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Haspin Acres

Haspin Acres

Haspin Acres is a 750-acre private off-road park and campground in Laurel, Indiana — Franklin County in the southeastern corner of the state, approximately 25 miles east of the Indiana-Ohio border and 50 miles from Cincinnati. The southeastern Indiana location in the Driftless Area's glacial margin gives Haspin Acres terrain that is hillier and more varied than the flat glaciated farmland dominating most of Indiana: forested hills, drainage hollows, and the rolling terrain produced by the margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet's advance into the Ohio Valley region. The park operates as a multi-activity destination rather than a single-purpose OHV facility: the trail network for four-wheelers, side-by-sides, dirt bikes, and Jeeps is supplemented by a dedicated drag strip for speed competition, a motocross track, a fishing pond for non-riding recreation, and a pressure wash station for post-ride equipment cleaning. On-site dining at the Stone Hearth Grill Restaurant provides a food service option that most OHV parks do not have, making Haspin a viable day-destination for groups that include non-riders or family members. Riders under 18 must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian, or present a signed and notarized permission waiver — the guest policy is family-oriented and the park maintains it actively. Haspin operates year-round with consistent daily access, making it one of the more dependable Midwest OHV destinations in the shoulder seasons when other parks are managing seasonal closure transitions.

Hours
Open year-round, every day

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The Badlands

The Badlands

Badlands Off Road Park covers more than 1,400 acres in Attica in Fountain County, northwestern Indiana, approximately 35 miles west of Lafayette on US-136 — positioned between Indianapolis and Chicago at the edge of the Kankakee River lowlands where the Indiana glacial plain meets the Wabash River valley. The park's terrain mix is unusual for a Midwest OHV facility: the 1,400-acre property includes sand dune sections, wooded trail corridors, gravel-surface routes, mud areas, and rock features — a diversity of terrain types that is rare at single-property parks in the agricultural flatland zone of the Midwest. The sand dune component is the signature feature: genuine dune terrain in Indiana's interior, formed from the glaciofluvial outwash deposits of the Wabash River system, providing open-area riding that the surrounding flat farmland cannot offer. Wooded trail loops move through the forested areas of the property with a more sheltered, trail-park character for riders who prefer enclosed forest riding over open-area dunes. ATVs, UTVs, dirt bikes, full-size trucks, and Jeeps are all accommodated on appropriate route designations across the 1,400 acres. The park operates event-format weekends and regular riding sessions throughout the season; check the Badlands website for the current operating calendar before visiting. On-site camping is available. The northwestern Indiana location makes Badlands accessible from Indianapolis (2 hours), Chicago (1.5 hours via I-65 and US-136), and the South Bend-Fort Wayne corridor.