R

Redbird Crest Trail

Redbird Crest Trail

The Redbird Crest OHV Trail System is a 69-mile designated motorized loop in the Daniel Boone National Forest, threading through the Appalachian ridgelines of Clay and Leslie counties in southeastern Kentucky — county-seat communities of Manchester and Hyden anchor the corridor, with the trail connecting three primary trailheads across a landscape of mature second-growth hardwood forest, sandstone outcroppings, and the creek-bottom drainages that define the Red Bird River watershed. The 69-mile routing is one of the longer USFS OHV loop designations in the eastern United States, giving it a destination character beyond typical day-use trail parks: completing the full loop is a 2–3 day riding project depending on pace, and the three trailhead options at Bear Creek (off KY-66 in Clay County), Sugar Creek (Leslie County), and Peabody (Clay County) allow riders to plan route segments and shuttle logistics. The trail is designated multi-use — shared with hikers and equestrians — which sets a pace and noise-awareness expectation for OHV riders. No OHV-specific permit fee is required beyond the standard National Forest motorized trail access guidelines, which is unusual for a trail of this scale and quality. The system connects with the adjacent First Frontier trail network and is proximate to Mine Made Adventure Park, enabling combined multi-system itineraries. Contact the London Ranger District for current conditions (606-598-2192).

Hours
Open year-round

Get trail maps for Redbird Crest Trail

GPS tracking, SOS alerts, fire monitoring, and community chat — free for riders.

Browse All Parks

More off-road parks in Kentucky

B

Black Mountain Off-Road

Black Mountain Off-Road

Black Mountain Off-Road Adventure Area occupies 7,000 acres — 11 square miles — of former surface-mining and logging terrain in Harlan County, Kentucky, on the Virginia border, rising from 1,180 feet at the valley floor to 3,321 feet at the summit of Black Mountain itself, the highest point in Kentucky. The elevation range creates a riding experience unlike any other in the state: the lower trail sections at valley grade move through reclaimed bench road corridors with the industrial-archaeological character of Harlan County's coal heritage, while the upper routes climb through mature hardwood and mixed-conifer forest to ridgeline terrain with panoramic views across the Virginia and Tennessee mountains. The 150+ miles of trail cover the full difficulty spectrum from easy access routes to extreme sections where a winch, high-clearance suspension, and significant technical skill are prerequisites — a range justified by the scale of terrain the 7,000 acres contains. The park is operated by the Harlan County Outdoor Recreation Board Authority with a mandatory permit system. ATVs, UTVs, dirt bikes, registered Jeeps and SUVs, and unregistered 4x4s are all permitted on appropriate routes. Two trailheads serve the park: Evarts Trailhead on the south and Putney Trailhead on the north. Camping runs $20/night for tents and $30/night for RVs. An 11-line zipline canopy tour operates as a complementary attraction. Store hours Sunday through Thursday 8am–4:30pm, Friday–Saturday 8am–8pm (606-837-3205).

D

Dirt Nasty Off-Road Park

Dirt Nasty Off-Road Park

Dirt Nasty Off-Road Park covers 900 acres in Rowan County in northeastern Kentucky, approximately 25 miles south of the Ohio River near Morehead in the Knobs physiographic region — rolling sandstone hills and forested hollows that characterize the transitional zone between the Bluegrass and the Cumberland Plateau. The park is a weekend-only operation on select dates, which sets its character apart from the year-round destination parks that dominate the eastern Kentucky market: Dirt Nasty operates as a periodic community event rather than a daily ride facility, creating a more concentrated, socially active riding atmosphere on its open weekends. The 50-mile trail network covers wooded terrain supplemented by dedicated hill climbs, mud bogs, and open play areas — a diverse mix that serves dirt bikes, ATVs, UTVs, Jeeps, and dune buggies across skill levels. Trail character spans from easier wooded double-track to the hill climbs and bogs that give the park its name. Entry structure is $5 gate fee plus $20 per-vehicle day pass; season passes are available at $85. Primitive camping is $10/person per night and is available during operational weekends, supporting overnight visits from the surrounding region. The Morehead area is approximately 2 hours from Cincinnati and 1.5 hours from Lexington, placing Dirt Nasty within practical range of two of Kentucky's largest metro areas (606-356-5768).

F

First Frontier Appalachian Trails

First Frontier Appalachian Trails

First Frontier Appalachian Trails is a multi-county OHV trail network spanning 18 to 21 eastern Kentucky counties — managed by the Kentucky Mountain Regional Recreation Authority as the state's answer to Virginia's Spearhead Trails system, both in geographic scope and in the model of building a distributed, permit-based network across existing forest roads and converted coal-haul corridors rather than building new dedicated trail. With 450+ miles open and a stated goal of 1,000 total trail miles, First Frontier is among the most ambitious OHV trail development projects currently active in the Appalachian region. The permit system is rider-based rather than vehicle-based, which reflects the network's public-access design: $7/day, $15/3-day, $25/year for Kentucky residents, and $40/year for non-residents. Vehicle classes permitted are broad — ATVs, UTVs, Jeeps, overlanders, and dirt bikes on appropriate route designations — which matches the mixed-use character of eastern Kentucky's trail ecosystem where everything from Class II ATVs to expedition-rigged Jeeps shares the same road infrastructure. The system connects with Hollerwood Offroad Adventure Park and shares the First Frontier permit shop for pass acquisition. Trail access is 24 hours, 7 days, year-round on open routes. Eastern Kentucky's broader trail ecosystem — Mine Made, Redbird Crest, and the First Frontier network all within the same county cluster — makes this one of the deepest OHV riding destinations in the eastern US.

H

Hillbilly Trails

Hillbilly Trails

Hillbilly Trails is Pike County's motorized trail system in eastern Kentucky — the largest county in Kentucky by geographic area, occupying the far southeastern corner of the state on the Virginia border, with the Appalachian ridgelines of the Breaks Interstate Park country defining the eastern edge. The system crosses private landowner leases across Pike County's hollows and ridges and into the Jenkins area, using the road infrastructure legacy of Pike County's coal-production era: former haul roads, mine access corridors, and logging paths converted to recreational riding routes. The permit system operates under Kentucky state law with a tiered structure: $10/year for Pike County residents, $25/year for adjacent-county riders, and $50/year for out-of-county and non-resident riders — an approach that deliberately supports local riders while remaining accessible to the broader OHV tourism market. The park markets night riding as a differentiator: Appalachian mountain riding after dark, on certain trail phases, is a specific experience marketed to riders who want something beyond standard daylight trail riding. The system is growing in phases as additional landowner agreements are secured, expanding the rideable network. The eastern Kentucky trail ecosystem — connecting Hillbilly Trails with the broader First Frontier network and the major destination parks of Knott, Letcher, and adjacent counties — creates multi-day riding itineraries from a Pike County base (606-432-6247).