, there are exceptions. At Mitchell State Park in Cadillac, restrooms are open all year, Fleming said.
At the Porcupine Mountains Wilderness State Park in Ontonagon, visitors can stay in a 12-person lodge or camp in the back country and snowshoe or ski on groomed trails, said Jimmy Newkirk, a ranger at the park.
“Every year, our attendance has seen an uptick,” he said.
Farther east, at the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, only backcountry camping is available in the winter. Ranger Scott Perry said the park hosts an average of six campers at any given time. All are in tents and usually venture out on snowshoes or skis.
The park is especially popular with college students and ice climbers, he said.
During the winter, privately owned Timber Ridge RV & Recreation Resort in Traverse City keeps open 20 of its 300 campsites for folks in motorhomes and travel trailers.
“We have seen an increase of maybe 50 percent (in winter camping) over the last two years,” said park manager Ella Baggs. “People are staying more in their campers rather than motels.”
But they aren’t necessarily roughing it.
“We have water, electricity, sewer, cable, Wi-Fi,” Baggs said. “They’re pretty happy campers down there.”
Tahquamenon Falls State Park in Paradise has an eight-person lodge open in the winter. It also plows out two loops in its campground to open up 20 to 30 sites, said Theresa Neal, the park’s naturalist.
On a typical winter weekend, Neal said, six to 10 campsites might be filled. All sites offer electrical hookups and fire pits. Water is available at a single, heated spigot.
Some visitors come to the park to see the waterfalls, which are especially awe-inspiring in the winter.
The other plus? “No mosquitoes!”
The park’s growing use in the winter is a boon for business owners in nearby Paradise.
Shirley Clark, owner of the Berry Patch Gifts, Bakery & Restaurant on M-123, said she sees an increase in park winter visitors.
“We have a couple that comes from Florida every year,” Clark said. They stay in an RV they had specially made in Canada to withstand Michigan’s harsh winters. “We also have a man who comes up every year. He sleeps outdoors in a sleeping bag.”
Most winter visitors come to Paradise to ski, snowshoe, snowmobile or walk the trails and check out the roaring, icy waterfalls, she said.
Of course, camping in Paradise’s winter wonderland can be challenging.
By early January, the area already had received about 80 inches of snow this season, and temperatures around zero are not uncommon, Clark said.
“It’s just awesome,” she said, “if you’re into that kind of thing.”

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