Honobia Creek WMA OHV Trails
Honobia Creek Wildlife Management Area is a 68,000-acre Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation-managed tract of forest land in Pushmataha, Le Flore, and McCurtain counties in the rugged southeastern Oklahoma Ouachita Mountain country — one of the largest single blocks of public land in Oklahoma outside the national forests. The WMA sits in the heart of the Kiamichi Mountain subrange of the Ouachitas, with topography that distinguishes southeastern Oklahoma from the flatter western and northern portions of the state: forested sandstone ridges rising to 2,400 feet, deep creek drainages cutting through the ridge topography, and the mixed pine and hardwood forest that characterizes the Ouachita highlands south of the Arkansas border. OHV use on Honobia Creek WMA is permitted on designated routes and forest roads, giving riders access to a trail network that totals over 140 miles of designated OHV-legal forest roads and trails — remarkable mileage for a state WMA system and the largest OHV-legal public land network in Oklahoma outside the Ouachita National Forest. The management focus as a WMA means hunting and wildlife conservation take priority, and OHV access is suspended or restricted during various hunting seasons — riders must check current OWCC hunting regulations before visiting, particularly in the late October through early January deer season window when motorized access patterns change significantly. An Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Permit is required for all users; the permit is sold online and at license vendors. Contact the OWCC Southeast Region office (405-521-3851) for current OHV-legal route maps and seasonal access changes.
- Phone
- 405-521-3851
- Hours
- Open year-round with seasonal hunting restrictions. Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Permit required. No OHV day-use fee.
Get trail maps for Honobia Creek WMA OHV Trails
GPS tracking, SOS alerts, fire monitoring, and community chat — free for riders.
Browse All ParksMore off-road parks in Oklahoma
Little Sahara
Little Sahara State Park in Waynoka in Woodward County, northwest Oklahoma, covers more than 1,600 acres of sand dunes on the edge of the Great Plains — a surprise in the Oklahoma landscape where the flat agricultural plains of Woodward County transition into a wind-deposited dune system that reaches 75 feet in height and provides the closest thing to genuine dune OHV riding available to Oklahoma, Texas Panhandle, and southern Kansas riders without a multi-state haul. The park's position in the Great Plains means the surrounding context is flat, open ranch country: the dunes appear at the crest of a low ridge and reveal themselves gradually as the flat horizon transforms into a dune field. Oklahoma's climate at this latitude gives Little Sahara a year-round operational window with relatively mild winters and hot summers — the spring and fall seasons (March through May, September through November) offer optimal temperatures for riding. ATVs, dirt bikes, and dune buggies are the primary permitted vehicle classes on the designated dune area. The park maintains a developed campground with RV hookups and tent sites, a concession stand, a vehicle wash area, and ATV rentals for visitors who arrive without machines — a full-amenity configuration that makes Little Sahara a practical day-destination for the Oklahoma City, Wichita, and Amarillo markets. Day-use fees and camping fees apply through the Oklahoma State Parks system. Woodward, 35 miles southeast, provides full services for multi-day stays. Contact Oklahoma State Parks for current conditions (580-824-1471).
Ouachita National Forest ATV Trail
The Ouachita National Forest ATV Trail system in the Choctaw Ranger District occupies the Kiamichi Mountains of southeastern Oklahoma near Big Cedar — the wildest and most topographically rugged corner of Oklahoma, where the Ouachita Range pushes north into the state from Arkansas in a series of parallel sandstone ridges and shale valleys that are unlike anything in the flat-plains interior of the state. The system runs within the Winding Stair Mountain National Recreation Area corridor, which encompasses some of the most heavily forested public land in Oklahoma and provides the mixed pine-hardwood terrain that gives Ouachita riding its distinctive southern mountain character: shortleaf pine and oak-hickory forest on the ridge faces, bottomland hardwood and cedar along the creek drainages, and the sandstone outcroppings that define the Ouachita Range at every elevation. Trail routes wind through this terrain and cross the creek drainages that form the headwaters of the Mountain Fork, Kiamichi, and Glover rivers — streams that carve the steep V-shaped valleys characteristic of the folded Ouachita geology. ATVs, UTVs, and motorcycles are permitted on designated routes. No day-use fee; Oklahoma does not require OHV registration for national forest use. Wet weather frequently causes temporary closures on sections of the system — always call the Choctaw Ranger District in Heavener before making a trip (918-653-2991). Daylight hours year-round on open routes.
Three Rivers WMA OHV Trails
Three Rivers Wildlife Management Area is a 197,000-acre Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation-managed tract in McCurtain County — the far southeastern corner of Oklahoma, bordering Arkansas and Texas in the heart of the Ouachita Mountain country around Broken Bow and Beavers Bend State Park. Three Rivers is the largest state-managed WMA in Oklahoma and one of the largest single blocks of publicly accessible land in the state, providing the scale that serious OHV riders want in a single destination. The terrain occupies the McCurtain County Ouachita highlands where the mountains reach their highest Oklahoma elevations before dropping toward the Red River basin to the south and the Arkansas border to the east. Forested sandstone ridges, the creek drainages of the Mountain Fork River and Little River systems, shortleaf pine and oak-hickory forest typical of the southern Ouachitas, and the varied terrain relief that supports both beginner-accessible loop routes and more challenging technical riding. OHV use is permitted on designated forest roads and trails within the WMA boundary; the total OHV-legal road network exceeds 150 miles, making Three Rivers the largest OHV-accessible WMA in Oklahoma. As with Honobia Creek, the wildlife management focus means hunting takes priority during open seasons and OHV access is restricted during various hunt periods — riders must check current seasonal access before visiting. An Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Permit is required. Beavers Bend State Park adjacent to the WMA provides developed camping, lodging, and non-riding amenities. OWCC Southeast Region (405-521-3851) manages current access information.