Pines and hardwoods shade this remote campground on the shore of Beaver Lake (34 acres), providing an idyllic northwods 'getaway' camping experience. Hundreds of square miles of forest, bogs, streams, rivers, and more lakes surround the campground. The nearest community, Mellen (Pop. 690), is 12 miles away.
The campground sprawls over a half-mile on the west shore of Black Lake (133 acres). Most campsites are lakefront with shoreline access and room to beach a boat, canoe, or kayak. Sunsets on partly cloudy evenings can be fantastic from many of the sites.
Day Lake (578-acres) features beautiful scenery with numerous islands, bays and peninsulas that are fun to explore by boat, canoe, or kayak. Tamarack-spruce bog, pines, maple, oak, and birch cover the shoreline and islands. There’s also great fishing for Panfish, Musky and Largemouth Bass. The campground is spread out along the west shore, about one mile north of Clam Lake Junction.
This small campground sits in a gorgeous setting next to a 112-acre lake surrounded by wilderness and areas of spruce bog. East Twin Lake is fed by two springs and offers a scenic paddling and fishing experience. The public boat landing is a half-mile northeast of the campground and offers a gravel ramp, turnaround, trailer parking area and a boat pier.
This secluded campground is in a hardwood forest on the east shore of a narrow 6.5-mile long flowage named Moose Lake (1670 acres). The northeast end of the lake features a wilderness shoreline and several uninhabited islands providing a scenic paddling experience. Moose Lake and the West Fork of the Chippewa River offer excellent fishing for Musky, Walleye, Panfish, Largemouth and Smallmouth Bass.
This fun, family-destination campground sits next to beautiful Namekagon Lake. The lake sprawls over 3,000 acres with numerous bays, islands and navigable channels to other lakes; ideal for exploring by pontoon, boat, kayak, or canoe. Namekagon Lake is noted for its excellent crappie fishing, and for Walleye, Musky, Largemouth and Smallmouth.
The East Fork Chippewa River flows past this small campground shaded by tall pines and birch in a remote area of the National Forest. A spur to the Dead Horse Run ATV Trail is across from the campground entrance. This is an excellent campground for paddlers, anglers, and for those running the ATV trails.